Category: FOREIGN

Foreign Blogs is a network of global affairs blogs and a supplement to the Foreign Policy Association’s Great Decisions program.

  • Boy steals mother’s jewellery to gift iPhone to girlfriend

    Boy steals mother’s jewellery to gift iPhone to girlfriend

    A ninth-grader boy in India stole his mother’s gold jewellery to gift his girlfriend an iPhone for her birthday.

    The incident occurred in the Najafgarh area of the Indian capital, New Delhi, as per Indian media.

    The police said that on August 3, the woman filed a complaint stating that on August 2, between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m., an unknown person stole two gold chains, gold earrings, and a gold ring.

    During the investigation, the CCTV footage showed no one entering the house or leaving.

    However, the police then turned the scope of the investigation inside the house and found that one of the woman’s sons was missing.

    The investigation team then started gathering information about the boy and questioned his school friends.

    The boy’s friends told the police that he had a close friendship with a girl in his class and that the two liked each other.

    The investigation team then learned that the woman’s son had bought a new iPhone worth Rs 50,000. The team conducted several raids to search for the boy, but each time he managed to escape from the scene.

    “We received a tip-off on Tuesday that the boy would come home around 6 pm.

    However, as soon as he came home, he was taken into custody, and later, an iPhone was recovered from his possession,” the police stated.

    The young boy is a student in class 9 and studies in a private school in Najafgarh.

    The investigation further revealed that the boy had asked his mother for money to buy a gift on his girlfriend’s birthday, but due to her limited resources, the mother refused to give him the money.

    Enraged at the refusal, the boy stole the gold ornaments from the house, sold them to a goldsmith, and bought an iPhone.

    Delhi police have arrested the goldsmith and recovered the woman’s jewellery.

  • Opposites don’t attract in Russia as politics makes its mark on dating

    Opposites don’t attract in Russia as politics makes its mark on dating

    Sitting at a cafe in Moscow, Yulia swiped through a carousel of men on her phone’s dating app, trying to guess if the people in the pictures shared her views.

    “I started to include the artists that I listen to in the bio. It’s kind of a hint at my thinking,” the 21-year-old freelance photographer said, choosing her language carefully.

    Since Russia launched its full-scale military operation in Ukraine in February 2022, thousands of people have been denounced, fined or thrown in jail for expressing opposition to the conflict.

    According to opinion polls, only a minority of young people living in Russia disapprove of the offensive.

    A June poll by the independent Levada centre suggested 30 percent of 18-24 year-olds disapprove, compared with 59 percent who approve.

    For young, liberal Russians who want to avoid hooking up with hardline pro-army patriots, dating has become a minefield.

    “After 2022, I stopped giving links to any publications that I read,” Yulia said of her online dating profile.

    Gone were any articles expressing tolerance towards LGBTQ people or opposition to the Ukraine conflict — opinions that can land you in jail.

    Instead, she listed her favourite musicians as Zemfira and Monetochka, singers who have criticised Russia’s offensive in Ukraine and have been declared “foreign agents” by Moscow.

    ‘Very classy’

    The dating scene can also be tricky to navigate for those who back the offensive.

    Several groups on social media organise “patriotic meetings” for supporters of the Kremlin and military to search for potential matches offline.

    Arseny Blavatsky, a 24-year-old PR manager and self-confessed admirer of President Vladimir Putin, said he was looking for “an ideologically close partner”.

    “Since February 2022, nobody can be apolitical,” he told AFP at a speed-dating event held in a Moscow restaurant, his fourth so far.

    For Arseny, avoiding ideological conflict in a relationship is a must.

    He recalled his frustration after meeting one girl whom he called “very classy” but politically incompatible.

    “I was getting on very well with this one girl, everything was cool. On the same wavelength, the same language,” he said.

    But after Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny died in prison in February, she became extremely upset — to his dismay.

    “She was in absolute hysterics. I told her that changed nothing between us. And she says, ‘Well, that’s it, we can’t go on’. I mean, that’s a bit rubbish, isn’t it?” he told AFP.

