作者: admin

  • Mother-in-law of Indian bride whose death set off media frenzy arrested

    Mother-in-law of Indian bride whose death set off media frenzy arrested

    A high-profile death case involving a former Indian model and actor has reignited national outrage over India’s persistent dowry system crisis, after the country’s top federal anti-crime agency took a key suspect into custody this week.

    Thirty-three-year-old Twisha Sharma was found dead in her marital home in Bhopal, the capital of Madhya Pradesh, on 12 May, just five months after she married lawyer Samarth Singh. The case has sparked intense public debate and conflicting narratives from the two sides: Sharma’s family claims she was murdered following months of brutal dowry harassment, while Singh and his family maintain her death was a suicide driven by pre-existing mental health struggles.

    On Thursday, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), which took over the investigation earlier this week from local police, arrested Giribala Singh—Samarth’s mother, a retired high court judge—after hours of intensive questioning. The arrest came just after the Madhya Pradesh High Court revoked her anticipatory bail, ruling that the lower trial court had incorrectly dismissed critical evidence and witness statements when it granted the bail earlier.

    Sharma’s family has leveled a series of severe accusations against the couple. They allege that harassment over dowry began almost immediately after the wedding, with the Singh continuously pressing Sharma for more gifts and financial assets from her birth family. When Sharma became pregnant several months into the marriage, the family claims the Singhs falsely accused her of infidelity and coerced her into terminating the pregnancy, a claim the Singhs deny. The Singhs argue the termination was Sharma’s own independent choice, and insist she suffered from untreated mental health challenges that led her to take her own life.

    Samarth Singh was already taken into police custody earlier this month. He fled Bhopal after Sharma’s death and was captured by local authorities in the city of Jabalpur on 22 May. Local police initially filed a formal charge of dowry death against both Singhs shortly after Sharma’s body was found, a charge that remains in place as the CBI investigation proceeds.

    The case has already captured national media attention and become a top headline across India, in large part due to the prominent social standing of the Singh family. Beyond that, it has pushed the long-running crisis of dowry-related violence back into the center of public discourse. Though the practice of demanding dowry from a bride’s family was formally banned across India all the way back in 1961, thousands of women are killed every year in dowry-related deaths, when a groom’s family murders the bride for what they deem an insufficient dowry.

    Controversy has followed the investigation from its earliest stages. Sharma’s family demanded a second autopsy after alleging the first post-mortem examination was tainted by political and procedural interference, claiming local police were working to cover up wrongdoing to protect the well-connected Singh family. Local law enforcement has repeatedly denied those accusations. Sharma was cremated on Sunday following the completion of the second autopsy ordered by authorities.

  • Watch: Moment 14-year-old wins US national spelling bee

    Watch: Moment 14-year-old wins US national spelling bee

    After days of grueling, head-to-head competition that tested the spelling mastery of some of the brightest young minds across the United States, a 14-year-old teenager from California has emerged as the champion of the 2026 Scripps National Spelling Bee.

    The annual event, one of the most prestigious and long-running academic competitions for young people in the country, brought together top spellers who had advanced through regional qualifying rounds held in communities across all 50 states. Over multiple days of competition, participants tackled increasingly complex, rarely used words, pushing their knowledge of etymology, language roots, and spelling rules to the limit. As the field narrowed down to the final competitors, the 14-year-old Golden State contestant held their nerve under the pressure of national attention, correctly spelling a series of challenging words to secure the first-place title.

    Footage captured from the final round shows the emotional moment the teen was announced as the winner, bringing an end to this year’s iteration of the iconic competition that has launched academic pursuits for generations of young students. This victory marks a major milestone for the young champion, who now joins a decades-long legacy of standout spellers who have claimed the national title.

  • William Forde: AFL umpire’s mate admits he used insider information to bet on the Brownlow Medal votes

    William Forde: AFL umpire’s mate admits he used insider information to bet on the Brownlow Medal votes

    A decades-long friendship with a former Australian Football League umpire has landed a 36-year-old Melbourne man in legal trouble, after he pleaded guilty to running a two-year insider betting scheme that exploited confidential voting information for the prestigious Brownlow Medal.

    William Forde entered guilty pleas to six corruption and betting-related charges during a Friday hearing at the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court, linked to manipulated wagers placed on the 2021 and 2022 editions of the Brownlow Medal, the AFL’s highest individual honor for season-long player performance. Prosecutors agreed to withdraw 47 additional charges ahead of the plea, and the court approved an application to hear the matter through a summary proceeding rather than a full trial.

    Forde’s case is one part of a wider investigation launched by Victoria Police’s specialist sporting integrity unit, which laid charges against Forde, former umpire Michael Pell, and two other co-accused in August 2023. The court confirmed that Pell and the two other defendants are currently contesting their identical charges, with a committal hearing scheduled for next month to determine whether their cases will proceed to a full criminal trial.

