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  • Iran says it won’t negotiate with ‘erratic’ Trump

    Iran says it won’t negotiate with ‘erratic’ Trump

    A rapidly unfolding crisis in the Persian Gulf’s strategic Strait of Hormuz has sent global shockwaves, after a series of escalatory moves from both the United States and Iran have pushed regional security and global energy supplies to the breaking point. What began with incendiary rhetoric from US President Donald Trump has now devolved into armed confrontation at sea and a complete breakdown of planned diplomatic negotiations, raising grave fears of a broader regional war.

    On Sunday, Trump opened the week with an extreme public threat against Iran: if Tehran refused to sign a new US-brokered deal, he warned, “the whole country is going to get blown up.” Minutes later, conflicting claims emerged over a maritime confrontation in the Gulf of Oman. According to Trump’s account, US forces opened fire on an Iranian-flagged vessel, which he claimed ignored repeated warnings before being seized and disabled during operations to enforce a US naval blockade on Iranian ports. Iran’s account directly contradicts this narrative: state media affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) says IRGC forces repelled US troops and forced them to retreat from Hormuz waters following the clash.

    The maritime incident is the latest flashpoint in a crisis that erupted after Trump unilaterally announced plans for a new round of talks set to take place Monday in Islamabad, Pakistan, saying the US delegation would be led by Vice President JD Vance, senior advisor Jared Kushner, and Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff. Iran’s official government news agency IRNA swiftly refuted the announcement, calling the claim of planned talks “not true” and dismissing it as “a media game and part of the blame game to pressure Iran.”

    Iran’s position has long been clear: it will not enter negotiations with the US while the naval blockade of its ports remains in place, a measure Tehran considers a direct violation of the temporary ceasefire agreed between the two nations earlier this month. When Trump confirmed the blockade would continue, Iran acted Saturday to close all shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, just one day after reopening the route following a ceasefire between Lebanon and Israel.

    An anonymous senior Iranian official familiar with Tehran’s internal decision-making told Drop Site News that the collapse of talks stems from what Iranian leaders see as Washington’s unworkable approach to diplomacy. “Washington’s excessive demands, unrealistic expectations, constant shifts in stance, repeated contradictions, and the ongoing naval blockade” have convinced Iran to pull back its negotiating team, the official explained. While Iran remains open to a future agreement that would secure its right to enrich uranium, deliver meaningful sanctions relief, and establish a long-term non-aggression pact, Trump’s erratic leadership and maximalist demands – including the full surrender of all Iranian enriched uranium – have destroyed any trust that he could be a reliable negotiating partner.

    “Our assessment is that Trump effectively lacks both a coherent plan and the capacity to secure even a temporary agreement,” the official said, adding that Trump’s decisions are consistently shaped by daily Israeli security and political input. The official also noted that during the first round of Islamabad talks that produced the earlier two-week ceasefire, Iran explicitly warned the US delegation that public threats to destroy “Iranian civilization” would not be tolerated. Even before Sunday’s new threat, Iran had refused to commit to another round of talks.

    Should Trump choose to continue military escalation rather than pursue good-faith diplomacy, the official warned, Iran will suspend all diplomatic channels indefinitely and prepare to impose far greater costs on US interests across the region. “Tehran is prepared for a long war,” the official added.

    Tehran-based political analyst Mohammed Sani confirmed that Iran has used the two-week ceasefire to dramatically upgrade its military readiness. “The Americans have been bringing in more troops and equipment to prepare to attack, but the Iranians have also not been resting during these two weeks of ceasefire,” Sani told Drop Site News. “They have been preparing, repairing the underground missile cities, bringing in new air defenses, missiles, and drones. Iran is at a high standard of readiness right now. If there is another round of negotiations sometime later in the future, after another round of American attacks against Iran fail, the Iranian conditions for peace will be much tougher.”

    Foreign policy experts say Trump’s reliance on coercive threats is self-defeating, pushing Iran further from the negotiating table even as the president claims he wants an exit from the conflict that has already triggered economic upheaval and dragged down his already low approval ratings. Trita Parsi, executive vice president of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, noted that Trump has prioritized public optics of victory over tangible diplomatic progress. “Due to poor discipline, Trump ends up prioritizing the optics of victory over actually getting a deal,” Parsi said Sunday. “Instead of using deescalatory signals from Iran to get closer to a deal, he declares victory and seeks Iran’s humiliation, and by that, he undermines his own diplomacy.”

