India brought forward its TB elimination deadline – but can it be met?
Atul Kumar (name changed) anxiously paced the corridor of a public hospital in India’s capital Delhi.
A small-appliance mechanic, he was struggling to secure medicines for his 26-year-old daughter who suffers from drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB). Mr Kumar said his daughter needed 22 tablets of Monopas, an antibiotic used for treating TB, every day.
“In the past 18 months, I haven’t received government-supplied medicine for even two full months,” he told BBC Hindi in January, months before India’s declared deadline to eliminate the infectious disease.
Forced to buy costly drugs from private pharmacies, Mr Kumar was drowning in debt. A week’s supply cost 1,400 rupees ($16; £12), more than half his weekly income.
After the BBC raised the issue, authorities supplied the medicines Mr Kumar’s daughter needed. Federal Health Secretary Punya Salila Srivastava said that the government usually acts quickly to fix medicine access issues when alerted.
Mr Kumar’s daughter is one of millions of Indians suffering from tuberculosis, a bacterial disease that infects the lungs and is spread when the infected person coughs or sneezes.
India, home to 27% of the world’s tuberculosis cases, sees two TB-related deaths every three minutes. India’s TB burden has long been tied to poor case detection, underfunding and erratic drug supply.
Despite this grim reality, the country has set an ambitious goal. It aims to eliminate TB by the end of 2025, five years ahead of the global target set by the World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nations member states.
Elimination, as defined by the WHO, means cutting new TB cases by 80% and deaths by 90% compared with 2015 levels.
But visits to TB centres in Delhi and the eastern state of Odisha revealed troubling gaps in the government’s TB programme.
In Odisha’s Khordha district, around 30km (18.6 miles) from state capital Bhubaneshwar, 32-year-old day-labourer Kanhucharan Sahu is struggling to continue his two-year-old daughter’s TB treatment, with government medicines unavailable for three months and private ones costing 1,500 rupees a month – an unbearable burden.
“We can’t see her suffer anymore,” he says, his voice breaking. “We even thought of abandoning her.”
At Odisha’s local TB office, officials promised to review Sahu’s case, but a staffer admitted, “We rarely get the medicines we need, so we ration them.”
Mr Sahu says he hasn’t received the promised 1,000 rupees monthly support from the federal government and at the local TB office, officials admit to chronic shortages, leaving families like his adrift in a failing system.
Vijayalakshmi Routray, who runs the patient support group Sahyog, says medicine shortages are now routine, with government outlets often running dry. “How can we talk about ending TB with such gaps?” she asks.
There are other hurdles too – for example, changing treatment centres involves navigating complex bureaucracy, a barrier that often leads to missed doses and incomplete care. This poses a major hurdle for India’s vast population of migrant workers.
At a hospital near Khordha, 50-year-old Babu Nayak, a sweeper who was diagnosed with TB in 2023, struggles to continue his treatment. He was regularly forced to travel 100km to his village for medicines as officials insisted he collect them from the original centre where he was diagnosed and first treated.
“It became too difficult,” he says.
Unable to travel so often, Mr Nayak stopped taking the medication altogether.
“It was a mistake,” he admitted, after contracting TB again last year and being hospitalised.
At his hospital, no TB specialist was available, highlighting another critical gap in India’s fight: a shortage of frontline health workers.
The BBC shared its findings with the federal health ministry and officials in charge of the TB programme in Delhi and Odisha. There was no response despite repeated reminders.
A 2023 parliamentary report showed there were many vacant roles across all levels of the TB programme, affecting diagnosis, treatment and follow-up – especially in rural and underserved areas.
- Can vaccines help India triumph over tuberculosis?
In 2018, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi brought forward India’s TB elimination target to 2025, he cited the government’s intensified efforts as a reason for optimism.
Two years later, the Covid pandemic disrupted TB elimination efforts globally, delaying diagnosis, diverting resources and pausing routine services. Medicine shortages, staff constraints and weakened patient monitoring have further widened the gap between ambition and reality.
Despite these challenges, India has made some progress.
Over the past decade, the country has reduced its tuberculosis-related mortality. Between 2015 and 2023, TB deaths declined from 28 to 22 per 100,000 people. This figure, however, is still high when compared with the global average which stands at 15.5.
The number of reported cases has gone up, which the government credits to its targeted outreach and screening programmes. In 2024, India recorded 2.6 million TB cases, up from 2.5 million in 2023.
Federal Health Minister JP Nadda recently touted innovations like handheld X-ray devices as game-changers in expanding testing. But on the ground, the picture is less optimistic.
“I still see some patients come to me with reports of sputum (phlegm) smear microscopy for TB, a test which has a much lower detection rate as compared to genetic tests,” says Dr Lancelot Pinto, a Mumbai-based epidemiologist.
Genetic tests, which includes RT-PCR machines – widely used to diagnose HIV, influenza and most recently, Covid-19 – and Nucleic Acid Amplification Testing, also examine the sputum sample but with greater sensitivity and in a shorter timeframe.
Besides, the tests can reveal whether the TB strain is drug-resistant or sensitive, something that microscopic testing can’t do, Dr Pinto says.
The gap, he adds, stems not just from lack of awareness but from limited access to modern tests.
“Genetic testing is free at government hospitals but not uniformly available, with only a few states being able to provide it.”
In May, Modi led a high-level review of India’s TB elimination programme, reaffirming the country’s commitment to defeating the disease.
But the official statement notably skipped mention of the 2025 deadline. Instead, it highlighted community-driven strategies – better sanitation, nutrition and social support for TB-affected families – as key to the fight.
The government has also prioritised better diagnosis, treatment and prevention at the core of its elimination strategy.
This approach mirrors the WHO’s view of TB as a “disease of poverty”. In its 2024 report, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called it “the definitive disease of deprivation”, noting how poverty, malnutrition and treatment costs trap patients in a vicious cycle. As India pushes toward its goal of eliminating the disease, deep health and social inequalities remain hurdles.
With just six months left until India’s self-imposed deadline, new complications have emerged.
The fallout from US President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the WHO and suspension of USAID operations has raised concerns about future funding for global TB efforts. Since 1998, USAID has invested more than $140m to help diagnose and treat TB patients in India.
However, India’s federal health secretary insists there is “no budgetary problem” anticipated.
Meanwhile, hope lies on the horizon. Sixteen TB vaccine candidates are currently in development across the world, with the WHO projecting potential availability within five years, pending successful trials.
Budget airline Jetstar Asia to close in weeks, customers offered refunds
Singapore-based budget airline Jetstar Asia will close down at the end of July, with affected passengers to be offered full refunds.
The low-cost airline has struggled with rising supplier costs, high airport fees and increased competition in the region. More than 500 employees will be laid off.
The shutdown of Jetstar Asia will not impact the operations of Australia-based Jetstar Airways, nor those of Jetstar Japan, according to its part-owner Qantas.
The budget carrier will offer a progressively reduced service over the next seven weeks and travellers will be notified if their flight is affected. Passengers with tickets to fly after the 31 July closure will be contacted by the airline.
Some affected customers could be moved onto alternative flights operated by the Qantas Group. Jetstar Asia is advising people who booked through a travel agent or separate airline to contact those providers directly.
Sixteen routes across Asia will be impacted by the shutdown, including flights from Singapore to destinations in Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines.
The closure of Qantas’ low-cost arm will provide Australia’s national airline with A$500m ($325.9m; £241.4m) to invest towards renewing its fleet of aircraft. It will also redeploy 13 planes for routes across Australia and New Zealand.
“We have seen some of Jetstar Asia’s supplier costs increase by up to 200%, which has materially changed its cost base,” said Qantas Group Chief Executive Vanessa Hudson in a statement.
The discount airline, which has operated flights for over 20 years, is set to make a A$35m loss this financial year.
Fifty one per cent of the company is owned by Singapore firm Westbrook Investments, with the remainder held by Qantas.
Former customers have expressed their shock and sadness at its closure.
In a comment under Jetstar Asia’s Facebook post about the shutdown, one user said they were “very saddened to hear this news about a very warm, efficient, wonderful airline”.
Another thanked the airline for “opening up and popularising the budget travel market”.
All employees affected by Wednesday’s announcement will be provided with redundancy benefits.
“We have an exceptional team who provide world leading customer service and best in class operational performance and our focus is on supporting them through this process and helping them to find new roles in the industry,” said Jetstar Group chief executive Stephanie Tully.
Qantas, Australia’s national carrier, will continue to provide low-cost flights to Asia through its Jetstar Airways arm, which offers services from Australia to destinations in Thailand, Indonesia and Japan, among others.
Jetstar Asia was launched in 2004 as Qantas looked to gain a foothold in the growing low-cost air travel market in Asia, but has faced increased competition from other budget outlets including AirAsia and Scoot.
US-China talks end with plan for Trump and Xi to approve
The US and China say they have agreed in principle to a framework for de-escalating trade tensions between the world’s two biggest economies.
US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the deal should result in restrictions on rare earth minerals and magnets being resolved.
Both sides said they would now take the plan to their presidents – Donald Trump and Xi Jinping – for approval.
The announcement came after two days of negotiations in London between top officials from Beijing and Washington.
Chinese exports of rare earth minerals, which are crucial for modern technology, were high on the agenda of the meetings.
Last month, Washington and Beijing agreed a temporary truce over trade tariffs but each country has since accused the other of breaching the deal.
The US has said China has been slow to release exports of rare earth metals and magnets which are essential for manufacturing everything from smartphones to electric vehicles.
Meanwhile, Washington has restricted China’s access to US goods such as semiconductors and other related technologies linked to artificial intelligence (AI).
“We have reached a framework to implement the Geneva consensus,” Lutnick told reporters.
“Once the presidents approve it, we will then seek to implement it,” he added.
The new round of negotiations followed a phone call between Donald Trump and China’s leader Xi Jinping last week which the US President described as a “very good talk”.
“The two sides have, in principle, reached a framework for implementing the consensus reached by the two heads of state during the phone call on June 5th and the consensus reached at the Geneva meeting,” China’s Vice Commerce Minister Li Chenggang said.
When Trump announced sweeping tariffs on imports from a number of countries earlier this year, China was the hardest hit. Beijing responded with its own higher rates on US imports, and this triggered tit-for-tat increases that peaked at 145%.
In May, talks held in Switzerland led to a temporary truce that Trump called a “total reset”.
It brought US tariffs on Chinese products down to 30%, while Beijing slashed levies on US imports to 10% and promised to lift barriers on critical mineral exports. It gave both sides a 90-day deadline to try to reach a trade deal.
But the US and China have since claimed breaches on non-tariff pledges.
US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said China had failed to rollback restrictions on exports of rare earth magnets.
Beijing said US violations of the agreement included stopping sales of computer chip design software to Chinese companies, warning against using chips made by Chinese tech giant Huawei and cancelling visas for Chinese students.
Ahead of this week’s talks, the Chinese Ministry of Commerce said on Saturday that it had approved some applications for rare earth export licences, although it did not provide details of which countries were involved.
Trump said on Friday that Xi had agreed to restart trade in rare earth materials.
Huckabee suggests Muslim countries should give up land for Palestinian state
The US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee has suggested “Muslim countries” should give up some of their land to create a future Palestinian state.
In an interview with the BBC, Huckabee said “Muslim countries have 644 times the amount of land that are controlled by Israel”.
“So maybe, if there is such a desire for the Palestinian state, there would be someone who would say, we’d like to host it,” he said.
The ambassador also strongly criticised US allies including the UK and Australia for sanctioning two far-right Israeli ministers over “repeated incitements of violence against Palestinian communities” in the occupied West Bank.
In his interview, the ambassador called a two-state solution – a proposed formula for peace between Israel and the Palestinians that has generally received international backing, including from multiple US administrations – “an aspirational goal”.
The two-state solution envisages an independent Palestinian state in the occupied West Bank and in Gaza, with East Jerusalem as its capital. It would exist alongside Israel.