    After meeting a dozen girls at the speed-dating event, Arseny chose two to follow up with.

    Arseny said he doesn’t know if it’s going to work out this time.

    ‘Unexpected joy’

    To avoid encountering such differences, other young people have found partners within political movements.

    Katya Anikievich and Matvei Klestov, both 21, met in January while campaigning for Boris Nadezhdin, an opposition politician who wanted to challenge Putin in March’s presidential election.

    “Thousands of people, often my age, spoke freely. It was an unexpected joy,” Matvei said of the campaign.

    In the end, the authorities blocked Nadezhdin from running.

    But life changed for Katya and Matvei.

    Hand in hand, they have gone on to support jailed anti-offensive activists in court and taken part in gatherings to write letters to prisoners.

    “Katya shares my opinions, it makes me want to go on living,” Matvei said.

    ‘I’ll follow him’

    Maria Smoktiy and Mikhail Galyashkin also found love through politics.

    They met at a demonstration organised by the “Other Russia” party, an offshoot of the far-left National Bolshevik movement founded by the late activist and writer Eduard Limonov.

    The party backs Russia’s military operation in Ukraine. But its politics is generally more hardline than that of the government, which has sometimes brought it into conflict with the authorities.

    Maria, 18, said she gave up her Arabic studies to deliver aid to parts of eastern Ukraine controlled by Russia with the 24-year-old Mikhail, whom she called “an accomplished adventurer”.

    “When some turbulent historical events happen, you immediately realise who’s on your side and who’s on the other side,” she said, speaking to AFP in the kitchen of their small Moscow flat.

    The couple have travelled a lot in Russia and organised unauthorised demonstrations that have often landed Mikhail in prison for a few days.

    “Setting up barricades, having a family, I want to do everything with him,” Maria said, stroking a bust of Lenin on the table with one hand.

    “I’ll follow him all the way to Siberia,” she added.

    “Maria is a diamond like no other in the world,” Mikhail replied, unabashedly proud.

    But for some in Moscow, the adage that opposites attract still applies.

    Lev, a 28-year-old salesman at a patriotic bookshop in Moscow, and Yevgenia, а 20-year-old English teacher, say they found love even though they are ideologically opposed.

    A “stubborn conservative” by his own admission, Lev said he was about to marry a “liberal open to the West”.

    “She contradicts me and I often take her side,” he confessed, surprised.

  • Turkey joins South Africa’s case against Israel

    Turkey joins South Africa’s case against Israel

    Turkey has filed an official request to join South Africa’s genocide case against Israel in the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in the Hague.

    In a statement, the Turkish foreign ministry announced that it had decided to join the case—formally known as submitting a declaration of official intervention—and would make the necessary legal preparations.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said it had made the formal request on Wednesday.

    “The international community must do its part to stop the genocide and exert the necessary pressure on Israel and its supporters,” Fidan said in a post on X (formerly Twitter).

    “Turkiye will make every effort to do so,” he added.

    The court will make the final decision of admission to the case.

    South Africa brought its case against Israel in December, accusing it of state-led genocide in Gaza.

    To read more: All you need to know about South Africa’s genocide case against Israel at ICJ

    However, in January, the ICJ ordered Israel to refrain from any acts that could fall under the Genocide Convention and to ensure its troops commit no genocidal acts against Palestinians.

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that in January, Turkiye provided documents for the case at the ICJ, also known as the World Court. In June, Spain said it had asked to intervene in the case at the ICJ.

    Israel has repeatedly dismissed the case’s accusations of genocide, claiming its right to self-defence after Oct 7 last year that killed 1,200 Israelis and foreigners. In 10 months of subsequent Israeli attack, more than 39,600 Palestinians have been martyred in Gaza. Hundreds of thousands are displaced, and most of the strip suffers from a humanitarian crisis.

