Category: 2. World

  • Lightning strikes kill 33 people in eastern India

    Lightning strikes kill 33 people in eastern India

    Lightning strikes over the grey sky during monsoons in Patna on July 16, 2025. — AFP 

    PATNA: Lightning strikes during monsoon storms in eastern India this week killed at least 33 people and injured dozens, officials said on Friday.

    The deaths in Bihar occurred during fierce storms between Wednesday and Thursday, a state disaster management department statement said, with the victims mostly farmers and labourers working in the open.

    More heavy rain and lightning are forecast for parts of the state.

    Bihar state’s disaster management minister, Vijay Kumar Mandal, told AFP that officials in vulnerable districts had been directed to “create awareness to take precautionary steps following an alert on lightning”.

    The state government announced compensation of 4 million rupees ($4,600) to the families of those killed by lightning.

    At least 243 died by lightning in 2024 and 275 the year earlier, according to the state government.

    India’s eastern region, including Bihar, is prone to annual floods that kill dozens and displace hundreds of thousands of people during peak monsoon season.


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  • Germany resumes deportations to Afghanistan – DW – 07/18/2025

    Germany resumes deportations to Afghanistan – DW – 07/18/2025

    The German Interior Ministry on Friday confirmed it sent 81 Afghan nationals back to their home country on board a flight from Leipzig airport.

    It was the first such flight conducted by the new German government under Chancellor Friedrich Merz.

    The government has said it aims to deport more people to Afghanistan after having held talks with the Taliban government, which Berlin does not officially recognize.

    Germany has been criticized for its plans to deport people to Afghanistan in spite of the human rights violations being recorded there. The talks between Berlin and the Taliban have also been seen as controversial.

    For the latest news, explainers and analysis from Germany, follow our blog.

    What do we know about the flight?

    The German Interior Ministry confirmed the repatriation flights in a statement.

    “This morning, Germany is deporting 81 Afghan nationals to their country of origin as part of a collective repatriation effort. These are Afghan men who are legally required to leave the country and who have a criminal record in the past.

    “The Federal Government is thus implementing an important agreement in the coalition agreement. This stipulates that deportations to Afghanistan will also be carried out, starting with criminals and those who pose a threat.”

    The statement said Germany was relying on Qatar for logistical support for the operation.

    The website Flightradar24 said the Qatar Airways jet took off at 8.35 a.m. local time (0635 GMT/UTC), having been scheduled to depart at 7 a.m. 

    Afghan refugee family faces migration reality in Germany

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    How has Germany approached repatriations?

    More than 10 months ago, Germany resumed deporting Afghan nationals for the first time since the Taliban seized power in 2021. Then-Chancellor Olaf Scholz had pledged to ramp up removals of rejected asylum-seekers.

    His successor, Friedrich Merz, made tougher migration policy a key pillar of his February election campaign.

    Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt said an entry and residence ban would also be imposed on the deportees.

    “This is how we begin to implement another part of the policy change from the coalition agreement.”

    “Deportations to Afghanistan must continue to be carried out safely in the future. There is no right of residence for serious criminals in our country.”

    The Afghans received up to €1,000 (about $1,160) in cash from the federal states to cover their initial expenses upon their return. This sum was said to ensure legal certainty for the operation because Germany’s Federal Administrative Court says a deportation can be blocked if a returnee is threatened with immediate destitution.

    Edited by: Alex Berry

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  • Russia says it shot down 73 Ukrainian drones aimed at Moscow

    Russia says it shot down 73 Ukrainian drones aimed at Moscow

    Russian air defences destroyed 73 Ukrainian drones overnight, including three heading for Moscow, Russia’s defence ministry said on Friday.

    Most of the drones were downed over Russia’s southwestern regions, including 31 over the Bryansk region that borders Ukraine, the ministry said on the Telegram messaging app.

    Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin, writing on Telegram, made no mention of casualties or damage, but said emergency services were examining the area where drone fragments fell to the ground.

    The federal aviation agency, Rosaviatsia, briefly ordered the suspension of operations at two airports near the capital, Domodedovo and Zhukovsky, but services were later resumed.

    Operations were halted well after midnight at a third Moscow airport, Vnukovo, before being reinstated by the morning.

