- Afghan FM Muttaqi heads for first visit to India to foster ties abroad Dawn
- Taliban FM begins first visit by senior Afghan leader to India since 2021 Al Jazeera
- Afghanistan’s Taliban foreign minister visits India to build closer ties Reuters
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Afghan FM Muttaqi heads for first visit to India to foster ties abroad – Dawn
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Military promises swift retribution for any Indian misadventure – Dawn
- Military promises swift retribution for any Indian misadventure Dawn
- Army brass warns India any ‘imaginary new normal’ to be met with ‘new normal of swift retributive response’ Dawn
- ‘India United Only Under Aurangzeb’: Pak’s Khawaja…
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Clashes break out in Lahore after raid on TLP HQ goes awry – Dawn
- Clashes break out in Lahore after raid on TLP HQ goes awry Dawn
- Security beefed up in Rawalpindi amid TLPs Islamabad march plan Geo.tv
- Police arrest 2 TLP men; recover sticks, catapults, small marble balls, salt packs The Nation (Pakistan )
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Salah scores twice as Egypt qualifies for 2026 World Cup with win over Djibouti
Updated on: Oct 09, 2025 07:43 am IST
The Liverpool star netted twice in a 3-0 win that sealed Egypt’s place in next year’s FIFA World Cup.
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Israel and Hamas agree to first phase of Trump's Gaza ceasefire plan – Reuters
- Israel and Hamas agree to first phase of Trump’s Gaza ceasefire plan Reuters
- Trump says first phase of Gaza peace deal agreed, paving way for hostage and prisoner releases BBC
- LIVE: Trump says Israel, Hamas agree on ‘first phase’ of Gaza…
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Motorola officially reveals when the ultra-thin Edge 70 is getting unveiled just as its price leaks
Motorola is ready to get into the ultra-thin smartphone game too, following the Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge, the Tecno Spark Slim and Pova Slim, and, of course, the Apple iPhone Air. Motorola’s entrant into the category will be called X70 Air…
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DASSAI MOON Project, the World’s First Test Brewing of Sake in Space– Launch of space brewing equipment from Tanegashima on October 21 —
Tokyo, October 9, 2025 – The space brewing equipment jointly developed by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. (MHI) and DASSAI Inc., a sake company based in Iwakuni City, Yamaguchi Prefecture, and ingredients will be launched by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) for the DASSAI MOON Project, a project to brew sake in space. The launch will take place from Tanegashima Island on October 21, 2025 using H3 Rocket No. 7, a new mainstay launch vehicle built in Japan.
The items will be transported to the International Space Station (ISS) using HTV-X, a new Japanese-built unmanned cargo transfer spacecraft that will undergo its first demonstration test with this launch, and arrangements are being made with JAXA for the brewing test to be conducted in the Japanese experiment module Kibo on the ISS by astronaut Kimiya Yui. The Japanese-led mission aims to brew sake in space for the first time in the history of humanity.
■ About the DASSAI MOON Project
In 2024, DASSAI commenced the DASSAI MOON Project, seeking to build a brewery on the surface of the moon and brew its sake there with the aim of improving quality of life in activities on the moon in future. In Phase 1 of the DASSAI MOON Project, planned jointly by DASSAI and MHI, the world’s first test brewing of sake in space will be conducted in an environment simulating the gravity of the moon’s surface in the Japanese experiment module Kibo in the fall of 2025.
Past link: https://dassai.com/us/news/info/005853.html■ Schedule and mission details for Phase 1 of the DASSAI MOON Project
The ingredients from DASSAI (rice, malt, yeast, and water) and purpose-built space brewing equipment that will be used on the mission will be launched from the Tanegashima Space Center at approximately 10:58am on Tuesday, October 21, 2025 and taken to the ISS. The items will be launched on the new Japanese-made H3 rocket, which commenced operation in 2024, together with the HTV-X, the resupply vehicle being used to transport them to the ISS, which is being taken to space for the first time. Upon arrival at the ISS, the brewing equipment will be set up and water will be placed inside to start multiple parallel fermentation, a fermentation reaction unique to Japanese sake, for the test brew. DASSAI will brew the sake during the mission and MHI has been developing the space brewing equipment. Processes such as the loading of the equipment on the rocket at the launch site, followed by the launch and the operations at the ISS, will be a collaborative effort between JAXA and various Japanese administrative bodies, companies such as MHI, and other organizations, for an all-Japanese technological endeavor.
Testing in orbit will commence around 10 days after the launch, with the sake brewed in a 1/6G environment, equivalent to the gravity of the moon’s surface, over a period of approximately two weeks while various data is monitored from Earth. After the fermentation in space is completed, the raw sake will be frozen and stored in orbit; it is expected to be brought back to earth no sooner than the end of the year. After being collected, the raw sake will be thawed and refined on Earth, half of the collected sake will be sent to the purchaser, while the remaining half will be analyzed to glean information for future Japanese space industry development.