  • Yunus says Bangladesh celebrating ‘second independence’

    Yunus says Bangladesh celebrating ‘second independence’

    Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus on Thursday paid tribute to those killed in Bangladesh’s deadly protests that toppled Sheikh Hasina’s government, saying their sacrifices had brought the nation a “second independence.”

    “Today is a glorious day for us,” he told reporters at the airport in Dhaka shortly after returning to the country to lead a caretaker government. “Bangladesh has created a new victory day. Bangladesh has got a second independence.”

    Yunus returned to Bangladesh Thursday, landing at the capital’s airport ahead of his expected swearing in to lead a caretaker government, an AFP reporter said.

  • Time to leave: Hasina’s son convinced her to flee the country

    Time to leave: Hasina’s son convinced her to flee the country

    On August 5 2024, Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina fled to India as the demonstrations grew bigger and bolder.

    Ruling since 2009, her resignation was deemed as a major victory by the people of Bangladesh who, moments after she left, had barged into her palace.

    And while the protests were happening for over a month, with over 300 killed while thousands injured and arrested, what really prompted Sheikh Hasina to escape?

    The New York Times reports that until the final hours, Hasina firmly believed she could withstand the crowd gathering around her. Three sources familiar with the internal conversations disclosed that she ignored the suggestions of her security advisors, who had warned that their efforts to suppress anti-government protests had already been unsuccessful and that any additional action would lead to more violence and bloodshed.

    Her top security advisors then resorted to her family in order to dispel Sheikh Hasina’s rigidity and make her realise that, “it was the end”.

    The heads of army, police, air force, and navy came to her residence where she met with them alongside her sister, Sheikh Rehana, who had come from London just days earlier for a visit.

    Her sister spoke to Hasina in private for about 20 minutes after which she was “quiet, but still reluctant”.

    Army chief Gen. Waker-uz-Zaman, who is also a relative of Sheikh Hasina, then contacted her son, Sajeeb Wazed, living in Virginia, US, to urge him to persuade his mother to recognize the seriousness of the situation.

    “She wanted to stay, she did not want to leave the country at all,” Mr. Wazed later told Indian news channels. “We were concerned for her physical safety first. So we persuaded her to leave.”

    By then, the security personnel had estimated that Sheikh Hasina had less than an hour to leave.

    “At very short notice, she requested approval to come for the moment to India,” India’s foreign minister, S. Jaishankar told the Indian Parliament.

  • German woman to pay 600 euros as fine for using pro-Palestinian slogan

    German woman to pay 600 euros as fine for using pro-Palestinian slogan

    BERLIN: A Berlin court on Tuesday fined a woman €600 euros (1, 82, 159 rupees) for using the phrase “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” at a protest, in a ruling slammed as a “dark day for freedom of expression” by her lawyer.

    The 22-year-old, named only as Ava M, was found guilty of using the slogan at a banned gathering in Berlin’s Neukoelln district on October 11, according to a court spokeswoman.

    The court concluded that the woman’s use of the phrase so soon after the October 7 raid in Israel meant it “could only be understood as a denial of Israel’s right to exist and an endorsement of the attack”, the spokeswoman said.

    “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” is seen by some as a call for the destruction of Israel, though others say it simply appeals to equality for Palestinians and Israelis.

    German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser outlawed the phrase in November as part of a ban on the activities of Hamas.

    However, the ban is legally controversial, and courts in different parts of Germany have handed down different rulings on cases involving the phrase, with many finding it to be permissible.

    Lawyer Alexander Gorski, who represented the woman in Berlin, said it was “a dark day for freedom of expression”.

    “My client only wanted to express her hope for a future of democratic coexistence for all people in the region,” he said, adding that his client would appeal the decision.

  • Western ambassadors to skip Nagasaki memorial after Japan exclude Israel

    Western ambassadors to skip Nagasaki memorial after Japan exclude Israel

    Ambassadors from Western countries including the United States will skip a ceremony marking the 79th anniversary of the bombing of Nagasaki after Israel was snubbed, officials said Wednesday.