In a separate interview with Bloomberg, Huckabee said the US was no longer pursuing the goal of an independent Palestinian state.
State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce later said the ambassador “speaks for himself”, and it is the president who is responsible for US policy in the Middle East.
Later this month at the United Nations in New York, French and Saudi diplomats will host a conference aimed at laying out a roadmap for an eventual Palestinian state.
Although Huckabee did not say where any future Palestinian state could be located specifically or whether the US would support such an effort, he called the conference “ill-timed and inappropriate”.
“It’s also something that is completely wrongheaded for European states to try to impose in the middle of a war,” he said, arguing that it would result in Israel being “less secure”.
“At what point does it have to be in the same piece of real estate that Israel occupies?” he said on the BBC’s Newshour programme.
“I think that’s a question that ought to be posed to everybody who’s pushing for a two-state solution.”
Asked if the US position was that there could not be a Palestinian state in the West Bank, Huckabee said: “I wouldn’t say there can never be, what I would say is that a culture would have to change.
“Right now the culture is that it’s OK to target Jews and kill them and you’re rewarded for it. That has to change.”
Israel rejects a two-state solution. It says any final settlement must be the result of negotiations with the Palestinians, and statehood should not be a precondition.
Huckabee has previously been a strong supporter of the idea of a “greater Israel”, seeking permanent Israeli control of the Occupied Palestinian Territories, and using the biblical term “Judea and Samaria” for the West Bank.
Some of his language echoes positions frequently taken by ultranationalist groups in Israel. Some in this movement, including far-right ministers in the Israeli governing coalition, have argued for the expulsion of Palestinians from the occupied West Bank and Gaza, saying any future Palestinian state could exist in Arab or Muslim countries.
If such a policy was enacted, rights groups and European governments say it would be a clear violation of international law.
Sanctions ‘shocking’
The ambassador also reacted to the sanctioning of National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, which was part of a joint move announced by the UK, Norway, Australia, Canada and New Zealand on Tuesday.
British Foreign Secretary David Lammy said the Israeli officials had “incited extremist violence and serious abuses of Palestinian human rights”. The men were banned from entering the UK and will have any assets in the UK frozen.
Israel registered strong objections to the move, and Huckabee called it a “shocking decision”.
“I have not yet heard a good reason for why these two elected ministers have been sanctioned by countries that ought to respect the country’s sovereignty and recognise that they have not conducted any criminal activity,” he said.
The war in Gaza began after Hamas attacked Israel in October 2023, killing some 1,200 people and taking around 251 others hostage.
There are 56 hostages still being held by Hamas in Gaza, at least 20 of whom are believed to be alive.
Since October 2023, at least 54,927 Palestinians have been killed, according to the territory’s Hamas-run ministry of health. The UN estimates that more than a quarter of them are children.
Gangster tells BBC why India’s biggest hip-hop star was murdered
It was a killing that shocked India: Punjabi hip-hop star Sidhu Moose Wala shot dead through the windscreen of his car by hired gunmen.
Within hours, a Punjabi gangster named Goldy Brar had used Facebook to claim responsibility for ordering the hit.
But three years after the murder, no-one has faced trial – and Goldy Brar is still on the run, his whereabouts unknown.
Now, BBC Eye has managed to make contact with Brar and challenged him about how and why Sidhu Moose Wala became a target.
His response was coldly articulate.
“In his arrogance, he [Moose Wala] made some mistakes that could not be forgiven,” Brar told the BBC World Service.
“We had no option but to kill him. He had to face the consequences of his actions. It was either him or us. As simple as that.”
On a warm May evening in 2022, Sidhu Moose Wala was taking his black Mahindra Thar SUV for its usual spin through dusty lanes near his village in the northern Indian state of Punjab when, within minutes, two cars began tailing him.
CCTV footage later showed them weaving through narrow turns, sticking close. Then, at a bend in the road, one of the vehicles lurched forward, cornering Moose Wala’s SUV against a wall. He was trapped. Moments later, the shooting began.
Mobile footage captured the aftermath. His SUV was riddled with bullets, the windscreen shattered, the bonnet punctured.
In trembling voices, bystanders expressed their shock and concern.
“Someone get him out of the car.”
“Get some water.”
“Moose Wala has been shot.”
But it was too late. He was declared dead on arrival at hospital – hit by 24 bullets, a post-mortem would later reveal. The 28-year-old rapper, one of modern-day Punjab’s biggest cultural icons, had been gunned down in broad daylight.
A cousin and a friend who had been in the car with Moose Wala at the time of the ambush were injured, but survived.
Six gunmen were eventually identified. They carried AK-47s and pistols. In the weeks that followed the murder, about 30 people were arrested and two of the suspected armed men were killed in what the Indian police described as “encounters”.
Yet even with arrests piling up, the motive remained murky.
Goldy Brar, who claims to have ordered the hit, wasn’t in India at the time of the killing. He is believed to have been in Canada.
Our conversation with him unfolded over six hours, pieced together through an exchange of voice notes. It gave us a chance to find out why Moose Wala had been killed and to interrogate the motives of the man who claimed responsibility.
Sidhu Moose Wala was born Shubhdeep Singh Sidhu in a Jat-Sikh family in rural Punjab, before moving in 2016 to Canada to study engineering – a journey familiar to hundreds of thousands in the Punjabi diaspora.
But it was there, far from his village of Moosa – the inspiration for his rap name – that he reinvented himself as one of Punjabi music’s most influential artists. In just five years, Moose Wala became the unmistakable voice of Punjabi hip-hop.
With his signature swagger, flashy style, and lyrical grit, Moose Wala sang openly about identity and politics, guns and revenge, pushing the boundaries of what Punjabi music had been willing to say.
He was fascinated by rapper Tupac Shakur, who had been murdered, aged 25, in 1996. “In terms of personality, I want to be like him,” Moose Wala once told an interviewer. “The day he died, people cried for him. I want the same. When I die, people should remember that I was someone.”
Over a brief but explosive career, the singer spotlighted the darker undercurrents of India’s Punjab region – gangster culture, unemployment, and political decay – while evoking a deep nostalgia for village life.
Moose Wala was also a global force. With more than five billion views of his music videos on YouTube, a Top 5 spot in the UK charts, and collaborations with international hip-hop artists including Burna Boy, Moose Wala swiftly built a fan base stretching across India, Canada, the UK and beyond, powered by a diaspora that saw him as both icon and insurgent.
But fame came at a cost. Despite his rising star and socially conscious lyrics, Moose Wala was drifting into dangerous territory. His defiant attitude, visibility, and growing influence had drawn the attention of Punjab’s most feared gangsters. These included Goldy Brar, and Brar’s friend Lawrence Bishnoi, who even then was in high-security jail in India.
Not much is known about Brar, apart from the fact he is on the Interpol Red Notice list, and is a key operative in a network of gangsters operated by Bishnoi – orchestrating hits, issuing threats and amplifying the gang’s reach. It is thought he emigrated to Canada in 2017, just a year after Moose Wala himself, and initially worked as a truck driver.
Bishnoi, once a student leader steeped in Punjab’s violent campus politics, has grown into one of India’s most feared criminal masterminds.
“The first [police] cases filed against Lawrence Bishnoi were all related to student politics and student elections… beating a rival student leader, kidnapping him, harming him,” according to Jupinderjit Singh, deputy editor of Indian newspaper the Tribune.
This led to a spell in jail which hardened him further, says Gurmeet Singh Chauhan, Assistant Inspector General of the Anti-Gangster Task Force of Punjab Police.
“Once he was in jail, he started to get deeper into crime. Then he formed a group of his own. When it became an inter-gang thing, he needed money for survival. They need more manpower, they need more weapons. They need money for all that. So, for money, you have to get into extortion or crime.”
Now 31, Bishnoi runs his syndicate from behind bars – with dedicated Instagram pages and a cult-like following.
“So while Bishnoi sits in jail, Brar handles the gangs,” says Assistant Inspector General Chauhan.
Securing BBC Eye’s exchange with Brar took a year of chasing – cultivating sources, waiting for replies, gradually getting closer to the kingpin himself. But when we got through to Brar, the conversation cast new light on the question of how and why he and Bishnoi came to see Moose Wala as an enemy.
One of the first revelations was that Bishnoi’s relationship with Moose Wala went back several years, long before the singer’s killing.
“Lawrence [Bishnoi] was in touch with Sidhu [Moose Wala]. I don’t know who introduced them, and I never asked. But they did speak,” said Brar.
“Sidhu used to send ‘good morning’ and ‘good night’ messages in an effort to flatter Lawrence.”
A friend of Moose Wala’s, who spoke anonymously, also told us that Bishnoi had been in touch with Moose Wala as early as 2018, calling him from jail and telling him he liked his music.
Brar told us that the “first dispute” between them came after Moose Wala had moved back to India. It began with a seemingly innocuous match of kabbadi – a traditional South Asian contact team sport – in a Punjabi village.
Moose Wala had promoted the tournament which was organised by Bishnoi’s rivals – the Bambiha gang – Brar told us, in a sport where match-fixing and gangster influence are rampant.
“That’s a village our rivals come from. He was promoting our rivals. That’s when Lawrence and others were upset with him. They threatened Sidhu and said they wouldn’t spare him,” Brar told BBC Eye.
Yet the dispute between Moose Wala and Bishnoi was eventually resolved by an associate of Bishnoi’s called Vicky Middhukhera.
But when Middukhera himself was gunned down by gangsters in a parking lot in Mohali in August 2021, Brar told us Bishnoi’s hostility towards Sidhu Moose Wala reached the point of no return.
The Bambiha gang claimed responsibility for killing Middukhera. The police named Moose Wala’s friend and sometime manager Shaganpreet Singh on the charge sheet, citing evidence that Singh had provided information and logistical support to the gunmen. Singh later fled India and is believed to be in Australia. Moose Wala denied any involvement.
The Punjab police told the BBC there was no evidence linking Moose Wala to the killing or to any gang-related crime. But Moose Wala was friends with Shaganpreet Singh, and he was never able to shake off the perception that he was aligned with the Bambiha gang – a perception that may have cost him his life.
Although he can cite no proof of Moose Wala’s involvement, Brar remains convinced that the singer was somehow complicit in the killing of Middukhera. Brar repeatedly told us that Shaganpreet Singh had assisted the gunmen in the days before Middukhera’s shooting – and inferred that Moose Wala himself must have been involved.
“Everyone knew Sidhu’s role, the police investigating knew, even the journalists who were investigating knew. Sidhu mixed with politicians and people in power. He was using political power, money, his resources to help our rivals,” Brar told BBC Eye.
“We wanted him to face punishment for what he’d done. He should have been booked. He should have been jailed. But nobody listened to our plea.
“So we took it upon ourselves. When decency falls on deaf ears, it’s the gunshot that gets heard.”
We put it to Brar that India has a judicial system and the rule of law – how could he justify taking the law into his own hands?
“Law. Justice. There’s no such thing,” he says. “Only the powerful can… [obtain] justice, not ordinary people like us.”
He went on to say that even Vicky Middukhera’s brother, despite being in politics, has struggled to get justice through India’s judicial system.
“He’s a clean guy. He tried hard to get justice for his brother lawfully. Please call him and ask how that’s going.”
He appeared unrepentant.
“I did what I had to do for my brother. I have no remorse whatsoever.”
Outside the UK, watch on YouTube, or listen on BBC.com
The killing of Moose Wala has not just resulted in the loss of a major musical talent, it has also emboldened Punjab’s gangsters.
Before the singer’s murder, few outside Punjab had heard of Bishnoi or Brar.
After the killing, their names were everywhere. They hijacked Moose Wala’s fame and converted it into their own brand of notoriety – a notoriety that became a powerful tool for extortion.
“This is the biggest killing that has happened in the last few decades in Punjab,” says Ritesh Lakhi, a Punjab-based journalist. “The capacity of gangsters to extort money has gone up. [Goldy Brar]’s getting huge sums of money after killing Moose Wala.”
