Category: FOREIGN

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

  • Fears rise as multiple hoax bomb threats received across India

    Fears rise as multiple hoax bomb threats received across India

    Following a blast outside a Central Reserve Police Force school in Delhi on Sunday, multiple hoax calls of bomb threats have been received by schools acoss the country, raising tension among the masses in India.

    Along with the CPRF, airlines have also been receiving bomb threats. Times of India reported that several schools, ten flights and 30 airlines have received threats so far, while the total number of threats has surged to more than 100 in a week.

    The threats were sent via email to the management of the schools late Monday night.

    Various international and local flights had to be diverted, causing inconvenience to the passengers.

    An India Today report about the hoax calls reveals that many of the callers have used VPNs with IP addresses tracing them to the UK and Germany, making the process of tracking them complicated.

    Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu Kinjarapu was initially seen saying that the hoax calls had been made by minors and pranksters. Talking to ANI News Agency he said, “Whatever we know right now is that they are all individual people, most of them minors, who don’t understand the whole idea of what they are doing and they are creating this kind of inconvenience.”

    However, in a recent statement, he advocated stronger laws to combat these hoax bomb calls. He told the media that the Aviation ministry is consulting with the Home ministry to bring changes to the constitution. The proposed legislation suggests a five-year imprisonment for offenders and their placement on a no-fly list.

    Aviation expert Vandana Singh, while talking to India Today, stressed that this is not just about the image of the aviation industry anymore but about the “image of the country.”

    Meanwhile, the widespread problem of these hoax calls has put security agencies on high alert as more than 40,000 armed personnel have been deployed at airports across the country.

  • Erdogan’s rival Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen dies in exile

    Erdogan’s rival Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen dies in exile

    US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, who was accused by Ankara of organising a failed 2016 coup, has died in exile in the United States aged 83, his movement and the Turkish government said Monday.

    Turkish-born Gulen, who had lived in the United States since 1999, was once a close ally of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan before the two became bitter enemies.

    “Our intelligence sources confirm the death of the leader of the FETO organisation,” Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan told a press conference, using Turkey’s term for Gulen’s once-influential Hizmet movement.

    Turkey’s TRT public television said the preacher, who had lived in Pennsylvania for a quarter of a century and was stripped of his Turkish nationality in 2017, died in hospital overnight.

    In a message on X, Gulen’s website Herkul, which is banned in Turkey, said he died on “October 20”, pledging to share details about his funeral.

    Gulen moved to Pennsylvania in 1999, ostensibly for health reasons, and from there he ran Hizmet which, at the time, had a sprawling network of public schools on every continent.

    In 2013 he had a major falling out with Erdogan and three years later the Turkish strongman accused him of plotting to overthrow him, dubbing Hizmet “the Fethullah Terror Organisation” (FETO).

    Some 250 people died on July 15, 2016 when a rogue military faction tried to overthrow Turkey’s government using warplanes and tanks, with Erdogan blaming Gulen supporters within the military.

    “This organisation has become a threat rarely seen in the history of our nation,” Fidan said, accusing its followers of “being used as a weapon against their own country”.

    Despite Gulen’s death, Turkey would continue “the fight against this organisation, which poses a national security problem”, Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc wrote on X.

    Once an ally who helped Erdogan when he became prime minister in the early 2000s, Gulen’s ties with him became strained in 2010.

    Three years later, Gulen became persona non grata when a corruption scandal engulfed the Turkish premier’s inner circle.

    Erdogan blamed Gulen, and later began accusing him of terror links although the preacher repeatedly insisted his movement was merely a network of charitable and business institutions.

    Things worsened after the coup, with the authorities prosecuting more than 700,000 people and handing a life sentence to some 3,000 Gulen followers for their alleged involvement in the putsch.

    Bayram Balci, a researcher at the Paris Institute of Political Studies (Sciences-Po) told AFP the death of the once-charismatic preacher would have little impact in Turkey.

