作者: admin

  • Pakistan accused of attacking Afghan university

    Pakistan accused of attacking Afghan university

    Fresh cross-border violence has reignited tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan, after Pakistani jets and drones carried out strikes on the eastern Afghan province of Kunar that have left at least seven civilians dead and 75 more injured, multiple informed sources have confirmed to the BBC. Among the casualties are multiple students and one faculty member from Kunar University, with the ruling Taliban administration confirming that 30 of those wounded are currently enrolled university students.

    Local accounts from the strike zone paint a picture of chaos and destruction. A Kunar University professor who was on campus during the attacks described hearing deafening, terrifying explosions that rippled across the entire university grounds. Official statements from Afghanistan’s Ministry of Higher Education later confirmed that university buildings and their surrounding residential and public areas suffered extensive structural damage from the bombings.

    Pakistan’s Ministry of Information has issued a direct denial of the claims, dismissing reports that strikes targeted the university and residential neighborhoods as completely false manufactured information.

    This latest escalation comes just weeks after a far deadlier Pakistani air strike on a drug rehabilitation facility in Afghanistan’s capital Kabul. United Nations officials have confirmed that the earlier attack killed 269 people, making it one of the deadliest cross-border strikes in the region in recent years.

    The resumption of violence breaks a fragile ceasefire that had held across most of the shared border for nearly a month. That truce was brokered through Chinese diplomatic mediation, which brought representatives from both nations to talks in the Chinese city of Urumqi in early April aimed at de-escalating months of growing cross-border conflict.

    Over the past six months, hundreds of people have been killed or wounded in recurring clashes and cross-border strikes between the two neighboring nations. Pakistan has repeatedly justified its air operations inside Afghan territory, stating that all strikes are targeted exclusively at militant hideouts that it says operate from Afghan soil to launch attacks against Pakistani targets. Notably, Pakistan has recently taken on a diplomatic mediation role itself, working to de-escalate tensions between Iran and the United States amid their ongoing standoff.

  • Former National Railway Administration head indicted with bribery

    Former National Railway Administration head indicted with bribery

    In an official announcement made Monday, China’s Supreme People’s Procuratorate (SPP) confirmed that Fei Dongbin, the former director of the National Railway Administration, has been formally indicted on suspicion of bribery following a year-long investigation by national supervisory authorities.

    The case follows a standard legal process for major corruption probes in China: after the National Commission of Supervision completed its fact-finding and investigation, the matter was transferred to procuratorial organs for prosecution review. The SPP first approved a formal arrest warrant for Fei, then designated the Changchun People’s Procuratorate based in northeast China’s Jilin Province to handle the prosecution of the case. The prosecuting office recently submitted its formal indictment to the Changchun Intermediate People’s Court, opening the next phase of judicial proceedings.

    Per official case documents, Fei is accused of abusing a series of senior positions he held over decades of work in both the national railway system and local government to extract illegal gains. His career included senior leadership roles as executive deputy director of the former Beijing Railway Bureau and former Jinan Railway Bureau, director of the former Hohhot Railway Bureau, mayor of Ulaanqab in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, vice-governor of central China’s Henan Province, and finally head of the National Railway Administration starting in September 2022. Prosecutors allege that Fei used his official influence to coordinate with other state functionaries to secure improper business and personal benefits for specific organizations and individuals, and in exchange, illegally accepted an exceptionally large sum of money and high-value assets.

    Throughout the prosecution review process, legal procedural requirements were strictly followed: prosecuting officials informed Fei of all his litigation rights as a defendant, conducted formal interrogations, and accepted and reviewed arguments presented by Fei’s defense legal team. Prosecutors have formally stated that Fei must bear criminal liability for the suspected bribery offense.

    A 55-year-old native of Jinzhou, Liaoning Province, Fei began his professional career in 1991, joining the Communist Party of China five years later in 1996. His entire career was rooted in public service, starting with an entry-level role at the former Shenyang Railway Bureau in his home province, where he rose through the ranks to hold senior roles including deputy director and chief engineer. Following 2017, Fei transitioned into senior local government roles, first serving as deputy Party chief and mayor of Ulaanqab, then vice-governor of Henan Province, before his appointment to lead the National Railway Administration in 2022.

