作者: admin

  • Activists raise alarm over ‘flood’ of military supplies from India to Israel

    Activists raise alarm over ‘flood’ of military supplies from India to Israel

    A coalition of pro-Palestinian advocacy groups — the global Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement and No Harbour for Genocide (NHFG) — has sounded a urgent alarm over a surge of military-grade material shipments from India to Israeli weapons manufacturers, uncovering six separate consignments of military-spec steel that activists say are destined for artillery production for the Israeli military.

    The six shipments, tracked by the coalition, collectively total roughly 806 tonnes of military-grade steel. Activists calculate this volume is sufficient to manufacture up to 17,458 155mm artillery shells, a core ammunition type used extensively by the Israeli military in its ongoing campaigns in Gaza and Lebanon. Three of the shipments, transported by Geneva-based global shipping giant Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC), are currently detained at Italian ports: two in Calabria’s Gioia Tauro and one in Cagliari, Sardinia. Activists are escalating pressure on Italian authorities to conduct full inspections of the cargo. MSC has not responded to multiple requests for comment from Middle East Eye (MEE) on the matter. The remaining three shipments were diverted away from Mediterranean routes and rerouted to Sri Lanka, with shippers reportedly searching for an alternative path to deliver the cargo to Israel, according to the coalition.

    Activists have confirmed all six shipments originate from R L Steels & Energy Limited, a firm based in Aurangabad, India, and are ultimately bound for a key ammunition production facility owned by Elbit Systems Land (formerly IMI Systems) in Ramat Hasharon, Israel. The $1 million worth of cargo departed India’s Jawaharlal Nehru Port in Maharashtra between January and March 2026. This is not the first time the Indian firm has supplied military material to Israeli arms manufacturers: in October 2025, R L Steels delivered 125 tonnes of military-grade steel to Israel as part of a larger 440-tonne military cargo that also included 175 tonnes of 155mm artillery shell bodies and 140 tonnes of mortar component parts, according to prior reporting from The Ditch.

    Ilham Yaseen, military embargo coordinator for the BDS movement, told MEE that the series of shipments expose what the movement calls a ‘flood’ of military supplies flowing from India to Israel amid ongoing Israeli military campaigns. Founded in 2005, BDS organizes nonviolent pressure campaigns to push Israel to comply with international law. Yaseen said the movement is demanding global pressure to block these shipments from reaching Israeli forces, and to hold both India’s far-right national government and any complicit Indian private firms accountable for facilitating what the movement calls Israeli atrocity crimes in Palestinian and Lebanese territories.

    Activists emphasize that the shipments come in a clear context: India has stepped in to fill critical gaps in Israeli military supply chains that have emerged over 2.5 years of active conflict in Gaza, despite a 2024 International Court of Justice ruling that calls on all UN member states to avoid any action that could support Israel’s military campaign, which has been formally recognized as genocide by the United Nations, hundreds of genocide scholars, and leading global human rights organizations. Since the outbreak of full-scale war in October 2023, more than 200,000 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed or injured, and activists note that even amid a recent temporary ceasefire, what they describe as a ‘slow-motion genocide’ continues in the besieged enclave. Israeli military operations in southern Lebanon have also killed more than 3,000 people since hostilities escalated in 2025.

    A NHFG spokesperson explained that while Israel maintains a large domestic military industrial complex, it relies on imported raw materials for large-scale ammunition production. ‘This military steel is going directly to the Ramat Hasharon ammunition plant, which produces no civilian goods — 100 percent of its output is for military use,’ the spokesperson confirmed. The Ramat Hasharon facility was previously scheduled for permanent closure, but the urgent need for uninterrupted artillery production amid the current conflicts has led the Israeli government to keep it open and even ramp up output, according to activists.

    Israel’s demand for 155mm artillery shells surged immediately after the October 7, 2023 Hamas attacks on southern Israel: Israeli forces fired more than 100,000 shells into Gaza and Lebanon in the first few months of the conflict alone, depleting stockpiles so rapidly that the Israeli government requested emergency additional shipments of 155mm rounds from the United States as early as mid-October 2023. India has a well-documented recent history of expanding military shipments to Israel: in early 2024, New Delhi delivered Indian-assembled Hermes 900 drones to Israel, followed by multiple shipments of other military equipment including rockets. NHFG says the newly tracked steel shipments are critical to helping Israel resolve its ongoing 155mm shell shortfall.

    India’s federal government has already faced sustained criticism from domestic and international civil society for its ongoing military trade with Israel. New Delhi abstained from a April 2024 United Nations Human Rights Council vote that called for a global arms embargo on Israel, and in September 2025, the Indian Supreme Court immediately dismissed a petition filed by Indian activists and lawyers seeking a formal ban on all arms shipments to Israel.

    Yaseen noted that imposing a military embargo on Israel at this juncture is both a moral and legal obligation for all states, adding: ‘India was once a global leader advancing UN principles and multilateralism rooted in justice, freedom, and equality. Today, its far-right government has turned India into a world leader in arming genocide and apartheid.’

    Activists also uncovered evidence that shippers have deliberately structured the supply chain to obscure the origin and final destination of the cargo. Four of the six shipments share identical export codes and product grades, and are routed through a procurement intermediary called Banyan Group International (BGI), a firm that markets itself as a bridge connecting Israeli companies seeking to source raw materials from Indian suppliers. BGI did not respond to MEE’s request for comment. Activists say the use of intermediaries is a deliberate tactic to separate the end Israeli buyer from the Indian source of the material to avoid scrutiny.