    There was no immediate comment from Ukraine about the attacks. Kyiv says that its strikes inside Russia are necessary to destroy infrastructure key to Moscow’s efforts in its war against Ukraine, now in its fourth year.

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  • China calls for strengthening SCO economic, trade cooperation

    China calls for strengthening SCO economic, trade cooperation

    Gao Yunlong, vice-chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference and chairman of the All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce, addresses the opening of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) business forum in Beijing, capital of China, July 17, 2025. [Xinhua/Jin Liangkuai]

    BEIJING — Gao Yunlong, chairman of the All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce, called for bolstering economic and trade cooperation within the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) when speaking at the opening of the SCO business forum in Beijing on Thursday.

    Economic and trade cooperation is a powerful engine driving the SCO’s dynamic development, said Gao, also vice-chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference.

    Gao said China is ready to work with other parties to further align regional development strategies, enhance the quality and level of SCO economic and trade cooperation, and ensure the stability and efficiency of industrial and supply chains.

    He stressed that these efforts will promote the building of an SCO community with a shared future and contribute to lasting global peace and shared prosperity.

    Hosted by the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade, the forum attracted nearly 400 participants from government institutions and the business community both at home and abroad.

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  • Syria’s Druze find bodies in the streets while searching for loved ones after clashes

    Syria’s Druze find bodies in the streets while searching for loved ones after clashes

    JARAMANA, Syria — A Syrian Druze woman living in the United Arab Emirates frantically tried to keep in touch with her family in her hometown in southern Syria as clashes raged there over the past days.

    Her mother, father and sister sent videos of their neighbors fleeing as fighters moved in. The explosions from shelling were non-stop, hitting near their house. Her family took shelter in the basement. When she reached them later in a video call, they said her father was missing. He had gone out during a lull to check the situation and never returned.

    “Now I only pray. That’s all I can do,” she told The Associated Press at the time.

    Hours later, they learned he had been shot and killed by a sniper. The woman spoke on condition of anonymity fearing that using her name would put her surviving family and friends at risk.

    A ceasefire went into effect late Wednesday, easing days of brutal clashes in Sweida. Now, members of its Druze community who fled or went into hiding are returning to search for loved ones and count their losses. They are finding homes looted and bloodied bodies of civilians in the streets.

    The fighting began with tit-for-tat kidnappings and attacks between local Sunni Bedouin tribes and Druze militias in the majority-Druze Sweida province. Government forces that intervened to restore order clashed with the Druze militias, but also in some cases attacked civilians.

    At least 600 people — combatants and civilians on both sides — were killed in four days of clashes, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor. It said the dead included more than 80 civilians, mostly Druze, who were rounded up by fighters and collectively shot to death in what the monitor called “field executions.”

    “These are not individual acts but systemic,” the Observatory’s director Rami Abdul-Rahman told the AP. “All the violations are there. You can see from the bodies that are all over the streets in Sweida clearly show they’re shot in the head.”

    In response, Druze militias have targeted Bedouin families in revenge attacks since the ceasefire was reached. Footage shared on Syrian state media shows Bedouin families putting their belongings in trucks and fleeing with reports of renewed skirmishes in those areas. There was no word on casualties in those attacks.

    Most of the Syrian Druze who spoke to the AP requested anonymity, fearing they and their families could be targeted.

    The Druze religious sect is an offshoot of Ismailism, a branch of Shiite Islam. More than half of the roughly 1 million Druze worldwide live in Syria. The others live in Lebanon and Israel, including in the Golan Heights, which Israel captured from Syria in the 1967 Mideast War and annexed in 1981.

    They largely celebrated the downfall in December of Syrian autocrat Bashar Assad but were divided over interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa’s Sunni Islamist rule. The latest violence has left the community more skeptical of Syria’s new leadership and doubtful of peaceful coexistence.

    One Syrian-American Druze told the AP of his fear as he watched the clashes from the United States and tried to account for his family and friends whom he had seen in a recent trip to his native city Sweida.

    Despite internet and communications breakdowns, he tracked down his family. His mother and brother fled because their home was shelled and raided, he said. Their belongings were stole, windows shattered. Their neighbors’ house was burned down. Two other neighbors were killed, one by shelling, another by stray bullets, he said.

    He also pored over online videos of the fighting, finding a harrowing footage.