    Fei’s tenure at the top of the national railway regulator ended abruptly when he was placed under official investigation for corruption in 2025. By December that same year, he was expelled from the Communist Party of China and removed from all public office, ahead of the formal indictment announced this week. The case is part of China’s ongoing national anti-corruption campaign that targets misconduct by senior officials across all critical public sectors, including transportation infrastructure.

  • Gunmen raid Nigerian orphanage and kidnap children

    Gunmen raid Nigerian orphanage and kidnap children

    A devastating targeted attack by armed gunmen on an unregistered orphanage in Nigeria’s north-central Kogi State has left 23 people abducted, with eight children still unaccounted for days after the assault, local authorities confirmed this week. The brazen Sunday raid also saw the owner of the unlicensed child care facility taken captive by the attackers, according to Kogi State Information Commissioner Kingsley Fanwo. Following a rapid, coordinated mobilization of local security agencies, 15 of the abducted children have been successfully rescued from captivity, Fanwo stated in an official briefing Monday.

    To date, no armed faction has publicly claimed responsibility for the attack. But senior security sources familiar with regional instability note that Kogi State hosts an active operational cell of the jihadist insurgent group Boko Haram, and the area has already seen a string of violent, opportunistic attacks targeting vulnerable communities in recent months.

    The orphanage attack is the latest high-profile incident in Nigeria’s growing national kidnap crisis, which has plagued regions across the country for years. Transnational criminal gangs regularly abduct civilians, including children, to demand large ransom payments. While the Nigerian federal government has formally outlawed ransom payments to kidnappers, the ban has done little to curb the frequency of these attacks, as criminal networks continue to profit from the practice despite increased security deployments.

    In his Monday statement, Commissioner Fanwo emphasized that the targeted orphanage had been operating illegally in a remote, bushy rural area without the knowledge or official approval of state regulatory authorities. He issued a formal warning to all operators of orphanages, schools, and residential care institutions across the state to complete required regulatory registration and coordinate regularly with relevant government agencies, particularly amid the country’s ongoing volatile security environment.

    Mass abductions of children at educational and care facilities have become increasingly common across northern Nigeria, where long-running insurgency and weak security infrastructure have created conditions for rampant kidnapping. This incident marks the first recorded attack specifically targeting an orphanage in the country. The attack echoes a much larger mass abduction in November 2025, when more than 300 students and their teachers were seized from a Catholic secondary school in neighboring Niger State, also in north-central Nigeria. All captives were eventually released in two separate batches, with the final group regaining freedom more than a month after their abduction. The Nigerian government has repeatedly denied widespread reports that it paid a large ransom to secure their release, or that it swapped two detained Boko Haram commanders for the hostages as part of a negotiated deal.

    Nigerian authorities have reaffirmed their commitment to locating and rescuing the eight remaining missing children from the Kogi State orphanage attack, saying security operations are ongoing in the area. “The government remains fully committed to ensuring the rescue of all the victims,” Fanwo said.

  • Chinese and Kyrgyz defense ministers discuss bilateral military cooperation

    Chinese and Kyrgyz defense ministers discuss bilateral military cooperation

    On Monday, during an official invited visit to Kyrgyzstan, China’s Minister of National Defense Dong Jun met face-to-face with his Kyrgyz counterpart, Mukambetov Ruslan Mustafaevich, for high-level bilateral defense discussions.

    Prior to the formal negotiations, Minister Mukambetov extended a formal welcome to Dong by hosting a traditional honor guard ceremony, where the two leaders jointly inspected the guard of honor to mark the significance of the diplomatic meeting.

    According to an official statement released by China’s Ministry of National Defense immediately following the talks, the two defense chiefs held a thorough, in-depth exchange of views across a wide range of critical topics. These included the current state of bilateral state-to-state and military-to-military relations, evolving dynamics in the international and regional security landscape, and other shared concerns that impact both nations.

