Latest News:
Breaking News
Bangladesh’s Gen Z helped bring down a seemingly unshakeable autocrat in 2024, but the first election after Sheikh Hasina’s flight are shaping up to reward the very political ecosystem the uprising tried to bury. In Dhaka, the revolution’s imagery is everywhere, graffiti, murals, slogans about freedom, yet the ballots due on February 12 appear to be less like a generational transfer of power than a reallocation of spoils among older, better-organized political parties and groups. The BBC follows the story through Rahat Hossain, a young protester who survived the crackdown that killed his friend Emam Hasan Taim Bhuiyan. That widespread violence, with police dragging students from shelter, beating them, shooting them as they ran, was the catalytic shock that transformed a quota protest into a nationwide revolt. The UN estimate of up to 1,400 deaths hangs over the vote like a moral debt the state still has not paid: the trials are unfinished, accountability is partial, and grief has been converted into campaign currency rather than institutional reform. The student movement’s political vehicle, the National Citizen Party, is arriving at the election battered by its own compromises. Inexperience, internal fracture, and the gravitational pull of real electoral infrastructure have pushed it into an alliance with Jamaat-e-Islami, an Islamist party whose historical baggage from 1971 is fading for younger voters who did not live that war, and who now read Jamaat primarily as “opposition” to Hasina rather than as a moral red line. The alliance is also a gendered consequence: women who were visible, central, and courageous in 2024 have now been reduced to symbolic representation on candidate lists, and pushed out through the familiar mix of patriarchal bargaining and online intimidation. The vacuum left by the Awami League’s ban is being filled most efficiently by the BNP, another dynastic structure rebranded as liberal-democratic restoration. Its leaders speak the language of reconciliation commissions and democratic repair, but the underlying continuity is hard to miss: Bangladesh’s post-uprising politics is still organized around patronage networks, family names, and the tactical use of ideology. Even the threat from an Awami organizer in hiding, hinting at boycott or obstruction if Hasina demands it, underscores how easily the country’s factions revert to coercion when they cannot win legitimacy outright.
Drone-pigeons, Putin’s daughter and a plan to control minds
Arrests of Azerbaijani opposition Popular Front Party members continue
‘Treacherous assassination’: Who was Saif al-Islam Gaddafi?
Tunisian police arrest member of parliament who mocked president
As food prices surge, Russians stop buying fruit, ignore expiration dates, and brace for more hikes
An election that hopes to bring democracy back to Bangladesh
Syrian security forces continue to deploy in Kurdish areas under deal with SDF
Cubans also want an amnesty for their political prisoners
Iran signals willingness for nuclear talks with US
Under Prabowo, Indonesia is veering off course
What Xi Jinping’s purge of China’s most senior general reveals
An Apparent Calm With a Long Shadow: Revisiting Central Asia’s Illiberal Peace
Russia using Interpol's wanted list to target critics abroad, leak reveals
My survival guide to the Kremlin’s winter of terror in Kyiv
Over 36,500 killed in Iran's deadliest massacre, documents reveal
'Half of my friends were killed' - the girls returning to a school caught up in war
North Korea's Kim purges vice premier, slams ‘incompetent’ officials
Death toll rises to 10 in gangsters’ attacks on Guatemalan police as state of emergency is declared
Hackers target Iran state TV's satellite transmission to broadcast exiled crown prince
Continuing Conflicts
The wave of coordinated assaults across Balochistan are a consequence of the conflict that the Pakistani government has attempted to manage with force, denial, and administrative silence. However, what has made these attacks “unprecedented” was not merely the casualty count or the symbolism of targets (police stations, military sites, banks, roads) but the choreography and planned nature: dozens of simultaneous strikes across multiple towns, some reportedly stretching across days, under conditions where verification was deliberately hard. At the center of this escalation is the Baloch Liberation Army’s evolution from insurgent nuisance to something closer to a hardened, adaptive organization. The report describes a group that has moved beyond classic hit-and-run raids into complex assaults: suicide bombings, vehicle-borne explosives, IED campaigns, multi-attacker operations designed to exhaust security responses and seize brief territorial control. Whether every claim about kills and losses is inflated, and in conflicts like these, they almost always are, the operational message is clear: the BLA wants to demonstrate that the state cannot guarantee order even in district hubs, and that it can impose its own tempo when they so choose. But the deeper story is intrinsically linked to the unique environment: a province that seems to be governed as a lawless frontier rather than a community. The anger of many in Balochistan is not purely ideological. It has been personal and cumulative, shaped by accusations of extraction without local benefit, contested control of land and minerals, and a long record of security practices that are widely alleged to include disappearances, arbitrary detention, torture, and killings outside any transparent legal process. When the state’s primary language is coercion, insurgents don’t have to “win hearts and minds” so much as