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  • PTA starts blocking unregistered VPNs in Pakistan

    PTA starts blocking unregistered VPNs in Pakistan

    One day after social media users were facing internet connectivity issues through Virtual Private Networks (VPN) in Pakistan, sources within Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) have responded to the development.

    Citing safe internet access to users and security risks, sources told Geo News on Monday that the PTA has started the process of banning unregistered and illegal VPNs in Pakistan on Sunday.

    PTA reportedly blocked VPNs because it allowed unauthorised access to sensitive data and illegal content for many social media users, sources added.

    Meanwhile, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority has not issued an official statement yet regarding the initiating process of registering the Virtual Private Networks.

    It should be noted here that a number of social media users complained about accessing X (formerly Twitter) through a VPN yesterday.

    The use of VPNs has increased in Pakistan since the February general election when the government banned social media platform X. Many users were also forced to use VPNs to access the restricted content in Pakistan during the months-long internet disruption in 2024.

    The government reportedly used the recently launched firewall test in Pakistan between 4 pm and 10 pm and impacted the netizens for six long hours.

    Earlier, the PTA has called on businesses, such as IT firms, software companies, freelancers, and banks, to register their IPs to maintain VPN access, ensuring uninterrupted internet services for authorised users.

    The Pakistan Telecommunication Authorities reportedly began the proxy network registration process in 2010, and until now, approximately 20,500 VPNs have been successfully registered.

    Pointing out the blockage of proxy networks and the frequent shutdown of the internet nationwide this year, Pakistani citizens expressed rage over the government and seemed concerned about the future of e-commerce in the country.

    Pakistani social media activists and netizens sadly responded by saying that Pakistan has become the first country to introduce the concept of “internet load shedding in Pakistan.”

    Farieha Aziz, a Digital rights advocate, stated, “It’s completely arbitrary, disrupting everyday life and work, and no one in the PTA and government has yet given a straight answer — other than partially on VPNs, which they have stated they are in the process of registering.”

    The incumbent government, in the second quarter of the ongoing year, had reportedly introduced the firewall test in Pakistan, leading to the internet slowing to crawl.

    When the government was criticised for slow internet, Minister of State for Information Technology Shaza Fatima Khawaja accused the internet user of using the VPN, which, according to her, caused the internet to slow down.

    It should be mentioned here that a firewall can track, block and significantly limit the visibility of content it deems is propaganda.

  • Is Juggun Kazim related to ASP Shehrbano? TV host clarifies

    Is Juggun Kazim related to ASP Shehrbano? TV host clarifies


    Television host and actress Juggan Kazim has cleared the air regarding claims about her relation to celebrity cop ASP Shehrbano Naqvi.  


    ASP Naqvi has time and again made headlines since after going viral for saving a woman from a religiously charged mob in Lahore earlier this year. With the cop repeatedly being the subject of several discussions over the internet, a recent claim suggested that she was related to Kazim. 


    Appearing as a guest on Ahmed Ali Butt’s podcast, Kazim addressed the claims and also spoke of her husband’s association with Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi, whom ASP Naqvi has also served as a personal staff officer. 


    “So, I want to make one thing clear, there is no relation between me and my husband with ASP Shehrbano. I met her for the first time on my morning show,” Kazim said, adding that people also always assumed that the couple was connected to Mohsin Naqvi. 

    “I have never met the gentleman, and I’m not related to him. I have nothing bad to say about him,” she said. Kazim further explained that she preferred to focus on entertainment rather than political discussions.  


    “I came here to share my opinions about entertainment and not engage in political discussions. I am involved in entertainment, so please let me stay on that,” Juggan said.
    “People always assume. They say Mohsin Naqvi is my husband’s brother… why is my 18-year career being questioned?” 


    The Hadsa actress also recalled her experience at Mohsin Naqvi’s Channel 24 where she worked for six months before being forced to resign due to the same assumptions. 

     
    “For six months, I worked at 24 News, and everyone said I got the job because of my relations with Mohsin Naqvi. I had to resign because people were saying I was working there because of my connections. How many times should I listen to these things?” Juggan asked. 


    The podcast comes weeks after Kazim made headlines for sharing details of physical abuse during her first marriage, revealing how she was mistreated and why she kept it hidden for years.  