    Both sides reached a clear mutual agreement: they will continue to follow through on the consensus that has already been established by the two countries’ heads of state, and work to expand and deepen practical, on-the-ground military cooperation in the coming period. This meeting marks another step forward in strengthening the constructive defense partnership between China and Kyrgyzstan, aligning with long-term efforts to boost regional stability and cross-border mutual trust.

  • China issues alerts for strong winds, heavy rain and convective weather

    China issues alerts for strong winds, heavy rain and convective weather

    China’s top meteorological body has launched a Level IV emergency response as the nation prepares to face a spell of hazardous weather, including strong winds, intense downpours and severe convective activity. On Monday, the National Meteorological Center issued a tiered set of weather alerts: a yellow warning for strong gusts, and blue warnings for both heavy rain and severe convective weather.

    China operates a standardized four-tier color-coded warning system for wind and rain events, where red marks the most severe level, followed by orange, yellow, and blue as the least urgent. For severe convective weather, the country uses a three-tier warning framework.

    According to the center’s forecast, the strong wind event will impact a wide swathe of northern China between 8 a.m. Monday and 8 a.m. Tuesday. Affected regions include the provinces of Shanxi, Hebei, Liaoning and Shandong, the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, as well as the direct-controlled municipalities of Beijing and Tianjin. Sustained average wind speeds across these areas are projected to hit 10 to 20 meters per second, with gusts capable of reaching up to 28 meters per second in hard-hit zones. These conditions are strong enough to uproot fully grown trees and cause structural damage to buildings and infrastructure.

    Over the same 24-hour window, heavy rainfall will lash multiple regions in southern and central China, including Chongqing Municipality, Guizhou, Hunan, Hubei provinces and the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Some localities are expected to record total precipitation of 100 to 140 millimeters, with short-duration intense rain events driving the bulk of the accumulation. Hourly rainfall totals are forecast to peak at 20 to 50 millimeters, and the downpours will be paired with severe convective hazards including thunderstorms, sudden wind gusts and hail.

    In specific high-risk zones, the hazards carry elevated risks to life and property. Parts of southwestern Guizhou and western Guangxi face dangerous thunderstorm gales, where gusts could be strong enough to collapse unstable informal housing and damage power transmission infrastructure. In sections of eastern and southwestern Hunan, as well as northern Guangxi, hourly rainfall will climb above 50 millimeters, with some locations even exceeding 60 millimeters of rain in a single hour – conditions that raise the risk of flash flooding and secondary disasters.

    To reduce the risk of harm, the National Meteorological Center has issued a series of public safety guidance. Vessels operating in affected coastal and inland waters are urged to proceed with extreme caution to avoid wind and wave-related accidents. Residents across all impacted regions have been advised to cut back on non-essential outdoor activities, and maintain a safe distance from flimsy temporary structures such as construction scaffolding and temporary market stalls.

    Meteorological officials have also called on local authorities to take proactive preparatory measures. These include stepping up fire prevention work, securing loose or easily moved outdoor structures, prepping urban and rural drainage systems to handle heavy runoff, and putting early response plans in place to manage secondary disasters such as mountain torrents, landslides and mudslides.

  • Camera trap shows Sumatra orangutan using a canopy bridge to cross a public road in Indonesia

    Camera trap shows Sumatra orangutan using a canopy bridge to cross a public road in Indonesia

    For the first time ever, a wild Sumatran orangutan has been recorded crossing a busy public road via a purpose-built artificial canopy bridge, a landmark breakthrough for conservation efforts protecting this critically endangered species, Indonesian environmental leaders announced Monday.