■ “DASSAI MOON Project” Dedicated website: https://dassai.com/moon/en/
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Jennifer Lopez remembers moment of strength 6 months after welcoming twins
Jennifer Lopez proved her determination knows no limits, even just months after becoming…
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Decoding Backdoor Attacks in Cybersecurity
In the 1995 Sandra Bullock movie The Net, a supposedly secure and safe security program is actually a Trojan horse of sorts, allowing hackers “backdoor access” into business mainframes. It might have sounded high-tech at the time, but…
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Thoughts from the Road: The Middle East
I recently spent time in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the UAE — my second trip to the region in 2025 — with local KKR colleagues, CEOs, CIOs, business executives, and investors. KKR has been on the ground in the region for over sixteen years, but the firm’s momentum certainly accelerated after the landmark 2019 ADNOC Oil Pipelines deal, which created a template for investment in the Middle East. That momentum has increased further still since the appointments of General David Petraeus (U.S. Army, Retired) as Chair of KKR Middle East and Julian Barratt-Due as head of our dedicated regional investment team, and with two transactions announced this year.
Ahead of my trip, Aidan Corcoran and other colleagues on the global macro team, in conjunction with our EMEA deal teams, conducted substantial preparatory work by revisiting the opportunity set in the region, focusing this trip on the countries sharing a political and economic union as part of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). As detailed below, five key areas stood out:
1. There is a clear, shared push to diversify the region’s economies. Pro-growth policy frameworks — driven by focused and effective leadership — are helping to make that a reality, including a thoughtful approach to financial services. All told, the GCC markets now rank among the top five regions globally for IPO activity, with markets like the UAE showing meaningful gains in capitalization relative to GDP, signaling improving liquidity and broader investing options. We expect this dynamic to strengthen further as foreign ownership increases and corporate governance continues to improve. At the same time, GCC governments are doubling down on hospitality, real estate, healthcare, and digitalization. Importantly, these changes are occurring against a backdrop where current oil prices largely stay the same, underscoring our view that sound policy implementation — not higher commodity prices — holds the key to success, including attracting more foreign capital into the region.
2. The labor force in the region is changing – and for the better, but more can be done. Already, more women are joining the workforce, which is a tailwind. Consider that Saudi Arabia has driven a remarkable rise in women entering the workforce — from 18% in 2010 to 36% now, and likely to reach 40% ahead of 2030; however, there is also a need for more local worker training (and retraining). That said, during this transition period locals do have more access to high quality healthcare, Internet, and impressive public transportation than we see in other growth markets. Overall, we think more policies that encourage broad-based growth in financial services, technology, healthcare, and leisure/travel, for example, should also accelerate some of the positive momentum we believe can be unleashed in the region’s services economy.
3. The infrastructure opportunity is especially noteworthy, driven by sizable investment plans that will be needed to hit national strategic and economic goals across the region. We see upside across diversified PPPs, the energy transition, the digital economy, and broader corporate infrastructure, each strong areas for foreign capital deployment. In particular, low energy costs and ample land make this region appealing for the digital transformation we are seeing across key industries, including the reshaping of financial services as parts of the sector decentralize. Artificial intelligence is also a centerpiece of government leadership, a backing that we believe has already begun to pay handsome dividends.
4. However, more work is needed to attract foreign capital into the liquid capital markets. We believe more focus on improving external shareholder returns as well as offering securities and indices that are reflective of the region’s improving GDP-per-capita could significantly boost capital flows into the GCC states (Exhibit 1). Ultimately, we think these types of initiatives will be required to move investor mentality from valuing equities off dividend yields to price-to-earnings ratios.
5. On the private side, however, we believe the story is compelling for those who are willing to create a domestic presence as well as leverage their global footprint. Local national champions want foreign capital and their operational expertise to expand abroad, but — more importantly — they also want more foreign capital to help ‘right-size’ and improve existing local businesses as well as to increase investment behind rising GDP-per-capita stories. As such, we continue to believe the opportunity for global players with a local presence, particularly in Asset-Based Finance, Structured Credit Solutions, and Preferred Equity, is quite compelling. The reality is that the region has many attractive ‘hard assets’ with contracted revenue streams where traditional securitization technology can both unlock value for owners and expand the potential market for allocators of capital beyond what currently exists in the region, we believe.
Importantly, our latest trip only confirms our central thesis laid out earlier in March 2025 (see Thoughts From the Road: Europe and the Middle East) that the GCC region has transformed itself from ‘just’ a fundraising hub for global investors to one of domestic opportunity for global investors, especially on the infrastructure side. The region boasts strong structural GDP growth, liberalizing capital markets, and economic diversification. A pro-business philosophy, competitive taxes, low government leverage, and compelling demographics all serve as positive macro tailwinds for investors as well as companies targeting new markets for growth. Overall, our base view is that this region is potentially on track to challenge existing financial hubs, especially on the human talent front, such as Hong Kong, London, Dublin, and Singapore.
EXHIBIT 1: We Think Broadening of GCC Capital Markets Sectoral Composition May Be Warranted
Sector Weights %: GCC vs. U.S. vs. India
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