they have to offer a vocabulary of resistance. For many young people, especially in a demographic profile where youth dominate, militancy becomes a social fact before it becomes a political choice. That is the trap Islamabad keeps stepping into: repression that is meant to deter ends up clarifying the insurgents’ recruiting pitch. Every new crackdown may remove fighters in the short term, but it also produces fresh grievances, deeper distrust, and a wider circle of families who learn to expect impunity rather than accountability. In that atmosphere, the separatists’ most valuable asset is not weapons; it is the conviction, spreading quietly, that conventional politics has been emptied of consequence. The government’s response, deploting drones, helicopters, and systematically retaking towns, may restore the map, but it does not restore legitimacy. Even the refusal to talk is seen as a signal: informing ordinary residents that the state will treat the insurgency as a security problem forever, even as it becomes a governance crisis. Meanwhile, the insurgents are betting that spectacle plus persistence will eventually force a choice: negotiate from weakness, or keep escalating until the province is governed by emergency measures as a permanent condition.
First Day Of Ukraine-Russia Peace Talks In Abu Dhabi End, Will Head To Second Day
US ‘ready’ to meet Iran, says Rubio, but talks must address ballistic missiles programme
Zelenskyy says 55,000 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed in war
Epstein files reveal Turkey's final ultimatum to Assad before Syrian war
Ukraine Accuses Russia Of 'Winter Genocide' After New Strikes On Energy Sites
Vietnam’s military ‘secretly planning for US invasion’
China bankrolling Putin’s war to gain advantage over West, MPs told
Why peace remains elusive in Pakistan’s troubled Balochistan
Coca-Cola, cat food, tampons: The missing goods of military-run Myanmar
Half of all Sudanese children not in education due to civil war
Damascus extends truce with Kurds in northeast Syria
Electoral violence is on the horizon in Kenya
Aftermath challenges daily life in Syria
Norwegians told to prepare for wartime property seizures
My children were recruited in a trafficking scam. I joined a police hunt to find them
Sudan paramilitary forces say 'regret' deadly Chad border clash
'Muslim NATO': Turkey in advanced talks to join Saudi-Pakistan mutual defense pact
China Won’t Save Iran’s Regime – But Chinese Surveillance Technology Might
Russian strikes on Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk leave one million without water and heat
Lebanese army says it has taken over security in Hezbollah-dominated soutSaudi Arabia’s allies in Yemen oust UAE-backed separatist from government
Survivors recount RSF gang rape in Sudan; infants among victims
Iran anti-government protests spread to majority of provinces, videos show
Europe
Russia’s latest “innovation” pitch is a familiar genre: take something disturbing, dress it up as civilian utility, and dare the outside world to name the obvious use case. The Telegraph reports that a startup, Neiry Group, is implanting neural chips in pigeons under a project codenamed PJN-1, steering them via electrodes and a head-mounted stimulator while a chest camera streams video and a small solar-powered pack carries the controller. The selling point is not just endurance; it’s plausibility. A pigeon doesn’t look like a drone. It can move through cluttered terrain, perch near people and infrastructure, and operate inside the visual “normal” of a city. The “civilian monitoring” framing doesn’t survive contact with basic logic. A remotely guided, camera-equipped animal is surveillance hardware with feathers. The article itself points toward the escalation pathway: Neiry’s founder speaks about adapting the system to other birds for different environments (ravens, seagulls, albatrosses), and outside experts warn that any such platform can be repurposed for military ends. In a world of electronic jamming, air-defense saturation, and restricted airspace, the incentive is straightforward: if machines are being detected, disrupted, or shot down, you look for carriers that blend into the background of everyday life. The report describes substantial funding and suggests links, direct or indirect, to Kremlin-linked technology programs and investment networks. This matters because projects like these rarely appear on “usefulness” alone. They emerge because they are politically legible: easily marketable as modernization, asymmetric advantage, or technological sovereignty. In that environment, the ethical question isn’t a barrier; it’s a communications problem. The darker edge is that “bio-drones” don’t only seek stealth in the air, they manufacture ambiguity on the ground. A conventional drone is visibly a machine and therefore visibly accountable. A bird is not. If something goes wrong, if surveillance crosses a border, if a payload is attached, if a civilian is harmed, the system is built for denial: it was only a pigeon, a hobbyist experiment, a harmless prototype. The technology’s value lies partly in that blur, because blurred lines slow accountability and soften consequences. Even if Neiry’s pigeon program never becomes operational at scale, the direction is the point. Russia is steadily widening the space where coercion can be tested under the cover of novelty, and where “dual use” becomes a euphemism for “waiting for permission never granted.” The result is a future where monitoring, intimidation, and potentially attack can be embedded into ordinary urban life, quietly, cheaply, and with just enough plausibility to keep officials’ hands clean.