    “Since the break with Erdogan in 2010 and especially after the attempted coup in 2016, Gulen’s image has been very bad. Few people hold him in high esteem,” he told AFP.

    There was no chance Ankara would allow Gulen’s body to be repatriated for burial, and he would likely be buried near his home in Pennsylvania, he said.

    Hizmet is “no longer the big movement that it once was” with its influence much reduced and its vast network of schools now only mainly operating in Germany, the United States, Nigeria and South Africa.

    Turkey still regularly rounds up Gulen followers and demands their extradition from countries where his network is active.

    Turkish security sources quoted by the private NTV broadcaster said very few people were expected to attend Gulen’s funeral and that his body would likely be buried in the US at a location which would be kept secret.

  • BJP leader’s son marries Pakistani girl online

    BJP leader’s son marries Pakistani girl online

    Indian ruling party Bharatiya Janata Party’s leader Tehseen Shahid’s son got married to a Pakistani girl through an online Nikkah.

    Mohammad Abbas Haider, the son of the Uttar Pradesh leader of India’s ruling party, fell in love with a Pakistani girl, Andaleeb Zahra, from Lahore. The wedding was attended by local BJP leaders, including Brijesh Singh Parshu, an elected member of parliament from Jaunpur.

    The wedding caught the attention of both sides of the border.

    The Nikkah was performed over a video call since visa restrictions remain tight amid ongoing tensions between the countries. The boy’s side was in Jaipur, Uttar Pradesh, and the girl’s side was in Lahore.

    Tahseen Shahid is a resident of Jaunpur’s Makhdoom Shah Adahan and is associated with BJP as a party’s corporator. He decided to marry his elder son with a relative’s daughter a year ago.

    Apart from not being granted the visa, the Indian Express reports that the girl’s mother, Rana Yasmeen Zaidi’s health, deteriorated as the wedding approached, and she was admitted to a hospital in Lahore.

    Tahseen Shahid, after discussing this with his sister in Lahore, decided to have the nikkah via video call. He, along with hundreds of baristas, arrived at the Imambargah and got married online in front of everyone on the TV screen.

    Religious scholar Maulana Mahfouz-ul-Hasan Khan recited Nikah verses. He even explained that a girl’s permission is necessary in Islam. In such a case she must give permission to a cleric either online or offline, then scholars from both sides can sit together and perform Nikah.

  • $1000 for flour, $73 for a dozen eggs; sky-high prices of food in Gaza

    $1000 for flour, $73 for a dozen eggs; sky-high prices of food in Gaza

    Israel has closed the Rafah crossing, which has resulted in a food blockade in Gaza, leaving almost 400,000 Palestinians facing starvation.

    A recent report by Maram Humaid and Alia Chghtai of Al Jazeera elaborates that at least 2.15 million people, or 96 per cent of the population, are facing high levels of food shortages, with one in five people facing starvation across the besieged enclave of Gaza.

    Israeli airstrikes and forced evacuations have closed food distribution points, kitchens and bakeries.

    Additionally, the only functioning bakery in Northern Gaza, supported by the World Food Programme (WFP), also caught fire after an Israeli airstrike.

    10-year-old food blogger Renad Attallah has frequently spoken about the shortage of food in Gaza as she makes her recipes with the available ingredients.

    In one of her videos she excitedly examined two sugar packets inside an aid package, an item usually considered unaffordable for her family as it costs 99 Dirhams in the war-torn Gaza.

    On top of that, the prices of basic essentials are very high.

    Gazans lack basic essential goods, lost their jobs and are dependent upon charity kitchens and aid distributions for food and cash coupons. Their cash savings have run out.

    Al Jazeera journalists compiled a summary of the prices of food items as of September.

    Prices of essential items have increased to a great extent. Flour, for example, costs $150 for a 25kg (approximately 55-pound) bag in the south and up to $1,000 per bag in the north.

