Category: International

  • While the war in Gaza rages on, Ukraine begins to rebuild its towns and cities.

    While the war in Gaza rages on, Ukraine begins to rebuild its towns and cities.

    With little money, Ukraine is defending itself against further Russian attacks after its own counteroffensive was ineffective.

    In the Ukrainian village of Trostianets, an excavator spews smoke as it clears debris and dirt from between the rail and bus stations to create room for a redesigned transportation hub.

    Trostianets, severely damaged in combat with Russian forces nearly two years ago, is one of six settlements being rebuilt with state finances as part of a pilot initiative to build the expertise and experience required for a later, far larger restoration operation.

    Time was running short, according to Mayor Yuriy Bova, to revitalise communities or risk losing millions of Ukrainians who could contribute to the country’s development to permanent exile in Europe.

    The village is only about 30 km (20 miles) from Russia. “We’re fighting for every person who should return; for every child who needs to return and build their future here,” he said to Reuters there.

    Bova remarked of the abandoned northeastern town, “To walk around and see this every day, that will morally traumatise a person.” “We need to restore everything, starting with cafes, libraries, factories, schools, hospitals.”

    The urgent need to rebuild Ukraine has also been indicated by Kyiv officials; this endeavour will cost hundreds of billions of dollars and entail more than just band-aid repairs to vital infrastructure like hospitals, power plants, and railroads.

    Still, there are no indications that the fighting will end. With little money, Ukraine is defending itself against further Russian attacks after its own counteroffensive was ineffective. Additionally, Moscow has started up a campaign of widespread airstrikes on urban areas located well beyond of the battle line.

    Reviving town squares is a luxury that Ukraine cannot currently afford, according to Pavlo Kuzmenko, the mayor of Okhtyrka, a town located just 20 km away from Trostianets that likewise suffers from the effects of severe Russian bombing during the early stages of the conflict.

    The department store that was destroyed across the street has not yet been fixed, and Okhtyrka officials took their time removing the debris off the main avenue that originally housed the municipal hall. Nonetheless, the majority of schools have been renovated with new roofs, windows, and bomb shelters, largely because of contributions from outside.

    Kuzmenko, who lamented a lack of resources and openly questioned the Trostianets plans last year, stated that the priority should be on repairing homes and essential infrastructure exclusively. The military should get any remaining funds.

    “A lot needs to be rebuilt,” Kuzmenko informed Reuters. “Squares, and all their decorations, can be done after the war.”

    Antonina Dmytrychenko, 65, of Okhtyrka, was standing next to the remnants of the city hall when she agreed with her mayor that “first we need victory, then reconstruction.”

    The divergent opinions in the nearby communities are a reflection of a national discussion concerning wartime expenditures in Ukraine. Most obviously, there is a growing grassroots protest movement calling for the military to take precedence over discretionary initiatives like maintaining public areas and roadways.


  • Indian-origin Singapore’s Transport Minister S Iswaran resigns amidst allegation of corruption.

    Indian-origin Singapore’s Transport Minister S Iswaran resigns amidst allegation of corruption.

    Amidst accusations of corruption, S Iswaran, the Transport Minister of Singaporean Indian descent, declared his departure from the ruling People’s Action Party. Furthermore, according to The Straits Times newspaper, the 61-year-old politician would resign from his position as a member of parliament.

    Iswaran was taken into custody in July of last year as a result of an inquiry conducted by the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB).

    According to media sources, his detention was made public on July 14; however, no information regarding the nature of the inquiry was given. Property magnate Ong Beng Seng, who chairs the race promoter Singapore GP and holds the rights to the Singapore Grand Prix, was detained and questioned about his contacts with Iswaran.

    Iswaran refuted the numerous crimes the CPIB accused him of in a January 16 resignation letter to Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. “I refute the accusations contained in the charges, and I’ll now concentrate on cleansing my record. I believe it is appropriate for me to step down from Cabinet, as well as from my roles as a member of Parliament and the PAP, in light of the current situation,” the letter stated.