    “I was physically abused and tortured during my first marriage, which lasted for 1.5 years. I got married within a week of falling for my first husband who started assaulting me in the third week of our marriage,” she said in another podcast. 


    Reflecting on her past, she added, “I ignored the warning signs, and that was a mistake. Abuse often starts with hurtful words. I should have taken action when he first hit me, but I was too blinded by his charm. I made a mistake by marrying him secretly. I was attracted by his good looks.”

  • ‘Not sending pollution through missiles,’ says Indian climate expert

    ‘Not sending pollution through missiles,’ says Indian climate expert

    Punjab’s Air Quality Index, on both sides of the border between India and Pakistan, has become one of the biggest causes of concern, not just in South Asia but globally as well.


    A BBC Urdu report about the hazardous conditions of smog in Lahore and Delhi, with the former being particularly in a bad spot with AQI at 1000 plus points, Indian Punjabi correspondent Harmandeep Singh quoted Punjab Agricultural University’s Department of Climate Change and Punjab Pollution Control Authority’s study about the air pollution in the area. 


    “There is no scientific study that can prove that the fires in the villages of Indian Punjab after harvesting the crops cause air pollution in Lahore and Delhi,” says the university’s report.
    Experts say that there are scientific arguments which prove that the air pollutants created by burning the residue of harvested crops are not reaching the borders of Lahore and Delhi.


    However, on both sides of the border, stubble burning is considered to be the main cause of smog, whereas farmers claim that fire is set only to prepare the land for the next harvest. 


    Contrary to the claims of experts from Indian Punjab, experts from the country’s central educational institutions also blame the fires as the cause of Delhi’s pollution while maintaining that the contribution of this fire to pollution is very minor.


    Notably, smoke from post-harvest fires in any state, including Punjab, contributed only 4.44 percent to Delhi’s pollution this year, as per Indian research institutes.


    Satellite data of the US space agency NASA showed more fires seen on the Indian side than on the Pakistan side. Pakistani side concluded that because Lahore is close to the Indian border, so it can easily be affected by cross-border smog.


    Additionally, the Pakistani Punjab’s Environment Department claimed the reason behind the hazardous conditions of smog in Lahore is because of the “Eastern Corridor of winds” while talking to The Current a week ago. 


    Meanwhile, talking to BBC Urdu, the Department of Climate Change and Agricultural Meteorology at Punjab Agricultural University, India, said that it is natural that light and moderate winds prevail in Punjab in October and November. “For the polluted particles to move from one place to another, the speed of the air must be more than six kilometres per hour,” the department said in their defence, implying the wind is not the reason for pollution in Delhi and Lahore. 


    Puneet Kaur Dhingra, Head of the Meteorological Department, says, “Wind speed should be more than six kilometres per hour for particulate matter and smoke to move in any direction. Since October, there is light wind in eastern Punjab. Only twice the wind speed was more than four kilometres per hour.”


    Adding on, he said, “For the first time on October 5, the wind speed was recorded at 4.4 km per hour and for the second time on October 24, the wind speed was recorded at 4.1 km per hour. Therefore, the pollution created by the fires set after harvesting the crops in Punjab cannot travel in any direction.”


    University’s Department of Climate Change further asserted that the concentration of pollution and smog in a particular place during the months of October and November is associated with a drop in temperature.


    When the temperature gets warmer, the air expands and the pollutant particles disperses easily. Meanwhile, when the temperature drops like it is happening with the start if winters, the pollutant particles stay in one place and smog is created. 


    “Therefore, if there is smoke and pollution in Lahore and Delhi, there are self-generated reasons behind it.”


    Adarsh Pal Vij, the chairman of the Pollution Control Board of Indian Punjab, emphasised that the PM 10 and PM 2.5 polluting particles released from the gases produced by the stubble fires in Punjab don’t have the potential to travel much. “There is no such research which proves that the pollution of Punjab plays a role in the pollution of Delhi and Lahore. PM 10 and PM 2.5 particles do not fly as far,” he said categorically. 


    Punjab Pollution Control Board’s Environmental Scientist Avatar Singh rationalizes his claim by saying, “After harvesting, the land is set on fire in Indian as well as Pakistani Punjab, so Lahore is itself responsible for the polluted air.”


    “Even under these conditions, PM 10 particles can travel a maximum distance of 25 km, while PM 2.5 can travel a maximum distance of 50 km,” emphasised another expert as quoted by BBC Urdu. 