    As activists began tracking the MSC-chartered vessels carrying the cargo starting in February 2026, shippers have repeatedly altered routes and moved between ports to avoid detection, echoing tactics documented in an April 2026 NHFG report that found Greek shipping firms have hidden military cargo destinations and disabled vessel tracking systems to bypass Turkey’s official trade embargo on Israel. The current shipments have already faced widespread opposition across Europe: Spanish authorities initially blocked one vessel from docking, Portuguese parliamentarians raised formal questions about a port call in Sines, and Greek dockworkers refused to unload the suspected cargo, before three shipments were ultimately detained in Italy for potential inspection.

  • Watermelons and Handala: Germany outlines symbols of ‘secular pro-Palestinian extremism’

    Watermelons and Handala: Germany outlines symbols of ‘secular pro-Palestinian extremism’

    Germany’s Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV), the country’s domestic domestic intelligence service, has released a controversial new dossier categorizing grassroots secular pro-Palestinian organizing within Germany as a form of extremism, triggering widespread debate over civil liberties, political speech, and the country’s official policy toward the Israel-Gaza conflict.

    The document outlines three core focus areas: the alleged ties between antisemitism and secular pro-Palestinian extremism, common symbols and markers used by activist groups, and cross-ideological networking between pro-Palestinian organizers, left-wing extremists and Islamists. BfV notes that the movement is highly diverse, made up of long-standing established groups as well as newer formations that emerged following the October 7, 2023 attacks led by Hamas. According to the dossier, all these factions are united by what BfV frames as inherent hostility toward Israel, regularly rejecting the country’s right to exist and spreading rhetoric that runs counter to norms of international understanding.

    The report specifically calls out pro-Palestinian protests against Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, noting that in Berlin, the epicenter of German pro-Palestinian activism, events frequently feature anti-Israel and occasionally antisemitic statements and displays. The dossier names the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) and the global Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement as key “relevant actors,” claiming that even groups that publicly support a two-state solution implicitly endorse terrorist activity by Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), and the PFLP, and frame the October 7 attacks as legitimate resistance. It also warns that so-called extremist Palestinian individuals are driving rising radicalization and increasing willingness to use violence.

    In its section on protest symbols, BfV even frames widely used pro-Palestinian messaging as evidence of extremism. The popular slogan “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” and the sliced watermelon symbol — which uses the fruit’s red, green, black and white colors to echo the Palestinian flag, often as a subtle nod to Palestinian solidarity when public display of the flag is restricted — are both labeled as attempts to deny Israel’s right to exist. “The outline of the entire State of Israel is depicted in the colours of the Palestinian flag (as a sliced watermelon), thereby denying Israel’s right to exist,” the report reads. The dossier also alleges that pro-Palestinian extremists act as a unifying ideological bridge between disparate extremist factions across the political and religious spectrum, from Islamist groups to German and Turkish left-wing and even right-wing extremist networks, exploiting the humanitarian crisis in Gaza to radicalize mainstream civil society. The report only mentions the word “genocide” once when referring to accusations against Israel, referring to the death of more than 73,000 Palestinians and widespread destruction of Gaza simply as the “situation.” Notably, the BfV’s broad claims of antisemitism and extremism are not backed by specific cited examples in the document.

    The release of the dossier comes as German law enforcement has already waged a sweeping crackdown on pro-Palestinian demonstrations across the country, with broad political backing rooted in Germany’s official “Staatsräson” — a core state principle that enshrines unconditional support for Israel as a central part of German national identity, a commitment tied to the country’s Nazi-era history of the Holocaust that killed six million Jews. In recent months, Berlin police have repeatedly broken up peaceful pro-Palestinian gatherings, arresting dozens of demonstrators including minor protesters. Video footage from multiple days of actions in April 2026 shows officers forcibly dragging non-violent protesters to the ground and aggressively restraining them, with no evidence of protester violence prior to police intervention.

    One protester interviewed by Middle East Eye, whose reporting first documented the crackdown, said demonstrators have faced ongoing repression simply for their Palestinian identity and opposition to Israel’s military campaign. “They [have been] arrest[ing] us for three years until now,” the protester said. “Just because we are Palestinian, and they are committed to a genocide. They are fascism.”

    The repression extends beyond street protests. In March 2026, families and legal representatives of anti-arms trade activists who were arrested for breaking into a facility run by Israel’s largest weapons manufacturer in Germany accused authorities of subjecting the detainees to extreme solitary confinement under harsh, restrictive prison conditions.

    Germany’s unwavering political support for Israel has shaped both its domestic and foreign policy in recent years. Berlin is the world’s second-largest arms supplier to Israel, trailing only the United States. While Berlin briefly paused some arms transfers in October 2025 after Israel launched its ground offensive to seize full control of Gaza City, shipments resumed just one month later. In April 2026, Germany joined Italy to block a joint motion put forward by Spain, Ireland, and Slovenia at the EU level to suspend the bloc’s trade agreement with Israel over its conduct in Gaza. German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul dismissed the proposal as inappropriate, arguing that critical conversations about Gaza must happen through constructive dialogue with Israel rather than punitive measures.