    Prosecutor Greg Buchhorn outlined the Crown’s case to the court on Friday, laying out how the long-running conspiracy operated. Forde and Pell have been close since childhood, having grown up together and attended the same Melbourne schools. In 2021, Pell – who served as an umpire in AFL matches – began sharing confidential details of the three-vote selections he awarded after each game, a key component of the final Brownlow Medal vote count. Buchhorn explained that Forde recruited four additional associates to place wagers on the predetermined vote outcomes, to avoid drawing attention to the scheme.

    To cover their tracks, the syndicate adopted multiple layers of concealment: they used end-to-end encrypted messaging platforms to communicate, shared handwritten notes of vote details as image files to avoid detection, placed decoy bets on unrelated match rounds to mask their activity, and on one occasion transported thousands of dollars in cash to a regional Victorian town inside a pillowcase to avoid money tracing.

    After the full 2021 Brownlow Medal count was concluded and the winner announced, the scheme netted the group approximately AU$40,750 in illegal profits, which prosecutors allege were split between Forde, his four betting associates, and Pell.

    The conspiracy expanded in 2022, after Pell was promoted to a full-time regular field umpire position, giving him access to a greater number of vote selections ahead of the annual count. Buchhorn told the court that on August 21, 2022, just after the final round of the regular AFL season, Forde met Pell and Pell’s infant son at a public park in the Melbourne suburb of Glenroy. During that meeting, Pell passed Forde AU$27,000 earmarked for betting, as well as color-coded notes that detailed which players had received Brownlow votes in every game Pell had officiated that season.

    Profits from the 2022 round of betting exceeded the previous year’s takings, with the syndicate pulling in roughly AU$60,345 in illegal gains from bets placed directly by Forde or on his instructions.

    The operation was uncovered later that year, when betting regulators flagged suspicious wagering activity during the 2022 Brownlow count. Police arrested Forde in November 2022, and he has been on public record with charges since August 2023.

    Buchhorn told the court that during police interviews, Forde was fully forthcoming about his role in the scheme. He told investigators he had rationalized his actions by arguing that betting agencies had taken large sums of money from him through personal gambling in years prior.

    Forde’s defense attorney, Heather Anderson, told the court her client accepts the prosecution’s summary of the offending as accurate, and has expressed deep shame and genuine remorse for his actions. Anderson described Forde’s involvement as opportunistic: he simply chose to exploit confidential information shared by a close childhood friend for personal financial gain. For the three and a half years since his police interview, Anderson explained, the knowledge of his impending prosecution has hung over Forde, and he has endured significant public humiliation from widespread media coverage of the case.

    Defense counsel has argued that an appropriate sentence for Forde would be either a substantial financial penalty, or a community-based order requiring unpaid community work. The prosecution has confirmed it does not oppose this sentencing request. Magistrate Siobhan Whittle will hand down Forde’s sentence when he returns to court for a sentencing hearing on June 3.

  • Can Messi deliver again for Argentina at his final World Cup?

    Can Messi deliver again for Argentina at his final World Cup?

    It has been nearly four years since Lionel Messi etched his name into soccer immortality by lifting the FIFA World Cup trophy with Argentina in Qatar 2022, an achievement that capped what many thought would be the perfect final chapter of his legendary international career. Now, just months away from his 39th birthday, the Argentine icon is set to make history once more as he prepares to compete in a record-breaking sixth World Cup in North America, chasing an unprecedented back-to-back tournament victory that no other Argentine captain has pulled off in more than half a century.

    Messi’s 2022 campaign was nothing short of iconic: seven goals, three assists across seven matches, including a clinical brace in the unforgettable final against France, and a coolly converted penalty in the decisive shootout that secured Argentina’s third World Cup title. After that historic win, Messi himself admitted he could not have asked for a better ending to his international journey. “Obviously I wanted to finish my career with this. I can’t ask for any more,” he said in the immediate aftermath of the Doha triumph, a comment that fueled widespread speculation he would hang up his international boots soon after.

    But fueled by his enduring love for the game and a desire to continue competing as a world champion, Messi chose to extend his international career, a decision that has been widely celebrated by the Argentine camp. Head coach Lionel Scaloni has repeatedly emphasized that no replacement can ever fill the void left by arguably the greatest player to ever step onto a soccer pitch. “There can’t be. There won’t be. There won’t be an heir to Messi, for sure,” Scaloni told outlet Flashscore in September, making clear how critical the 38-year-old remains to Argentina’s title hopes.