Journalist Jupinderjit Singh agrees: “The fear factor around gangsters has risen amongst the public.”
Extortion has long been a problem in the Punjabi music industry, but now after Sidhu’s murder, Singh says: “It’s not just people in the music and film industry who are being extorted – even local businessmen are receiving calls.”
When BBC Eye quizzed Brar on this, he denied this was the motive, but did admit – in stark terms – that extortion was central to the gang’s working.
“To feed a family of four a man has to struggle all his life. We have to look after hundreds or even thousands of people who are like family to us. We have to extort people.
“To get money,” he says, “we have to be feared.”
HK bans ‘seditious’ mobile game about fighting communists
Hong Kong residents found downloading or sharing a mobile game app about defeating the communist regime may be punished under national security laws, police have said.
According to the website for Reversed Front: Bonfire, players can “pledge allegiance” to Taiwan, Hong Kong, Mongolia, Tibet or Uyghurs, among other options, “to overthrow the Communist regime”.
In a statement on Tuesday, police warned that those who download the game “may be regarded as in possession of a publication that has a seditious intention”.
It comes as Beijing has tightened grip over the city and has been seen as increasingly cracking down on dissent in the wake of the 2019 pro-democracy protests.
In a line on the game’s website, it stated that it was a “work of non-fiction”, adding that “any similarity to actual agencies, policies or ethnic groups of the PRC in this game is intentional”.
The game also allows for users to play as communists to fight enemies and support the communist revolution.
Police have also warned people against providing funding to the app developer, ESC Taiwan.
“‘Reversed Front: Bonfire’ was released under the guise of a game with the aim of promoting secessionist agendas such as ‘Taiwan independence’ and ‘Hong Kong independence’,” said the police statement.
“Those who have downloaded the application should uninstall it immediately and must not attempt to defy the law.”
As of Wednesday, the game – which was launched in April – is no longer accessible on Google Play or Apple’s App Store from Hong Kong.
But the warning might have inadvertently brought more attention to the game, which on Wednesday was the most popular search term on Google among Hong Kong residents.
The game’s creators have appeared to embrace the news surrounding its ban in the city, writing in a post that the game had been “introduced to the entire Hong Kong” as a result.
In 2020, China imposed a national security law (NSL) on Hong Kong that critics say effectively outlawed dissent – but Beijing maintains is crucial for maintaining stability.
The law – which criminalises secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces – came in response to massive pro-democracy protests that broke out in Hong Kong in 2019.
Media mogul Jimmy Lai and activist Joshua Wong are among the pro-democracy figures that have been charged or jailed under the NSL.
Hong Kong is governed under the principle of “one country, two systems”, under which China has agreed to give the region a high degree of autonomy and to preserve its economic and social systems for 50 years from the date of the handover.
But critics say the implementation of the NSL has breached the “one country, two systems” principle, though Beijing and Hong Kong have argued the NSL ensures the “resolute, full and faithful implementation” of “one country, two systems”.
Austrians hold vigil to mourn 10 victims of school shooting
Thousands of people in Austria have held a candlelight vigil for the victims of a school shooting in which 10 people were killed.
Police said the 21-year-old suspect, a former student, took his own life in a school bathroom shortly after the gun attack in Graz on Tuesday – the deadliest in the country’s recent history.
The incident took place at Dreierschützengasse secondary school in the north-west of the city.
A further 12 people were injured, some seriously, and the gunman’s motive remained under investigation, officials said.
Six females and three males were killed in the attack, and a seventh female died later in hospital. Austria’s APA news agency has reported that seven of those killed were pupils.
At the vigil on Tuesday night, Graz residents said they wanted to turn the city’s main square into a sea of candles, and that is what they did.
In the whispering silence, thousands of mostly young people gathered over the course of the evening, alone or clutching the arms or shoulders of their friends. They lit candles, cried, or stood for a while in prayer or contemplation.
Then they slowly came forward to hand candles to volunteers who arranged them carefully on the steps of the fountain.
The Archbishop Johann fountain is known as the heart of the old town of Graz, in front of the city hall. On Tuesday night it became a symbol of the grief, and solidarity, of the people of Austria.
“When you hear about it, you have so much sympathy for the people, maybe you could have known someone,” Felix Platzer, a passerby at the vigil, told the Reuters news agency.
“This is an example of solidarity and you grieve together and together it is easier to cope,” he added.
Three days of mourning have been declared in Austria, and a nationwide minute’s silence will be held on Wednesday at 10:00 local time in memory of the victims.
Flags on the Hofburg Palace in Vienna, where the President Alexander Van der Bellen has his office, will fly at half mast.
The school where the attack took place will remain closed until further notice.
Austrian Chancellor Christian Stocker said Tuesday was a “dark day in [the] history of our country” and declared the shooting a “national tragedy”.
“A school is more than just a place to learn – it is a space for trust, for feeling comfortable and for having a future,” he told the conference, adding this safe place had been “violated”.
“In these difficult hours, being human is our strongest point,” he said.
The attack “strikes our country right at its heart”, Stocker said in the immediate aftermath.
“These were young people who had their whole lives ahead of them.”
Gunman was former student
The gunman, who has not yet been named, was a former Dreierschützengasse student who didn’t graduate from the school, Interior Minister Gerhard Karner told a news conference on Tuesday afternoon.
Karner added it was now the job of the criminal office to investigate.
Officers also confirmed the gunman was not known to police before the attack.
Current information suggests the shooter legally owned the two guns used in the attack and had a firearms licence, police added.
Local media outlets have reported the suspect used a pistol and a shotgun to carry out the shooting.
He was an Austrian man from the wider Graz region who acted alone, police said.
Police said they began an operation at 10:00 local time (09:00 BST) after gunshots were heard from inside the school.
A specialist Cobra tactical unit – which handles attacks and hostage situations – was deployed to the school, police said.
Authorities evacuated all pupils and teachers from the building. Police confirmed the school had been secured and there was no further danger posed to members of the public.
“Locally, we have seen people crying on the streets, talking to friends that have been at the school when the shooting happened, who have maybe lost a friend,” said Fanny Gasser, a journalist for the Austrian daily newspaper Kronen Zeitung.
She told BBC News “everybody knows somebody” at the school because Graz – despite being the second-largest city in Austria – is “not that big”.
She said the school was likely unprepared for the possibility of an attack. “We are not living in America, we are living in Austria, which seems like a very safe space.”
Local mayor Elke Kahr called the incident a “terrible tragedy”.
European Commission Vice-President Kaja Kallas said she was “deeply shocked” by the news. “Every child should feel safe at school and be able to learn free from fear and violence,” she posted on X.
Witnesses heard gunshots
Astrid, a woman living with her husband Franz in the ground floor flat of the residential building next to the school, told the BBC she had just finished hanging out the washing when she heard gunfire.
She said: “I heard shots. Lots of them, one after the other. ‘Poof… poof… poof…. poof… poof…’ again and again. I went into the flat to my husband and I told him: ‘Someone is shooting!’
“He thought it was maybe something else, but we heard I reckon 30 to 40 shots. Then my husband rang the police.”
“We saw one pupil at the window – it looked like he was getting ready to jump out… but then he went back inside,” Franz said, adding they also saw a teacher.
The pair later saw the students had “got out of the school on the ground floor, from the other side” where they “gathered on the street”, Franz said.
Queues to give blood
By Tuesday afternoon, long queues had formed outside a blood donation centre in Graz.
“Today is a hard day for all of us in Graz. I’m here to [donate] my blood to help other people who need it,” 25-year-old Stephanie Koenig told Reuters news agency.
“Today I’m here because I wanted to do something. I felt helpless with the news,” Johanna, 30, said.
Another person standing in line told Reuters giving blood felt like the “only way possible to help”.
The incident is the deadliest mass shooting in the country’s recent history.
In 2020, jihadist gunman Kujtim Fejzulai shot four people dead and wounded 23 others on a rampage through Vienna’s busy nightlife district.
Meanwhile, in 2016, a gunman opened fire at a concert in the town of Nenzing, killing two people before shooting himself dead. Eleven other people were injured in the attack.
UK sanctions far-right Israeli ministers for ‘inciting violence’ against Palestinians
The UK has sanctioned two far-right Israeli ministers over “repeated incitements of violence against Palestinian communities” in the occupied West Bank.
Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich will both be banned from entering the UK and will have any assets in the UK frozen as part of the measures announced by the foreign secretary.
It is part of a joint move with Australia, Norway, Canada and New Zealand announced on Tuesday.
In response, Israel said: “It is outrageous that elected representatives and members of the government are subjected to these kind of measures.”
David Lammy said Finance Minister Smotrich and National Security Minister Ben-Gvir had “incited extremist violence and serious abuses of Palestinian human rights”.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio condemned the move, writing on X: “These sanctions do not advance US-led efforts to achieve a ceasefire, bring all hostages home, and end the war”.
He urged the nations to reverse the sanctions, adding that the US “stands shoulder-to-shoulder with Israel.”
The US Ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, joined Rubio’s condemnation, describing the move as a “shocking decision” in an interview with the BBC.
Smotrich and Ben-Gvir have also been criticised for their stance on the war in Gaza. Both ministers oppose allowing aid into the Strip and have called for Palestinians there to be resettled outside the territory.
The Foreign Office said: “As Palestinian communities in the West Bank continue to suffer from severe acts of violence by extremist Israeli settlers which also undermine a future Palestinian state, the UK has joined Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Norway in stepping up the international response.”
After the announcement, Lammy said: “These actions are not acceptable. This is why we have taken action now – to hold those responsible to account.
“We will strive to achieve an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the immediate release of the remaining hostages by Hamas which can have no future role in the governance of Gaza, a surge in aid and a path to a two-state solution.”
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said the cabinet would meet next week to respond to what he called an “unacceptable decision”.
The Foreign Office added that the five nations are “clear that the rising violence and intimidation by Israeli settlers against Palestinian communities in the West Bank must stop”.
In a statement it said the sanctions against the ministers “cannot be seen in isolation from events in Gaza where Israel must uphold International Humanitarian Law”.
The ministers lead ultra-nationalist parties in the governing coalition, which holds an eight-seat majority in parliament. The support of Ben-Gvir’s Otzma Yehudit (Jewish Power) party, which holds six seats, and Smotrich’s Religious Zionism party, which holds seven seats, is crucial to the government’s survival.
Speaking at the inauguration of a new settlement in the West Bank, Smotrich said he felt “contempt” towards the UK’s move.
“Britain has already tried once to prevent us from settling the cradle of our homeland, and we cannot do it again,” he said. “We are determined, God willing, to continue building.”
The minister was alluding to the period when Britain governed Palestine and imposed restrictions on Jewish immigration, most significantly from the late 1930s to late 1940s.
Israel has built about 160 settlements housing some 700,000 Jews since it occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem in the 1967 Middle East war.
The vast majority of the international community considers the settlements illegal under international law – a position supported by an advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) last year – although Israel disputes this.
Speaking in the Commons on Tuesday, Foreign Office Minister Hamish Falconer said that 2024 had seen the “worst settler violence” in the West Bank in the past two decades and this year was “on track to be just as violent”.
Commenting on the sanctions imposed on the two ministers, Falconer said they were “responsible for inciting settler violence” in the West Bank which has “led to the deaths of Palestinian civilians and the displacement of whole towns and villages”.
Falconer said Smotrich and Ben-Gvir had continued their “appalling” rhetoric despite warnings from the UK government, and so action was taken.
The possibility of sanctioning these two ministers has long been in the pipeline.
In October, Lord Cameron said he had planned to sanction the pair, when he was foreign secretary from 2023-24, as a way of putting pressure on Israel.
The UK’s decision reflects growing popular and parliamentary pressure to take further action against the Israeli government for its operations both in Gaza and the West Bank.
It also comes after a steady escalation of pressure by the UK and other allies.