    The BfV’s core claim that pro-Palestinian activism amounts to extremism because it rejects Israel’s right to exist has also sparked legal and political pushback. International law scholars note that while defenders of Israel regularly invoke the country’s right to exist, no provision of international law guarantees this right to any sovereign state; statehood is widely recognized as a political reality rather than a legally granted status. Critics also argue that the BfV’s framing conflates criticism of Israeli government policy with antisemitism, noting that the agency’s claim that activists fail to distinguish between the Israeli state and global Jewish communities echoes the very conflation it accuses protesters of making. Since the start of Israel’s current military campaign in Gaza, the country has expanded its territorial control through force, having already displaced 750,000 Palestinians during its founding in 1948. Today, Israeli forces occupy more than half of the Gaza Strip and have advanced into southern Lebanon, redrawing de facto borders across the region.

  • ‘Too dangerous to ever be free’ – Utah mother who poisoned husband sentenced to life

    ‘Too dangerous to ever be free’ – Utah mother who poisoned husband sentenced to life

    In a shocking case that blurred the lines between public grief and alleged criminal violence, 36-year-old Kouri Richins, a Utah mother of three who penned a bestselling children’s book about coping with loss after her husband’s 2022 death, has been sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for his aggravated murder.

    A jury delivered a guilty verdict in March 2026, concluding that Richins poisoned her husband Eric Richins by slipping the powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl into one of his drinks. The sentencing, handed down on Wednesday, fell on what would have been Eric Richins’ 44th birthday, adding an extra layer of gravity to the court proceedings. Third District Judge Richard Mrazi emphasized the severity of Richins’ crimes in his sentencing statement, noting that a person convicted of such premeditated, harmful acts poses an unacceptable danger to the public if ever released.

    Prosecutors laid out a clear motive during the weeks-long trial that captured national attention. They told the court that Richins had accumulated millions of dollars in unsustainable personal debt, taken out multiple life insurance policies on her husband without his full knowledge, and was engaged in an extramarital affair. In addition to the murder conviction, the jury found her guilty of fraudulent insurance fraud after she wrongfully collected death benefits following Eric’s death at the couple’s home outside Park City, a popular ski resort town. Prosecutors also confirmed that Richins wrongly expected to inherit her husband’s entire estate, valued at more than $4 million, and had already made plans to build a new life with her extramarital partner. She was additionally convicted of attempted murder for a separate earlier incident where prosecutors say she laced Eric’s sandwich with poison in a first attempt to kill him.

    The case took a particularly jarring turn with the publication of Richins’ children’s picture book *Are You With Me?*, released in January 2023, just two months before her arrest. Richins marketed the book as a resource to help children and families navigate grief after losing a loved one, saying it was inspired by her own experience as a young widow raising three children alone. In a pre-arrest interview with local radio station KPCW, Richins said she hoped the book would bring comfort to her own family and other households going through similar loss, and she dedicated the book to Eric, calling him “my amazing husband and a wonderful father.”

    Richins, who chose not to testify during her trial, addressed the court for roughly 30 minutes during Wednesday’s sentencing hearing, directing most of her comments to her three children, according to CBS News, which partners with the BBC on U.S. crime coverage. “I know today you don’t want to speak to me and you hate me. That’s OK. When you are ready, I will be here for you,” she told her children in a emotional statement.

    The case has sparked widespread discussion about the manipulation of public sympathy and the hidden layers of domestic violence that often go unseen until a fatal outcome.

  • Alberta judge tosses out petition for province to separate from Canada

    Alberta judge tosses out petition for province to separate from Canada

    In a landmark ruling that underscores the centrality of Indigenous land rights in Canadian constitutional politics, an Alberta judge has dismissed a bid to hold a province-wide referendum on Alberta’s separation from Canada. The decision came after several Indigenous First Nations groups argued that proceeding with the independence vote without meaningful consultation would directly violate their inherent territorial rights.

    According to Canadian public broadcaster CBC, Justice Shaina Leonard delivered the ruling Wednesday at an Edmonton courthouse, bringing an end to the latest push by separatist organizers to advance their long-held goal of breaking away from the Canadian federation. The petition was led by Stay Free Alberta, a grassroots separatist group that claimed to have collected more than 300,000 signatures – a threshold that would have legally required the province to schedule a binding referendum on independence. Leonard had already paused the official signature verification process while she reviewed the First Nations’ legal challenge, ahead of Wednesday’s final ruling.

    In her dual rulings released this week, Leonard found that the Alberta provincial government failed in its legal duty to consult four affected Indigenous nations: the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation, Blood Tribe, Piikani Nation, and Siksika Nation. Indigenous advocates have long argued that any separation initiative would redraw territorial boundaries and reconfigure land governance without the free, prior, and informed consent of the First Nations who have inhabited and governed those lands since time immemorial.

    The push for Alberta separation is rooted in decades of growing resentment toward the federal government in Ottawa, particularly among segments of the province’s population. Frustration has centered most sharply on disputes over natural resource development: many Albertans argue that successive federal Liberal governments have prioritized national climate policy at the expense of the province’s lucrative oil and gas sector, blocking critical pipeline projects and imposing regulations that have stunted industry growth.

    Separatist sentiment has also been fueled by a widespread belief among Albertans that the province, which holds vast fossil fuel and mineral wealth, contributes far more to federal tax revenues than it receives back in national transfers and public investment. Many residents also argue that eastern Canadian political elites consistently disregard western priorities, deepening a cultural and political rift that has widened in recent years.

    What was once a marginal fringe movement only a decade ago has grown steadily in traction over the last 12 months, pushing the threat of a national unity crisis higher on Canada’s political agenda. While the Alberta separatist movement remains fragmented, with no single unified leadership or platform, most supporters agree that the province needs far greater autonomy over its natural resource management and domestic policy agenda, regardless of whether full separation is achieved.