    However, a dozen eggs that cost $3.50 before the war now sell at $32 in the South and about $73 in the North.

    Non-dairy powdered milk is now being sold in the north for $1 a spoonful or $124 a kilo (2.2 pounds).

    Infant formula, which is imperative for children’s growth, is largely unavailable in the North and costs $15 a tin in the South. Meanwhile, an average tin is approximately 350gm (12 ounces).

    The price of the biggest source of protein, frozen meat, has increased 17 times and sells at $90 per kg in the North and 41 dollars in the South.

    Fresh produce, including cucumbers and tomatoes, are among the most expensive after Israel destroyed most of Gaza’s farms.

    Satellite images show the once-fertile regions of Beit Lahiya- known for its juicy strawberries that locals called “red gold”- are now destroyed with vehicle tracks and barrenness.

  • Hezbollah drone hits Netanyahu’s home in Israeli town

    Hezbollah drone hits Netanyahu’s home in Israeli town

    A drone was launched towards Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s home in northern Israel on Saturday, his spokesman informed, adding that he was not in the vicinity and there were no casualties.

    Earlier, the Israeli military announced that a drone was launched from Lebanon and that it had hit a building. It was not immediately clear what the building was.

    However, two more drones that crossed into Israeli territory were intercepted.

    There were no casualties reported and police said explosions had been heard in the town where Netanyahu has a holiday home.

    The drone attack was not immediately claimed by the Lebanese group Hezbollah, which has been trading fire with Israel since last October, or any other militant group.

  • Legend in death: Sinwar’s last moments shows him defiantly fighting Israel

    Legend in death: Sinwar’s last moments shows him defiantly fighting Israel

    The Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) have released a video of the last moments before the martyrdom of Yahya Sinwar-head of the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas, who took charge of the organization after the assassination of its leader Ismail Haniyeh in Iran.

    Yesterday, the Israeli army claimed that they had targeted a building in Gaza where Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar was present and were checking if he is dead or not.

    Later, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also confirmed the death of Yahya Sinwar and called it the beginning of the end of the ceasefire in Gaza, but no official statement has been issued by Hamas yet.

    American broadcasting agency CNN has reported that the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) released an edited video of the time of the attack on Yahya Sinwar.

    In a video released by the IDF, a man with one arm cut off can be seen sitting on a sofa in a damaged building, and a drone camera moves towards him, whereas the voice behind him says it is Yahya Sinwar.

    Despite being injured, Yahya attacks the drone with a piece of wood as the drone approaches him.

    X users praised the Hamas leader for being valiant even in his last moments.

    A Bangladeshi user praised him for being a hero.

    Another user posted a picture of the Hamas leader for being brave and commented,”Even in his final movements, Israelis could not budge him from his chair.

    Another called him “iconic.”

    Umar bin Zahir posted the picture of Yahya and commented that “he continued to fight with honour.”

    A user by the name of America the Ghetto posted that in the attack Yahy didn’t die, everyone around him did.

    American politician Sam Parker commented, “Sinwar gave the last full measure of devotion.”

    Though Israel released the footage to try and trample Hamas’ morale, the footage had the opposite effect. Twitter flooded with praise for Sinwar after footage showed him defiantly throwing a stick at an Israeli drone filming him even though one of his arms was cut off by then.

  • ‘India made horrific mistake by violating Canada’s sovereignty,’ warns furious Justin Trudeau

    ‘India made horrific mistake by violating Canada’s sovereignty,’ warns furious Justin Trudeau

    Canadian Prime Minister (PM) Justin Trudeau has accused India of making a “horrific mistake” by violating his country’s sovereignty by killing Canadian citizens.

    Testifying at a public inquiry into foreign interference on Wednesday, Justin Trudeau angrily remarked, “The Indian government made a horrific mistake in thinking that they could interfere as aggressively as they did in the safety and sovereignty of Canada. We need to respond in order to ensure Canadians’ safety.”