From Classrooms To TikTok, China's Soft Power Push Expands In The Balkans
Russia spends half its state budget on military
Ingush MMA fighter receives award despite previous sexual violence conviction
Moscow Court Jails Stand-Up Comedian Nearly 6 Years for Alleged Joke About War Veterans
Bulgaria probes secret taping of women in beauty salons for porn sites
The King’s cousin and a corrupt officer, inside Spain’s narco scandal
Queer Azerbaijani influencer detained for ‘immoral activity’ on social media
BIRN Publishes 2026 Trends Report – ‘Populism in Central Europe: A Reprise’
Killed by Russian drones, two bodies lie in the snow, testament to love’s endurance
Armenian opposition politician says country needs ‘ministry of sex’
Belarus’ economic weakness becomes systemic - inte
Georgian Dream embarrassed by revelation that Tbilisi is paying premium for Russian gas
The Collapse That Created Today’s Russia
British Sikhs save teenage girl in London: Inside the UK's grooming gang scandal
Regions Calling: Why a Buryat Woman Stood Up to Russia’s Police Racism
After presiding over Georgia’s free speech crackdown, Kobakhidze calls for ‘healthy’ public debates
Polish minister warns of ‘dangerous precedent’ as Hungary’s Orbán grants asylum to fugitive politician
UAE limiting students coming to UK over Muslim Brotherhood concerns
What the Bella-1 Teaches Us About Targeting Shadow Fleets
From master spy to lead negotiator What does Zelensky’s new chief of staff, Kyrylo Budanov, bring to the peace talks?
Asia
It is clear that China’s anti-corruption campaign has always had a second, quieter purpose: to ensure that only the Party gets to decide what corruption is, who counts as corrupt, and when the public is allowed to hear about it. The detention of two investigative journalists, Liu Hu and Wu Yingjiao, for publishing an article about alleged abuses by a local official in Sichuan is a clean demonstration of that logic. Here, we can see how corruption is treated as an existential threat to the state, but independent reporting on corruption is treated as a threat to the state’s monopoly on truth, and this the state itself. The official justification is telling in its vagueness. Police in Chengdu said the men were detained on suspicion of “making false accusations” and “illegal business operations,” the kind of elastic charges that can be fitted around almost any disfavored speech. Liu’s lawyer says the case rests on the article itself, a report describing an official in Pujiang County accused of bullying tactics and legally dubious property seizures. The piece has since been scrubbed from the internet, which is often the real verdict in these cases: the state deletes the narrative first, then decides what to do with the people who wrote it. There’s a particular cruelty to the timing. Xi Jinping’s system is simultaneously purging high-level figures for graft while tightening the cage around anyone who tries to document corruption outside Party channels. The Discipline Inspection Commission’s warning, that allegations should be made through “legal channels” is less a procedural reminder than a political boundary line. “Legal,” in this context, means routed through institutions designed to protect the Party’s authority, not the public’s right to knowledge. When Liu pushes back that a published article is not a “complaint,” he’s pointing at the obvious: journalism is being reclassified as misconduct. This isn’t only about two men in a Chengdu detention center. It’s about the disappearance of a whole tradition of accountability reporting that once exposed contaminated baby formula, shoddy construction, and predatory local governance, stories that embarrassed officials but also, at times, forced action. Under Xi, that space has been methodically erased: outlets hollowed out, reporters harassed or jailed, the internet cleaned nightly of anything that suggests the state is failing. What remains is sanctioned outrage, aimed where the Party permits, and cheerful propaganda to fill the silence. The result is an anti-corruption narrative that doubles as an obedience test. If the Party chooses you, your downfall proves the system works. If a journalist finds you, the journalist becomes the criminal. It is a governance model that cannot tolerate independent verification, not because it fears corruption, but because it fears competition over who gets to name it.