    Critics have questioned whether Messi still has the stamina and elite edge he displayed during his peak years in European soccer. After an uneven two-year spell at Paris Saint-Germain, Messi left Europe in 2023 to join Major League Soccer side Inter Miami, meaning he no longer competes at the highest club level week in and week out; his last win in a UEFA Champions League knockout tie stretches all the way back to 2020. But the Argentine legend has shown he still has the golden touch in MLS: he helped Inter Miami lift the MLS Cup last year, and has already notched 13 goals in 16 appearances for the club in 2026. A minor hamstring injury that forced him off during a recent match against Philadelphia Union is the only question mark over his fitness ahead of the tournament, and he is on track to lead Argentina into their opening group clash against Algeria in Kansas City on June 16.

    Messi’s journey to this historic sixth World Cup began all the way back in 2006, when he made his World Cup debut as a teenager in Germany. He went on to captain Argentina to the 2014 final in Brazil, where they suffered a heart-breaking extra-time loss to Germany. Since Qatar 2022, he has added more international silverware to his cabinet, lifting the Copa America title on U.S. soil in 2024, and finished as the top scorer in South American World Cup qualifying. He is already Argentina’s all-time top goal scorer and most-capped player, and is just two matches away from hitting a remarkable 200 international caps – a milestone he could reach even before the World Cup kicks off, when Argentina plays pre-tournament friendlies against Honduras in Texas and Iceland in Alabama.

    The 39th birthday of the Argentine legend falls just three days before Argentina’s final group stage match against Jordan in Arlington, Texas, capping a historic milestone in a tournament that is widely expected to be his final World Cup. Teammate Julian Alvarez, the 26-year-old Atletico Madrid forward who was part of the 2022 title-winning squad, says the entire camp is aware of the significance of the moment. “We’re all fully aware that this could well be Leo’s last World Cup, given his age, but it’s his decision at the end of the day,” Alvarez told FIFA.com. “It’ll certainly make for a special World Cup and I don’t just mean for us, his team-mates and the Argentinian people, but for everyone who watches and follows him, given that he’s the best player of all time. He’s made a colossal impact the world over.”

    While the entire soccer world is focused on Messi’s final act, Argentina’s deep squad means the team does not have to rely solely on their ageing talisman. Alvarez himself is a world-class talent, and the squad also features a host of elite young players including Inter Milan striker Lautaro Martinez, who won the Serie A golden boot, midfield stars Enzo Fernandez and Alexis Mac Allister, defensive leader Cristian Romero, and star goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez. As proof of the team’s strength even without Messi, Argentina secured a marquee 4-1 home victory over bitter rivals Brazil in qualifying with their captain sidelined.

    Alvarez says the team’s ambition remains the same as it was in 2022, regardless of Messi’s age or status. “As an Argentinian, the excitement is always there and we always want to be crowned champions. There’s no reason for this time to be any different,” he added. For soccer fans around the world, the upcoming World Cup will be a chance to say goodbye to a legend – and to see if he can pull off one more historic miracle.

  • Football eyes NFL throne says 1994 World Cup architect

    Football eyes NFL throne says 1994 World Cup architect

    Thirty-two years after he led the groundbreaking 1994 FIFA World Cup that first cemented soccer’s place in mainstream American consciousness, 87-year-old Alan Rothenberg — the tournament’s chief architect and one of U.S. soccer’s earliest pioneers — is convinced the sport is on an irreversible trajectory to dethrone the NFL as the nation’s most popular sport.

    When the U.S. hosted its first-ever World Cup in 1994, Rothenberg recalls, soccer was widely dismissed across American media circles: derided as boring, low-scoring, and a foreign pastime that would never catch on with domestic sports fans. Speaking from his Beverly Hills home office ahead of the 2026 World Cup, where the U.S. will host the majority of matches, Rothenberg has watched that narrative flip dramatically over three decades.

    Today, Major League Soccer (MLS) boasts 30 professional franchises, drawing an average of more than 20,000 fans per game — a figure that outpaces average attendance for both the NBA and NHL. Top European competitions, including the English Premier League, now air for free on national U.S. television, bringing elite soccer to millions of households weekly.

    “Thirty years from now, I think we will have challenged, if not already overtaken, the NFL for prominence in this country,” Rothenberg told AFP. “I can’t imagine the NFL growing any further; it will eventually plateau. Mounting concerns over player injuries will slow its growth, while soccer just keeps soaring.”

    To back up his claim, Rothenberg points to a visible shift at his alma mater, the University of Michigan, a longstanding powerhouse of collegiate American football. “When I was a student, and for decades after, any open field in Ann Arbor would be full of people throwing an American football,” he explained. “Drive past those same fields today, and they’re all playing soccer.”