    Former Chairman of the Indian Punjab Pollution Control Board SS Marwaha strongly criticised the ongoing claims as he asserted, “Punjab can play an important role in the pollution of Lahore and Delhi if it sends its pollution towards these two cities through missiles.”


    Notably, Professor Vinayak Sinha of the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research admitted that the impact of Punjab’s pollution on Delhi’s pollution is negligible.


    “The effect of pollution in Punjab is only in Punjab. Incidents of post-harvest fires in Uttar Pradesh or other neighboring states have a greater impact on pollution in Delhi than in Punjab,” he noted. 
    Indian Institute of Science Education and Research is a government research institute located in New Delhi and their finding say that pre-Diwali and winter analysis in Delhi found that the main cause of pollution is vehicle smoke rather than farm fires.


    Talking to The Current, Environment Department’s Secretary Raja Jahangir also highlighted the other factors contributing to the pollution.  “Lahore is a city of 15 million, with 4.5 million bikes and 1.3 million cars on roads. There are 6,800 industrial units because it is the fastest growing city in the country and has the most construction sites, as well as more than 1,200 brick kilns,” Jahangir highlighted.


    For a city spread over 1,757 square kilometres, the green cover is not enough.


    “Ideally, it needs to be more than 30 per cent, but unfortunately, it is not more than four per cent,” he said, further that the smoke emitted from harvesting of 6.6 million of rice given a boost by air pressure is disturbing the air of Lahore while it doesn’t have enough to combat.


    “Ideally, it needs to be more than 30 per cent, but unfortunately, it is not above four per cent,” he said, adding that the smoke emitted from the harvesting of 6.6 million tons of rice, combined with air pressure, is contributing to the air pollution in Lahore, which lacks sufficient resources to combat it.

    Read more: Why is Lahore more polluted than Delhi?

  • Will Hania Aamir tie the knot? Here’s what she says

    Will Hania Aamir tie the knot? Here’s what she says

    Famous actress Hania Aamir has shared her thoughts about marriage with her fans.

    She is currently on a tour in Canada, where fans organized a program for her.

    Hania Aamir was asked various questions. In response to a question related to marriage, she said, “I have no intention of getting married right now.”

    Continuing in the same vein, she stated, “I am a simple girl. Whenever I get married, I will make sure to announce it loudly and clearly.”

    In response to another question, the actress said, “Borders at the frontiers cannot separate people. No one can put restrictions on whom you love from the heart. That’s why I travel abroad, so I can meet those who like me. It brings me joy to meet all of you.”

  • ‘Hamari matt mari gaii thee’: Sher Afzal Marwat on PTI’s association with Faiz Hameed

    ‘Hamari matt mari gaii thee’: Sher Afzal Marwat on PTI’s association with Faiz Hameed

    Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leader Sher Afzal Marwat on Sunday regretted his party’s intense dependence on ex-spymaster General (retd) Faiz Hameed’s policy towards the relocation of Fitna al Khawarij ( Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan) within Pakistan.

    “Hamari matt mari gai thi kay General Faiz Hammed hamara pasandida banda tha,” Sher Afzal Marwat regretfully said while talking to Samaa’s Absar Alam.

    General Faiz Hameed and former Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Qamar Javed Bajwa were involved in the “TTP’s resettlement in Pakistan,” insisted Sher Afzal Marwat.


    Days after the United States (US) forces withdrew from Afghanistan, the former Director General (DG) of Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI), Gen Faiz Hameed, visited Kabul, Afghanistan’s capital, on September 4, 2021.

    Speaking to the News5 channel, Hameed smilingly said, “Don’t worry, everything will be okay.” 

    The terrorist group, during the PTI’s federal government, reportedly returned to the northern districts of Buner, Bajaur and Mohmand, and forced local businesses to pay protection money.

    PTI allegedly helped the Fitna by relocating them to western Pakistan, and the ex-spymaster was the key player in that development.

    On Feb 2, 2023, the founder of PTI, Imran Khan, in an address, defended the resettlement of the terrorists in Pakistan from Afghanistan, noting, “The PTI government had two options: either kill all of them or reach an agreement with them and allow them to settle in the province. These returning fighters had many issues that needed to be resolved for peace in the province.”