    It showed gunmen in military uniform forcing a number of men in civilian clothes to kneel in the street in a well-known roundabout in Sweida. The gunmen then spray the men with automatic fire, their bodies dropping to the ground. The footage was seen by the AP.

    To his horror, he recognized the men. One was a close family friend — another Syrian American on a visit to Sweida from the U.S. The others were the friend’s brother, father, three uncles and a cousin. Friends he reached told him that government forces had raided the house where they were all staying and took them outside and shot them.

    “We affirm that protecting your rights and freedoms is among our top priorities,” al-Sharaa said in a speech broadcast Thursday, where he addressed the Druze people in Syria, promising to hold perpetrators of civilian killings to account.

    But some rights groups accused Syria’s interim government of systematic sectarian violence, similar to that inflicted on the Alawite religious minority in the coastal province of Latakia in the aftermath of Assad’s fall as the new government tried to quell a counterinsurgency there.

    Footage widely circulated on social media showed some of the carnage. One video shows a living room with several bodies on the floor and bullet holes in the walls and sofa.

    In another, there are at least nine bloodied bodies in one room of the home of a family that took in people fleeing the fighting. Portraits of Druze notables are visible, smashed on the floor.

    Evelyn Azzam, a Druze woman, is searching the Damascus suburb of Jaramana, trying to find out what happened to her husband, Robert Kiwan.

    Last week, the 23-year-old Kiwan left home in Jaramana early as he does every day to commute to his job in Sweida.

    He got caught up in the chaos when the clashes erupted. Azzam was on the phone with him as government forces questioned him and his coworkers. She heard a gunshot when one of the coworkers raised his voice. She heard her husband trying to appeal to the soldiers.

    “He was telling them that they are from the Druze of Sweida, but have nothing to do with the armed groups,” the 20-year-old Azzam said.

    Then she heard another gunshot; her husband was shot in the hip. An ambulance took him to a hospital, where she later learned he underwent an operation. But she hasn’t heard anything since and doesn’t know if he survived.

    Back in the U.S., the Syrian-American said he was relieved that his family is safe but the video of his friend’s family being gunned down in the street filled him with “disbelief, betrayal, rage.”

    He said his family and friends protested against Assad, celebrated his downfall and wanted to give al-Sharaa’s rule a chance. He said he hadn’t wanted to believe that the new Syrian army — which emerged from al-Sharaa’s insurgent forces — was made up of Islamic militants.

    But after the violence in Latakia and now in Sweida, he sees the new army as a “bunch of militias … with a huge majority being radicals.”

    “I can’t imagine a world where I would be able to go back and integrate with these monsters,” he said.

    ___

    Chehayeb reported from Beirut.

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  • Iranian president travels by taxi after fuel contamination disables motorcade

    Iranian president travels by taxi after fuel contamination disables motorcade



    Masoud Pezeshkian, the President of Iran, during ceremony to unveil Tehran’s new electric public transport fleet on February 20, 2025. — ISNA/File

    Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian had to finish part of a recent journey to Tabriz by taxi after all three of his official vehicles broke down due to fuel contamination, a senior government official said.

    According to the president’s special inspector, Mostafa Moulavi, the vehicles — including those transporting the president and his security detail — came to a halt near Takestan in Qazvin province after refuelling at a roadside station close to the Rasht exit, reported Iran International.

    “Our investigation revealed that the gas station had been distributing poor-quality fuel mixed with water. It wasn’t the first time — the station had a history of similar violations,” Moulavi said during a recent visit to Qazvin’s provincial government offices.

    Despite the mechanical failure, President Pezeshkian declined to seek assistance from local authorities and instead hired a private taxi to continue his journey to Tabriz. “He did not contact the provincial governor or request help,” Moulavi added.

    The National Iranian Oil Products Distribution Company (NIOPDC) later confirmed that the gas station had been the subject of past complaints over fuel quality, though no clear reason was given for why it continued to operate.

    Neither the president’s office nor the Ministry of Petroleum has issued a public statement on the matter.

    Ongoing fuel concerns in Iran

    Fuel contamination remains a persistent problem across Iran. Drivers regularly complain of watered-down gasoline and tampered pump meters, often citing discrepancies between the amount of fuel received and the prices charged.

    Although videos documenting these issues have circulated widely, energy officials deny any widespread flaws in the system.