    Rothenberg has documented his decades-long role building U.S. soccer in a new memoir, *The Big Bounce: The Surge that Shaped the Future of US Soccer*, which traces his involvement back to the 1960s, when he helped manage the Los Angeles Wolves in the United Soccer Association, the precursor to the North American Soccer League. He later oversaw the wildly successful 1984 Los Angeles Olympic soccer tournament, which drew more than 100,000 fans to the Pasadena Rose Bowl for the gold medal match between France and Brazil.

    As CEO of the 1994 World Cup, Rothenberg led the most well-attended tournament in FIFA history, with an average match attendance of 68,991 that still stands today. He credits part of that success to the U.S. men’s national team, which defied low expectations to reach the knockout round, falling to eventual champion Brazil in the round of 16. “If our team had been an embarrassment, no matter how many tickets we sold or how much revenue we generated, there would have been a permanent dark cloud over the sport here,” he noted.

    Three decades later, Rothenberg says the pressure is off the 2026 U.S. squad, thanks to soccer’s far stronger standing in the country. “I’m confident we’ll get out of the group stage; how far we go after that depends on our development and our draw,” he said. “But I’m not worried about an embarrassment anymore — the sport has solid roots it didn’t have before. A great run will boost us even more, but a bad performance won’t kill soccer in America now.”

    On the topic of World Cup expansion, Rothenberg has broken with common critics who argue the expansion from 24 teams in 1994 to 48 teams in 2026 has diluted on-field quality. He even supports a future expansion to 64 teams, and proposes scrapping group stages entirely for a full single-elimination format that would make every match do-or-die.

    “It’s a radical idea, but it’s worth examining,” he said. “There will definitely be some blowouts, but it will also create more opportunities for Cinderella stories — underdog nations that come out of nowhere to upset top seeds, or even knock them out. That would bring a whole new level of excitement to the tournament.”

    Rothenberg also pushed back on widespread fan criticism of FIFA’s controversial 2026 ticketing model, arguing the backlash will amount to nothing more than temporary media chatter. “In the U.S., we’re already accustomed to high and dynamic pricing for major events,” he explained. “People who aren’t wealthy still spend thousands of dollars to see Taylor Swift or Bad Bunny. This just reflects the actual market. Will pricing be out of reach for some people? Yes, but that’s unfortunately the case for many things in modern society.”

  • Blue Origin rocket explodes on launch pad

    Blue Origin rocket explodes on launch pad

    On a routine ground test Thursday at the Cape Canaveral, Florida launch facility, Blue Origin’s next-generation New Glenn rocket suffered a catastrophic explosion, marking the second major setback in less than a month for Jeff Bezos’ private space exploration firm. No personnel were harmed in the incident, company representatives confirmed in the immediate aftermath of the failure.

    In a short post to social media platform X immediately after the incident, Blue Origin acknowledged that an unexpected anomaly occurred during the rocket’s hotfire test, a standard ground evaluation that involves firing the rocket’s engines while the vehicle remains anchored to the launch pad. The company also confirmed that all crew members working on the test have been accounted for and are safe.

    Footage captured at the test site shows a plume of smoke billowing from the base of the 321-foot (98-meter) heavy-lift rocket, which is the centerpiece of Blue Origin’s long-term commercial and deep-space exploration goals. Within moments, the entire lower section of the rocket ignited into a massive, billowing fireball that consumed the vehicle on the pad.

    Bezos, the billionaire founder of Blue Origin, addressed the public within hours of the explosion, acknowledging the frustrating setback while reaffirming the company’s commitment to its space development goals. “It’s too early to know the root cause but we’re already working to find it,” Bezos wrote on X. “Very rough day, but we’ll rebuild whatever needs rebuilding and get back to flying. It’s worth it.”

    Even rival SpaceX founder Elon Musk, whose company has become Blue Origin’s primary competitor in the commercial launch market, extended support following the incident, calling the failure “most unfortunate.”

    Local and federal stakeholders have also weighed in on the event. Florida Congressman Mike Haridopolos, whose congressional district includes the Cape Canaveral launch complex, confirmed he had been in direct contact with NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman to coordinate updates on the incident. Haridopolos noted in his statement that he was relieved no injuries had been reported, and thanked first responders, engineers, and launch teams for their rapid, professional response to the emergency.

    Blue Origin is a key partner to NASA on the agency’s flagship Artemis program, which aims to return the first humans to the lunar surface in more than 50 years. The company is developing a crewed lunar lander for the program under a multi-billion dollar contract with NASA. Isaacman confirmed that NASA leadership was aware of the test failure, and acknowledged the inherent risks of developing next-generation launch technology.

    “Spaceflight is unforgiving, and developing new heavy-lift launch capability is extraordinarily difficult,” Isaacman wrote on X. “We will work with our partners to support a thorough investigation of this anomaly, assess near-term mission impacts, and get back to launching rockets.”