    “When the Afghan war ended, some 30,000 to 40,000 Pakistani tribal fighters wanted to come back,” Khan said and clarified that all stakeholders were on board regarding the resettlement of terrorists in Pakistan.


    When asked about PTI’s lack of effort in protesting against the deteriorated law and order situation in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), Sher Afzal Marwat claimed: “It is the duty of security institutions” to restore law and order rather than political parties.

    Meanwhile, commenting on the ongoing teachers’ protest in the KP province, Marwat claimed that teachers can protest as long as they want, and it is their “right” to protest.

    Teachers have been protesting at Jinnah Park Peshawar against the provincial government for more than five days for not upgrading their pay scale from BPS 12 to BPS 14.

    Moreover, teachers are demanding permanent posts for those teachers who were hired in 2022 by the provincial government on a contract basis.

  • Did Trump just tweet in Imran Khan’s favour?

    Did Trump just tweet in Imran Khan’s favour?

    Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) followers on social media have been engaging with a blue tick verified account seemingly run by United States (US) President-elect Donald J. Trump, resharing a video that was posted by the handle, featuring a short clip from an interview of former prime minister (PM) Imran Khan.

    The post on X (formerly Twitter) has garnered more than 250,000 views with 13,000 likes and almost 5,000 re-tweets, while the screenshot of the post has also gone viral in multiple WhatsApp groups in Pakistan. 


    On November 10, the account posted a clip of Khan’s interview with Fox News from 2019, when he visited the US and met then-president Trump. In the interview, Khan appreciated Trump for being a “completely straightforward man and my whole delegation – we loved the meeting”.


    Firstly, the verified account by the username ‘Donald J. Trump Potus Commentary’ itself states in its bio that it is “not affiliated with Trump.” Upon further research, the account has a history of posting in Urdu and commenting on local politics of Pakistan. One of the posts in Urdu on October 24 stated: “History has forgotten Justice Munir and Justice Qazi Faez Isa will be remembered for judicial regression.”


    It may be noted that several past tweets have also been deleted by the user since after netizens found out about the account’s history.

    However, PTI followers have been engaging with the post, with one user commenting: “It’s appalling that such a courageous and honest leader is languishing behind bars on false charges . Please help get Khan out .”


    Another user pointed out that the account has nothing to do with Trump, writing, “Pakistanio [sic] is account ka Donald Trump say koi taluq nahi hai Only the ppl of Pakistan protesting in mass numbers can free IK. Focus on that. Rest is all noise.”


    As the Republican presidential nominee, Donald Trump, swept the polls in the US last week, congratulatory messages poured in from across the world. However, unbeknownst to the American public and the president-elect himself, PTI’s leadership and followers have pinned their hopes on the incoming US president to get justice for Imran Khan.


    PTI blamed the US for conspiring against its government when Khan was ousted from power through a no-confidence motion in 2022. Khan, in an infamous rally, had waved a page in front of a charged crowd, which was allegedly the cypher sent to Islamabad by Pakistan’s ambassador in Washington.
    However, later, Khan and his party changed their narrative as the American-Pakistani community continuously lobbied among US politicians to pressure the Pakistan government to release the incarcerated former prime minister.

  • Pakistan considering ‘minus India’ formula for Champions Trophy: report

    Pakistan considering ‘minus India’ formula for Champions Trophy: report

    The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) is taking a tough stance on the Board of Control for Cricket in India’s (BCCI) decision not to send its team to the Champions Trophy in Pakistan: considering a ‘minus-India’ formula in response.

    The PCB has decided to use the examples from the 1996 and 2003 World Cup in its initial stance to adopt a tough stance against India.

    In 1996, Australia and West Indies refused to play in Sri Lanka, while in 2003, New Zealand refused to play in Kenya and England refused to play in Zimbabwe. In response, the International Cricket Council (ICC) awarded points to the teams that were present on the ground for the scheduled matches, putting the teams that refused to participate at a disadvantage.

    Geo reports that based on these examples, the PCB will assert that the ICC has never changed a venue in the past when teams failed to show up, and as a result, Pakistan will adopt a firm stance.

    Pakistan may also propose a ‘minus India’ Champions Trophy on this basis, as India has not yet spoken about the Champions Trophy in writing. PCB will insist to the ICC that India submits all its positions in writing, sources have claimed.

    Earlier, it was also reported that Pakistan would write a letter to the ICC in light of the government guidelines in the next day or two, for which the Board had also completed a legal consultation.