    Iswaran said in a separate letter on January 17 that he would be returning his MP stipend and salary that he had been receiving since the CPIB investigations started in July 2023.

    He stated that he will not be requesting the return of the funds if he is found not guilty, saying, “My family and I have decided to return the monies because we cannot in all good conscience benefit from them when I was unable, on account of the investigations, to discharge my duties as a minister and Member of Parliament.”

    The prime minister expressed his disappointment and sadness that Iswaran was quitting politics under these circumstances in response to Iswaran’s letter on Wednesday.

    However, it is imperative that I handle these situations strictly in accordance with the law. It is the proper course of action. The integrity of the government and the Party (PAP) must be upheld. You recognise the significance of doing this, I’m sure. No less is expected by Singaporeans,” added Lee.

    The Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) announced in a separate statement that Iswaran will be replaced on Thursday by Acting Transport Minister Chee Hong Tat. In addition, he will be named Finance’s Second Minister.

    Meanwhile, Iswaran’s position as the Minister-in-Charge of Trade Relations would be assumed by Grace Fu, the Minister for Sustainability and the Environment.

    When Iswaran went before a district judge earlier on Thursday, he was accused with two charges of corruption involving bribery.

    According to a Channel News Asia report, he showed up at the State Courts at around eight in the morning and did not answer questions from media as he walked to the court entrance.

    He entered a not guilty plea to 27 accusations, including two under the Prevention of Corruption Act, one for obstruction of justice, and 24 under the Penal Code, which dealt with receiving gratification while working as a public servant.

    In order to further the hotelier’s commercial interests in a Singapore Grand Prix contract with the Singapore Tourism Board in September and December 2022, Iswaran is charged with taking more than SGD 160,000 from Ong.

    In addition, he faces one allegation of obstructing justice in May 2023 and 24 charges of accepting expensive items worth more than SGD 218,000 from Ong while he was a public worker between November 2015 and December 2021, including Singapore Grand Prix tickets.

    Since May 2021, Iswaran has served as the Transport Minister. Since his initial election as a Member of Parliament in 1997, he has been involved in politics for almost 26 years.


  • China Is Trying Harder To Increase Birth Rates While Population Continues To Decline

    China Is Trying Harder To Increase Birth Rates While Population Continues To Decline

    The decrease from the previous year was more than twice as high as the one recorded for 2022, when the nation’s population fell for the first time since 1960, losing 850,000 people.

    Beijing: As the nation struggles with an impending demographic crisis, China’s population drop picked up speed in 2023, according to official figures released on Wednesday. This continued the country’s downward trend after more than 60 years of development.
    After India surpassed China as the most populous nation in the world last year, Beijing is now rushing to increase declining birth rates through pro-fertility rhetoric and subsidies.

    “By the end of 2023, the national population was 1,409.67 million… a decrease of 2.08 million over that at the end of 2022,” the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) in Beijing announced on Wednesday 2023.

    Last year’s decline was more than double the fall reported for 2022, when the country lost 850,000 people as its population shrank for the first time since 1960.

    “In 2023, the number of births was 9.02 million with a birth rate of 6.39 per thousand,” the NBS said Wednesday, down from 9.56 million births in 2022.

    China ended its strict “one-child policy”, imposed in the 1980s amid overpopulation fears, in 2016 and started letting couples have three children in 2021.

    But that has failed to reverse the demographic decline for a country that has long relied on its vast workforce as a driver of economic growth.

    Many attribute the decline in birth rates to the rising expense of living and the rising proportion of women entering the labour and pursuing higher education.

    He Yafu, an independent Chinese demographer, told AFP that it is “basically impossible to reverse the trend of China’s population decline.”

    “Even if fertility is encouraged, it is impossible for China’s fertility rate to rise to replacement level, because now the younger generation has fundamentally changed its conception of fertility and is generally unwilling to have more children,” said He.