Bangladesh’s Hindu minority in fear as attacks rise and a national election nears
UN experts condemn conviction of human rights defenders in Pakistan
EU ready to impose sanctions on Kyrgyzstan — report
Putin’s Top Security Aide Deepens Ties With Myanmar After Vote
Sale of nuclear secrets? Invasion of Taiwan? What the tea leaves reveal about the purge in China’s military leadership
The exiled Awami league members plotting a political comeback in Bangladesh –
The unseen front in the Philippines’ China challenge
Years After Coup, Myanmar’s Government in Exile Teeters on Irrelevance
India's oil shake-up: Can Venezuela really replace Russia?
Woman faints after being caned 140 times under Indonesian province’s sharia law
At Pakistan’s Afghan border, a trade shutdown empties markets
Vietnam Is Close to Launching Its Own Version of a China-Style Social Credit System
Farmers In Uzbekistan Say Land Forcibly Taken For 'Chinese Projects'
How bad is Delhi’s air? Like smoking half a pack of cigarettes.
Pakistan Creates Special Security Unit To Protect Chinese Citizens Amid A Rise In Attacks
Can a dynastic heir lead a post-dynasty Bangladesh?
Can Xi Jinping Make China Spend?
Afghan refugees at risk as deportations surge in Pakistan
‘Romance fraud billionaire’ sent to face justice in China
Africa
Human Rights Watch is warning that West Africa’s crisis is no longer just about insurgencies and insecurity, but rather one about governments using that insecurity as permission to close politics and crack down on freedom. In its latest World Report, HRW argues that 2025 brought a sharper regional turn toward repression: military transitions extended into semi-permanent rule, opposition space narrowed, and arrests replaced debate as the default response to dissent. The pattern is familiar: juntas promise stability, then treat civil liberties as a luxury the public can’t afford. The Sahel trio, Niger, Mali, and Burkina Faso, sit at the center of HRW’s diagnosis. HRW claim the juntas have postponed democratic timelines, restricted multiparty politics, and pushed out regional oversight, including a break with ECOWAS. At the same time, armed groups like JNIM and Islamic State-linked factions have escalated massacres and attacks on civilians, and HRW says state forces and allied militias have also been implicated in abuses, including summary executions. The result is a trap: insurgent violence expands, governments respond with indiscriminate force, and public fear becomes the justification for further repression. HRW’s most pointed alarm is about accountability. It criticizes Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso’s announced withdrawals from the International Criminal Court, warning that this weakens already-fragile pathways to investigate and prosecute grave crimes. That matters because impunity isn’t just a moral failure, it’s an operational one. When civilians believe both the gunmen and the state can kill without consequence, communities stop cooperating, intelligence dries up, and insurgents gain room to move. Underneath HRW’s language about treaties and charters is a blunt political reality: these regimes are trying to govern without competition, and they’re doing it in countries where violence makes the public desperate for order. HRW is calling on the African Union and international partners to push harder for protections for civilians and a reopening of political space, but the leverage is limited when regional institutions are fragmented and outside actors keep prioritizing counterterror optics over governance reform. In the Sahel, “security-first” has become a permanent excuse, and the civilian is the only constant loser. /
Islamic militants kill at least 162 people in attacks on 2 villages in Nigeria, lawmaker says
Zimbabwe's Mugabe latest former African leader to be mentioned in Epstein files
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, son of former leader, killed in Libya
Morocco evacuates over 100,000 people from 4 provinces after floodsNiger: Who attacked Niamey’s airport and what it reveals?