    Earlier, the PCB denied all claims about the Indian team refusing to travel to Pakistan for the Champions Trophy 2025.

    PCB source told The Current, “All speculations about Indian cricket board’s letter to PCB or India not coming to Pakistan are baseless. PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi’s press conference in Gaddafi Stadium on November 8 is the latest update on this issue.”

    Mohsin Naqvi said that there should be no politics in the game and assured that the Board will continue preparations despite India not coming.

    On the other hand, reports claimed that the government of Pakistan is likely to make tough decisions regarding India’s refusal to come to the Champions Trophy.

    The government is considering that if India does not participate at the agreed venues, Pakistan will not play any future matches with India, and until relations with India improve, they will not play any game with India in any tournament.

    They are of the view that Pakistan always makes goodwill gestures, but India is always involved in politics.


     
    If India does not participate in matches in Pakistan and the host country doesn’t agree on the hybrid model, then there is a strong chance that Sri Lanka will replace India.

  • ‘I questioned everything’; Hamza Ali Abbasi talks about finding Islam

    ‘I questioned everything’; Hamza Ali Abbasi talks about finding Islam

    Actor Hamza Ali Abbasi has opened up about his journey to rediscovering Islam, revealing how deep, personal questioning led him to embracing his faith.

    Talking on Hamza Sheikh Sabherwal podcast, he revealed the pivotal moments that shaped his spiritual transformation.

    The host asked him, “I want to know if your life was always like this from the beginning, or if you have a transformation story?”

    Hamza Ali Abbasi replied, “I have a very simple and boring transformation story, there’s nothing sensational in it. Often, when people turn toward God, there’s usually a significant event, like someone’s passing, an accident, or a realization. But for me, there wasn’t anything like that. In my teenage years, I had a very rational question that felt necessary to answer: I’m alive now, but one day I will die.”

    The Alif actor continued: “From all around, I would hear talk of every kind of religion, not just Islam but Christianity, Judaism, and all religions and that God exists. Most importantly, the concept of the hereafter. Learning about these concepts, that I would be accountable before God, and the result of that would be either paradise or hell, these are big matters, not small ones. I wanted to know if there was any truth to these concepts or not, and if there was, to what extent.”

    Reflecting on his mindful journey, Abbasi admitted that his pursuit of answers led him to questioning faith.

    “For me, it was important to ask these questions and equally important to find answers to them. I had no interest in discussing religious matters, I’d say it was my compulsion, my necessity. This pursuit of answers initially pushed me towards some form of agnosticism,” the megastar recalled.

    Talking about his faith and accountability, the Pyaaray Afzal actor explained, “If there’s no truth in these concepts, then life in this world is all there is. Then it’s just ‘YOLO’, you only live once. In that case, whatever benefit there is here is the only benefit, and whatever loss is here is the only loss. But if there’s any truth in these concepts, then all my efforts and, this is a very rational approach, all my efforts should focus on success in that accountability.”

     Hamza Ali Abbasi is set to make his comeback in the highly anticipated drama serial ‘Faraar’ written by Mustafa Afridi and directed by Syed Wajahat Hussain and Musaddiq Malek. The drama will air on 17 November on Green Entertainment.

  • Indian CEO offers X user a job after liking his suggestions

    Indian CEO offers X user a job after liking his suggestions

    Indian food delivery app Zomato’s Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Deepinder Goyal, whose app is now synonymous with food itself in India, recently shared updates on some of the new features in the app on his official X (formerly Twitter) handle. 


    The updates were in continuation of the new feature update called ‘Food Rescue’, announced by Goyal on November 10 earlier this month. While many of his followers shared their opinions about the update, one user’s review, in particular, caught the eye of the Indian billionaire.


    The new feature attempts to reduce food wastage by redirecting cancelled orders on Zomato to other potential customers. 


    Goyal, while shedding light on the feature, wrote, “Canceled orders will now pop up for nearby customers, who can grab them at an unbeatable price, in their original untampered packaging, and receive them in just minutes.”


    An X user by the name of Bhanu shared some positive critique to prevent misuse of the new feature:


    1. Should not be applicable to COD (Cash on Delivery)
    2. Cancellation should not be allowed if the delivery reaches 500 m to the delivery point 
    3. Chances of twi idiots sharing meals ordering and cancelling at the same time getting a discount place 
    4. Less than two cancellations are allowed per month.