  • Expulsion of Iran’s ambassador from Pakistan due to airstrike: “We reserve the right to respond”

    Expulsion of Iran’s ambassador from Pakistan due to airstrike: “We reserve the right to respond”

    Iran Attack in Pakistan: At a time when regional conflict is on the rise, Tehran and its nuclear-armed neighbour faced a diplomatic crisis as a result of Iran’s strike.

    The foreign ministry of Pakistan described the strike as a “illegal and unacceptable act” after Iran used drones and missiles to target two bases used by Jaish al-Adl militants in the Balochistan province. This led to a diplomatic crisis between Tehran and its nuclear-armed neighbour at a time when regional conflict was on the rise.

    Amid tensions created by the Middle East conflict between Israel and Hamas, Pakistan became the second neighbour of Iran to report an attack on its territory in a single day. Pakistan’s foreign ministry stated that the country reserves the right to respond. Iraq had earlier denounced a lethal missile assault carried out by Iran in retribution for the death of an Iranian commander in Syria, which targeted an Israeli spy camp in Iraqi Kurdistan.

    Additionally, Pakistan withdrew its ambassador from Iran and prevented the envoy from Tehran from coming back to Islamabad.

    “Last night’s unprovoked and blatant breach of Pakistan’s sovereignty by Iran is a violation of international law and the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations,” the ministry of foreign affairs stated.

    In protest of the “unprovoked violation of its airspace by Iran and the strike inside Pakistani territory” that left two children dead and three others injured, Pakistan’s minister of foreign affairs called the Iranian charge d’affaires. Iran has full responsibility for the ensuing fallout. Such unilateral actions can gravely damage bilateral trust and confidence and are not consistent with good neighbourly relations, the statement stated.

    “We have to seek talks to eliminate the root causes of the issue, whether ungoverned spaces in Iran which are used against Pakistan or ungoverned spaces in Pakistan which may be used by terrorists against Iran,” stated Mushahid Hussain Sayed, the chairman of the defence committee of the Pakistani Senate.

    How did Iran respond to the strikes?
    Iran said that the insurgent organisation Jaish al-Adl, which has expanded over Afghanistan, Iran, and Pakistan and aspires to an independent Balochistan, was targeting bases with its paramilitary Revolutionary Guard. Six drones and rockets carrying bombs targeted houses where the gang claimed to have their family.

    “We urge the two sides to exercise restraint, avoid any actions that escalate the tensions, and jointly safeguard peace and stability in the region,” China said in response to the escalation of hostilities.


  • An explosion at a fireworks business in Thailand 18 Dead.

    An explosion at a fireworks business in Thailand 18 Dead.

    The rescue worker said, “Eighteen found dead, confirmed,” lowering his previous estimate of 20.

    According to a rescue worker, an explosion at a fireworks business in central Thailand on Wednesday resulted in the deaths of at least 18 individuals.

    The explosion happened in the centre of Suphan Buri province, close to Sala Khao township, at approximately 3:00 PM (0800 GMT).

    Police said that they were still verifying the official death toll with AFP.

    According to police colonel Theerapoj Rawangban, “there were deaths, we are checking how many people died,” AFP was told.

    “We do not see more damage towards other houses or people who live in the (nearby) community,” he stated.

    Nothing suggested that the explosion was triggered by anything.

    A massive black smoke plume and metal debris scattered across the ground were depicted in photos released by the local emergency agency.

    In Thailand, explosions at pyrotechnics and firecracker production workshops are not unusual.


  • Saudi Arabia raises the alarm about the Middle East: “Really worried that…”

    Saudi Arabia raises the alarm about the Middle East: “Really worried that…”

    Israel-Hamas War: “We’re incredibly concerned for regional security,” Saudi minister said at the World Economic Forum in Davos.