    Global attention is now fixed on the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most critical chokepoints for global energy supplies, with market and diplomatic observers bracing for further escalation as both sides maintain hardline positions.

  • Israeli soldier filmed smashing Jesus statue in Lebanon

    Israeli soldier filmed smashing Jesus statue in Lebanon

    A widely circulated image posted to social media Sunday has ignited international anger after appearing to show an Israeli soldier using a jackhammer to destroy a crucifix statue of Jesus in a Christian village in southern Lebanon. The incident comes just days after a ceasefire took effect Friday, ending Israel’s military offensive launched against Lebanon on March 2 that has left much of the southern part of the country under Israeli occupation.

    According to local Christian community leaders, the statue stood in Debel, a majority Maronite Christian village positioned roughly six kilometers northwest of Ain Ebel and just five kilometers from the Israeli border town of Shtula. Officials with Debel’s municipal government confirmed the statue was located within the village when contacted by Agence France-Presse, though they stopped short of verifying the extent of damage shown in the photo.

    The image quickly spread across major social platforms, drawing condemnation from unexpected quarters, including prominent former allies of former US President Donald Trump aligned with the MAGA movement. Former Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, who has broken ranks with Trump in recent months over his handling of the Epstein files and his support for Israel’s push for conflict with Iran, shared the image sarcastically on platform X. She wrote, “’Our greatest ally’ that takes billions of our tax dollars and weapons every year,” a sharp rebuke of the decades-long US policy of robust military and financial aid to Israel.

    Fellow former Republican Congressman Matt Gaetz echoed the criticism, calling the scene captured in the image simply “horrific.” Political analysts note this public backlash from key MAGA figures threatens to erode Israel’s standing among one of its most loyal support bases in the United States: white evangelical Christian voters, who have long backed Israel as a core part of their ideological beliefs.

    Regional commentator Muhammad Shehada highlighted the hypocrisy he sees in the incident, captioning the viral post “’Judeo-Christian values’ in Israel” — a direct reference to the framing Israeli leaders often use to win support from Western audiences by highlighting shared cultural values with Europe and the United States.

    This incident is not an isolated case, rights observers and religious leaders emphasize. Over recent years, Christian communities living in Israel and the Israeli-occupied West Bank have faced a steadily rising tide of anti-Christian attacks, ranging from routine street harassment to the deliberate destruction of religious sites and symbols. Clergy report multiple instances of being spat on and physically assaulted by extremist groups, while churches, cemeteries and other Christian landmarks have been repeatedly vandalized. Most of these attacks have been tied to ultra-Orthodox Jewish groups, religious nationalist extremists and Israeli settlers in occupied territories, and human rights groups say the vast majority of these incidents have gone unpunished. Israeli police have repeatedly been accused of failing to intervene to stop attacks or hold perpetrators accountable.

    In response to growing outcry over the viral image, an Israel Defense Forces spokesperson did not explicitly dispute the photo’s authenticity. In a post on X, the spokesperson said that “If this photo is indeed real and recent,” then the actions shown do not align with the Israeli military’s official values.

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

  • San Francisco delegation visits Shanghai, strengthens cultural and tourism ties

    San Francisco delegation visits Shanghai, strengthens cultural and tourism ties

    Almost half a century after Shanghai and San Francisco formally established their sister city relationship, a high-level delegation led by San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie touched down in Shanghai on April 19, kicking off a two-day visit focused on expanding bilateral collaboration in culture, science and tourism across the Pacific.

    This trip arrives as the latest milestone in the 46-year-long exchange between the two major global metropolises, building on decades of uninterrupted dialogue and people-to-people connection to open new chapters of partnership. The itinerary began with a stop at the 146-year-old Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, where delegation members gained firsthand insight into the century-long development and evolution of symphonic music in China.

    Following the orchestra visit, the group toured three more iconic Shanghai institutions: the Shanghai Conservatory of Music, the Shanghai Natural History Museum (a subsidiary branch of the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum), and the Shanghai Grand Opera House. By the end of the first day of the visit, three landmark memorandums of understanding (MOUs) had been signed to formalize new cooperative frameworks. The agreements pair the Shanghai Conservatory of Music with the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum with the California Academy of Sciences, and the Shanghai Grand Opera House with San Francisco Opera, laying the groundwork for long-term exchange across art, science and education.

    Speaking on the visit, Lurie emphasized the enduring strength of the two cities’ nearly 50-year partnership. “Our cities share a partnership that is nearly five decades strong. It is a dialogue that has never stopped,” he said. “We are building on that foundation and investing in a future where science, education and sustainability remain at the center of our partnership.”