    Wednesday’s ruling marks a major legal setback for the separatist movement, prioritizing Indigenous rights over a popular grassroots push for political self-determination and setting a new precedent for future separation initiatives in the country.

  • Trump and Xi set for high-stakes talks in Beijing

    Trump and Xi set for high-stakes talks in Beijing

    Eight years after his last visit to China, U.S. President Donald Trump touched down in Beijing Wednesday evening for a two-day high-stakes leadership summit, marking the first trip by a sitting U.S. president to the Chinese capital since 2017. Welcomed with traditional ceremonial fanfare, including a red carpet greeting and 300 uniformed Chinese youth chanting welcome and waving both national flags as the U.S. leader pumped his fist descending from Air Force One, the lavish opening sets the stage for discussions on a host of thorny issues that have split the world’s two largest economies and nuclear powers.

    Trump’s traveling delegation includes some of America’s most high-profile business leaders, headlined by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and Tesla CEO Elon Musk — names the president has highlighted as symbols of the commercial breakthroughs he aims to secure during the meetings. On Thursday morning, Chinese leader Xi Jinping will formally greet Trump at Beijing’s opulent Great Hall of the People, followed by an official state banquet that evening. After the summit, Trump is scheduled to tour the Temple of Heaven, a centuries-old UNESCO World Heritage Site that once served as the ceremonial worship site for Chinese imperial dynasties, before holding informal talks, a tea gathering and working lunch with Xi on Friday ahead of his departure back to Washington.

    This summit was originally scheduled for March, but was delayed by the escalating conflict around Iran, a sticking point that will still top the bilateral agenda. Most of Iran’s oil exports, which are sanctioned by the United States, currently flow to China, and Trump has confirmed the two leaders will hold a lengthy discussion on the issue, even as he downplays the need for Chinese cooperation on Washington’s policy toward Tehran.

    Trade tensions, the longest-running source of friction between the two nations, will also be a core focus of the talks. Following Trump’s 2017 visit, the U.S. rolled out sweeping tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars worth of Chinese goods, triggering a tit-for-tat trade war that saw retaliatory levies push combined duties to over 100% on many cross-border goods. The two leaders reached a one-year truce on tariffs during an October meeting in South Korea, and this week they are expected to negotiate an extension of that pause — though negotiators on both sides have cautioned a final agreement is far from guaranteed.

    Trump has pinned his approach to the talks on his self-described close personal rapport with Xi, telling reporters ahead of the trip he expects a “great big hug” from the Chinese leader, who he has long praised for his firm governing style. Top on the president’s commercial priority list are new trade deals covering U.S. agricultural exports, aircraft sales and wider market access for American companies. Aboard Air Force One en route to Beijing, Trump wrote on social media that he would press Xi to “open up” China’s markets to U.S. firms, saying “these brilliant people can work their magic” given fair access.

    For its part, the Chinese foreign ministry struck a constructive tone ahead of the summit, releasing a statement Wednesday saying Beijing “welcomes” Trump’s visit and stands ready to work with Washington to expand bilateral cooperation and productively manage differences. But analysts note China’s global position has shifted significantly since Trump’s last visit in 2017, with Beijing now far more assertive on geopolitical and trade issues, leaving multiple core disputes unresolved.

    One of the most sensitive issues on the agenda is Taiwan, the self-governing democracy that Beijing claims as its sovereign territory. Trump confirmed ahead of the trip that he will raise the topic of ongoing U.S. arms sales to Taipei during his talks with Xi — a break from decades of U.S. policy that has refused to consult Beijing on arms sales to the island, a shift that is being closely watched by Taipei and U.S. regional allies.

    Other topics slated for discussion include China’s export controls on rare earth minerals, the growing global rivalry in artificial intelligence development, and broader restructuring of the bilateral trade relationship. Both sides enter the summit seeking to secure tangible wins while preventing a further escalation of tensions, a delicate balance that carries major implications for the global economy and international security. Trump is also pushing to lock in a firm date for a reciprocal visit by Xi to the U.S. later in 2026, a move that would serve as a high-profile proof of his claim to have built a strong working relationship with his Chinese counterpart.

  • ‘Europe must become more Jewish’ says owner of Telegraph and Politico

    ‘Europe must become more Jewish’ says owner of Telegraph and Politico

    In a provocative address to the World Jewish Congress (WJC) Governing Board in Geneva this week, Mathias Dopfner, CEO of global media giant Axel Springer – owner of major outlets including The Telegraph and Politico – declared that anti-Zionism is indistinguishable from racism, while laying out a series of divisive policy proposals that have reignited debates over media independence, censorship and immigration.

    Dopfner’s hardline stance on Israel is not new. Back in April, the media executive made international headlines when he told Politico journalists that any staff who refused to publicly back Israel must resign, a move that stoked widespread fears over the editorial independence of the political news outlet, which Axel Springer acquired in 2021. Opening his WJC speech, he doubled down on his ideological commitments, telling attendees: “I’m a goy, and I’m Zionist, with all my heart, out of conviction, and with passion.”

    In a wide-ranging address that included sharp anti-immigrant rhetoric and broad attacks on cultural institutions, universities, musicians, artists and the United Nations, Dopfner launched a particularly scathing attack on the UN Human Rights Council. The body has drawn repeated international condemnation of Israel over documented war crimes, systemic human rights abuses and the imposition of apartheid rule in occupied Palestinian territories; Dopfner derided the council as the “human rights Twistings Council”, claiming it unfairly targets Israel.