Last month the leaders of Britain, France and Canada issued a joint statement saying that Israel was at risk of breaking international law. The UK also broke off trade talks with Israel.
In the Commons last month, Lammy described remarks by Smotrich about “cleansing” Gaza of Palestinians as “monstrous” and “dangerous” extremism.
Timeline of UK-Israel tensions
- 19 May: UK, France and Canada denounce expanded Israeli offensive on Gaza and continuing blockade, warn of “concrete” response; Israeli PM calls move “huge prize” for Hamas
- 20 May: UK suspends free trade talks with Israel, sanctions settlers, and summons Israel’s ambassador; Israel foreign ministry calls move “regrettable”
- 22 May: Israeli PM links criticism of Israel by leaders of UK, France and Canada to deadly shooting of two Israeli embassy staff in Washington DC on 21 May
- 10 June: UK sanctions Israeli ministers Smotrich and Ben-Gvir for advocating forced displacement of Palestinians from Gaza; Israel’s foreign minister calls move “outrageous”
Conservative shadow home secretary Dame Priti Patel did not directly comment on the sanctions, but said: “We have been clear that the British government must leverage its influence at every opportunity to ensure the remaining hostages [held by Hamas] are released, that aid continues to reach those who need it, and a sustainable end to the conflict is achieved.”
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey welcomed the sanctions, but said it was “disappointing” that the Conservative government and Labour “took so long to act”.
It is 20 months since Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to the unprecedented Hamas-led cross-border attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
At least 54,927 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.
Record number of drone attacks signals dangerous shift in war
Large-scale Russian drone attacks on Ukrainian cities are on the rise.
Monday night’s bombardment, while not record breaking, was typical of the new norm.
For several hours after midnight, drones buzzed incessantly over Kyiv.
It seemed they were coming from almost every direction, as searchlights raked the sky and skeins of orange tracer fire rose from air defence units stationed around the city.
As each drone approached, the streets would echo with the deep rattle of heavy machine gun fire.
From our hotel, a fire could be seen raging in the distance, as a fiery orange moon, nearly full, slowly faded as if unwilling to compete.
Loud explosions would mark a successful interception, or a drone reaching its target.
Sitting underneath all this drama, it is hard to keep a sense of perspective.
The word “massive” is routinely used in official statements.
But a glance at the statistics tells an unmistakable story: away from the front lines, Ukraine is in the midst of the most sustained bombardment since the early stages of Russia’s full-scale invasion, with a sharp increase in the number of drones.
In the three months before August last year, Russia fired a total of 1,100, according to a report by Ukraine’s general staff.
A steep rise followed, with 818 drones recorded in August, 1,410 in September and more than 2,000 in October.
But the numbers just keep going up.
In May, for the first time, the number of drones exceeded 4,000. This month is likely to set a new record.
Since the start of June, Russia has fired an average of 256 projectiles every 24 hours, according to figures compiled by the Ukrainian air force.
The overwhelming majority of these are drones, including Shahed-type models and various decoys designed to confuse Ukraine’s air defence systems.
Russia first started using Iranian-supplied Shaheds – the word means “martyr” – in late 2022.
But by the following summer, it was producing its own variant, known as Geran, at a special economic zone in Yelabuga, in the Russian republic of Tatarstan.
According to Artem Dehtiarenko, spokesman for Ukraine’s security service, the SBU, 25,000 drones have been produced there, with a further 20,000 assembled from previously supplied Iranian components.
Of 315 detected during Monday night’s bombardment, 250 were actual strike drones, according to Ukraine’s air force spokesman, Yurii Ihnat.
“Most of them were headed specifically for Kyiv,” he told the Ukrainian RBC news agency.
A total of seven ballistic and cruise missiles were also fired at the capital.
It meant another sleepless night for Kyiv’s long-suffering population.
“It’s become more intense,” Katya, a Kyiv resident told me.
“It used to be easier emotionally. Now it’s somehow become harder.”
And it’s not just the intensity of the strikes. After hundreds of similar nights, people in Kyiv can sense the subtle shifts in technology as Russia develops its capability.
“There are more drones with a slightly different sound than before,” Katya said.
The SBU’s Dehtiarenko says Russia is making constant modifications.
“Russian engineers have been tasked with increasing their destructive power in order to maximise devastation and civilian casualties,” he said.
“In addition, efforts are being made to make the Geran drones less vulnerable to Ukrainian air defences.”
Apartment blocks and office buildings were among the locations hit on Monday. Kyiv generally avoids saying if damage was caused to anything that might be considered a military target.
But a statement from the culture ministry said that for the first time, Kyiv’s St Sophia cathedral felt the impact.
St Sophia’s is a Unesco World Heritage Site and one of Ukraine’s most significant cultural and religious monuments, with spectacular 11th Century mosaics and frescoes.
A blast wave is said to have damaged a plastered cornice on the eastern façade but not affected the interior.
“However, any vibrational impact caused by explosions poses a serious threat to the integrity of the structure,” the ministry said in a statement.
Average Australian home passes A$1m amid housing crisis
The average price of an Australian home has surpassed A$1m ($652,000; £483,000) for the first time, as the nation grapples with a housing affordability crisis.
Figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) this week estimate the average home was worth A$1,002,500 in the March quarter, up 0.7% from the previous quarter.
The nation is home to some of the least affordable cities on Earth, where buying or renting a place is increasingly out of reach for many Australians.
Experts say the crisis is being driving by a lack of homes, a growing population, tax incentives for property investors, and inadequate investment in social housing.
The country’s most populous state, New South Wales (NSW), continues to have the priciest homes on average, at A$1.2m, followed by Queensland at A$945,000, according to the ABS.
The agency’s Mish Tan said the states of Western Australia, South Australia and Queensland were the “main drivers of the rise”.
While the average price of homes climbed in all states and territories in the March quarter, the annual growth rate is slowing, she added.
The figures take in Australia’s 11.3 million dwellings – including the full gamut of property types, from freestanding homes, to terrace houses and apartments.
Michael Fotheringham, head of the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute, is not surprised to see the $1m benchmark crossed.
Though a “daunting” and “compelling” statistic, he says it is the result of a years-long national trend of home prices outpacing wages and leaving the housing system “very strained”.
“This isn’t just an affordability problem for lower income households – this is very much a problem for medium-income households as well,” he said.
“Globally we’re seeing the term housing crisis being used in many developed countries,” he added, “[but] our housing prices have risen sharply so it’s one of the less affordable countries overall.”
Rental availability has also been a problem in recent years, and there isn’t enough social housing to meet demand either.
The average price of a home in Britain is about half that of Australia (£560,000), while homes in Canada will, on average, set you back about A$763,000 (C$680,000), according to the Canadian Real Estate Association.
Canada is facing similar challenges to Australia, Dr Fotheringham said, but the UK is markedly different as it has more council estates and social housing in the mix.
However, the UK and Australia do share what he called “ambitious housing targets” with Australia hoping to build 1.2 million homes and the UK 1.5 million homes within the next five years.
Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese – who won a second term last month at an election where housing was a top issue – on Tuesday said his government was looking to further reduce red tape for developers. They have long complained that planning laws prevent them from building enough homes.
“One of the things that we have to do is to make it easier,” he said, according to the Sydney Morning Herald, adding “developers say that it’s just too complex [and it] adds to costs as well”.
Bolsonaro denies involvement in alleged coup plot
Brazil’s former President Jair Bolsonaro has denied his involvement in an alleged plot to overthrow the country’s current president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.
Speaking for the first time in court, Bolsonaro, who ruled the country between 2019 and 2022, said a coup was an “abominable thing” and there was “never even a possibility of a coup in my government”.
Along with seven “co-conspirators”, the 70-year-old is standing trial over the events which led up to the storming of government buildings by his supporters on 8 January 2023, a week after Lula’s inauguration.
The former president could face decades in prison if he is convicted. He has always denied the charges against him.
Questioned by Judge Alexandre de Moraes in court on Tuesday about the alleged charge of plotting a coup, Bolsonaro said the charge “does not hold, your Excellency”.
Speaking later, he said: “I only have one thing to affirm to your excellency: on my part, on the part of military commanders, there has never been talk of a coup. A coup is an abominable thing.”
“Brazil couldn’t go through an experience like that. And there was never even the possibility of a coup in my government,” he added.
Bolsonaro narrowly lost the presidential election to Lula in 2022.
Following Lula’s victory, Bolsonaro ramped up false claims that there had been faults with electronic voting machines in the run-up to the election.
The prosecution alleged Bolsonaro’s claims of voter fraud started as early as 2021 as a pretext that could be used to question a possible defeat in the 2022 election.
Responding in court, Bolsonaro said he wasn’t the only person who distrusts electronic voter machines and said he had acted within the rules of the constitution.
“Many times I rebelled, I swear. But, in my opinion, I did what had to be done,” he told the court on Tuesday.
Bolsonaro is the sixth defendant to take the stand since the trial started in May.
The eight defendants are accused of five charges, which include attempting to stage a coup, involvement in an armed criminal organisation, attempted violent abolition of the democratic rule of law, aggravated damage and deterioration of listed heritage.
Most have so far denied the charges against them.
Bolsonaro, a former army captain and admirer of US President Donald Trump, governed Brazil from January 2019 to December 2022.
He narrowly lost a presidential election run-off in October 2022 to his left-wing rival, Lula.
Bolsonaro never publicly acknowledged his defeat. Many of his supporters spent weeks camping outside army barracks in an attempt to convince the military to prevent Lula from being sworn in as president as scheduled on 1 January 2023.
A week after Lula’s inauguration, on 8 January 2023, thousands of Bolsonaro supporters stormed government buildings in the capital, Brasilia, in what federal investigators say was an attempted coup.
Bolsonaro was in the United States at the time and has always denied any links to the rioters.
He has already been barred from running for public office until 2030 for falsely claiming that Brazil’s voting system was vulnerable to fraud, but he has declared his intention to fight that ban so that he can run for a second term in 2026.
‘Un-American’ or ‘necessary’? Voters divided on Trump’s LA protest crackdown
US President Donald Trump has sent thousands of National Guard troops and hundreds of US Marines to Los Angeles as protests take place against the administration’s ramped-up immigration enforcement.
While the president’s allies cheer him on, both the governor of California and the mayor of Los Angeles say Trump is overstepping his authority and stoking tensions.
Everyday Americans are no less divided over the issue. But do they feel it is the president or the protesters who have gone too far?
Here’s what six voters had to say about the news.
Eric Kaiser, 46, Independent
I’ve seen some different takes on the legality of it, but it feels to me like the federal government is being very, very heavy-handed on this, which is concerning to me since protest is a protected form of expression in this country.
I’m concerned that this sets Americans against Americans, and specifically American military against American citizens.
The Trump administration is going about [the ICE raids] in an interesting manner… While making unilateral raids like these, they’re making a lot of mistakes and those mistakes are costing people their freedoms. [The Trump administration] is not admitting to their mistakes and they’re not following due process.
We have laws in this country for a reason.
Demesio Guerrero, 70, Republican
It’s a shame that people who have come to this country to set themselves up are doing this, the riots.
I tend to think that many of the rioters are people with criminal histories. Violent protesters.
People that want to be here to create a future and have a family in this generous country would not be doing that. Many are even waving Mexican flags. That’s so shameful.
I respect the president in so many ways. He is a guy who knows how to get things done. He’s the law-and-order president. What was he supposed to do? Let them burn trash? Let them destroy Los Angeles?
Lori Gregory, 62, Democrat
When I saw they called on the National Guard, I just started crying because he’s weaponising everything he possibly can. There’s no free speech, there’s no dissent – it’s Hitler’s playbook all over again.
It’s heartbreaking, really.
I just feel for the people he’s targeting. It’s wrong, it’s so un-American. It’s so against what this country was founded for.
I’m just shocked. I probably shouldn’t be, but I just can’t believe it’s happening. I can’t believe the military and the National Guard are supporting this.