    Decades of rapid economic and infrastructure development across Sumatra have gnawed away at the ancient jungle habitats that orangutans depend on, splitting once-contiguous wild populations into isolated, vulnerable groups and raising the frequency of deadly human-orangutan conflicts as hungry or displaced primates enter settled areas. This latest milestone comes from conservation work focused on a high-stakes stretch of infrastructure in North Sumatra’s Pakpak Bharat district, where the Lagan–Pagindar road serves as a critical lifeline connecting remote local communities to schools, medical care and government services. When the road was upgraded in 2024, the expansion widened the gap in the forest canopy, completely eliminating the natural tree-to-tree crossings that arboreal orangutans rely on to move between forest patches. The road now cuts the region’s estimated 350 wild orangutans into two completely disconnected groups, separated between the Siranggas Wildlife Reserve and the Sikulaping Protection Forest.

    “Development was necessary for people,” explained Erwin Alamsyah Siregar, executive director of Indonesian conservation non-profit Tangguh Hutan Khatulistiwa (TaHuKah). “But without intervention, it would have left orangutans trapped on either side.”

    Working in partnership with the Sumatran Orangutan Society (SOS) and local and national government agencies, TaHuKah rolled out a low-cost, targeted solution: five rope canopy bridges suspended between mature trees on opposite sides of the road, designed to let tree-dwelling wildlife cross safely above moving vehicle traffic. Each bridge was sized and reinforced to support the weight of orangutans— the world’s largest tree-dwelling mammal—and motion-activated camera traps were installed at every site, placed after extensive surveys mapping orangutan nesting sites, forest cover and local wildlife movement patterns. A long-term monitoring program, including regular anti-encroachment patrols, was also put in place to protect the corridor.

    Conservationists waited two full years for the first orangutan to use the crossing. In the months after installation, smaller arboreal species were the first to test the structures: squirrels, langur monkeys and macaques were followed by gibbons, a encouraging sign that the bridges were viewed as safe. Over time, the young male orangutan that would eventually make the crossing gradually acclimated to the structure: building sleeping nests near the bridge edge, lingering to observe the crossing and testing the rope’s stability repeatedly before committing to the full traverse.

    “They observe,” Siregar said. “They don’t rush. They watch, they try, they retreat. Only when they’re certain it’s safe do they move.”

    The brief, historic crossing was captured by the motion-activated camera, which recorded the young orangutan pausing at the forest edge, gripping the bridge rope with deliberate care before stepping out over the open road. Halfway across, it paused to glance down at the traffic below before completing the crossing to the opposite forest. Conservationists emphasize this is the first documented case of any Sumatran orangutan using an artificial canopy bridge to cross a public road. While orangutans have used similar structures to cross rivers and private industrial forest roads elsewhere, busy public roads—with their constant noise, vehicle movement and unpredictability—present a far larger barrier and greater risk to the shy primates.

    For the long-term survival of Sumatran orangutans, reestablishing habitat connectivity is a critical priority. Isolated populations face extreme risks of inbreeding, genetic decline and eventual population collapse, while restored connectivity allows orangutans to access new food sources, find mates and maintain genetically healthy, resilient populations. Once widespread across much of southern Asia, orangutans now survive only on the Indonesian islands of Sumatra and Borneo. Current conservation data puts the total wild Sumatran orangutan population at fewer than 14,000 individuals, alongside just 800 Tapanuli orangutans and roughly 104,700 Bornean orangutans, all three species classified as critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

    “This was the moment we had been waiting for,” Siregar told the Associated Press. “We are very grateful that the canopy here provides benefits for orangutan conservation efforts.” Conservation teams now hope this pioneering crossing will encourage more orangutans to use the bridges, and that the successful model can be replicated in other fragmented orangutan habitats across Sumatra and Borneo to reduce extinction risk for the species. “These bridges allow orangutans to move, to mix, to maintain healthy populations,” Siregar said. “It reduces the risk of extinction.”