    David Stull, president of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, noted that both cities share a natural alignment in their forward-thinking, innovative identities. “When people are excited about new ideas, they gravitate to others who are excited about new ideas. San Francisco and Shanghai have always shared that spirit of imagination, innovation and the spirit of the future,” he explained.

    Beyond institutional collaborations, the delegation also took part in a joint tourism promotion event held at Xintiandi, Shanghai’s bustling cultural and commercial hub in Huangpu District. The initiative, launched in partnership by United Airlines and San Francisco International Airport, is designed to drive two-way travel by highlighting the one-of-a-kind attractions and immersive cultural experiences that each city offers.

    Mike Nakornkhet, director of San Francisco International Airport, framed the Chinese market as a core growth priority for the airport, pointing to strong existing travel volumes. “If you look at the numbers in 2025, we had 700,000 passengers travel between China and San Francisco — that’s 23 weekly flights to four destinations in China. So it’s a very important market for us,” he said. “We really see China as a growing market for us. There’s a lot of leisure and business travel demand.”

    The first day of the visit wrapped up with a celebratory evening cruise along the Huangpu River, where delegates joined a special reception to commemorate the 46th anniversary of the Shanghai-San Francisco sister city relationship. The delegation continued its schedule of meetings and tours in Shanghai on Monday, with additional discussions focused on expanding future collaborative projects across sectors.

  • Hamas rebuffs ‘trap’ disarmament plan as Israeli violations stall ceasefire process

    Hamas rebuffs ‘trap’ disarmament plan as Israeli violations stall ceasefire process

    ### Hamas Rejects US-Backed Disarmament Plan Amid Unresolved Ceasefire Violations

    Palestinian militant group Hamas has flatly rejected a US-backed disarmament proposal put forward by the Board of Peace, framing the initiative as a deliberate trap designed to sow internal conflict and destabilize Palestinian governance in the Gaza Strip. Multiple Palestinian sources with direct knowledge of the closed-door Cairo talks shared details of the negotiations with Middle East Eye, outlining the group’s deep-seated opposition to the framework presented earlier this month.

    From Hamas’ perspective, the proposal would leave Gaza’s Palestinian population completely defenseless while enabling Israeli-aligned armed gangs to operate unimpeded across the enclave, creating widespread chaos and disorder. A senior Gaza-based source close to the group confirmed the outright rejection, noting that opposition runs particularly strong within Hamas’ military wing, the al-Qassam Brigades, which has labeled any disarmament agreement as nothing less than collective suicide. “They know that giving up their weapons is not an option and will not happen,” the source emphasized.

    The plan was formally delivered to Hamas delegates by Nickolay Mladenov, the Board of Peace’s High Representative for Gaza, who centered the entire proposal on coercing Hamas into relinquishing its weapons arsenal. Beyond the disarmament demand, Hamas has also decried a second unacceptable provision that would remove 20,000 sitting civil servants – nearly the entire administrative workforce that keeps basic services running across Gaza – from their positions. The source called the mass dismissal plan a catastrophic mistake, noting that these workers hold the cumulative expertise needed to address Gaza’s ongoing humanitarian and governance challenges, and replacing them en masse is fundamentally illogical.

    A core non-negotiable demand from Hamas is that Israel must first fully comply with all obligations laid out in the first phase of the October 2023 US-brokered ceasefire before any talks on further steps, including disarmament, can begin. That ceasefire was negotiated to end a two-year Israeli military campaign that has claimed the lives of roughly 72,000 Palestinians and pushed Gaza’s 2.3 million residents into widespread mass starvation. Under the terms of the truce, Israel was required to lift all restrictions on humanitarian aid entry, allowing up to 600 trucks of food, fuel, medical equipment, shelter materials and commercial goods to enter the enclave daily.

    To date, Israel has failed to meet these requirements, maintaining harsh limits on aid deliveries that have left Gaza’s catastrophic humanitarian situation largely unchanged. Even after the ceasefire took effect, Israeli forces have killed more than 700 Palestinians in ongoing incursions and attacks across the Strip. When Hamas presented these demands to Mladenov during negotiations, the envoy offered no substantive commitments or responses to address Palestinian concerns.