    Thursday’s explosion is the latest problem to hit the New Glenn program in just four weeks. Last month, the rocket’s first operational launch failed to deliver a commercial communications satellite for AST SpaceMobile to its target correct orbit, despite successfully recovering and reusing the rocket’s first stage booster.

    Following that launch failure, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) ordered Blue Origin to conduct a full mishap investigation, which the company wrapped up earlier this month. On May 22, Blue Origin announced that the FAA had approved its final investigation report for the NG-3 mission, and that all required corrective actions had been implemented. The investigation found that off-nominal thermal conditions prevented one of the rocket’s engines from reaching full thrust during flight, leading to the missed orbit target.

    The New Glenn rocket is designed to be a reusable heavy-lift launch vehicle targeted at both commercial satellite launch contracts and NASA deep-space exploration missions, with Blue Origin positioning it to compete directly with SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy and Starship launch systems.

  • Bluesky accounts hijacked in pro-Russia propaganda campaign

    Bluesky accounts hijacked in pro-Russia propaganda campaign

    A large-scale Russian influence operation has leveraged hundreds of hijacked user accounts on the social platform Bluesky to spread pro-Kremlin propaganda aimed at eroding international support for Ukraine, cybersecurity and disinformation researchers have confirmed. What makes this campaign unusual is its departure from the standard playbook of using fraudulent fake accounts; instead, operatives weaponized the existing verified identities of real, often influential users to push anti-Ukraine messaging, marking a concerning new evolution in Kremlin-aligned disinformation tactics.

    Researchers from Clemson University have tied the operation to Social Design Agency (SDA), a Moscow-based firm already sanctioned by Western governments for coordinated information warfare. The campaign specifically targeted high-profile users including working journalists, academics, and documentary filmmakers, with many of those affected being prominent figures based in the United States.

    Multiple affected users have publicly confirmed the unauthorized activity on their accounts. Alex Ward, a reporter for *The Wall Street Journal*, reported on Bluesky that unknown actors had gained access to his profile and posted an unapproved story framing France and Ukraine in a negative light. Ward later confirmed he had reclaimed control of his account and the problematic post had been removed. Ward was not the only *Wall Street Journal* reporter affected: a database of compromised accounts compiled by an independent internet monitor tracking Russian influence operations, which was shared with AFP by a Clemson researcher, includes at least one other staff member from the outlet. Other confirmed targets include Jake Tucker, editorial director of the PC Gaming Show, who reported his account was compromised, temporarily banned, and eventually recovered; independent filmmaker Mary Beth McAndrews; and academic Ben Gilbert.

    Darren Linvill, a disinformation researcher at Clemson University who tracks Kremlin-aligned operations, told AFP that while malicious actors have used stolen or hacked accounts for disinformation for years, this operation stands out for its level of targeting and unprecedented scale for Russian operatives. “I’ve personally never seen Russia use hacked accounts at this scale before,” Linvill said. While the exact total number of compromised accounts remains unclear, as Bluesky has already removed many propaganda posts and suspended affected accounts pending recovery by their owners, Linvill confirmed he has personally tracked at least a couple of hundred hacked accounts linked to the campaign, and noted the true figure is almost certainly higher.

    Bluesky’s safety team has released official details about the operation, confirming that the platform’s core infrastructure was not breached. Instead, individual accounts were compromised using login credentials that had already been leaked in third-party data breaches from other services. The team noted that most of the affected accounts were older, inactive profiles, though a number of regularly active accounts were also caught up in the compromise. The platform added that it has already removed 4,907 accounts tied to state-backed influence operations so far in 2025, roughly twice the number removed in the whole of 2024. This campaign marks the first time state-backed influence operatives have attempted this tactic of compromising real accounts on Bluesky, the team confirmed.

    Clemson researchers link SDA’s operation to a long-running Kremlin disinformation campaign codenamed Matryoshka, after the Russian nested doll, which is well-known among disinformation experts for its impersonation-based tactics. Joseph Bodnar, senior research manager at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, explained that Matryoshka has a track record of stealing official branding from established media outlets, government agencies, and private companies, and using artificial intelligence to clone the voices of public figures including celebrities, law enforcement officials, academics, and journalists to spread false messaging. “Hacking into accounts to post content using someone else’s identity is a logical next step for an operation that appears to have a lot of resources and no ethical constraints,” Bodnar added.

    The SDA is already a known target of Western sanctions: the United States, European Union, and United Kingdom have all imposed punitive measures on the firm for its repeated information warfare campaigns targeting democratic institutions. Earlier this month, the UK’s Foreign Office imposed new sanctions on 49 individuals employed by SDA, including writers, translators, and video producers responsible for creating and distributing deceptive pro-Kremlin propaganda. “The SDA has been tasked and funded by the Kremlin to deliver a series of interference operations designed to undermine democracy and weaken support for Ukraine,” the UK Foreign Office said in its official statement.