Eswatini education minister's anti-LGBTQ+ remarks risk harm to students, advocates warn
‘Executions, torture, abductions, rape': Ethiopia’s hidden conflict
Egypt’s crackdown on online discussion of religion violates fundamental freedoms, Amnesty International warns
South Sudan continues to restrict humanitarian access to opposition-held areas
Kenya's ex-deputy president alleges assassination attempt in church attack
Half of all Sudanese children not in education due to civil war
Militarising the Sahel will not defeat terrorism
Sudan's women face 'world's worst' sexual violence amid brutal conflict, minister says
Wife of Uganda’s opposition leader describes moment armed men attacked her at home
Nigeria: Gunmen kidnap more than 160 in church attacks
Kenya seeks $824mn from pipeline company privatisation as debt pressures mount
Saudi Arabia opens new gold market in Africa, ending Dubai’s long-standing dominance
Uganda police deny arresting opposition candidate amid clash over election credibility
US pursues integrated strategy to stabilise Libya, safeguard interests
Middle East
The newly released Epstein documents suggest he cultivated, and was willing to trade on, proximity to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, invoking “bin salman” in correspondence as a route into Saudi investment circles while tracking the kingdom’s internal power shakeups like a live market. In one exchange dated just before the 2017 Ritz-Carlton purge, Epstein is told to “keep close eye” on Saudi Arabia and immediately asks whether this is about “the missile or the anti corruption,” landing on the crackdown that corralled princes and businessmen and effectively forced a wealth transfer under the banner of “anti-corruption.” The point isn’t that Epstein predicted events; it’s that he treated state coercion as a signal of who would be safe to deal with afterward. What the emails keep showing is a consistent Epstein method: turning political access into a form of leverage. He positions himself as a broker between Gulf elites, investors, and Western gatekeepers, where the real asset is not an official title but the ability to imply you can reach the throne. In that ecosystem, even suggested closeness becomes power , and that’s exactly the kind of ambiguity Epstein appears to have used.
Syria signs landmark offshore oil field deal with Chevron and a Qatari investor
'Iran's Revolutionary Guards converted to a monster,' co-founder Mohsen Sazegara says
All-female Syrian militia refuses to lay down arms
Saudi’s MBS Unleashes Months of Reforms to Draw More FDI
Syria security forces enter strategic al-Hassakeh as part of deal with Kurdish-led SDF
Massive fire breaks out in Tehran after series of mystery explosions
HRW condemns detention of Yemeni investigators by UAE-backed forces
Businesses fear blowback from Saudi-UAE rift
What’s Buried by Baghdad’s Construction Boom
Syria opens humanitarian corridor to Kurdish town of Kobane after ceasefire extended
Iraq set to crown Nouri Al-Maliki as next Prime Minister
Russia may be forced to give up its base in northern Syria. What does that mean for Moscow?
Iran’s two crypto economies: state guile and household survival
Saudi Arabia to scale back flagship NEOM project: report
Power vacuum in Yemen threatens biodiversity of the one-of-a-kind Socotra archipelago
Aid cuts push Yemen towards catastrophe as famine pockets feared: Report
Who are the Kurds?