    Talks over the proposal have stretched on for two weeks, with multiple sessions marked by sharp tensions. Mladenov presented the plan as a non-negotiable take-it-or-leave-it offer to the Hamas delegation in Cairo, and at one point issued a 48-hour ultimatum: accept the terms or face a resumption of full-scale Israeli military operations. In a subsequent meeting, Mladenov was joined by unexpected high-level US officials, including Major General Jasper Jeffers, commander of the International Stabilisation Force, and senior US advisor Aryeh Lightstone. The unannounced addition of the US delegation was not coordinated in advance with Hamas, led by senior leader Khalil al-Hayya, and was viewed as an additional layer of pressure to force concessions, ultimately leading to a breakdown in talks with no agreement reached.

    Egypt, one of the key mediators in the process, has also pushed Hamas to accept the proposal, despite internal concerns that the plan does not align with either Palestinian or Egyptian national interests. Sources note that Egyptian leadership is reluctant to publicly oppose or upset the US administration. In recent days, external pressure has grown to convince Hamas to grant preliminary approval for the proposal before hashing out specific details later, according to reporting from Asharq Al-Awsat. A revised version of the plan has recently been circulated that proposes moving to second-phase talks – which include disarmament – once Israel begins implementing its first-phase ceasefire obligations.

    At present, it remains unclear whether Hamas will agree to the revised framework. Hamas continues to stand firm in its demand for legally binding, concrete guarantees that Israel will fully implement all first-phase ceasefire commitments before any discussions of further negotiations begin.

  • Robots outrun humans at marathon

    Robots outrun humans at marathon

    In a landmark demonstration of advancing robotics capability that stunned observers, a humanoid robot developed by Chinese consumer technology firm Honor has broken the half-marathon world record previously held by a human elite athlete, capping a dramatic year of progress in the sector at a landmark competition in Beijing on Sunday.

    Named Flash, the Honor-built humanoid crossed the 21-kilometer finish line of the 2026 Beijing E-Town Half Marathon and Humanoid Robot Half Marathon in a time of 50 minutes 26 seconds. That mark is nearly seven minutes faster than the existing human record of 57 minutes 20 seconds set by Ugandan distance star Jacob Kiplimo in Lisbon, Portugal just one month prior.

    The milestone comes just 12 months after the inaugural edition of the humanoid robot race, where the winning entry crossed the line more than two hours slower, at 2 hours 40 minutes 42 seconds, and only six out of nearly 20 competing teams managed to get their robots across the finish line at all. This year’s event tells a story of explosive growth in the sector: more than 100 teams from 13 Chinese provinces (up from just five in 2025) plus five international teams competed, with a record-high share of participants completing the full course. All three podium positions were claimed by humanoids built by Honor, a company that has pivoted from smartphone manufacturing into humanoid robotics development in only 12 months.

    Du Xiaodi, an Honor engineer who served as Flash’s team coach, noted after the race that the firm has not yet launched commercial humanoid robot sales, and still faces key technical hurdles to overcome, particularly in the development of fully independent high-performance electric motors for the devices. Honor was far from the only competitor: other participating entries came from established Chinese robotics firms including Unitree and Noetix.

    A year ago, one of the most memorable moments of the event came when human engineers ran alongside their robots the entire way, holding laptops to adjust performance and fix navigation errors mid-race. This year, more than 40 percent of competing robots operated fully autonomously. Using on-board sensors, cameras and embedded processing systems, the robots independently perceived their surrounding environment in real time, completing complex tasks including self-localization, course mapping, dynamic path adjustment and obstacle avoidance without any human intervention.

    Organizers also increased the difficulty of this year’s course to put robot adaptive capabilities to a stricter test, adding additional curves, varying elevation and multiple uphill and downhill segments that wind through scenic local landmarks including the E-Town milu deer park and tree-lined urban avenues. All three top-finishing robots successfully navigated the full challenging course entirely on their own.

    The breakthrough performance comes as Beijing positions humanoid robotics as a core strategic future industry, expected to follow the growth trajectories of smartphones and smart connected vehicles to become a key pillar of the city’s innovation economy. Beijing Municipal Bureau of Economy and Information Technology Party secretary and director Jiang Guangzhi explained that the city is actively developing real-world testing scenarios to accelerate the growth of this new economic engine.

    To support that goal, Beijing has already built more than 18,000 square meters of dedicated robot testing grounds and data collection centers across the E-Town development zone, Haidian District and Shijingshan District. These facilities generate hundreds of thousands of hours of high-quality performance data annually, providing critical support for technological innovation and iteration for both startups and established industry leaders.