    Dopfner claimed that anti-Zionist sentiment – which he framed as any widespread, repeated criticism of the Israeli state – is spreading rapidly across North America and Europe, taking root in university campuses, arts and cultural circles, social media platforms and public street protests. While he conceded that criticism of Israel is not inherently forbidden, he argued that such critique should not become a normalized “everyday” conversation. He went further, claiming that rising criticism of Israel has rendered major Western European nations including Germany, France, the UK and Spain no longer “truly safe countries for Jews”.

    Turning specifically to UK politics, he attacked the country’s Green Party, which has seen growing electoral support in part driven by its public criticism of Israeli policy. He took particular issue with the party’s framing of Zionism as a racist ideology, retorting: “There must be a misunderstanding here. It is not Zionism that is racism. It is anti-Zionism that is racism.”

    Dopfner argued that the rise of anti-Zionism is fueled by “envy” of Jewish communal success, a claim that omitted any reference to Israel’s 56-year military occupation of Palestinian land, or ongoing public calls by sitting Israeli politicians for the establishment of a “Greater Israel” spanning territory from the Nile River in Egypt to the Euphrates in Iraq. “Only a self-assured, proud Jewish identity can help reduce envy and [the] new antisemitism,” he added.

    Framing growing global criticism of Israel as a leading warning sign of rising authoritarianism in the West, Dopfner put forward a slate of draconian policy measures. Conflating all anti-Zionists with antisemites, he argued that anti-Zionists “regardless of their origin, must be expelled wherever legally possible”. He praised UK Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch for advancing similar policy proposals, arguing every democratic nation should adopt such measures. He also called for sweeping changes to European immigration policy, urging the continent to introduce preferential immigration and citizenship pathways exclusively for Jewish families, framing this as a counterbalance to what he called “Christian and particularly Muslim influences” in Europe. “Europe must become more Jewish,” he concluded.

    Dopfner also joined growing calls for the forced sale or full censorship of TikTok in Europe, pointing to the 2025 US order forcing the platform to sell off its US operations to non-Chinese owners – a deal that would see pro-Zionist billionaire and close Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ally Larry Ellison take control of the platform. “In America, TikTok has been forced to be sold… Europe should follow this example,” he said, warning that failure to root out anti-Zionism would lead the West to “destroy itself”.

    Political analysts note Dopfner’s high-profile public intervention is part of a broader coordinated push by pro-Israel leaders to counter mounting global condemnation and diplomatic isolation of Israel, which has intensified sharply following Israel’s military campaign in Gaza that the UN and multiple international human rights organizations have ruled constitutes a genocide. Dopfner’s comments also echo growing alarm among pro-Israel elites expressed at the 2025 Tikvah Jewish Leadership Conference in the US, where billionaires, investment bankers, media leaders, lawyers and Zionist Christian activists gathered to address what they described as a growing global backlash against Israeli policy. That gathering, which brought together leaders from the WJC, the Jewish Leadership Conference and the Jewish Federations of North America’s General Assembly, collectively called for expanded censorship of voices across the political spectrum that criticize Israel – framed by attendees as an effort to “save America from the barbarians”.

  • US drops $15,000 visa deposit for foreign fans with World Cup tickets

    US drops $15,000 visa deposit for foreign fans with World Cup tickets

    Ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup co-hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico, the Trump administration has issued a key policy adjustment: it will waive the mandatory $15,000 visa deposit requirement for football fans traveling from 50 restricted countries, as long as they hold valid match tickets for the tournament. Among the 50 countries included in this exemption, five national squads – Algeria, Cabo Verde, Ivory Coast, Senegal, and Tunisia – have already qualified for the global tournament kicking off on June 11. “We are waiving visa bonds for qualified fans who bought World Cup tickets,” Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs Mora Namdar confirmed in an official statement provided to the BBC. The $15,000 visa bond mandate was first rolled out last August as part of a 12-month pilot program, a key component of the administration’s broader immigration enforcement push. U.S. State Department documentation notes the policy was designed to address the problem of visa overstays and cases where applicant screening and vetting materials are deemed insufficient. The full deposit would be returned to visitors once their authorized stay in the U.S. comes to an end. Prior to this new announcement, only participating players and coaches had been granted exemptions from the bond requirement, leaving ordinary ticket-holding fans subject to the fee until this week. While the bond suspension applies to fans from 50 countries, the exemption does not extend to fans traveling from Iran and Haiti, who remain barred from entering the U.S. under existing restrictions. Even for these two nations, however, World Cup-bound players and coaches are still exempt from the entry ban for tournament-related travel. Additional travel restrictions remain in place for fans from Ivory Coast and Senegal – both World Cup-qualified nations – under the administration’s expanded travel ban framework. This latest policy change comes as the U.S. maintains another controversial immigration rule that could impact World Cup visitors: late last year, the government announced that tourists from dozens of countries could be required to hand over five years of their social media history as a condition of entry. Human and civil rights organizations have repeatedly raised alarms about this policy, warning travelers that such extensive screening creates multiple risks, including heightened chances of entry denial, potential arrest, broader travel restrictions, targeted racial profiling, and increased government surveillance of visitors. The 2026 World Cup, the first to be expanded to 48 teams, will mark the first time the tournament has been co-hosted across three North American nations, with matches scheduled across multiple U.S. cities from the tournament’s opening round through the final. This policy adjustment reflects the administration’s effort to balance its strict immigration agenda with the logistical and diplomatic demands of hosting one of the world’s largest international sporting events.