    Despite the tactical sophistication of the operation, researchers and platform officials agree that its actual real-world impact has been extremely limited. Bluesky’s safety team confirmed that the average propaganda post from compromised accounts received only around 50 views before it was detected and removed. Bodnar noted that this limited reach aligns with the broader goals of Matryoshka, which prioritizes shaping public perception of conflict rather than actually persuading large online audiences. “Sophistication isn’t impact,” Bodnar said. “Matryoshka’s impact is driven more by public perception than by its ability to persuade audiences online. It’s a perception hack.”

  • Former PM Tony Abbott elected federal Liberal Party president

    Former PM Tony Abbott elected federal Liberal Party president

    Australia’s former prime minister Tony Abbott has secured the position of president of the country’s federal Liberal Party after being nominated for the role without any challengers. In remarks delivered to party loyalists during a meeting of the Liberal Party’s federal council on Friday, Abbott framed his return to a top internal party role as a debt repayment and a responsibility he could not shirk.

    The one-time Member for Warringah, who led the center-right Coalition to a federal election victory in 2013, said he owed the party an enormous debt, and that he viewed accepting the presidency as his duty to serve during what he called a period of “existential crisis” for the party. As the last person to successfully lead the Coalition as opposition leader to an election win, Abbott argued he is uniquely positioned to help current Opposition Leader Angus Taylor replicate that success, and eventually become Australia’s 32nd prime minister.

    While Abbott reiterated that Australia remains the greatest nation on Earth, he warned that the country is sliding backward. He cited stagnant economic growth, deepening social divisions, growing threats to national security, and a widespread underlying “spiritual malaise” as core problems facing the nation. For the modern Liberal Party, he added, the central challenge is rebuilding trust with a skeptical electorate to prove it is a credible alternative to the current government — a goal he said he believes the party is fully capable of achieving.

    “We remain the best hope of better government in this country, the better government that we so desperately need right now,” Abbott said, thanking Taylor for the opportunity to return to a formal leadership role within the party.

    The former prime minister’s appointment has not been without controversy, drawing sharp criticism from old political rivals who warn the move could shift the party even further to the ideological right. Fellow former Liberal prime minister Malcolm Turnbull — whose tumultuous political history with Abbott includes Abbott ousting him as opposition leader in 2009, followed by Turnbull toppling Abbott in a 2015 leadership spill — dismissed early rumors of Abbott’s nomination by saying he was “clearly a masochist” for seeking the role, before acknowledging Abbott’s longstanding commitment to Australian politics.

    Turnbull went further to warn against a further rightward shift for the Liberal Party, noting that repeated election results have sent a clear message that a large share of the electorate already believes the party has moved too far right. “They’re basically arguing that the Liberal Party’s mistake has been not being right-wing enough, despite every election sending them the message that a significant part of the electorate feel they have gone too far to the right,” Turnbull told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC).

    Independent MP Zali Steggall, who defeated Abbott in his long-held Warringah seat during the 2019 federal election, echoed Turnbull’s criticism. She argued that Abbott’s appointment proves the Liberal Party has failed to learn key lessons from its poor performance in the last three consecutive national elections. Steggall emphasized that moderate, rational Australian voters are hungry for constructive policy solutions, not the ideological culture wars and partisan blame games she linked to Abbott’s leadership style. “It’s clear that the Australian public, the sensible public, wants rational policies. They don’t want culture wars. They don’t want blame game. They want something constructive,” she told the ABC.

    Abbott’s ascension comes as the Liberal Party grapples with internal ideological tensions and low poll numbers following three straight election defeats, making his new role as the top party leader a high-stakes test for the future direction of Australia’s main conservative political force.

  • Chinese FM attends meeting of Group of Friends of Global Governance

    Chinese FM attends meeting of Group of Friends of Global Governance

    NEW YORK — On Thursday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi took the stage at the Group of Friends of Global Governance meeting hosted at United Nations headquarters, laying out a clear vision for updating global governance frameworks and advancing targeted reform of the UN system amid growing global geopolitical and institutional turbulence. Wang, who also serves as a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, opened his address by framing the overhaul of global governance systems as a defining, generational responsibility that requires sustained commitment and unwavering collective purpose from the international community.

    A core priority Wang emphasized was reform to strengthen the United Nations itself. He clarified that the ultimate goal of any UN restructuring is to reinforce the world body’s capacity to serve its member states, not undermine its central role in global affairs. He added that all reform processes must be member-state led, and adhere to core principles of fairness, inclusivity, and full transparency. A critical outcome of this reform, Wang argued, should be a more efficient United Nations overall and a more authoritative, capable Security Council that can deliver on its core mandate of maintaining global peace and security.