    Nagasaki’s mayor last week said that Israel’s ambassador Gilad Cohen was not invited to Friday’s event in the southern Japanese city because of the risk of possible protests over the Gaza conflict.

    The US and British embassies said on Tuesday that their ambassadors would not take part as a result, and that their countries would be represented by lower-ranking diplomats.

    Media reports said that Australia, Italy, Canada and the European Union, who together with the US, Britain and Germany signed a strongly worded joint letter to Nagasaki’s mayor last month, would follow suit.

    US ambassador Rahm Emanuel will not attend “after the mayor of Nagasaki politicised the event by not inviting the Israeli ambassador”, an embassy spokesperson told AFP.

    Instead Emanuel, 64, who was ex-president Barack Obama’s chief of staff, will go to a separate event at a temple in Tokyo, the spokesperson said.

    The British embassy said that ambassador Julia Longbottom would also not be in Nagasaki, saying that not inviting Israel “creates an unfortunate and misleading equivalency with Russia and Belarus — the only other countries not invited to this year’s ceremony.”

    A spokesperson for the French embassy said that its number two would attend, telling AFP that the “decision not to invite the representative of Israel is regrettable and questionable”.

    Nagasaki mayor Shiro Suzuki had said last week that the decision not to invite Cohen was “not politically motivated” but based on a desire to “hold the ceremony in a peaceful and sombre atmosphere”.

    In June Suzuki said Nagasaki had sent a letter to the Israeli embassy calling for an “immediate ceasefire” in Gaza.

    Cohen, who was invited to and attended a memorial ceremony on Tuesday in Hiroshima, last week had said the Nagasaki decision “sends a wrong message to the world”.

    “As a close friend and like-minded nation of Japan, Israel has attended this ceremony for many years to honor the victims and their families,” he wrote on social media platform X.

    On Monday Cohen told US broadcaster CNN that the security concerns were “invented” and that he was “really surprised by (Suzuki) hijacking this ceremony for his political motivations.”

    In their letter to Suzuki seen by AFP, the six Western envoys had warned that if Israel was excluded “it would become difficult for us to have high-level participation at this event.”

    Government spokesman Yoshimasa Hayashi on Wednesday declined to comment, saying invitations were “a decision for the organiser, Nagasaki City.”

    A Nagasaki official in charge of the ceremony said it was “obviously better to have high-level individuals, like ambassadors themselves, taking part”.

    “What is important is that representatives of the countries will attend the ceremony,” he told AFP.

    hih-mac-stu/kaf/mca

    © Agence France-Presse

  • Bangladesh Nobel winner Yunus to lead interim govt

    Bangladesh Nobel winner Yunus to lead interim govt

    The appointment came quickly after student leaders called on the 84-year-old Yunus — credited with lifting millions out of poverty in the South Asian country — to lead.

    The decision was made in a meeting with President Mohammed Shahabuddin, the heads of the army, navy and air force, and student leaders.

    “(They) decided to form an interim government with Professor Dr Muhammad Yunus as its chief,” Shahabuddin’s office said in a statement.

    “The president has asked the people to help ride out the crisis. Quick formation of an interim government is necessary to overcome the crisis.”

    Yunus will have the title of chief advisor, according to Haid Islam, one of the leaders of Students Against Discrimination who participated in the meeting.

    Shahabuddin agreed that the interim government “will be formed within the shortest time” possible, Islam told reporters.

    Islam described the meeting as “fruitful”.

    However, there were few other details about the planned government, including the role of the military.

    Yunus, who is currently in Europe, told AFP on Tuesday he was willing to lead the interim government.

    “If action is needed in Bangladesh, for my country and for the courage of my people, then I will take it,” he said in a statement, also calling for free elections.

    Muhammad Yunus: Bangladesh’s ‘banker to the poor’

    Nobel-winning microfinance pioneer Muhammad Yunus has been asked by Bangladeshi protest leaders to helm an interim government to replace ousted premier Sheikh Hasina, who had hounded him in speeches and through the courts.