    A city-wide action plan for embodied intelligent technology innovation and industry development sets clear targets for 2027: Beijing aims to build a fully domestic integrated upstream and downstream industry chain for embodied intelligence, achieve breakthroughs in more than 100 core technologies, and cultivate a humanoid and robotics industry cluster with an output value of hundreds of billions of yuan.

    Industry data underscores China’s leading position in the global humanoid robot market right now: global shipments of humanoid robots reached approximately 17,000 units in 2025, with Chinese manufacturers accounting for 14,000 of those units, more than 80 percent of total global supply. Looking ahead, the second World Robot Games is scheduled to open in Beijing this coming August, where the world will get another look at the cutting edge of robotic capability coming out of the country’s fast-growing innovation ecosystem.

  • China boosts IP protection for new sectors

    China boosts IP protection for new sectors

    Against the backdrop of a global push to cultivate new economic growth drivers and accelerate technological transformation, China’s top intellectual property regulatory body is ramping up targeted protection measures for intellectual property (IP) in fast-growing emerging sectors ranging from artificial intelligence to big data, as part of the country’s broader strategic framework to advance the development of new quality productive forces. This announcement was made by Shen Changyu, Commissioner of the China National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA), in an exclusive interview with China Daily, delivered ahead of World Intellectual Property Day, which falls annually on April 26.

    Shen’s comments come just as the country prepares to launch its annual National Intellectual Property Publicity Week, a seven-day event designed to showcase China’s nationwide IP development achievements and raise public awareness of IP rights.

    As global technological revolutions and industrial upgrading gain momentum, Shen explained that cutting-edge emerging technologies including AI, integrated circuits, biomedicine, quantum technology, 6G communications, and brain-computer interfaces are fundamentally reshaping global economic structures. This rapid evolution has created new, unmet requirements for robust, adaptive IP protection frameworks that can keep pace with innovation.

    According to Shen, CNIPA has already rolled out a series of targeted policy measures over recent years that have delivered tangible progress toward fostering innovation and driving high-quality economic growth. Key priorities moving forward include continued refinement of IP-related legal frameworks, acceleration of trademark and patent examination workflows, and optimization of support services to facilitate IP commercialization across all emerging technology fields.

    Official 2025 data underscores the rapid growth of innovation in these key sectors. Among China’s entire stock of valid invention patents, computer technology and medical technology recorded the fastest year-over-year growth rates, with the total volume of AI-related patents held in China now ranking first globally. By the end of 2025, the number of new trademark registrations linked to AI and other emerging sectors reached 324,300, pushing the total number of valid trademarks in these fields to 4.39 million — a 5.94 percent increase from 2024.

    “These numbers reflect sustained market enthusiasm for trademark development in emerging areas, and demonstrate both growing innovation vitality across China’s tech ecosystem and rising awareness of trademark protection among technology enterprises,” Shen noted.

    To improve both the quality and efficiency of IP examination processes, CNIPA has streamlined administrative procedures and updated core regulatory rules multiple times. Notably, the country’s patent examination guidelines have undergone three revisions — in 2019, 2023, and most recently 2025 — specifically to address the unique challenges posed by AI-related patent applications.

    “The 2025 revision introduces a dedicated standalone section for artificial intelligence and big data for the first time, with a strong emphasis on integrating ethical oversight into the examination process,” Shen explained. “It clarifies that all core technical applications must align with existing legal standards, social morality, and public interest, so we can build strong safety guardrails that support the healthy development of the AI sector.”

    CNIPA is also actively involved in updating higher-level national legislation to address new industry needs. The agency is contributing to revisions of China’s Trademark Law and the Integrated Circuit Layout Design Protection Regulation, efforts designed to respond to public concerns and create clear legal support for the development and protection of core domestic technologies. Last year, the draft Trademark Law revision completed its first reading before the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislative body. The draft targets longstanding issues such as malicious trademark registration and trademark misuse, directly addressing the urgent need for stronger protection of AI-driven innovation, according to Shen.

    In a further practical adjustment to accommodate new sectors, CNIPA has added 890 standardized goods and service classification items specifically for big data, AI, and other emerging industries. “This reform resolves pressing on-the-ground problems, including the lack of corresponding classification categories for trademark registration in new fields and unclear boundaries for IP protection,” Shen said. “By cutting branding costs for businesses and reducing the risk of IP infringement, this move ultimately optimizes both the innovation and business environment, providing solid IP support for the healthy, orderly growth of strategic emerging and future-focused industries.”