    Wang also highlighted the urgent need to elevate the representation and voice of developing nations, as well as small and medium-sized states, in global governance structures. He specifically called for redressing long-standing historical injustices that have marginalized African countries in international institutional decision-making.

    Beyond core UN reform, Wang outlined a broad agenda for updating global governance across multiple critical domains. He called for adapting UN peacekeeping operations to align with evolving 21st-century security challenges, building broad international consensus around accelerated inclusive global development, guiding global human rights governance onto a fair, balanced path, and advancing deep reform of the global economic and financial system to better reflect contemporary global economic realities. He also pushed for the creation of formal, multilateral rules for artificial intelligence governance, stronger coordinated governance frameworks for emerging strategic domains including cyberspace and outer space, and expanded people-to-people and cultural exchanges between civilizations to reduce global tensions.

    Speaking to the role of the Group of Friends of Global Governance itself, Wang noted that the grouping has emerged as a critical stabilizing force and voice for fairness in an increasingly fragmented and unpredictable global landscape. He called for greater investment in and utilization of this multilateral platform to advance collective governance priorities. Wang reaffirmed that China will remain a steadfast advocate of multilateralism, and will continue to contribute its own domestic governance experience to strengthen collective global governance efforts.

    The meeting drew participation from foreign ministers and senior diplomatic representatives from more than 60 countries across the globe, including Pakistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, Cuba, and Zimbabwe. UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed delivered a briefing to attendees ahead of discussions on global governance priorities.

  • With a stalemate in Ukraine and discontent at home, Putin seems ready to escalate his war

    With a stalemate in Ukraine and discontent at home, Putin seems ready to escalate his war

    After nearly five years of conflict in Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin is plotting a major narrative shift to reverse mounting domestic pressures and a grinding battlefield stalemate that has stalled Moscow’s military advances across the front line.

    Multiple independent analysts and on-the-ground developments indicate Putin is preparing to sharply ramp up large-scale aerial assaults on Ukraine’s capital Kyiv, a strategic gambit designed to shore up slipping domestic approval ratings and convince a war-weary Russian public that Moscow is on track to victory. Recent official warnings from the Kremlin of “consistent and systematic” missile strikes against Kyiv, paired with an extraordinary demand for foreign embassies to evacuate their diplomatic staff from the capital, confirm the Russian leader’s willingness to escalate despite massive operational costs and certain widespread international backlash.

    This hardening posture has been underscored by large-scale nuclear force drills held by Russia earlier this month, as well as a string of increasingly belligerent statements warning European allies of Kyiv that they face direct retaliation for what the Kremlin frames as their direct involvement in Ukrainian cross-border drone attacks.

    The current military landscape paints a stark picture of Moscow’s stalled ambitions. Following limited territorial gains secured by Russian forces in 2023, advances along the roughly 1,000-kilometer front line have ground to a near-complete halt. In contrast, Ukraine’s armed forces have mounted increasingly effective counterstrikes, reclaimed swathes of occupied territory, and shifted the character of the conflict in their favor, according to a recent analysis from the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War. The think tank noted that Russian offensive momentum has fully stagnated, while Ukrainian forces have adopted innovative tactics and new operational frameworks to break out of the costly positional warfare that has defined much of the past two years of fighting.

    This battlefield gridlock has directly undermined Putin’s core stated military goal: the full capture of Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region, which remains partially under Kyiv’s control. Ukrainian officials have flatly rejected Moscow’s demand that Kyiv withdraw from all occupied Donbas territory as a precondition for any ceasefire negotiation.

    Parallel to its ground advances, Ukraine has dramatically expanded the scope and scale of its long-range strikes deep inside Russian territory, targeting key energy infrastructure and arms manufacturing facilities to inflict mounting economic and military damage. Just weeks ago, Putin was forced to scale back Moscow’s annual May 9 Victory Day parade—one of the Kremlin’s most high-profile domestic patriotic events—over credible fears of a Ukrainian drone attack. Days after the truncated parade, a large-scale drone assault on Moscow’s outer suburbs killed three people, proving that even Russia’s heavily defended capital is not immune to Ukrainian strikes. The attack shattered the Kremlin’s long-running domestic narrative that the war remains a distant conflict that does not disrupt daily life for ordinary Russians.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy emphasized that these deep strikes are “significantly changing the situation — and, more broadly, the world’s perception of Russia’s war.” In a direct acknowledgement of the growing threat from Ukrainian deep attacks, Russian lawmakers recently approved new legislation requiring Russian commercial banks to cover the full cost of installing drone-jamming equipment on their own properties, rather than shifting that expense to the Russian military.

    Thomas Withington, a senior analyst at London’s Royal United Services Institute, warned that “from Russia’s perspective, these attacks are just going to get worse.” He added that Ukraine’s increasingly bold drone operations are “exacting not only a political but an economic cost in Russia.”