  • What to expect as Trump hosts the King

    What to expect as Trump hosts the King

    A high-stakes diplomatic meeting is set to unfold on United States soil, as former President Donald Trump welcomes King Charles III for a formal visit that unfolds against a backdrop of growing friction between Washington and London. The long-awaited royal trip arrives at a moment of deep division between the two long-standing allies, with the simmering crisis over Iran emerging as the core flashpoint that threatens to complicate discussions between the two leaders. For decades, the United States and the United Kingdom have maintained a so-called special relationship, built on shared security goals, economic ties and cultural alignment. But in recent weeks, disagreements over how to address escalating tensions around Iran have opened a rare and noticeable rift between the two governments, casting a shadow over this symbolic royal engagement. Analysts note that while the visit carries heavy ceremonial weight, behind the formal handshakes and state dinners, both sides will be navigating significant differences on Iran policy. Whether the meeting will ease the current strain or further highlight the divide between the two allies remains to be seen as the visit gets underway.

  • Plane crash in South Sudan kills all 14 on board

    Plane crash in South Sudan kills all 14 on board

    A devastating aviation disaster has killed every person onboard a small passenger aircraft that crashed in South Sudan early Monday, according to official confirmation from the country’s Civil Aviation Authority (SSCAA). The CityLink Aviation-operated flight, a Cessna 208 Caravan, had departed the city of Yei at 9:15 a.m. local time bound for Juba, a roughly 130-kilometer route southwest of the capital. Roughly 30 minutes into the journey, authorities lost all contact with the aircraft, which ultimately crashed approximately 20 kilometers outside Juba.

    Preliminary investigations point to severe weather as the most likely cause of the crash. In an official statement, the SSCAA noted that initial reports link the crash to poor atmospheric conditions, specifically extremely low visibility that hindered the pilot’s navigation. A specialized investigation team has already been deployed to the remote crash site to collect evidence and confirm the root cause of the incident.

    Official passenger and crew breakdowns confirm the flight carried 14 people total: one pilot and 13 passengers. Among those killed were 12 citizens of South Sudan and two Kenyan nationals. No survivors have been recovered from the crash site.

    The crash renews longstanding concerns about aviation safety in South Sudan, where air travel infrastructure remains chronically underdeveloped, and the country has a well-documented poor aviation safety record. Air accidents are relatively frequent across the nation, with most incidents commonly attributed to two key risk factors: overloaded aircraft and unpredictable, severe weather conditions. This is not the first deadly air disaster to hit the country in recent years: in January 2025, a plane carrying 20 oil workers crashed just three minutes after takeoff near Unity State’s northern oil fields, killing everyone onboard.

  • Lamine Yamal and Chris Martin help Polish influencer raise more than £50m for cancer patients

    Lamine Yamal and Chris Martin help Polish influencer raise more than £50m for cancer patients

    In a historic display of grassroots philanthropy and digital community power, a 23-year-old Polish YouTube creator has pulled off one of the most successful charity fundraising events in modern livestream history, drawing global celebrity support and smashing previous world records to raise more than £52 million (roughly $65 million) for a Polish children’s cancer organization.

    Piotr Hancke, who goes by the online alias Latwogang and boasts millions of followers across his social media platforms, hosted the non-stop 9-day broadcast from a small apartment in the Polish capital of Warsaw, running from April 17 through Sunday’s close. To keep the stream anchored throughout its 216-hour run, Hancke repeatedly played a custom charity rap track created specifically for the effort—written as a diss track aimed directly at cancer, featuring guest vocals from a young patient currently undergoing treatment for the disease.

    The event captured widespread attention not just from Hancke’s loyal fanbase, but also from A-list entertainers and top global sports stars who rallied to support the cause. Coldplay frontman Chris Martin made a surprise virtual appearance, performing an original short snippet for the audience and joking about his imperfect attempt at speaking Polish. Football megastars also turned out in force: Former Arsenal goalkeeper Wojciech Szczęsny shared a promotional video featuring rising Spanish football prodigy Lamine Yamal backing the appeal, while Barcelona star striker Robert Lewandowski posted a viral TikTok of himself dancing to the charity track, later writing on Instagram that he was “proud to be Polish” for the outpouring of support. Polish rapper Bedoes 2115, who created the looping charity track, also joined the effort, alongside dozens of other Polish influencers and public figures.