  • Who is the real Wes Streeting? His record on Israel and foreign policy examined

    Who is the real Wes Streeting? His record on Israel and foreign policy examined

    A stunning political upheaval is unfolding in UK politics, with British Health Secretary Wes Streeting reportedly preparing to launch a leadership challenge against incumbent Prime Minister Keir Starmer — a move many senior MPs have already labeled an internal party coup.

    According to senior party sources, Streeting held a brief 10-minute closed-door meeting with Starmer at 10 Downing Street on Wednesday morning, and is now on track to step down from the cabinet and officially trigger a contest for the Labour leadership this Thursday. For the Ilford North MP, who aligns with the Labour Party’s right wing, this leadership bid is a race against the clock: he aims to unseat Starmer before the party’s soft left wing can unify behind a rival contender, most notably Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham, who has long been floated as a potential candidate and could launch his own challenge if he secures a seat in parliament.

    Crucially, Labour Together, the influential think tank that was instrumental in securing Starmer’s 2020 leadership victory, is widely understood to be backing Streeting. The group is eager to preserve its hold on power within a future Labour government should Starmer step down.

    Regardless of which candidate ultimately prevails in a leadership contest, political analysts widely agree that a shift in British foreign policy is all but guaranteed — and few policy areas will see more change than the UK’s long-standing military and political alliance with Israel. The Israeli war in Gaza has been a deeply divisive flashpoint in British politics for more than two years, and the recent US-Israeli military campaign against Iran has already sent ripple effects through the British economy, driving up energy costs and stoking inflation. In the most recent local elections, the Green Party — the most prominent political voice opposing UK support for Israel — eroded Labour’s voter base far more severely than the right-wing Reform Party, underscoring how deeply the Israel issue has shifted voter loyalties on the left.

    Any new prime minister replacing Starmer, whether through voluntary resignation or forced ousting, will be desperate to push back against the Green Party’s electoral gains and win back disillusioned left-wing voters. That political pressure almost certainly means a policy adjustment on Israel, but questions about what a Streeting-led government would actually do remain shrouded in contradiction. Middle East Eye’s deep dive into Streeting’s public and private record on Israel and the Middle East reveals a pattern of conflicting statements that have left even close political observers unsure of his true positions.

    Streeting is a long-standing, active member of Labour Friends of Israel (LFI), a pro-Israel parliamentary lobby group. A senior Westminster source confirmed that Streeting meets regularly with LFI leadership in parliament. He has also received significant financial donations from Trevor Chinn, a 90-year-old former car industry magnate and philanthropist who was awarded the Israeli Presidential Medal of Honour in November 2024 for his lifelong service to the State of Israel. Between 2021 and 2024, Chinn donated more than £15,000 (approximately $20,200) to Streeting, and gave an additional £5,000 in 2025 — after Streeting became Health Secretary — to “support campaigning in Ilford North”.

    Chinn’s father served as president of the UK branch of the Jewish National Fund (JNF), an organization that has long provided funding for Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, which are classified as illegal under international law. Public organizational records show that between 2015 and 2018, the UK JNF transferred more than £1 million to Hashomer Hachadash, a Zionist militia operating in the occupied West Bank. Chinn himself is a long-time supporter of both LFI and its Conservative counterpart, Conservative Friends of Israel, and two former officials from Tony Blair’s Labour government described him to Middle East Eye as a “very strong supporter of Israel” who was brought in as an unofficial advisor to Blair’s cabinet.

    Despite these deep ties to pro-Israel lobbying, Streeting has a documented history of engaging with Palestinian stakeholders as well. In February 2016, he joined a trip to Israel and the occupied West Bank organized by Medical Aid for Palestinians and the Council for the Advancement of Arab-British Understanding, where he met with then-Palestinian Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah and sitting members of the Israeli Knesset, and visited a Palestinian community school in Khan al-Ahmar that was facing ongoing intimidation from Israeli settlers and military forces at the time. Later, he became the first member of Starmer’s shadow cabinet to visit Israel after Starmer won the Labour leadership, on a separate trip funded by LFI. He framed that visit as a four-day “fact-finding mission” during which he met with Israeli politicians, diplomats, academics and health experts, and later praised Israel’s medical innovation, saying “Israel is 10 years ahead of the NHS.”

    After the 7 October 2023 Hamas attack on Israel, when Starmer’s then-opposition Labour Party backed the Conservative government’s policy of supporting Israel’s siege and bombing campaign in Gaza, Streeting aligned fully with official party line. Speaking to Sky News on 25 October 2023, he repeated Israel’s widely circulated claim that Hamas “cowardly [uses] innocent civilians, children, women, men as human shields” and echoed the Israeli assertion that “Hamas uses buildings like schools and hospitals as bunkers.” He refused to back calls for a permanent ceasefire, instead calling only for a temporary “humanitarian pause,” arguing that “Israel is a democracy… I don’t know if Hamas will abide by the rules for a pause.” In January 2024, he dismissed South Africa’s genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice as a “distraction from what needs to happen, which is the diplomatic heavy lifting to bring about an end to this conflict.”

    By mid-2024, however, Streeting began to ramp up public criticism of Israeli actions. “You look at the scale of the bloodshed, you look at the scale of destruction in Gaza, the number of civilian casualties,” he noted in one interview. “They are disproportionate, and it’s horrible.” In the 2024 UK general election, Streeting only narrowly held onto his Ilford North seat, where British Palestinian independent candidate Leanne Mohammed came within just 600 votes of unseating him — a result widely interpreted as a reflection of widespread voter anger in the diverse constituency over Labour’s pro-Israel policies. A senior Labour source familiar with Streeting’s thinking confirmed to Middle East Eye that as Health Secretary, Streeting privately pressured Starmer to toughen his public criticism of Israel.