    These efficiency-focused reforms have already delivered measurable results. In 2025, China’s average trademark examination period held steady at four months, while the average invention patent review period was cut to 15 months. Both examination timelines are the fastest of any major global economy for IP review processes of this scale, Shen added.

    Commissioner Shen also highlighted the critical economic role of IP commercialization, noting that it serves as the key bridge between raw innovation and real-world industrial application, making it a core priority for developing new quality productive forces. In 2025 alone, CNIPA accredited 65 new specialized centers dedicated to supporting IP commercialization, 48 of which focus specifically on emerging industries. These centers are designed to promote synergistic development between IP creation and industrial growth.

    Over the course of the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025), CNIPA delivered specialized public IP services — including IP search and analysis, industry navigation, infringement early warning, overseas IP rights protection, and targeted training — to more than 50,000 domestic enterprises across the country.

    On the international stage, China has actively pursued multilateral and bilateral exchanges and cooperation on emerging IP governance issues. By working closely with the World Intellectual Property Organization and foreign IP offices to coordinate global AI governance frameworks, China aims to ensure its perspective is heard and its influence expands in the global IP landscape, Shen said.

    Looking ahead to the 15th Five-Year Plan period (2026-2030), Shen confirmed that CNIPA will continue to center its work on addressing core innovation challenges in emerging fields. The agency will continuously refine IP-related legal and regulatory frameworks while proactively tracking evolving global industry trends to keep pace with rapid technological change.

  • Shanghai flower show goes viral

    Shanghai flower show goes viral

    One of China’s most anticipated annual floral events, the 2026 Shanghai International Flower Show, has quickly become a viral online sensation, drawing thousands of visitors and widespread social media attention just days after its official launch. The event’s Pudong branch kicked off on April 18 at Taikoo Li Qiantan, a popular commercial and leisure complex located along the banks of the Huangpu River. Visitors to the Qiantan venue are greeted with immersive displays that blend creative floral design with urban riverside scenery: striking animal-shaped botanical installations stand alongside layered riverside floral arrangements, creating an endless sea of blooms that stretches along the waterfront. This visually stunning transformation has turned the Qiantan district into one of the most sought-after travel and photography hotspots in the city, with thousands of user-generated photos and videos spreading rapidly across Chinese social media platforms. Unlike previous iterations that centered on a single main venue, the 2026 festival has expanded to a citywide scale, with designated viewing areas and pop-up floral displays installed across multiple Shanghai districts. The event will run through May 10, giving both local residents and domestic tourists more than three weeks to explore the blooming installations across the city. Through this citywide expansion, the annual flower show has turned the entire metropolis of Shanghai into an open-air romantic garden, blending natural beauty with urban life to create a one-of-a-kind seasonal experience for all attendees.

  • Rumen Radev looks set to win Bulgarian Parliamentary election

    Rumen Radev looks set to win Bulgarian Parliamentary election

    Bulgaria’s eighth general parliamentary election in five years has delivered a decisive early lead to former president Rumen Radev and his newly formed Progressive Bulgaria party, according to national exit polls released after voting closed Sunday.

    Initial exit poll data puts Radev’s party at 37% of the vote, more than double the 16% support captured by its closest competitor — former prime minister Boiko Borisov’s long-dominant GERB party. Between three and four additional smaller political groups are on track to clear the 4% electoral threshold required to claim seats in the new unicameral parliament.

    This snap election was triggered after the previous ruling coalition pushed through a deeply controversial budget proposal last December, which sparked large-scale public protests across the country that Radev — then serving as head of state — openly supported. In his first victory address to supporters Sunday evening, Radev framed the results as a clear rejection of Bulgaria’s established political order. “People rejected the self-satisfaction and arrogance of old parties and did not fall prey to lies and manipulation. I thank them for their trust,” he said, outlining a vision of “a strong Bulgaria in a strong Europe.”

    He added that the European bloc currently demands “critical thinking, pragmatic actions and good results,” particularly when it comes to forging a new regional security architecture and rebuilding European industrial power and global competitiveness. “That will be the main contribution of Bulgaria to its European mission,” he said.