    Saudi Arabia expressed its “deep concern” for the security of the Middle East in the wake of the Israel-Hamas conflict, citing fears that it may spread throughout the region. Prince Faisal Bin Farhan, the foreign minister of Saudi Arabia, reaffirmed that a cease-fire in Gaza is necessary for a settlement to the war. He stated that international powers have to employ diplomacy to put a halt to the Houthi group’s attacks on ships in the Red Sea during the lull of hostilities.

    At the World Economic Forum in Davos, he declared, “We’re incredibly concerned for regional security,” adding that “freedom of navigation in the Red Sea impacts all of us.” Deescalation, both inside the Red Sea and throughout the region, ought to be the first priority, in our opinion. Making sure we interact with all stakeholders is a part of that.

    Since mid-November, Houthi attacks have caused disruptions in the Red Sea. The Yemeni organisation has launched missiles and drones, attempting to capture vessels that it claims are supporting Hamas and the Palestinians. In an effort to halt Houthi attacks, the US and the UK fired missiles at targets in Yemen last week. However, the group supported by Iran declared that it would intensify its aggression until Israel leaves Gaza, striking a bulk carrier owned by Greece.

    For over a year, Saudi Arabia has been attempting to negotiate a peace agreement with the Houthis. Countries have started to steer clear of the Red Sea more and more, even though none of their own ships have been targeted. This could result in further increases in the cost of goods worldwide.

    Despite the fight against Hamas, Prince Faisal Bin Farhan stated that Saudi Arabia is prepared to formally recognise Israel if it moves towards a two-state solution.

    He declared, “We agree that regional peace includes peace with Israel. Peace and security for Israel are intimately linked with peace and security for the Palestinians.” But a Palestinian state is the only way that can make it happen.

    He cited Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s declaration that the conflict must go on until Hamas is destroyed as evidence that Israel is not winning the fight and that a cease-fire in Gaza is therefore essential.


  • Nine-year-old Indian-American child Preesha Chakraborty is recognised as one of the world’s most intelligent students by John Hopkins Centre.

    Nine-year-old Indian-American child Preesha Chakraborty is recognised as one of the world’s most intelligent students by John Hopkins Centre.

    Nine-year-old Indian-American Preesha Chakraborty was named one of the Johns Hopkins Centre for Talented Youth’s “world’s brightest” children. Acknowledgment for outstanding achievement in assessments above grade level, administered to more than 16,000 children worldwide. In summer 2023, Preesha, a third-grader, does exceptionally well on the SAT, ACT, and School and College Ability Test at JH-CTY. Preesha performed at a level equivalent to advanced Grade 5 performance, excelling in both the verbal and quantitative components of the test and reaching the 99th percentile.


  • The Implications Of Trump’s Potential Re-Entry Into The White House For Others And India

    The Implications Of Trump’s Potential Re-Entry Into The White House For Others And India

    In addition to his protectionist trade ideas, Donald Trump’s America First rhetoric and threats to leave NATO have alarmed many US allies.

    Not only did Estonia’s highly regarded prime minister, Kaja Kallas, meet with White House representatives during her November visit to Washington. She also made sure to talk to important allies of Donald Trump.


    Her foreign minister had been in the heart of Trump country just a month before, congratulating employees of an Arkansas Lockheed Martin Corp. facility for their contribution to national security—namely, the HIMARS multiple rocket launchers manufactured there. “It’s important that we take these messages not only to Washington but also to other part of American society, to states that are perhaps a little more conservative,” Margus Tsahkna told the press.

    The outreach is just one illustration of the careful, yet urgent, preparations that nations are doing for Trump’s potential comeback to the White House. This fact will probably be felt during this week’s Davos meetings of the world’s elite, as the former president’s commanding victory in the Iowa caucuses solidified his hold on the Republican nomination and set the stage for a possible rematch with Joe Biden, who trails in national polls.

    Donald trump again

    Trump’s win in 2016 startled both US friends and opponents. Leaders are not wasting any time this time.

    In an attempt to learn more about the former president’s foreign policy goals, residents of Washington’s Embassy Row have been searching the city for meetings with former officials and anybody else connected to him. In other cases, they have even gone so far as to personally massage Trump’s ego, or in Estonia’s case, try to defuse his frequent grievance that Europe doesn’t pay enough on defence.