    These pointers impressed CEO Goyal and he offered Bhanu to “work together” with him.

     
    Goyal wrote, “All this and more already in place. Good thinking, by the way. Who are you and what do you do? Would love to know you more, and see if we can work together? 🙂 DM [Direct Message] me please if you wanna chat more.”


    However, Bhanu seemed to be happy in his workplace as he responded to the offer to work for the food delivery company by respectfully sharing that he is based in Bangalore and is working already. “Thanks a lot. I am from Bangalore. Regularly use Blinkit. I regularly give suggestions to improve services via Twitter by tagging your company. Always thinking to reduce negative impact and improve service delivery. Working as a PM in a startup company.”


    The interaction caused a flare of surprise among Indian users and made it to the headlines for news outlets around the globe, especially in India.

  • 2024 ‘virtually certain’ to be hottest year on record: EU monitor

    2024 ‘virtually certain’ to be hottest year on record: EU monitor

    This year is “virtually certain” to be the hottest in recorded history with warming above 1.5C, EU climate monitor Copernicus said Thursday, days before nations are due to gather for crunch UN climate talks.

    The European agency said the world was passing a “new milestone” of temperature records that should be a call to accelerate action to cut planet-heating emissions at the UN negotiations in Azerbaijan next week.

    Last month, marked by deadly flooding in Spain and Hurricane Milton in the United States, was the second hottest October on record, with average global temperatures second only to the same period in 2023.

    “Humanity’s torching the planet and paying the price,” said United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres in a speech on Thursday, listing a string of calamitous floods, fires, heatwaves and hurricanes across the world this year so far.

    “Behind each of these headlines is human tragedy, economic and ecological destruction, and political failure.”

    Copernicus said 2024 would likely be more than 1.55 degrees Celsius (2.8 degrees Fahrenheit) above the 1850-1900 average — the period before the industrial-scale burning of fossil fuels.

    This does not amount to a breach of the Paris deal, which strives to limit global warming to below 2C and preferably 1.5C, because that is measured over decades and not individual years.

    “It is now virtually certain that 2024 will be the warmest year on record and the first year of more than 1.5C above pre-industrial levels,” said Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) Deputy Director Samantha Burgess.

    “This marks a new milestone in global temperature records and should serve as a catalyst to raise ambition for the upcoming Climate Change Conference, COP29.”

    – Wild weather –

    The UN climate negotiations in Azerbaijan, taking place in the wake of the United States election victory by Donald Trump, will set the stage for a new round of crucial carbon-cutting targets.

    Trump, who has repeatedly called climate change a “hoax”, pulled the United States out of the Paris Agreement during his first presidency. While President Joe Biden took the United States back in, Trump has threatened to withdraw again.

    Meanwhile, average global temperatures have reached new peaks, as have concentrations of planet-heating gases in the atmosphere.

    Scientists say the safer 1.5C limit is rapidly slipping out of reach, while stressing that every tenth of a degree in temperature rises heralds progressively more damaging impacts.

    Last month the UN said the current course of action would result in a catastrophic 3.1C of warming this century, while all existing climate pledges taken in full would still amount to a devastating 2.6C temperature rise.

    And in a report on Thursday, the UN warned that the amount of money going to poorer countries for adaptation measures was barely one-tenth of what they needed to spend on disaster preparedness.

    In a month of weather extremes, October saw above-average rainfall across swathes of Europe, as well as parts of China, the United States, Brazil and Australia, Copernicus said.

    The United States is also experiencing ongoing drought, which affected record numbers of people, the EU monitor added.

    Global warming is not just about rising temperatures, but the knock-on effect of all the extra heat in the atmosphere and seas.

    Warmer air can hold more water vapour, and warmer oceans mean greater evaporation, resulting in more intense downpours and storms.

    Copernicus said average sea surface temperatures in the area it monitors were the second highest on record for the month of October.

    C3S uses billions of measurements from satellites, ships, aircraft and weather stations to aid its calculations.

    Copernicus records go back to 1940.

    But other sources of climate data such as ice cores, tree rings and coral skeletons allow scientists to expand their conclusions using evidence from much further in the past.

    Climate scientists say the period being lived through right now is likely the warmest the Earth has been for the last 100,000 years.