- How protests erupted after rumours of immigration raid
- Analysis: This is a political fight Trump is eager to have
Jim Sullivan, 55, Republican
This goes far beyond just protest, in my view. This is an attack on our sovereignty and our civil society. We can debate immigration policy, but violence and chaos should not be tolerated.
[But Trump is] the one who’s going to push the envelope to the legal limit, and if he can get by with more, he will, I think.
That’s one of my concerns about this whole thing. I’m not 100% on board with it, but at the same time, I think something has to be done. It’s not getting taken care of.
My trepidation is about precedent…I feel like everything we do, when we set new precedents, it will become new norms and not the exception.
Devynn De Velasco, 22, Independent
When watching clips, I saw some mostly peaceful protests. It seems like Trump is just mad that they’re happening, rather than trying to prevent them from being violent.
More and more, he’s become a president who uses his power to enforce his will [rather] than the will of the people.
I wonder to what extent is he going to keep doing this.
It’s extremely valid that people are protesting ICE, because in all honesty there is very little proof of due process for people who have been taken by ICE and wrongfully detained.
Ross Barrera, 59, Republican
When state and local governments fail to support federal law – in this case deportation orders – the military deployment is necessary to protect lives, property and the movement of commerce.
The protesters are blocking major highways, disrupting commerce, destroying and burning police cars, and interfering with police orders to disperse in certain areas.
Everyone has the right to protest, but you don’t have the right to make me or others listen to you.
Creating violence so I can have your attention comes with consequences.
- Everything we know about the demonstrations
- Trump’s deportation drive is perfect storm in city of immigrants
- LA’s chaotic weekend of protests in maps and pictures
India brought forward its TB elimination deadline – but can it be met?
Atul Kumar (name changed) anxiously paced the corridor of a public hospital in India’s capital Delhi.
A small-appliance mechanic, he was struggling to secure medicines for his 26-year-old daughter who suffers from drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB). Mr Kumar said his daughter needed 22 tablets of Monopas, an antibiotic used for treating TB, every day.
“In the past 18 months, I haven’t received government-supplied medicine for even two full months,” he told BBC Hindi in January, months before India’s declared deadline to eliminate the infectious disease.
Forced to buy costly drugs from private pharmacies, Mr Kumar was drowning in debt. A week’s supply cost 1,400 rupees ($16; £12), more than half his weekly income.
After the BBC raised the issue, authorities supplied the medicines Mr Kumar’s daughter needed. Federal Health Secretary Punya Salila Srivastava said that the government usually acts quickly to fix medicine access issues when alerted.
Mr Kumar’s daughter is one of millions of Indians suffering from tuberculosis, a bacterial disease that infects the lungs and is spread when the infected person coughs or sneezes.
India, home to 27% of the world’s tuberculosis cases, sees two TB-related deaths every three minutes. India’s TB burden has long been tied to poor case detection, underfunding and erratic drug supply.
Despite this grim reality, the country has set an ambitious goal. It aims to eliminate TB by the end of 2025, five years ahead of the global target set by the World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nations member states.
Elimination, as defined by the WHO, means cutting new TB cases by 80% and deaths by 90% compared with 2015 levels.
But visits to TB centres in Delhi and the eastern state of Odisha revealed troubling gaps in the government’s TB programme.
In Odisha’s Khordha district, around 30km (18.6 miles) from state capital Bhubaneshwar, 32-year-old day-labourer Kanhucharan Sahu is struggling to continue his two-year-old daughter’s TB treatment, with government medicines unavailable for three months and private ones costing 1,500 rupees a month – an unbearable burden.
“We can’t see her suffer anymore,” he says, his voice breaking. “We even thought of abandoning her.”
At Odisha’s local TB office, officials promised to review Sahu’s case, but a staffer admitted, “We rarely get the medicines we need, so we ration them.”
Mr Sahu says he hasn’t received the promised 1,000 rupees monthly support from the federal government and at the local TB office, officials admit to chronic shortages, leaving families like his adrift in a failing system.
Vijayalakshmi Routray, who runs the patient support group Sahyog, says medicine shortages are now routine, with government outlets often running dry. “How can we talk about ending TB with such gaps?” she asks.
There are other hurdles too – for example, changing treatment centres involves navigating complex bureaucracy, a barrier that often leads to missed doses and incomplete care. This poses a major hurdle for India’s vast population of migrant workers.
At a hospital near Khordha, 50-year-old Babu Nayak, a sweeper who was diagnosed with TB in 2023, struggles to continue his treatment. He was regularly forced to travel 100km to his village for medicines as officials insisted he collect them from the original centre where he was diagnosed and first treated.
“It became too difficult,” he says.
Unable to travel so often, Mr Nayak stopped taking the medication altogether.
“It was a mistake,” he admitted, after contracting TB again last year and being hospitalised.
At his hospital, no TB specialist was available, highlighting another critical gap in India’s fight: a shortage of frontline health workers.
The BBC shared its findings with the federal health ministry and officials in charge of the TB programme in Delhi and Odisha. There was no response despite repeated reminders.
A 2023 parliamentary report showed there were many vacant roles across all levels of the TB programme, affecting diagnosis, treatment and follow-up – especially in rural and underserved areas.
- Can vaccines help India triumph over tuberculosis?
In 2018, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi brought forward India’s TB elimination target to 2025, he cited the government’s intensified efforts as a reason for optimism.
Two years later, the Covid pandemic disrupted TB elimination efforts globally, delaying diagnosis, diverting resources and pausing routine services. Medicine shortages, staff constraints and weakened patient monitoring have further widened the gap between ambition and reality.
Despite these challenges, India has made some progress.
Over the past decade, the country has reduced its tuberculosis-related mortality. Between 2015 and 2023, TB deaths declined from 28 to 22 per 100,000 people. This figure, however, is still high when compared with the global average which stands at 15.5.
The number of reported cases has gone up, which the government credits to its targeted outreach and screening programmes. In 2024, India recorded 2.6 million TB cases, up from 2.5 million in 2023.
Federal Health Minister JP Nadda recently touted innovations like handheld X-ray devices as game-changers in expanding testing. But on the ground, the picture is less optimistic.
“I still see some patients come to me with reports of sputum (phlegm) smear microscopy for TB, a test which has a much lower detection rate as compared to genetic tests,” says Dr Lancelot Pinto, a Mumbai-based epidemiologist.
Genetic tests, which includes RT-PCR machines – widely used to diagnose HIV, influenza and most recently, Covid-19 – and Nucleic Acid Amplification Testing, also examine the sputum sample but with greater sensitivity and in a shorter timeframe.
Besides, the tests can reveal whether the TB strain is drug-resistant or sensitive, something that microscopic testing can’t do, Dr Pinto says.
The gap, he adds, stems not just from lack of awareness but from limited access to modern tests.
“Genetic testing is free at government hospitals but not uniformly available, with only a few states being able to provide it.”
In May, Modi led a high-level review of India’s TB elimination programme, reaffirming the country’s commitment to defeating the disease.
But the official statement notably skipped mention of the 2025 deadline. Instead, it highlighted community-driven strategies – better sanitation, nutrition and social support for TB-affected families – as key to the fight.
The government has also prioritised better diagnosis, treatment and prevention at the core of its elimination strategy.
This approach mirrors the WHO’s view of TB as a “disease of poverty”. In its 2024 report, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called it “the definitive disease of deprivation”, noting how poverty, malnutrition and treatment costs trap patients in a vicious cycle. As India pushes toward its goal of eliminating the disease, deep health and social inequalities remain hurdles.
With just six months left until India’s self-imposed deadline, new complications have emerged.
The fallout from US President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the WHO and suspension of USAID operations has raised concerns about future funding for global TB efforts. Since 1998, USAID has invested more than $140m to help diagnose and treat TB patients in India.
However, India’s federal health secretary insists there is “no budgetary problem” anticipated.
Meanwhile, hope lies on the horizon. Sixteen TB vaccine candidates are currently in development across the world, with the WHO projecting potential availability within five years, pending successful trials.
Pitbull: Seeing fans dressed as me is priceless
Pitbull is fascinated by his popularity in the UK – telling the BBC it makes him “very, very happy” to look out into the crowd and see thousands of people dressed like him, singing along to every word of his songs.
Thanks to social media, it’s become custom in recent months to attend a Pitbull show dressed as the star – in sunglasses, suit and a bald cap.
“Every time I’m at a show, I let them know that when you put on a bald cap, I hope you’re ready to have the time of your lives – it feels deeper than just music,” he says.
The rapper and singer has recently returned to the UK for a second run of tour dates after a big reception from fans earlier in the year.
The 44-year-old, real name Armando Christian Perez, has sold more than 25 million albums worldwide and 100 million singles.
It’s only during his most recent tours that people have been dressing as him en masse – something he says is “an honour”.
“It’s the ultimate trophy to be able to go on stage and see all the hard work that you put into the music. I’ve been in the game for 25 years and to see every demographic, everybody [dressing up] at the shows is priceless,” he adds.
Pitbull, whose parents are from Cuba, began his career in the Latin hip hop scene, taking inspiration from the musical influences of his hometown of Miami.
His transition to pop began in the early 2010s, bringing with it chart success and collaborations with global artists such as Christina Aguilera, Usher and Shakira.
Due to the emergence of streaming over radio plays, Spanish music has been able to thrive in countries where it’s not a native language, something Pitbull has been able to use to his advantage.
“There’s an irony as I’m kind of an anomaly in the music business,” he says.
“In the Latin world they said I was too English, and in the English world I was too Latin, so to bring it together now, when it all really started around 2010, feels really good.”
A section of Pitbull’s setlist is dedicated to his favourite Spanish language songs and those from his own back catalogue.
“I now get the chance to merge the worlds together and to be able to hit the stage and see the power of music, no matter the language,” he adds.
Pitbull says it’s a “really powerful thing” to have “people coming up to me and say ‘I learned Spanish due to your words'”.
‘My music is escapism’
Speaking to fans ahead of his O2 Arena show in London on Monday night, many said the nostalgia factor had inspired them to buy tickets, with Pitbull providing the soundtrack to important parts of their lives – like school trips and university nights out.
“My music gives that outlet, that escapism. It’s like therapy,” Pitbull says.
His setlist for the tour was designed to get the party going, with tracks like Timber and Fireball causing a huge roar from the sea of bald caps.
There was barely a moment to breathe – with Pitbull’s several outfit changes punctuated by DJ sets that kept the momentum going.
Overall, the show was a fun and light-hearted affair, with the music transporting the crowd back to happier times in the early 2010s.
Pitbull says he doesn’t “worry about what the trends are” or “what’s cool” when putting his sets together and just wants people to have fun.
He didn’t disappoint with his famous one-liners. There were plenty to enjoy during his set, including, “This is for everyone going through tough times, been there done that, but everyday above ground is a great day” and, “Life is not a waste a time and time is not a waste of life. So let’s stop wasting time and have the time of our life”.
Pitbull says: “You don’t know what a person is going through in their life, so I try to create phrases, which we grew up doing as Cubans. One-liners to help you out in any situation you’re in,” he says.
The star says he’s applied the same philosophy to the English language – creating the celebrated pop song lyrics that fans sang back to him all night long.
More Israelis want the war to end – driven by fears for hostages, rather than Gaza
In the 20 months since the war in Gaza began, Amit Hevrony has been spat at, screamed at, and pelted with rocks and eggs in Israel’s streets, all because she was calling for peace.
“We would sit in silence, just a bunch of women dressed in white, holding signs in Hebrew, Arabic and English saying: ‘compassion’, ‘peace’, ‘nutritional security’,” she told me.
“We thought: who argues with peace? But these demonstrations would get the same hatred as when we called to Stop the Occupation or Free Gaza. One guy screamed at us during a peace sit-in in Tel Aviv that he wished we would all be raped in Gaza, while we sat in silence holding signs saying ‘love'”.