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  • Russia says it downed 73 Ukrainian drones, including 3 flying to Moscow – World

    Russia says it downed 73 Ukrainian drones, including 3 flying to Moscow – World

    Russian air defences destroyed 73 Ukrainian drones overnight, including three heading for Moscow, Russia’s defence ministry said on Friday.

    Most of the drones were downed over Russia’s southwestern regions, including 31 over the Bryansk region that borders Ukraine, the ministry said on the Telegram messaging app.

    Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin, writing on Telegram, made no mention of casualties or damage, but said emergency services were examining the area where drone fragments fell to the ground.

    The federal aviation agency, Rosaviatsia, briefly ordered the suspension of operations at two airports near the capital, Domodedovo and Zhukovsky, but services were later resumed.

    Operations were halted well after midnight at a third Moscow airport, Vnukovo before being reinstated by the morning.

    There was no immediate comment from Ukraine about the attacks. Kyiv says that its strikes inside Russia are necessary to destroy infrastructure key to Moscow’s efforts in its war against Ukraine, now in its fourth year.

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  • Pakistan condemns Israel’s continued military aggression against Syria – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. Pakistan condemns Israel’s continued military aggression against Syria  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. Houthi leader: Israel pursuing four strategic objectives in Syria – Shafaq News  شفق نيوز
    3. Pakistan condemns Israel’s ongoing military actions against Syria  Arab News PK
    4. China, Pakistan condemn Israeli strikes on Syria  Anadolu Ajansı
    5. Pakistan condemns Israeli attack on Syria  Aaj English TV

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  • Russia says it downed 73 Ukrainian drones, including 3 flying to Moscow – Reuters

    1. Russia says it downed 73 Ukrainian drones, including 3 flying to Moscow  Reuters
    2. Russia says it shot down 73 Ukrainian drones aimed at Moscow  The Express Tribune
    3. A series of explosions rocked Russian regions: drones attacked the Moscow region and Dzerzhinsk  Прямий
    4. Russia Says Ukrainian Drones Targeted Moscow, St. Petersburg  The Wall Street Journal
    5. Ukrainian Drone Attacks on Russia Kill At Least 2  The Moscow Times

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  • Tariff war must end quickly, German finance minister tells G7 partners – World

    Tariff war must end quickly, German finance minister tells G7 partners – World

    DURBAN: German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil made clear in a meeting with his counterparts from the Group of Seven major economies on Friday that the global trade conflict must be ended quickly, he told reporters.

    “But I also want to say very clearly: There will be no deal at any price, there should be no victory at any price,” Klingbeil said in Durban, South Africa, on the sidelines of the G20 finance chiefs meetings, where G7 ministers also met separately.

    Klingbeil called for a fair deal between the U.S. and Europe on tariffs.

    The 30% tariff on imports from European Union threatened by U.S. President Donald Trump would, if implemented, be a game-changer for Europe and a heavy blow for Germany with its export-oriented economy.

    Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel also warned of the “great global damage” that the uncertainty from tariffs is causing.

    “My appeal to the U.S. side is not to play games with the situation, because in the end, the prosperity of us all is at stake here,” Nagel said at the press event with Klingbeil.

    EU chief delays retaliation for US tariffs in search of deal

    The head of Germany’s Bundesbank had warned on Thursday in an interview with Reuters that the tariff plans risk wiping out even a modest recovery in Europe’s largest economy in the coming years.

    U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent did not attend the two-day G20 meeting in person, his second absence from a G20 event in South Africa this year, though he did join the G7 meeting online on Friday morning, according to Klingbeil.

    “We were once again very much in agreement that we want to overcome existing problems, that in the end there should be a solution,” Klingbeil said, referring to his talks with ministers from the G7 nations.

    However, the EU is ready and willing to take determined countermeasures if a negotiated solution with the U.S. was not found, Klingbeil said. “In the end, for me it is about protecting jobs and companies in Europe.”

    Brussels is discussing countermeasures if a deal is not reached by August 1, including the so-called anti-coercion instrument, which allows the bloc to retaliate against countries that put pressure on EU members to change economic policies.

    Asked about this instrument in an interview with Reuters on Thursday, Klingbeil said talks are now focusing on finding a joint solution with Washington, but if it doesn’t work out, the EU will act “united and decisively.”

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