    The 62-year-old incoming party leader, a former MiG-29 fighter pilot and ex-commander-in-chief of the Bulgarian Air Force, stepped down from his nine-year presidential post in January to launch his new political movement. Widely characterized as a pragmatic figure with soft pro-Russian leanings, Radev has repeatedly criticized EU sanctions on Moscow, called for sustained constructive dialogue with the Kremlin, and remains firmly opposed to direct Bulgarian military aid to Ukraine. His campaign centered heavily on domestic priorities: vowing to root out systemic corruption and end five years of fragile, short-lived coalition governments that have repeatedly collapsed and triggered repeated snap elections.

    While Sunday’s projected result marks a historic upset for Bulgarian politics, it falls short of delivering Radev’s party a parliamentary majority to govern alone. Radev confirmed Sunday evening that he will immediately begin negotiations with other parties to form a stable governing coalition.

    Beyond domestic policy, Radev’s victory has sparked analysis of his potential impact on European defense and Ukraine support. Bulgaria already acts as a key supplier of ammunition and explosives to Ukraine via third countries, most notably neighboring Romania, and the ongoing war has revitalized the country’s post-Soviet defense industry, which had struggled for decades after the collapse of the Eastern Bloc.

    Since the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Radev has openly opposed the transfer of Bulgaria’s stockpiled Soviet-era weapons to Kyiv, arguing that such supplies only prolong a conflict that Ukraine cannot win — a position that aligns closely with that of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban. Yet despite this public stance, Radev has positioned Bulgaria to become a core part of Europe’s expanding defense production ecosystem. In October 2025, German defense giant Rheinmetall announced a €1 billion joint venture with Bulgarian state-owned arms manufacturer VMZ, based in the town of Sopot roughly two hours east of Sofia. The partnership will scale up production to 100,000 NATO-standard 155mm artillery shells annually, and also includes plans to construct a dedicated new gunpowder production facility in Sopot. Rheinmetall will hold a 51% controlling stake in the new venture, which forms part of a continent-wide push to ramp up military output after years of underinvestment.

    Radev has already sought to claim credit for the deal, having invited Rheinmetall CEO Armin Papperger to Bulgaria in March 2025. During an August 2025 visit to Rheinmetall’s headquarters in Unterluss, Germany, he noted that “Bulgaria is becoming part of the European defence ecosystem.”

    Political analysts expect Radev’s approach as prime minister will mirror that of Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico: he will remain publicly critical of broad EU military support for Ukraine, but will not block private domestic defense manufacturers from producing and supplying arms to Kyiv through existing third-party supply chains.

  • Axe falls: Dragons expected to sack Shane Flanagan after horror start to the year

    Axe falls: Dragons expected to sack Shane Flanagan after horror start to the year

    The St George Illawarra Dragons are bracing for a major coaching shakeup just days out from their iconic annual Anzac Day clash against the Sydney Roosters, with incumbent head coach Shane Flanagan poised to become the second National Rugby League (NRL) mentor dismissed in 2025 following a catastrophic opening to the season.

    Club officials have called an urgent press conference for Thursday morning, slated to be led by chairman Andrew Lancaster and chief executive Tim Watsford, confirming long-circulating speculation that Flanagan’s tenure at the helm of the Red V will come to an abrupt end just eight months after he signed a contract extension promising long-term stability.

    Flanagan, who led the Cronulla Sharks to their first and only drought-breaking premiership title a decade ago, has overseen a completely winless run through the opening seven rounds of the 2025 NRL season. The club’s poor form extends even further back, with the Dragons having dropped 11 consecutive matches dating back to the closing stages of the 2024 campaign, effectively eliminating any chance of postseason football this year before the season hit the one-quarter mark.

    He follows Manly Sea Eagles coach Anthony Seibold out the door, who was sacked earlier this season after just three straight losses. In a stunning turn of events for Manly, Seibold’s departure immediately sparked an extraordinary turnaround for the side, leaving long-suffering Dragons fans hopeful that a similar coaching change can reverse the club’s lingering slide down the competition ladder.

    Flanagan took over the Dragons role ahead of the 2024 season, and notched a mediocre 19 wins from 56 total matches in charge during his tenure. The club has been plagued by persistent issues with player recruitment and retention for months, a problem that has gutted the side’s attacking power after key representative stars Ben Hunt and Zac Lomax departed the club in recent offseasons.

    In August 2024, the organization extended Flanagan’s contract for two additional seasons, releasing a statement that now rings hollow amid the crisis: “This extension reaffirms the club’s commitment to stability, growth, and a long-term vision for success both on and off the field.” That public commitment to long-term planning has now collapsed entirely, as growing fan frustration boiled over after seven straight opening losses.