I first met Amit in the early months of the war. The grandchild of Holocaust survivors, she described to me then how family discussions about what was happening in Gaza left her feeling angry and frustrated. She is convinced that Israel’s actions amounted to “Nazification”.
Now, she says, something in her family is shifting.
“With my father, I can say things that he couldn’t hear before, and it sinks in,” she said. “He’ll say ‘but what about Hamas?’ And I say, ‘Dad, if 80 kids were killed last night, it doesn’t matter – as a human, and specifically as a Jew, you must say this has to stop right now’. And he understands.”
The number of people in Israel concerned about Gazan suffering has been slowly increasing, but Amit and her friends are still part of a small minority.
The Israel Democracy Institute (IDI) asked Israelis last month whether the suffering of Gazan civilians should be a factor in their government’s decisions on the war. The majority – 67% – said Israel should either ignore it or consider it to a “fairly small extent”. Among Jewish Israelis, that rose to more than three-quarters.
Many Israelis, disillusioned after more than a year and a half of fighting, do now want an end to the war – in most cases this is not primarily because of Gaza’s suffering, but out of concern for the 54 Israeli hostages who are believed to remain in Hamas captivity (figures can vary), of whom 31 are believed to be dead.
‘Wall of denial’
The war in Gaza began after Hamas attacked Israel in October 2023, killing some 1,200 people and taking around 251 others hostage.
Since then, at least 54,607 Palestinians have been killed, according to the territory’s Hamas-run ministry of health. The UN estimates that more than a quarter of them are children.
After Israel broke the latest ceasefire in March, some of Amit’s fellow activists have begun holding up posters of children killed and injured in Gaza during their silent demonstrations.
“We thought we would get a lot of mad, aggressive responses,” said one of the organisers, Alma Beck. “But we were surprised when people asked us who these kids are, and what happened to them – genuinely curious and concerned.”
She believes that many Israelis are not exposed to the human stories of suffering in Gaza.
“The government and media do everything to shelter Israelis from what is happening in Gaza. There’s a wall of denial that’s very, very strong,” she said.
“I think this was the first instance of humanising the numbers [of casualties] – giving them a face, giving them a story. And it’s hard to look away.”
The fear and anger that galvanised Israel after the Hamas attacks, papering over divisions and driving support for the military campaign, has given way to exhaustion as the conflict grinds on.
Support for the conflict was already waning a year ago. Less than a third of Israelis supported fresh military action in Rafah, according to the IDI, while almost two-thirds supported a deal with Hamas.
More recently, several polls carried out this year by well-respected organisations have found a majority in favour of a ceasefire deal – with the primary aim of releasing the hostages.
Growing disillusionment
Posters of the hostages and “Stop The War” slogans were dotted among the rainbow flags at Jerusalem’s Pride March in June.
Yitzchak Zitter, there with his boyfriend, is currently serving as a reserve soldier in the Israeli army, but thinks the war is no longer worth it.
“I don’t think we’re getting closer to any of the stated goals of the war,” he said. “A year ago, stating these opinions openly was very unpopular, especially in the military. But today, people are tired of this war, we hate it, we’re done. And if you bring in the hostages, it becomes a much more acceptable opinion.”
Returning the hostages held by Hamas is by far the biggest reason Israelis give for wanting to end the war. At the main weekly anti-war demonstrations here, Gazans barely figure at all.
“Empathy for the people who celebrated the massacres of October 7 is very low,” Yitzchak says. “They voted for Hamas [in 2006] and haven’t really done much to get rid of them since. If we saw mass protests in Gaza, we would have a different conversation.”
Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has continued to insist that his military campaign in Gaza is critical to releasing the remaining hostages. So far, eight living captives have been freed in rescue operations by Israeli forces, while more than 140 have been released through agreements with Hamas.
Netanyahu says the military pressure has helped push Hamas into those agreements. But many of those demonstrating outside his office in Jerusalem, or in Tel Aviv’s Hostages Square, disagree.
“We can’t bring them back like that,” said one protestor, a developmental psychologist called Mayan Eliahu Ifhar. “It’s a terrible mistake. The war is killing them.”
That feeling has been echoed by many hostage families, worried that their relatives will die in captivity as the war grinds on, or be killed in Israeli airstrikes.
There is also growing disillusionment over whether Mr Netanyahu’s other war goal is achievable: the total destruction of Hamas as a military and governing force.
‘A political war’
After 20 months, exhaustion with the war has reached Israel’s armed forces. This is Israel’s longest war, and some reservists are on their third or fourth rotation. Some are now refusing to serve – a few because of ethical objections, but many more because of the strain on their health, finances and families.
But demands to end the war – from the streets, in military recruitment offices, and even within his own security cabinet – have left Netanyahu unmoved.
Part of the reason, says Prof Tamar Hermann from the IDI, is that the vast majority of those calling for an end to the war are people who say they would never vote for him.
“The majority [of Israelis] see the war as a political war,” she said. “If you are for the government, then you are for the government, regardless of what they are doing. And if you are against the government, you are against everything they are doing. It’s black and white. And the war has made that worse.”
Fears of Hamas regrouping
To hear what Netanyahu’s supporters thought about the war, we went to a rally in support of him.
The streets in Jerusalem leading up to the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, were a sea of blue and white Israeli flags, and the noise from vast loudspeakers set up along the route was deafening.
The crowd – mostly dressed in accordance with conservative religious rules – surged past buses with reinforced windows, fresh from ferrying groups of settlers from the occupied West Bank. Many young men carried M16 rifles slung over their shoulders.
I met Yisrael and his wife near the entrance.
“We can’t end the war [now],” says Yisrael. “It’ll end when Hamas is totally defeated and the whole infrastructure is totally taken apart. If you leave it now, they’ll rebuild everything and the situation will come back in another three or four years.”
Like almost all Israelis, he agreed that getting the hostages home was very important – but said there were other considerations too.
“There have to be some conditions,” he said. “You can’t save some people now, and then there’s another war in two or three years, a thousand more deaths. That’s not going to help anyone.”
Further into the crowd, another demonstrator, Avigdor Bargil, said the war should stop only “when Hamas is on its knees” – and that Gazans should move to other countries, like Indonesia, France and the UK.
“It’s not their home, they took it,” he said, when I asked why Gazans should leave their home. “This is our land – the land God gave us in the Torah.”
Dreams of annexation
This religious justification for seizing Palestinian land has been a regular theme of hard-right nationalist parties in Netanyahu’s coalition, since well before the war.
Cabinet members like finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, have long pushed for Israel to annex the occupied West Bank – or assert “sovereignty” as he puts it – but the war in Gaza, and the stance taken by US President Donald Trump, have opened up dreams of annexing that territory too.
Netanyahu needs to keep his coalition together, or run the risk of early elections.
And according to the respected US polling agency, Pew Research Center, the idea of expelling Gazans from their land has the support of a huge majority of Israelis – even secular ones.
Some right-wing voters are starting to turn against the war. But beneath the headlines of opinion polls, divisions over the war still largely fall along political lines.
Around half of right-wing Israelis told an IDI survey last week that the war could still bring back the hostages or destroy Hamas; only 6% of those on the left felt the same.
After a brief moment of unity after the Hamas attacks, old political divisions have resurfaced here, as deep as ever.
Mayan Eliahu Ifhar, the developmental psychologist at the protest in Tel Aviv, says that differences over the war are dividing her from friends, not just from adversaries.
“When I hear the bombs in Gaza, it tears me apart. But there are people, even my friends, who hear these bombs and say, ‘ok they deserve it’. I can’t spend time with them. I just can’t look them in the eyes.”
‘It’s my home, my country’
Amit Hevrony, the protestor who described the abuse she received at peace demonstrations, decided several months ago to leave Israel for a while and head to America, to find respite from the daily confrontation with her compatriots.
But here too, she has found herself isolated.
She told me how she had been to a pro-Palestinian demo there, and that when she told people she was from Israel, some didn’t want to speak to her.
“I said I was on their side, and that I go to pro-Palestinian demos in Israel,” Amit told me. “One girl asked me stupid questions, like ‘do your friends support the genocide?’ I support any action that calls to stop what’s happening in Gaza, but I can see how full of hate these demos are and it breaks my heart.”
Accusations of antisemitism have tainted some pro-Palestinian movements in Europe and America, complicating the situation for Israelis like Amit.
“I don’t think anyone can hate Israel as much as I hate it now, because I feel so betrayed by it – and it’s my home, it’s my country, it’s my language, my people, my friends.”
“What Israel is doing right now is the worst thing, not only for Palestinians, but for Israelis and Jews. It will forever be this horrible stain.”
School shooting leaves Austria’s second city in shock and grief
There is shock, sadness and disbelief in Graz, after the worst shooting in modern Austrian history left 11 people dead, including the gunman.
“We never could have imagined that this could have happened here, in our place. It’s a sad day for the whole city,” said Reka, who lives close to the school.
For many years, Austria had been spared the pain of mass school shootings.
But that all changed at about 10:00 on Tuesday when a former student ran amok at a secondary school in the Dreierschützengasse, close to the main station in Austria’s second largest city.
Morning classes were under way when the attack took place. Some students at the school would have been taking their final exams.
It took police 17 minutes to bring the situation under control.
By the time it was over six female victims and three males had died. Hours later, a seventh female victim, an adult woman, died in hospital. Several others remain in hospital, some with critical injuries.
The gunman, a 21-year-old Austrian citizen with two firearms, took his own life at the school.
A former pupil who never passed his final exams, he is reported to have seen himself as a victim of bullying.
Local resident Reka told me she couldn’t understand how an attack like this could have happened in her well-ordered city.
“This area is quiet, safe and beautiful,” she said. “People are nice, the school is good.”
Austria’s President Alexander Van der Bellen said: “This horror cannot be put into words. What happened today in a school in Graz, hits our country right in the heart. These were young people who had their whole lives ahead of them. A teacher who accompanied them on their way.”
He said there was “nothing at this moment that can alleviate the pain that the parents, grandparents, siblings and friends of those murdered are feeling”.
Austria’s Chancellor Christian Stocker, who rushed to the scene with the Interior Minister Gerhard Karner, called it “a national tragedy, that had shaken the entire country.” He said there were no words to describe “the pain and grief that we all – the whole of Austria – is feeling”.
Three days of mourning have been declared in Austria. Flags on the Hofburg Palace in Vienna, where President van der Bellen has his office, will fly at half-mast.
Austria has one of the most heavily armed civilian populations in Europe, with an estimated 30 firearms per 100 persons, according to the Small Arms Survey, an independent research project.
But school shootings here are rare. There have been a few incidents over the years that have involved far fewer casualties:
- In 2018 a 19-year-old was shot by another youth in Mistelbach, north of Vienna
- In 2012 in St Pölten, a pupil was shot dead by his father
- In 1997, in Zöbern, a 15-year-old killed a teacher and seriously injured another
- And in 1993 a 13-year-old boy in Hausleiten seriously injured the head teacher and then killed himself.
Austria’s most violent gun attack in recent years took place in the heart of Vienna in November 2020. Four people were killed and 22 injured when a convicted jihadist ran through the centre of the city opening fire, before he was eventually shot by police.
Machine guns and pump action guns are banned, while revolvers, pistols and semi-automatic weapons are allowed only with official authorisation. Rifles and shotguns are permitted with a firearms licence or a valid hunting licence, or for members of traditional shooting clubs.
The Graz gunman is understood to have owned both firearms legally, and he had no criminal record. One of his guns was bought only the day before the attack, according to one report.
Outside the school, a young man on a bicycle watched as the police allowed security vehicles through the security cordon round the school.
“It’s horrific,” he told me. “This is my home. I can’t understand how so many people my age are dead. This shouldn’t happen here.”
‘Scary and stressful’: Indian students reconsider plans for US education
When 26-year-old Umar Sofi received his acceptance letter from Columbia University’s School of Journalism, he thought the hardest part of his journey was over.