    Lambasting New Delhi for disdaining Canada’s efforts to cooperate on the matter of India’s involvement in killing Canadian citizen Hardeep Singh Nijjar, he said, “We had clear -and certainly now ever clearer indications- that India had violated Canada’s sovereignty.”

    Justin Trudeau maintained that his country is not looking to provoke or initiate a fight with India.

    He further said that Canadian officials privately shared evidence with their Indian counterparts.

    Meanwhile, rejecting the Canadian claim of India’s involvement, a spokesperson for India’s Ministry of External Affairs declared, “Canada has presented us no evidence whatsoever in support of the serious allegations that it has chosen to level against India and Indian diplomats.”

    Previously, the Canadian government expelled six Indian diplomats, including a High Commissioner, from Canada, citing New Delhi’s refusal to cooperate in criminal investigations.

  • Trio wins Economics Nobel for work on wealth inequality

    Trio wins Economics Nobel for work on wealth inequality

    The Nobel Prize in Economics was awarded on Monday to Turkish-American Daron Acemoglu and British-Americans Simon Johnson and James Robinson for research into wealth inequality between nations.

    By examining the various political and economic systems introduced by European colonisers, the three have been able to demonstrate a relationship between institutions and prosperity, the jury said.

    “Reducing the vast differences in income between countries is one of our time’s greatest challenges,” Jakob Svensson, chair of the Committee for the Prize in Economic Sciences, said in a statement.

    “The laureates have demonstrated the importance of societal institutions for achieving this,” Svensson added.

    Acemoglu, 57, is a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), as is Johnson, 61.

    Robinson, 64, is a professor at the University of Chicago.

    The jury highlighted the laureates’ work, illuminating how societal institutions play a role in explaining why some countries prosper while others do not.

    “I am delighted. It’s just a real shock and amazing news,” Acemoglu told reporters via telephone as the award was announced in Stockholm.

    The Economics Prize is the only Nobel not among the original five created in the will of Swedish scientist Alfred Nobel, who died in 1896.

    It was instead created through a donation from the Swedish central bank in 1968, leading detractors to dub it “a false Nobel”.

    However, like for the other Nobel science prizes, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences decides the winner and follows the same selection process.

    The economics prize wraps up this year’s Nobel season, which honoured achievements in artificial intelligence for the physics and chemistry prizes, while the Peace Prize went to Japanese group Nihon Hidankyo, committed to fighting nuclear weapons.

    South Korea’s Han Kan won the literature prize — the only woman laureate so far this year — while the medicine prize lauded discoveries in understanding gene regulation.

    The Nobel Prizes consist of a diploma, a gold medal and a one-million-dollar sum.

    They will be presented at ceremonies in Stockholm and Oslo on December 10, the anniversary of the 1896 death of scientist and prize creator Alfred Nobel.

  • US expands sanctions against Iran’s oil industry over Israel strikes

    US expands sanctions against Iran’s oil industry over Israel strikes

    The United States hit Iran’s oil and petrochemicals sectors with new sanctions Friday in response to Tehran’s October 1 attack against Israel, designating dozens of new companies and firms.

    The US Treasury Department said it was going after Iran’s so-called “shadow fleet” of ships involved in selling Iranian oil in circumvention of existing sanctions, designating 10 companies and 17 vessels as “blocked property” over their involvement in shipments of Iranian petroleum and petrochemical products.

    The State Department also announced it was slapping sanctions on six other firms and six ships for “knowingly engaging in a significant transaction for the purchase, acquisition, sale, transport, or marketing of petroleum or petroleum products from Iran.”

    “Today’s sanctions target Iranian efforts to channel revenues from its energy industry to finance deadly and disruptive activity — including development of its nuclear program, the proliferation of ballistic missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement.