    Others are publicly raising the alarm. Trump’s first term taught us that “it is clearly a threat,” European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said to French TV last week.

    Not many powerful people are as transparent. However, in-depth interviews with government representatives across Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America exposed their worries—and occasionally even their optimism—about the potential consequences of a Trump comeback for international commerce, security, climate action, and the distribution of power. The majority requested anonymity when speaking about a supposedly internal US topic, with the campaign only recently beginning to take up steam and expected to be fierce.


  • Ending his campaign for US president, Vivek Ramaswamy declares Donald Trump the “best president of the 21st century.”

    Ending his campaign for US president, Vivek Ramaswamy declares Donald Trump the “best president of the 21st century.”

    US Presidential Elections of 2024: According to his spokeswoman, who was cited by the news agency AFP, Vivek Ramaswamy confirmed his Republican candidature following a lacklustre showing in Iowa.

    The 38-year-old Ramaswamy supported former President Donald Trump, his opponent. Even as he attempted to persuade Republican voters to choose Trump in order to “take our America First agenda to the next level” and give the candidate “fresh legs,” he has previously referred to Trump as the “best president of the 21st century.”

    vivek ramaswamy endorses trump

    The affluent political outsider also took inspiration from Trump’s campaign, portraying himself as a headline-grabbing, quick-witted populist who would not back down from a challenge.

    In the first Republican presidential contest of 2024, held in Iowa on Monday, Donald Trump triumphed handily, demonstrating his control over the party in spite of a long list of legal issues as he looks to face Democratic President Joe Biden again, according to Reuters.

    “THANK YOU IOWA, I LOVE YOU ALL!!!” Trump sent a message on Truth Social, his social media network.

    In November, as the former US president attempted to win back the White House, Ramaswamy also supported Trump.

    “I looked in all directions, and I believe it’s true that we weren’t able to pull off the surprise we had planned for tonight… We are going to pause this presidential campaign as of right now. I have no chance of being the next president,” declared Ramaswamy, as cited by PTI.

    There are two America First candidates running in this election, as I have stated from the first. Additionally, earlier tonight, I gave Donald Trump a call to congratulate him on his win and let him know that going ahead, you will have my full endorsement for the presidency,” he added.

    As they compete to become the leading Trump rival, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis came in well behind in second place, according to Edison Research, beating out former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley.

    According to Edison, after nearly 90% of the predicted votes were counted, Trump had 50.9%, DeSantis was at 21.4%, and Haley was at 19.0%. Bob Dole’s 12.8 percentage point victory margin in the 1988 Iowa Republican caucus was the greatest ever.

    According to Reuters, it was too soon to determine whether Trump would surpass 50%, a psychological threshold that would bolster his opponents’ claims that his ascent to the nomination might be thwarted.

    To persuade supporters and donors that their challenges to Trump are still credible, DeSantis and Haley had each set their sights on a solid second-place result.

    Trump has aimed to create an air of inevitability around his campaign, skipping all five of the Republican debates thus far and largely eschewing the county-by-county politicking that most candidates do ahead of the Iowa vote.



  • Real Madrid beats Barcelona in SUPERCOPA FINAL 

    Real Madrid beats Barcelona in SUPERCOPA FINAL 

    In the Spanish Supercopa final, Real Madrid humiliated their bitter rivals Barcelona 4-1, with Vinicius Junior scoring a vicious hat-trick in the first half against a helpless Catalan defence.


    Jude Bellingham, who ripped past a ridiculously tall Barcelona defence and easily rounding Inaki Pena to score, started the celebration early with a delicious ball for Vinicius to chase. It’s Bellingham’s first trophy in Madrid.


    Although it’s unclear why Xavi set up such a high defensive line against Vinicius and Rodrygo, the Brazilians took full advantage and shared three more goals as Barcelona was completely outplayed.