After trying for three years, Mr Sofi had finally been admitted to his dream university and even secured a partial scholarship. He quit his job in anticipation of the big move.
But on 27 May, when the US suddenly paused student visa appointments, the ground slipped from beneath his feet.
“I was numb. I could not process what had happened,” Mr Sofi, who lives in Indian-administered Kashmir, told the BBC.
Some 2,000km (1,242 miles) away in Mumbai, 17-year-old Samita Garg (name changed on request) went through a similar ordeal.
A day after she was accepted into a top US university to study biochemistry – her first step towards becoming a dermatologist – the US embassy halted student visa appointments.
“It is scary and stressful,” Ms Garg told the BBC over the phone. “It feels like I’ve been left in the lurch, not knowing when this will end.”
Both Mr Sofi and Ms Garg now have only a few weeks to secure their visas before the academic year begins in August, but little clarity on whether they can go ahead with their plans.
Last month President Donald Trump’s administration asked US embassies across the world to stop scheduling appointments for student visas and expand social media vetting of applicants.
This wider move followed a crackdown on America’s elite universities like Harvard, which Trump accused of being too liberal and of not doing enough to combat antisemitism.
Trump’s decisions have had far-reaching repercussions in India, which sends more international students to the US than any other country.
Over the last month, the BBC spoke with at least 20 students at various stages of their application process, all of whom echoed deep anxieties about their futures. Most chose to remain anonymous, fearing retribution from the US government and worried that speaking out now could hurt their chances of obtaining a visa, or renewing it.
- Trump’s battle on international students explained… in 70 seconds
- Students say they ‘regret’ applying to US universities after visa changes
- Trump suspends foreign student visas at Harvard
More than 1.1 million international students were enrolled in US colleges in the 2023-24 school year, according to Open Doors, an organisation that collects data on foreign students.
Nearly a third of them, or more than 330,000, were from India.
Educational consultants report that applications to US universities for the upcoming autumn semester have dropped by at least 30% because of the uncertainty.
“Their biggest fear is safety – what if their visas are rejected or they’re deported mid-term?” said Naveen Chopra, founder of TC Global, an international education consultancy.
Experts say many students are now either deferring their plans or switching to countries perceived to be more “stable” like the UK, Germany, Ireland and Australia.
Prema Unni (name changed on request) was accepted into three US universities for a master’s in data analytics. But instead of preparing for the move, he decided to forgo the opportunity altogether.
“There’s uncertainty at every step – first the visa, then restrictions on internships and part-time work, and the constant surveillance while on campus,” Mr Unni said. “It is very stressful.”
The halt on visa interviews is the latest in a series of policies tightening immigration rules for students. A few weeks ago, the US warned that students who drop out or miss classes without proper notification risk having their visas revoked, and could be barred from future entry.
These decisions have come around the time of the year when 70% of student visas are issued, or renewed, sparking great unease among Indian students.
“No student wants to go to a country and then have the visa policy suddenly change,” Chris R Glass, a professor at Boston College told the BBC. “They need stability and options.”
The uncertainty will have long-term consequences – both for the aspirations of Indian students, but also for the US’s future as a coveted higher education hub – says Prof Glass.
Foreign student enrolment in US universities was slowing even before Trump’s latest salvo.
According to The Indian Express newspaper, the US denied 41% of student visa applications between the fiscal years 2023 and 2024, the highest rejection rate in a decade, and nearly doubling from 2014.
Data from Student and Exchange Visitor Information Systems (SEVIS), which tracks foreign students’ compliance with their visas, showed a nearly 10% drop in international student enrolments as of March this year compared with the same period in 2024.
International students are a financial lifeline for many US colleges, especially regional and state universities offering STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) and other master’s programmes.
These students pay significantly higher tuition fees than US citizens.
In the 2023–24 academic year alone, foreign students contributed $43.8bn to the US economy, according to Nafsa, an association of International educators. They also supported over 375,000 jobs.
“This really isn’t about a short-term disruption of tuition revenue. This is about a long-term rupture in a strategic relationship that benefits both countries,” Prof Glass said.
For decades the brightest Indian students have depended on an American education in the absence of top quality Indian universities or a supportive research ecosystem.
In turn they’ve helped plug a skills gap in the US.
Many land highly sought-after jobs after they finish their courses – in particular, representing a significant pool of skilled professionals in sectors like biotechnology, healthcare and data science – and have even gone on to lead iconic companies.
Everyone from Google’s Sunder Pichai to Microsoft’s Satya Nadella went to the US as students.
While this has often led to concerns of a “brain-drain” from India, experts point out that India is simply unable to solve the problem of quality and quantity higher education in the immediate future to provide a domestic alternative to these students.
Experts say it will be a lose-lose situation for both countries, unless the cloud of uncertainty lifts soon.
RFK Jr sacks entire US vaccine committee
US Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr, a vaccine sceptic, has removed all 17 members of a committee that issues official government recommendations on immunisations.
Announcing the move in an editorial in the Wall Street Journal, Kennedy said that conflicts of interest on the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (Acip) were responsible for undermining trust in vaccinations.
Kennedy said he wanted to “ensure the American people receive the safest vaccines possible.”
Doctors and health experts have criticised Kennedy’s longstanding questioning of the safety and efficacy of a number of vaccines, although in his Senate confirmation hearing he said he is “not going to take them away.”
On Monday he said he was “retiring” all of the Acip panel members. Eight of the 17 panellists were appointed in January 2025, in the last days of President Biden’s term.
Most of the members are practising doctors and experts attached to major university medical centres.
After the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approves vaccines based on whether the benefits of the shot outweigh the risks, Acip recommends which groups should be given the shots and when, which also determines insurance coverage of the shots.
Noel Brewer, a professor at the University of North Carolina Gillings School of Global Public Health who served on Acip for a year, called Kennedy’s decision “norm-breaking”.
“I was stunned, but not surprised,” he told the BBC. “It was deeply disappointing and more than a bit upsetting.”
Kennedy noted that if he did not remove the committee members, President Trump would not have been able to appoint a majority on the panel until 2028.
“The committee has been plagued with persistent conflicts of interest and has become little more than a rubber stamp for any vaccine,” Kennedy wrote.
He claimed that health authorities and drug companies were responsible for a “crisis of public trust” that some try to explain “by blaming misinformation or antiscience attitudes.”
In the editorial, Kennedy cited examples from the 1990s and 2000s and alleged that conflicts of interest persist.
“Most of ACIP’s members have received substantial funding from pharmaceutical companies, including those marketing vaccines,” he wrote in the Wall Street Journal.
Acip members are required to disclose conflicts of interest, which are posted online, and to recuse themselves from voting on decisions where they may have a conflict.
Dr Brewer said the panel had “one of the most rigorous conflict of interest procedures of any federal committee”.
The members had a wide range of vaccine expertise, and thoroughly reviewed and debated vaccine data to make the best decisions for the public, said Paul Offit, a former Acip member and director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
In his editorial, Kennedy said that the “problem isn’t necessarily that ACIP members are corrupt”.
“The problem is their immersion in a system of industry-aligned incentives and paradigms that enforce a narrow pro-industry orthodoxy,” he claimed.
Dr Bruce Scott, president of the American Medical Association, a professional organisation for American doctors, said mass sacking “upends a transparent process that has saved countless lives.”
“With an ongoing measles outbreak and routine child vaccination rates declining, this move will further fuel the spread of vaccine-preventable illnesses,” Dr Scott said in a statement.
Kennedy’s move appears contrary to assurances he gave during his confirmation hearings. Bill Cassidy, a Republican senator from Louisiana who is also a doctor, reported that he received commitments from the health secretary that Acip would be maintained “without changes.”
On Monday, Cassidy wrote on X: “Of course, now the fear is that the Acip will be filled up with people who know nothing about vaccines except suspicion.
“I’ve just spoken with Secretary Kennedy, and I’ll continue to talk with him to ensure this is not the case.”
Public health experts share Cassidy’s concerns that Kennedy may appoint vaccine-sceptics to the board.
Such replacements would mean some vaccines “won’t be recommended at all” and other effective shots could “no longer be reimbursable by insurance companies”, said Peter Lurie, a former FDA official.
“As a consequence, we will see still further declines in vaccination rates, and then a resurgence of the diseases that they could have prevented,” he said.
Kennedy did not say who he would appoint to replace the board members. The health secretary appears to be calling people himself and asking them to serve on the panel, said Dr Offit, who said he has heard from at least two people Kennedy called.
“His whole notion of radical transparency – this is the opposite of that,” Dr Offit said. “This is one man making a decision behind closed doors.”
Acip has a meeting scheduled starting 25 June, at which members are scheduled to vote on recommendations for vaccines for Covid, flu, meningococcal disease, RSV and other illnesses.
Dr Brewer said Acip had some of the “best scientists in the world”, adding that the secretary would have a hard time finding that calibre of experts again on short-term notice.
The BBC contacted the US Department of Health and Human Services and the Acip chair, Dr Helen Keipp Talbot, for comment.
Schoolchildren swept away as heavy floods and snow hit South Africa
A minibus carrying schoolchildren has been swept away by heavy flooding in South Africa, a spokesperson for the Eastern Cape provincial government has told the BBC.
Khuselwa Rantjie said it was unclear how many children were on the bus, but three had so far been found alive. Rescue efforts had been suspended as night had fallen and would resume on Wednesday, she added.
In a separate incident, the bodies of seven people carried away by flood water have been found in the province’s OR Tambo district.
South Africa has been hit by heavy snow, rains and gale force winds that have claimed the lives of a further five people in a road accident, and have left nearly 500,000 homes without electricity.
The Eastern Cape – the birthplace of anti-apartheid icon Nelson Mandela – has been worst-affected by the icy conditions, along with KwaZulu-Natal province.
The bad weather has forced the closure of some major roads in the two provinces to avoid further casualties.
“This is a devastating reminder of nature’s force. We urge everyone to exercise extra caution in areas prone to flooding,” Eastern Cape premier Oscar Mabuyane said in a statement.
Five people died when a minibus taxi overturned near the coastal city of East London, with the driver saying he had lost control as he was trying to avoid a fallen tree, Eastern Cape transport department spokesperson, Unathi Binqose, told the BBC.
Two people were injured in the accident, he added.
State power utility Eskom said that almost 300,000 homes had been hit by electricity cuts in 14 towns and villages in Eastern Cape.
A further 196,000 homes in 24 areas in KwaZulu-Natal were also experiencing power cuts, Eskom spokesperson Daphne Mokwena told the BBC.
KwaZulu-Natal Transport Minister Siboniso Duma said that heavy snow had led to lorries being stuck on roads, causing huge congestion.
Grader machines have been stationed on worst-affected roads to clear snow before it reached more than 30cm (12in) in depth.
Meteorologist Lehlohonolo Thobela also warned of strong winds and heavy waves at sea, making navigation for ships difficult.
Both Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal are along the coast.
South Africa regularly receives snowfall during its winter months, from June through August, with temperatures diving below 0C (32F).
There is also regular flooding and scientists say that climate change is causing heavier rainfall in the region.
Flash floods and overflowing rivers between 30 April and 2 May caused significant damage to about 4,500 homes, and left 18 people injured.
More BBC stories on South Africa:
- Unpacking the South African land law that so inflames Trump
- Rebuked by Trump but praised at home: How Ramaphosa might gain from US showdown
- Tears and heartbreak over tragic story of South African girl sold by her mother
Ketamine swapped for salt as smugglers exploit Europe loophole in booming market
The customs officers at Brussels Airport were stunned. They had opened crates in the back of a lorry expecting to find a tonne of medical ketamine. But somewhere on its journey, the white powder had been switched for salt.
After zigzagging hundreds of miles across Europe, the contents of the consignment had been verified five days earlier by customs officers at Schipol Airport in the Netherlands, ready for its road trip to Belgium.
But somewhere between Amsterdam and Brussels the ketamine had vanished – the authorities believe most likely into the black market – replaced by the salt and freshly forged documents.