    The 84-year-old, known as the “banker to the poorest of the poor”, was awarded the Peace Prize in 2006 for his work loaning small cash sums to rural women, allowing them to invest in farm tools or business equipment and boost their earnings.

    Grameen Bank, the microfinance lender he founded, was lauded for helping unleash breakneck economic growth in Bangladesh. Since then, scores of developing countries have copied its work.

    “Human beings are not born to suffer the misery of hunger and poverty,” Yunus said during his Nobel lecture, daring his audience to imagine a world where deprivation was confined to history museums.

    But his public profile in Bangladesh earned him the hostility of Hasina, who once accused him of “sucking blood” from the poor.

    In 2007, Yunus announced plans to set up his own “Citizen Power” party to end Bangladesh´s confrontational political culture, which has been punctuated by instability and periods of military rule.

    He abandoned those ambitions within months, but the enmity aroused by his challenge to the ruling elite has persisted.

    Yunus was hit with more than 100 criminal cases and a smear campaign by a state-led Islamic agency that accused him of promoting homosexuality.

    The government unceremoniously forced him out of Grameen Bank in 2011 — a decision fought by Yunus but upheld by Bangladesh´s top court.

    In January he and three colleagues from one of the companies he founded were sentenced to jail terms of six months — but immediately bailed pending appeal — by a Dhaka labour court which found they had illegally failed to create a workers´ welfare fund.

    All four had denied the charges and, with courts accused of rubber-stamping decisions by Hasina´s government, the case was criticised as politically motivated by watchdogs including Amnesty International.

    Yunus was born into a well-to-do family — his father was a successful goldsmith — in the coastal city of Chittagong in 1940.

    He credits his mother, who offered help to anyone in need who knocked on their door, as his biggest influence.

    Yunus won a Fulbright scholarship to study in the United States and returned soon after Bangladesh won its independence from Pakistan in 1971 war. When he returned, he was chosen to head Chittagong University´s economics department, but the young country was struggling through a severe famine and he felt compelled to take practical action.

    “Poverty was all around me, and I could not turn away from it,” he said in 2006.

    “I found it difficult to teach elegant theories of economics in the university classroom… I wanted to do something immediate to help people around me.”

    After years of experimenting with ways to provide credit for people too poor to qualify for traditional bank loans, he founded Grameen Bank in 1983.

    The institution now has more than nine million clients on its books, according to its most recent annual report (2020), and more than 97 percent of its borrowers are women.

    Yunus has won numerous high honours for his life´s work, including the US Presidential Medal of Freedom, which Barack Obama awarded him.

  • ‘Bangladesh is going to become the next Pakistan’; Sheikh Hasina’s son

    The Prime Minister of Bangladesh, Sheikh Hasina Wazed, resigned on Monday, fleeing the country as massive protests gripped the nation. The protests, that initially started as student protests against civil service job quotas metamorphosised into demands for Hasina to quit after more than 200 people were killed in violence.

    Hasina’s son Sajeeb Wazed, the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Advisor to the Prime Minister of Bangladesh, reacted to the developments by saying, “Bangladesh is going to become the next Pakistan.”

    He also said that his mother is very disappointed in the people of Bangladesh “Because after all she’s done…after all the development.”

    Siddhant Sibbal, correspondent at Wion News, asked Sajeeb whether his mother planned to return to power, to which he replied, “No, absolutely not. She is 77-years-old. This was going to be her last term, and she was going to retire after this anyway.”

    The journalist asked Hasina’s son whether he had plans to join the politics of Bangladesh in future, to which he replied laughingly, “No. My family has been through this three times. After this, we are done. We are tired of saving Bangladesh. Bangladesh can handle its own problems now. It’s not our problem.”

  • Military in control of Bangladesh after Hasina flees

    Military in control of Bangladesh after Hasina flees

    Bangladesh’s military was in control of the country on Tuesday after mass protests forced longtime ruler Sheikh Hasina to resign and flee.