Teenager among Iranian protesters sexually assaulted in custody, rights group says
Saudi banks borrow abroad at fastest ever pace
Americas
Colombia’s drug war has the grotesque rhythm of a job that can’t be finished: fly in, burn the lab, fly out, repeat, and return a day later to find the same economy rebuilt a few meters away. The BBC’s embed with the Jungle Commandos in Putumayo captures the mechanics of the first rung of the cocaine supply chain: crude jungle shacks, drums of chemicals, piles of coca leaves, and workers so disposable that the state doesn’t even bother arresting them. The spectacle is both effective and futile, effective because it destroys inputs and forces gangs to absorb losses, futile because the underlying infrastructure is cheap, mobile, and socially protected by poverty. The reporting also underlines a structural contradiction that politicians keep trying to talk their way around. President Gustavo Petro insists seizures are at historic highs; President Donald Trump says Petro is letting cocaine flood U.S. streets and threatens escalation; the United Nations says production has surged to record levels, while Petro disputes the methodology. Everyone is “winning” on their own metric while the commodity expands. And that is the real tell: when a war can be claimed as a success by seizure statistics at the same time it is expanding by production statistics, it’s not a war, it’s a managed churn. The commandos’ perspective is pure operational realism. Major Cristhian Cedano Díaz admits a lab can be rebuilt “in one day,” yet argues the point is profitability: burn the crop, destroy the precursors, make the business more expensive and less predictable. But even this logic quietly concedes the asymmetry. The state spends heavily to erase an asset that can be cheaply recreated; the criminal economy absorbs loss as a cost of doing business. Meanwhile, the gangs evolve: drones, bitcoin, mobile chemists who synthesize on site, and the ability to move faster than any bureaucracy can adapt. Then the story pivots to Catatumbo and shows the moral pressure point most narratives avoid: the farmer who knows the crop can harm other people’s children, but grows it anyway because survival is not a debate club. “Javier” is not romanticized; he’s cornered. A bare house, five daughters, no credible alternative income, armed groups who control access to buyers, and the state largely absent because it cannot safely operate where its authority is contested. He’s not choosing coca over virtue; he’s choosing it over hunger, until even the coca market collapses under turf wars and he’s robbed of his crop like any other civilian in a lawless economy. This is where the “never-ending battle” becomes less a lament than an institutional confession. Colombia can torch labs every forty minutes and still fail to break the pipeline because the drug trade is not only chemistry and guns, rather, it is governance, land, roads, credit, basic security, and the capacity to keep armed actors from substituting for the state. As long as the countryside remains an extractive zone where people are governed by whoever shows up with coercive power, cocaine is simply the most rational crop. The most honest line in the whole piece is implicit: the war is being fought at the bottom and argued at the top. Commandos will keep burning shacks; presidents will keep trading insults and statistics; the UN will keep counting hectares and yields. But unless the state can offer a real economy that outcompetes coca in places like Putumayo and Catatumbo, not as a slogan, but as lived infrastructure, the future will look exactly like the present: smoke over the jungle, another lab rebuilt nearby, and children inheriting the same conflict disguised up as policy.
Transfer of cartel members to the United States underlines lack of control in Mexican prisons
Sharks become easy prey for criminal groups
The fiery criminal defence lawyer seeking Colombia’s presidency
Peru’s President May Be Ousted Over Secret Meetings With Chinese Businessmen
Coltan, the ‘Blue Gold’ Fueling Colombia’s Armed Conflict
Cuban President Diaz-Canel Oversees Military Preparations
Explained: The Colombia-Ecuador trade tiff
‘El Mantecas,’ head of Beltrán Leyva cartel faction, arrested in Sinaloa
How Maduro's capture in Venezuela weakens China in Latin America
Major Ecuadorian organized crime leader set free in Spain
Venezuela announces release of political prisoners; 5 Spanish citizens freed
Cuba’s Long-Suffering Economy Is Now in ‘Free Fall’
China hacked email systems of US congressional committee staff
Opinion | Mexico Is Acting Like an Adversary to the U.S.
Ecuador protests Spain's release of alleged gangster tied to 2024 TV station attack
Suspects in Brazil Matisse heist arrested, but alleged thief nicknamed ‘Gargamel’ remains at large
Roberto Saviano: 'Venezuela is not a narco-state, but a state that uses drugs as an instrument for the survival of those in power'
Falling price of cocaine forces drug traffickers to reuse narco-submarines, say Spanish police
Why Colombia's Cocaine Production Keeps Setting New Records
Cuba blames online news site ‘elTOQUE’ for the country’s economic chaos
Massive power outage hits Cuba’s western region after transmission line fails
The killing of child soldiers: The dilemma facing Gustavo Petro’s government
Pirates of the Caribbean strike in their old Bahamas ‘kingdom’. Where was the Navy
Despot of the Week
President Samia Suluhu Hassan
Accreditation:
Tanzania doesn't have an election but a crackdown disguised as democracy
Election protests erupt in Tanzania with opposition leaders jailed, disqualified
Tanzania election: Erosion of democracy will also come at the cost of economic potential
Recent Achievements:
The disappearances haunting Tanzania's election
Tanzania Opposition Leader Placed in Isolation Before Election
Maduro bolsters troop presence in Venezuela amid rising U.S. military pressure
Tanzania — from leader of Frontline States to a net exporter of authoritarianism