    Many participating guests shaved their heads in a show of solidarity with chemotherapy patients, a gesture Hancke also joined to honor children undergoing cancer treatment. At the peak of viewership, state-run Polish news agency PAP reports that more than 1.4 million people tuned into the livestream simultaneously, highlighting the massive reach of the digital campaign.

    The final fundraising total, posted to the Cancer Fighters Foundation (CFF), the Polish charity benefiting from the drive, came in at just over £52 million—well over the initial £50 million reported as the event wrapped, and more than three times the previous Guinness World Record for livestream charity fundraising. The prior record, set by a group of French streamers in 2025, stood at €16.1 million (£14 million) raised for multiple charitable causes.

    In the wake of the historic fundraiser, CFF has launched a dedicated public transparency website, pledging to publish full, itemized accounts of every pound raised to ensure every donor can see how their contributions translate to tangible support for young patients. CFF president Marek Kopysc emphasized the stakes of the work the funds will support, saying the organization is “reaching for the stars” to help “innocent children who fight the hardest battles every day.”

  • Israel sent air defence system and troops to UAE during Iran war, report says

    Israel sent air defence system and troops to UAE during Iran war, report says

    In a landmark development that underscores deepening security ties between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Israel deployed its Iron Dome air defence system – complete with operating troops – to the Gulf nation during the ongoing conflict with Iran, multiple senior officials confirmed to Axios in a report published Sunday.

    The deployment, the first time Israel has ever sent an operational Iron Dome battery to another country, was ordered shortly after the conflict began by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, following a direct phone call between Netanyahu and Emirati President Mohammed bin Zayed, the US-based news outlet reported. The shipment included a full working battery, interceptor missiles, and several dozen specially trained Israeli soldiers to operate the system.

    One senior Israeli official noted that this deployment makes the UAE only the third country in the world – after the United States and Israel itself – to host and use the Iron Dome air defence system in active conflict. During the 40-day war, which began on February 28 when a joint US-Israeli aerial offensive targeted Iranian leadership, hundreds of Iranian ballistic missiles and drones were launched at US military installations located within UAE territory and other Emirati targets. Israeli officials confirm the Iron Dome system successfully intercepted dozens of these incoming Iranian projectiles.

    This historic security deployment is just one piece of a far broader pattern of intensive bilateral cooperation between Tel Aviv and Abu Dhabi that has emerged since the start of the conflict, officials from both nations told Axios. The two countries have coordinated closely across both military and political spheres since hostilities began, when the joint US-Israeli strike killed Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei alongside multiple other senior Iranian government and military officials.

    Beyond the Iron Dome deployment, the Israeli Air Force conducted pre-emptive strikes against short-range Iranian missile positions in southern Iran, destroying the projectiles before they could be launched toward the UAE and other neighbouring Gulf states.

    Escalation of the conflict followed a joint US-Israeli bombing raid on Iran’s strategic South Pars gas field, a critical cornerstone of Iran’s national energy infrastructure, on March 18. In response, Tehran launched a widespread counteroffensive targeting energy infrastructure across the entire Gulf region, expanding attacks to hit hotels, airports, data centres, commercial ports, and US diplomatic missions across the Middle East.

    The UAE emerged as one of Iran’s most heavily targeted adversaries in the conflict. Emirati authorities confirm Iran launched approximately 550 ballistic and cruise missiles, plus more than 2,200 attack drones, at targets across the country. While the vast majority of incoming projectiles were intercepted by allied air defence systems, falling debris still caused substantial damage across key urban and economic centres in Abu Dhabi and Dubai, including at iconic landmarks such as Burj Al Arab and Palm Jumeirah, Dubai International Airport, and the Fujairah oil industrial zone.

    The sustained conflict has also taken a major economic toll on the UAE: Dubai’s global reputation as a leading luxury tourism destination has suffered significant damage, and the country’s oil exports have slowed to a fraction of pre-war levels.

    On April 8, the United States and Iran agreed to implement a temporary ceasefire that halted large-scale active hostilities and opened the door for bilateral negotiations. As of the latest reporting, these talks have not yet produced any major breakthrough toward a lasting peace agreement.