    Under Starmer’s premiership, UK-Israel diplomatic relations did cool gradually: the UK introduced a partial arms embargo on Israel in September 2024. Yet Starmer’s government continued widespread military cooperation with Israel throughout the Gaza campaign, most notably carrying out hundreds of surveillance flights over Gaza and sharing real-time intelligence with Israeli forces. In March 2025, Starmer walked back previous comments from then-Foreign Secretary David Lammy that Israel was committing a “breach of international law.”

    Streeting never publicly accused Israel of war crimes, but he continued to edge toward stronger criticism: in April 2025, he said Israeli attacks on Gaza were “intolerable” and “cannot be justified as self-defence.” By September that year, he went further, arguing that Israel’s actions in Gaza were “leading Israel to pariah status” and added that Israeli President Isaac Herzog “needs to answer the allegations of war crimes, of ethnic cleansing and of genocide that are being levelled at the government of Israel.”

    That public shift, however, was thrown into new context in February 2026, when private text messages exchanged between Streeting and Peter Mandelson — former British ambassador to the U.S. and a controversial associate of the late Jeffrey Epstein — were leaked to the press. Multiple senior Labour sources told Middle East Eye that Streeting himself orchestrated the leak, in a bid to shore up left-wing support for his leadership bid and increase pressure on Starmer. One senior party official said Streeting was “intentionally presenting himself as more critical of Israel than official Labour policy” to appeal to disaffected voters.

    The leaked texts revealed that Streeting privately acknowledged Israel was “committing war crimes before our eyes” as early as July 2025, and explicitly endorsed imposing economic and political sanctions on Israel. He told Mandelson that the Israeli government “talks the language of ethnic cleansing, and I have met with our own medics out there who describe the most chilling and distressing scenes of calculated brutality against women and children.” He noted that he had been a member of LFI for more than 20 years, adding: “I have never been a shrinking violet on Israel. [Israel is engaged in] rogue state behaviour. Let them pay the price as pariahs with sanctions applied to the state, not just a few ministers.”

    While some left-wing critics welcomed Streeting’s private candor, the leak sparked fierce backlash from across the political spectrum. Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn published an open letter to Streeting, accusing him of a “shameful failure” for remaining in Starmer’s cabinet even as he privately condemned Israel’s war crimes in Gaza. Corbyn argued that “once a government acknowledges that Israel is committing war crimes, then any continued military or political support is an admission from the government that it is knowingly aiding and abetting those war crimes.” He pressed Streeting to answer a series of critical questions: why he did not resign from a government he believed was supporting war crimes, whether he believed the current Labour government was complicit in Israeli war crimes, whether he would cooperate with the International Criminal Court’s investigation into UK complicity, and what specific steps he had taken internally to end British military and political support for Israel. Corbyn noted that “our history books will shame government ministers who could have stopped the genocide in Gaza, but chose to stay silent instead,” and confirmed to Middle East Eye that Streeting has not responded to the letter.

    In the run-up to 2026 local elections, Streeting also publicly attacked pro-Palestinian politicians challenging Labour in his own constituency, framing their criticism of Labour’s Israel policy as “sectarian politics.” In Redbridge, the east London borough that contains Streeting’s Ilford North seat, the Redbridge Independents — a local grouping backed by Corbyn’s Your Party — won nine council seats last week. In March, Middle East Eye reported that Streeting sent a campaign letter to constituents accusing Redbridge Independents of being “a divisive political party that aims to only represent some of us, more focused on foreign conflicts than on fixing potholes.” He doubled down in April, telling The Times that “We’re voting for Redbridge council, not the UN Security Council. Who you choose to run your local council matters and the Redbridge Independents represent a divisive brand of sectarian politics.”

    Critics have pointed out the contradiction in this attack, noting that Starmer himself made foreign policy a central campaign issue during the same local elections, when he attacked Reform Party leader Nigel Farage and Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch over their stances on the Iran war, arguing that “Nigel Farage and Kemi Badenoch would have jumped into this war with both feet without thinking through the consequences… Britain would have been “in a war without a plan” had they been in power, adding that he “won’t be dragged in” to the US-Israeli war. Senior Labour MP John McDonnell, a prominent left-wing critic of Labour’s Israel policy, criticized Streeting’s attack on the independents, telling Middle East Eye that “one interpretation verges on a Reform [style] dog whistle politics. The last thing we need is more divisive politics in these elections.”

    Today, as Streeting prepares for what could be one of the most dramatic internal leadership challenges in modern British political history, his true positions on Israel and foreign policy remain an enigma to most observers. His public and private stances shift dramatically depending on his audience, shaped by his long ties to pro-Israel lobbying, his precarious hold on a marginal seat, and his ambition to become prime minister. If Streeting follows through on his plan to launch a leadership challenge, he will finally be forced to lay out a clear, consistent foreign policy agenda for the UK — and he will almost certainly craft that agenda with an eye toward holding his marginal seat and winning the next general election.