    The Dragons’ current struggles extend far beyond the coaching box, with a litany of on-field and off-field disruptions plaguing the squad through the early rounds. Star second-rower Jaydn Su’A was sent off during the club’s most recent round seven clash, and is staring down a lengthy suspension that will rule him out for multiple weeks. Adding insult to injury, Su’A has already confirmed he will leave the club at the end of the season to join rivals Parramatta Eels in 2027.

    Other recent on-field struggles have piled up too: star back Valentine Holmes missed 13 tackles in the round seven loss to South Sydney Rabbitohs, young playmaker Daniel Atkinson has failed to register a try assist across his last three appearances, and the club is still uncertain whether experienced utility Clint Gutherson will be able to return to his fullback position once he recovers from a current injury spell.

    Off the field, the club has also had to manage growing discontent within its playing ranks. Young forward Loko Pasifiki Tonga’s request for an early release from his contract was rejected earlier this month, prompting the player’s management to leak private internal club emails to the national media in an embarrassing breach of internal confidentiality.

    As the club prepares to formally announce Flanagan’s departure ahead of Thursday’s Anzac Day blockbuster, all eyes will be on the Dragons to see who will step in as interim head coach and attempt to revive the proud club’s fading 2025 campaign. More details are expected to emerge following the morning press conference.

  • Australia’s preparation for Iran war a “trainwreck”: Joyce

    Australia’s preparation for Iran war a “trainwreck”: Joyce

    Fresh escalatory rhetoric from former US President Donald Trump targeting Iran’s civilian infrastructure has sparked quiet reaction from Australian political leaders, with a senior One Nation MP refusing to deliver a direct character assessment of the former US leader’s inflammatory comments.

    In a post to his Truth Social platform, Trump doubled down on threats against Iran, promising that if Tehran does not agree to a proposed peace deal, the US will destroy every power plant and bridge across the country. In his uncompromising statement, he wrote: ‘NO MORE MR. NICE GUY! They’ll come down fast, they’ll come down easy and, if they don’t take the DEAL, it will be my Honour to do what has to be done, which should have been done to Iran, by other presidents, for the last 47 years.’

    The threat lands at a fragile moment in Middle Eastern tensions, just two weeks after the US and Israel carried out coordinated strikes on Iranian targets, with both Washington and Tehran now trading accusations of breaking a shaky bilateral ceasefire. Australia’s official position has long aligned with international calls for an immediate end to hostilities, urging all involved parties to prioritize diplomatic negotiations to de-escalate the crisis.

    On Monday, One Nation MP Barnaby Joyce echoed Canberra’s official call for peace, telling Seven Network’s Sunrise program that all Australians ‘hoped and prayed’ the conflict would wrap up quickly. When pressed by reporters to share whether he had faith in Trump’s leadership and to judge the validity of the former president’s threats, Joyce declined to offer a clear assessment. ‘Well, it doesn’t really matter,’ he said of his personal view of Trump. ‘We’ve got to deal with the cards that have been dealt with us.’

    Joyce used the moment to reflect on the shifting global security landscape, noting that the ongoing conflict underscores the volatile nature of modern geopolitics. ‘It does show the world in a febrile nature, and we’re living in a different world now. And it shows that, as we’ve always known, there’s no such thing as a short war. They just go on, and this one’s going on,’ he added. The key takeaway for Australia, Joyce argued, is the urgent need to strengthen domestic preparedness for future global shocks. ‘We were not prepared for this. And if something like this happens again … we have got to be vastly better prepared than we were this time, because this is in some areas is a train wreck, economically,’ he said.

    Social Services Minister Tanya Plibersek echoed calls for immediate peace during an appearance on the same broadcaster, acknowledging that ongoing global uncertainty surrounding the conflict benefits no side. ‘And we’ve seen real impacts on civilians in Iran and around the Middle East, which, of course, we’re concerned about,’ Plibersek said. ‘And although Australia is not formally a party to this conflict, Australians are paying a very heavy price for it. You certainly see the price at the petrol station, but you also see it flowing through to goods and services across the economy … We want to see de-escalation, and we want to see the situation resolved.’

    The current tensions carry a specific awkward context for Australian diplomacy: Canberra was not given advance notice of the February 28 US-Israeli strikes on Iran, yet it became the first nation to issue qualified public support for the operation, backing the stated goal of limiting Tehran’s nuclear program. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has since publicly called for greater transparency around Trump’s strategic objectives for the region. This story remains developing, with new details expected to emerge in coming hours.