    Beyond the battlefield, the prolonged conflict has taken a severe toll on Russia’s domestic economy and public morale. The short-term economic boost from massive wartime military spending has faded, leaving Russia with stagnating overall growth. To contain a growing budget deficit, the Kremlin has been forced to raise domestic taxes and increase government borrowing. While windfall oil revenues from the ongoing Iran war have temporarily eased fiscal pressures, structural economic challenges continue to build.

    Nigel Gould-Davies, a Russia expert at the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies, explained in a recent analysis that “war-fueled high prices of capital, labor and goods, as well as rising taxes, have begun to depress the civilian sectors,” resulting in “a dual economy of overheated military output and civilian stagnation.”

    Though Russia has relied on volunteer enlistment driven by comparatively high combat wages to sustain its force levels, Gould-Davies noted that emerging data shows this incentive model is losing effectiveness, and Russia is now losing more troops than it is able to recruit to front line units. To maintain current force levels, he argued the Kremlin will eventually be forced to implement a new round of forced mobilization of both human and material resources, a step that will require the government to “curtail the last remaining post-Soviet market freedoms, labor freedom, and freedom of movement.”

    Signs of growing domestic discontent are already emerging, even among circles previously loyal to the Kremlin. A number of pro-Kremlin social media influencers have begun openly criticizing government wartime policies, while recent moves to restrict mobile internet access and block widely used civilian messaging apps have disrupted daily routines for millions of Russians, sparking widespread public grumbling. Natalya Kasperskaya, one of Russia’s most prominent tech entrepreneurs and a longstanding Kremlin supporter, issued a rare public rebuke of internet restrictions and VPN blocking, warning that the policies are inflicting catastrophic damage on Russia’s domestic technology sector.

    Tatyana Stanovaya, a leading independent Russia analyst and founder of the Kremlin-focused R.Politik newsletter, observed that the combination of spreading Ukrainian drone strikes, disruptive internet restrictions, and rising taxes has gradually eroded Putin’s domestic political standing. While she noted Putin faces no immediate threat to his hold on power, “the gradual fading of Putin’s credibility is real.”

    Early spring opinion polling in Russia, including one survey conducted by a state-run pollster, recorded a clear dip in Putin’s approval ratings. While the state poll recorded a small uptick in ratings in May after switching its methodology to conduct face-to-face interviews, many independent observers believe official numbers are inflated amid a widespread crackdown on all forms of anti-government dissent.

    Alexander Baunov, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, wrote in a recent commentary that “Putin is losing his magic. Power remains undivided in his hands, but its spell is fading. Even loyalists complain about the mounting restrictions and repression, and once-upbeat businesspeople are now despondent.”

    The current round of Russian escalation follows a May 22 Ukrainian drone attack on a college dormitory in Russian-occupied eastern Ukraine, which Moscow claims killed 21 people. In retaliation, Putin ordered a massive missile barrage against Kyiv and its surrounding region. The Sunday strike, which marked the first combat use of Russia’s new hypersonic Oreshnik missile, killed two civilians, injured dozens more, and destroyed or damaged dozens of residential and commercial buildings.

    The day after the attack, the Russian Foreign Ministry announced that Moscow would launch “consistent and systematic” strikes on Kyiv targeting Ukrainian drone manufacturing facilities and what it called “decision-making centers.” It repeated its demand that all foreign diplomats evacuate the capital, a demand that has been uniformly rejected by Ukraine’s Western allies.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov held a call with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio to warn of the coming escalation and push for U.S. diplomatic evacuation. “The danger in all of these wars as they continue and then they go on is that they always have the threat of escalation, of spreading into something new,” Rubio told reporters after the call.

    The ongoing Iran war has paused U.S. diplomatic mediation efforts in Ukraine and drained American stockpiles of air defense missiles, delaying delivery of the U.S.-made Patriot air defense systems that Ukraine desperately needs to fend off Russian aerial assaults. Moscow-based independent military analyst Sergei Poletaev explained that Russia views this air defense gap in Kyiv as a unique window of opportunity. “Kyiv’s air defenses have been exhausted enough to make a massive attack efficient,” he noted in a recent analysis.

    Alongside the planned blitz on Kyiv, Russia has issued a wave of new threats targeting Ukraine’s European NATO allies. The Russian Defense Ministry published a public list of European facilities it claims are involved in producing drones and drone components for Ukraine, while Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service warned the Baltic states that their NATO membership will not shield them from Russian retaliation if they allow Ukraine to launch cross-border strikes from their territory. All targeted allies have outright rejected Moscow’s claims.

    Dmitry Polyansky, Russia’s permanent envoy to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, warned in a recent statement that “we are actually very, very close to direct military confrontation” between Russia and the Western alliance.