  • Ex-Nicaragua guerrilla believes Ortega-Murillo days numbered

    Ex-Nicaragua guerrilla believes Ortega-Murillo days numbered

    In an exclusive interview with Agence France-Presse from her exile home in Costa Rica, a former veteran commander of the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) has issued a stark prediction about the future of Nicaragua’s ruling power couple. Seventy-one-year-old Monica Baltodano, who once fought alongside current Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega in the revolution against the Somoza dictatorship, argues that 74-year-old Vice President and first lady Rosario Murillo will not be able to hold onto power once 80-year-old Ortega passes away.

    Ortega, a once fiery Marxist revolutionary who led the 1979 uprising that ousted the U.S.-backed Somoza regime, has held the Nicaraguan presidency since 2007. His successive election victories have been widely questioned by the international community, and the United States has formally labeled his administration a dictatorship, accusing it of rewriting the national constitution to consolidate absolute control and systematically suppress all political dissent.

    Today, Baltodano has broken completely with the regime she once helped bring to power, describing Ortega and Murillo as figures utterly corrupted by unbridled ambition for power. Speaking from her sunlit Costa Rican home, decorated with Nicaraguan art and personal mementos from her homeland, she reflected on how far the country has strayed from the revolutionary ideals they once shared.

    Baltodano recalled that during the fight against the “genocidal” Somoza dictatorship, the FSLN built a broad movement that united civic resistance, armed struggle, public demonstrations and an independent press. By contrast, she argues, modern Nicaragua under Ortega is more closed and repressive than even the Somoza era, comparing its political climate to that of North Korea. She accuses the regime of weaponizing exile and denationalization to silence opponents, brutally repressing the Catholic Church, and eliminating all independent state institutions.

    As rumors spread of Ortega’s declining health, opposition sources report that Murillo has already begun a quiet internal purge of the ruling party to solidify her grip on power ahead of Ortega’s death. But Baltodano says Murillo’s efforts are doomed to fail. “Rosario wouldn’t withstand Ortega’s disappearance because she’s still using him as a kind of icon, almost elevated to the level of a deity,” Baltodano explained. “Institutions wouldn’t be subordinated to her the way they are now.”

    Baltodano fled Nicaragua in 2021 after publicly denouncing Ortega’s growing authoritarian turn. In 2023, she was stripped of her Nicaraguan citizenship alongside dozens of other exiled dissidents, a common tactic the Ortega regime has used against its opponents. Today, the Nicaraguan government faces sweeping sanctions from the U.S. and European Union, and thousands of Nicaraguans have fled into exile after hundreds of real and perceived opposition figures were jailed by the regime.

    Baltodano notes that Ortega and Murillo rule in a climate of constant paranoia, pointing out that the regime now imprisons more dissidents from its own ruling ranks than it does from the formal opposition. Rejecting calls for foreign intervention similar to the recent push against Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro, an Ortega ally, Baltodano stressed that Nicaraguans must be the ones to solve their own political future. “We Nicaraguans have to be able to resolve our own problems, not by turning our backs on the international community, but not as the result of interventionist actions by any power either,” she said.

    For Baltodano, life in exile grows “doubly painful” each passing year, separated from her homeland. A March report from independent United Nations experts documented the Ortega regime’s growing pattern of targeting Nicaraguan dissidents even in exile, but Baltodano says she refuses to live in constant fear. Though she takes basic safety precautions, she remains absolutely certain that she will one day return to a free Nicaragua.

  • DV crackdown drives record surge in NSW prison numbers

    DV crackdown drives record surge in NSW prison numbers

    A targeted law enforcement initiative against alleged domestic violence offenders has triggered an unprecedented jump in jail populations across New South Wales (NSW), with nearly half of the state’s current inmate population yet to go through court proceedings, new official crime data shows.

    Released Thursday by the NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research (BOCSAR), the latest figures put the state’s total current prison population at 14,070 – a new historic high. Of that total, 6,650 inmates are being held on remand, meaning they have not been convicted of any crime and are still waiting for their court dates or trials to begin. That marks a more than 15 percent year-over-year increase in the state’s remand population.

    BOCSAR executive director Jackie Fitzgerald described the rapid growth as an extraordinary shift that has unfolded over an remarkably short timeline. “Prison numbers have grown more in four months than they did in the previous four years,” Fitzgerald told reporters. She added that the milestone of nearly half of all inmates being held on remand represents a fundamental shift in the demographic composition of NSW’s prison system.

    The sharpest growth in remand numbers has been concentrated among people charged with domestic and family violence offenses, Fitzgerald confirmed. Domestic violence remand populations have accounted for 41 percent of total four-month growth in the state’s overall remand population. The primary driver of this surge has been Operation Amarok, an ongoing statewide police initiative launched in January 2023 that specifically targets alleged domestic violence offenders, which has led to thousands of arrests across NSW to date.

    But expanded and more aggressive police activity across all offense categories is also contributing to the rising population, BOCSAR data confirms. Between December 2025 and March 2026, NSW police charged roughly 62,000 adult defendants, a 13 percent increase compared to the same 12-month period a year prior. Fitzgerald emphasized that this trend is not being driven by a rising overall crime rate, but rather by stricter enforcement and higher charging volumes that are pushing more defendants into pre-trial detention.

    “What we are seeing is increased police activity and stronger enforcement resulting in more people entering the justice system,” Fitzgerald said. “Rather than a change in crime rates, higher charging levels are driving higher remand numbers, particularly for domestic violence.”

    Breaking down the current population data, 13,108 of the state’s inmates are men, while 962 are women. Most notably, more than one-third of all people held in NSW jails – 4,834 people total – identify as Aboriginal, highlighting ongoing disproportionate representation of Indigenous people in the state’s correctional system.