    Hasina, 76, had been in power since 2009 but was accused of rigging elections in January and then watched millions of people take to the streets over the past month demanding she step down.

    Hundreds of people died as security forces sought to quell the unrest, but the protests grew, and Hasina finally fled Bangladesh aboard a helicopter on Monday as the military turned against her.

    Army chief General Waker-Uz-Zaman announced Monday afternoon on state television that Hasina had resigned and the military would form a caretaker government.

    “The country has suffered a lot, the economy has been hit, many people have been killed — it is time to stop the violence,” said Waker, shortly after jubilant crowds stormed and looted Hasina’s official residence.

    Millions of Bangladeshis flooded the streets of Dhaka after Waker’s announcement.

    “I feel so happy that our country has been liberated,” said Sazid Ahnaf, 21, comparing the events to the independence war that split the nation from Pakistan more than five decades ago.

    “We have been freed from a dictatorship. It’s a Bengal uprising, what we saw in 1971, and now seeing in 2024.”

    But there were also scenes of chaos and anger, with police reporting at least 66 people killed on Monday as mobs launched revenge attacks on Hasina’s allies.

    Protesters stormed parliament and torched TV stations, while some smashed statues of Hasina’s father, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the country’s independence hero.

    Others set a museum dedicated to the former leader on fire, flames licking at portraits in destruction barely thinkable just hours before, when Hasina had the loyalty of the security forces under her autocratic grip.

    “The time has come to make them accountable for torture,” said protester Kaza Ahmed. “Sheikh Hasina is responsible for murder.”

    Offices of Hasina’s Awami League across the country were torched and looted, eyewitnesses told AFP.

    The unrest began last month in the form of protests against civil service job quotas and then escalated into wider calls for Hasina to stand down.

    Her government was accused by rights groups of misusing state institutions to entrench its hold on power and stamp out dissent, including through the extrajudicial killing of opposition activists.

    At least 366 people died in the unrest that began in early July, according to an AFP tally based on police, government officials and doctors at hospitals.

    Student protest leaders, ahead of an expected meeting with the army chief, said Tuesday that they wanted Nobel laureate and microfinance pioneer Muhammad Yunus, 84, to lead the government.

    “In Dr. Yunus, we trust,” Asif Mahmud, a key leader of the Students Against Discrimination (SAD) group, wrote on Facebook.

    Waker said a curfew would be lifted on Tuesday morning, with the military set to lead an interim government.

    Bangladeshi President Mohammed Shahabuddin late Monday ordered the release of prisoners from the protests, as well as former prime minister and key opposition leader Khaleda Zia, 78.

    Zia, who is in poor health, was jailed by her arch-rival Hasina for graft in 2018.

    The president and army chief also met late Monday, alongside key opposition leaders, with the president’s press team saying it had been “decided to form an interim government immediately.”

    It was not immediately clear if Waker would lead it.

    Hasina’s fate was also uncertain. She fled the country by helicopter, a source close to the ousted leader told AFP.

    Media in neighboring India reported Hasina had landed at a military air base near New Delhi.

    A top-level source said she wanted to “transit” on to London, but calls by the British government for a UN-led investigation into “unprecedented levels of violence” put that into doubt.

    There were widespread calls by protesters to ensure Hasina’s close allies remained in the country.

    Bangladesh’s military said they had shut Dhaka’s international airport on Monday evening, without giving a reason.

    Bangladesh has a long history of coups.

    The military declared an emergency in January 2007 after widespread political unrest and installed a military-backed caretaker government for two years.

    Michael Kugelman, director of the South Asia Institute at the Washington-based Wilson Center, warned that Hasina’s departure “would leave a major vacuum” and that the country was in “uncharted territory.”

    “The coming days are critical,” he said.

    UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres stressed the importance of a “peaceful, orderly and democratic transition,” his spokesman said. European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell echoed that call.

    Former colonial ruler Britain and the United States meanwhile urged “calm.”