    The sanctions form part of the US response to Iran’s attack, in which it launched some 200 ballistic missiles against Israel in retaliation for the killing of Tehran-backed militant leaders and a general from Iran’s Revolutionary Guards.

    Israel has said its response to Iran’s second direct attack against its territory this year would be “deadly, precise, and surprising.”

    US President Joe Biden told reporters last week that Israel should consider “other alternatives than striking oil fields,” amid reports it was planning to do so.

    His national security advisor Jake Sullivan said Friday that sanctions had been announced after the president had consulted with America’s allies and partners.

    “These measures will help further deny Iran financial resources used to support its missile programs and provide support for terrorist groups that threaten the United States, its allies, and partners,” Sullivan said in a statement.

    Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Washington had made clear after the October 1 attack that Tehran would face consequences.

    “To that end, we are taking steps today to disrupt the flow of revenue the Iranian regime uses to fund its nuclear program and missile development, support terrorist proxies and partners, and perpetuate conflict throughout the Middle East,” he said in a statement.

  • Barack Obama Net Worth: His Passionate Journey of  Million-Dollar Fortune

    Barack Obama Net Worth: His Passionate Journey of Million-Dollar Fortune

    44th American President Barack Obama is likely to be one of modern history’s most recognized and active politicians. He is not only an active politician but also a businessman. Obama is polarising as a writer, a producer, a philanthropist, a public speaker, and a former political leader. Moreover, he would not only amass wealth but also be successful at integrating multiple roles.Barack Obama net worth in 2024 is summarised in this article:

    During the term of Obama as a Senate and President, the Washington Post estimates that Obama earned 20 million dollars.

    In 2024, which is Barack Obama net worth, it is projected to be $70 million.

    A Comprehensive Summary of Barak Obama Net Worth

    President Obama, who ruled from his office between 2009 and 2017, earned an annual pension of $205,700. Barack Obama net worth can comprise books’ return establishment. Obama said that he primarily focused on book deals, even at the pre-presidency stage, and that is how he earned his money. His books went on to be published well, and he attained over $500,000 in earnings as an author in 2006 alone. Obama has regularly published bestselling books such as Dreams From My Father, The Audacity of Hope, and A Promised Land. However, the most prominent political figures became best-selling English speakers because of this.

    The most recent book was issued in America, although the subtitles could have been more precise. In 2009, he landed a $65 million advance from Penguin Random House for his autobiography. In its first month of release, this book sold 3. 3 million copies, making it the fastest-selling political memoir of the time. He earned further income through public speaking. Being a former head of state, this also comes with financial benefits. Such news has noted that Obama can even earn more than $400,000 for a single invitation.

    Barack Obama net worth

    Citing the media, in 2017, he earned $800,000 only for two speeches, more than two million for three speeches where he talked about not only foreign but local issues as well. Barack and Michelle were owners of a producing house set up in 2018. It was called Higher Ground Productions and entered into a long-term agreement with Netflix, the OTT platform, to produce series and movies. His production house also did the documentary American Factory, which received an Academy Award.

    Obama also proclaimed in 2023 that he would be an executive producer for Netflix of three films—Leave the World Behind, American Symphony, and Rustin. Such initial agreements were with a husband and a wife—Barack Obama and Michelle, according to the rumors—for $25 million. He first signed the contract only for a podcast with Spotify, but Forbes reports that the man and woman in the family of two switched to Audible in 2022. This deal enables them for content production for a multiplicity of years and to a broader population.

    A complete picture of Barack Obama’s wealth will only be acquired after considering his construction and real estate ventures. Upon retiring from his position, he and his wife bought an $8.1 million villa, which is located in Washington, D.C. Additionally, the duo already possesses one property in Chicago’s Hyde Park. The couple has done a great deal in acquiring living spaces, whereas the Obamas also bought a property in Martha’s Vineyard worth $11.75 million in 2019. It is a lucrative piece of real estate that has a main house of 7,000 square feet on 29 acres of valuable ocean-facing land.