While it is not known where the drug ended up, and no-one responsible has been caught, this case shows the increasingly elaborate methods crime gangs are using to traffic ketamine across Europe and into the UK.
They exploit its classification in some countries as a legal medicine by transporting it across multiple borders to confuse the authorities. Consignments then disappear and are illegally sold as a hallucinogenic drug.
“It’s clear that criminal organisations are misusing all these long routes,” says Marc Vancoillie, head of Belgium’s central directorate of drugs.
Belgian investigators have uncovered at least 28 similar consignment switches – involving an estimated 28 tonnes of ketamine – since this case in 2023.
Some criminal gangs are now making more money from selling ketamine than other illegal drugs such as cocaine, Mr Vancoille told us, describing the situation as an epidemic.
In the UK, ketamine consumption has risen 85% between 2023 and 2024, wastewater analysis – sampling human waste from sewage plants to measure the scale of illicit drug use – suggests.
Latest figures show there were 53 deaths involving ketamine in 2023. It has been linked to high-profile deaths including those of Friends actor Matthew Perry and drag star The Vivienne. Abuse of the drug can also lead to cognitive problems and permanent bladder damage.
UK organised crime groups “are clearly stepping into this new market”, says Adam Thompson from the National Crime Agency (NCA).
The challenge for European law enforcement agencies is compounded by the fact that ketamine is used as a vital legitimate anaesthetic in hospitals and veterinary clinics, as well as being a popular illegal recreational drug.
File on 4 Investigates has examined how organised crime groups are exploiting this dual classification. In countries such as the UK and Belgium, ketamine is classified as a narcotic.
But in countries including Austria, Germany and the Netherlands, it is regulated as a medicine, meaning it faces less scrutiny during its import and transit.
“It starts off being produced for those markets and exported from countries like India,” said Mr Thompson. “But then it’s diverted by organised crime groups into illicit supply.”
Armed with this knowledge, the smugglers have developed a preferred route – shipping the drug from India, where it is legitimately produced as a medicine, into Germany, through the Netherlands and Belgium, then on to the UK.
In the case of the disappearing consignment at Brussels Airport, the drug was originally flown from India to Austria. It was then driven to Germany before being flown to the Netherlands where it was unloaded again and readied for the road trip to Belgium. During all of these connections it was being moved legally.
But, somewhere during this last leg, it was swapped with salt – and it is thought the ketamine entered the black market for illegal sales.
In another case, a container arriving at the Belgian port of Antwerp which had been verified as containing ketamine, was found to hold sugar.
Criminal groups are also exploiting legal supply chains by setting up front companies to import ketamine under the guise of legitimate use, only to divert it into illicit markets once it arrives in Europe.
The more countries and jurisdictions it goes through, the more difficult it is to investigate, requiring liaison between law enforcement agencies, Belgian and Dutch Police told the BBC. It also helps disguise where the front company – an import company which obtains a legitimate licence – is based.
“They [the criminals] will put all kinds of steps – companies in different countries – in between. So it’s hard for us to backtrack if we find any large quantities of ketamine,” said Ch Insp Peter Jansen, a drug expert from the Dutch police.
Germany, Europe’s biggest importer of ketamine, has a huge pharmaceutical industry, so large consignments are less likely to raise suspicions.
In 2023 alone,100 tonnes of ketamine were imported from India, Mr Vancoillie says – far more than would be expected for legitimate medical and veterinary use.
“Between 20 to 25% will be necessary for legal purposes and not more,” he told us. “It’s tonnes and tonnes and tonnes that disappeared in criminal routes.”
European police forces say they are planning to liaise with the Indian authorities to try to tackle the problem, with Germany’s Federal Criminal Police Office telling us it carries out intensive monitoring of new psychoactive substances like ketamine.
It added it was “in close contact with national and international authorities, organisations and institutions in order to be able to anticipate and react to further developments and new trends”.
‘Needle in a haystack’
The smuggling network sees plenty of reward in England and Wales, where an estimated 269,000 people aged 16-59 reported using ketamine in the year ending March 2024, government figures show. Among young people aged 16-24, usage has soared by 231% since 2013.
“Ketamine is a very cheap drug compared to some other illicit drugs,” the NCA’s Adam Thompson explained. “It’s sold for about £20 a gram at street level, compared to £60 to £100 for cocaine.”
The drug is being smuggled into the UK through two main routes – concealed in small parcels sent by post, or hidden in lorries and vans arriving via ferries and the Channel Tunnel, the NCA believes.
With hundreds of thousands of parcels arriving in the UK only a small percentage are spotted. It’s “very easy to hide that needle in the haystack,” Mr Thompson added.
In Belgium, some criminal groups are using AirBnBs to store ketamine before sending it through France to the UK, by cars, lorries or trucks, according to Mr Vancoillie.
In one case, somebody reported as suspicious a group of men who were moving IKEA boxes into a van. The vehicle had been hired, which meant the authorities were able to track its prior movements back to an AirBnB in Staden, Belgium.
There, they found 480kg (1,058lbs) of ketamine, along with 117kg of cocaine, and 63kg of heroin, stored in a garage.
Eight British nationals were eventually linked to the case and prosecuted.
As ketamine use continues to rise and trafficking methods grow more inventive, authorities across Europe are calling for greater international co-operation.
“It’s a responsibility of agencies and countries across the globe,” Mr Thompson warned, “to think about this.”
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Kenyan blogger was hit and assaulted to death, autopsy reveals
A Kenyan blogger who died in police custody was hit on the head and his death was likely to have been caused by assault, a post-mortem has revealed.
This contradicts police claims that Albert Ojwang “sustained head injuries after hitting his head against a cell wall”.
His death has sparked widespread outrage in Kenya, with rights groups demanding that police be held accountable. Mr Ojwang was detained following a complaint by the deputy police chief, who accused him of tarnishing his name on social media.
“The cause of death is very clear; head injury, neck compression and other injuries spread all over the body that are pointing towards assault,” state pathologist Bernard Midia said.
Police have not yet commented on the findings.
Mr Ojwang, a digital creator who microblogged on X and Facebook on topical political and social issues, was arrested in Homa Bay, a town in western Kenya, on Friday.
The 31-year-old, who is also said to be a teacher, was detained over a post on X that was allegedly critical of Deputy Inspector General of Police Eliud Lagat.
He was subsequently transferred over 350km (220 miles) to the capital, Nairobi, and booked into the Central Police Station on Saturday.
Police said he was later found unconscious in his cell with self-inflicted injuries.
But an autopsy, conducted by five pathologists who released a unanimous report, revealed that Mr Ojwang had severe head injuries and suffered neck compression and multiple soft tissue trauma.
Dr Midia, who led the team of pathologists, said that Mr Ojwang did not hit himself on the wall, as police had said in a statement on Sunday.
He said if Mr Ojwang had done this, the pattern of injuries would have been different, and frontal bleeding on the head would be seen.
“But the bleeds that we found on the scalp… on the skin of the head were spaced, including on the face, sides of the head and the back of the head,” Dr Midia said at a press conference.
“There were also multiple soft tissue injuries spread all over the body, including the head, neck, upper limbs and the trunk and lower limbs… these were injuries that were externally inflicted,” he added.
The injuries were consistent with “external assault” and there were also signs of a struggle, according to the pathologists.
Mr Ojwang’s father, Meshack Ojwang, has appealed to President William Ruto to help him get justice for his son.
“Help me as a taxpayer. The officers who picked up my son saw our home was humble and assumed we didn’t matter,” the father said.
Ruto has not yet commented.
The Digital Content Creators Association of Kenya paid tribute to Mr Ojwang, saying: “Albert was more than a content creator – he was a voice of the youth, a symbol of resilience, and an embodiment of the dreams and hopes of a generation that uses digital platforms to inspire change. His legacy will not be silenced.”
Faith Odhiambo, president of the Law Society of Kenya (LSK), said the autopsy report clearly showed that Mr Ojwang had been “tortured” and “brutally murdered” in police custody.
“We will continue to pile pressure until every single officer involved is held personally liable. We won’t accept more excuses,” Ms Odhiambo said.
Veteran opposition leader Raila Odinga has condemned Mr Ojwang’s “horrifying” death, saying it added to a long list of “young and defenceless Kenyans whose lives have been taken too soon, in brutal and senseless circumstances, at the hands of the police”.
Inspector-General of Police Douglas Kanja earlier suspended several officers who were on duty at the time of Mr Ojwang’s death.
Kenya’s Independent Policing Oversight Authority (IPOA) has launched an inquiry into his death.
But human rights groups have demanded more action, terming the blogger’s death as a possible attempt to silence the digital community through intimidation and fear.
A crowd of activists, holding placards and chanting “Stop killing us”, protested on Monday outside Nairobi City mortuary, where Mr Ojwang’s body is being kept.
You may also be interested in:
- Why Kenya’s president has so many nicknames
- The ‘tax collector’ president sparking Kenyan anger
- BBC identifies security forces who shot Kenya anti-tax protesters
Average Australian home passes A$1m amid housing crisis
The average price of an Australian home has surpassed A$1m ($652,000; £483,000) for the first time, as the nation grapples with a housing affordability crisis.
Figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) this week estimate the average home was worth A$1,002,500 in the March quarter, up 0.7% from the previous quarter.
The nation is home to some of the least affordable cities on Earth, where buying or renting a place is increasingly out of reach for many Australians.
Experts say the crisis is being driving by a lack of homes, a growing population, tax incentives for property investors, and inadequate investment in social housing.
The country’s most populous state, New South Wales (NSW), continues to have the priciest homes on average, at A$1.2m, followed by Queensland at A$945,000, according to the ABS.
The agency’s Mish Tan said the states of Western Australia, South Australia and Queensland were the “main drivers of the rise”.
While the average price of homes climbed in all states and territories in the March quarter, the annual growth rate is slowing, she added.
The figures take in Australia’s 11.3 million dwellings – including the full gamut of property types, from freestanding homes, to terrace houses and apartments.
Michael Fotheringham, head of the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute, is not surprised to see the $1m benchmark crossed.
Though a “daunting” and “compelling” statistic, he says it is the result of a years-long national trend of home prices outpacing wages and leaving the housing system “very strained”.
“This isn’t just an affordability problem for lower income households – this is very much a problem for medium-income households as well,” he said.
“Globally we’re seeing the term housing crisis being used in many developed countries,” he added, “[but] our housing prices have risen sharply so it’s one of the less affordable countries overall.”
Rental availability has also been a problem in recent years, and there isn’t enough social housing to meet demand either.
The average price of a home in Britain is about half that of Australia (£560,000), while homes in Canada will, on average, set you back about A$763,000 (C$680,000), according to the Canadian Real Estate Association.
Canada is facing similar challenges to Australia, Dr Fotheringham said, but the UK is markedly different as it has more council estates and social housing in the mix.
However, the UK and Australia do share what he called “ambitious housing targets” with Australia hoping to build 1.2 million homes and the UK 1.5 million homes within the next five years.
Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese – who won a second term last month at an election where housing was a top issue – on Tuesday said his government was looking to further reduce red tape for developers. They have long complained that planning laws prevent them from building enough homes.
“One of the things that we have to do is to make it easier,” he said, according to the Sydney Morning Herald, adding “developers say that it’s just too complex [and it] adds to costs as well”.
Eurostar plans direct trains to Frankfurt and Geneva
Eurostar has said it plans to launch direct train services from London to Germany and Switzerland.
A fleet of up to 50 new trains, costing around €2bn (£1.7bn), is planned to be up and running by the early 2030s, the firm announced.
Travel time between London and Frankfurt will be about five hours, and around five hours and 20 minutes to Geneva.
But there are questions over the expansion as the firm needs to make sure it has enough space for more trains at its depot in east London.
Eurostar’s boss said there was strong demand for train travel across Europe, despite the challenges of higher operational costs and inflation squeezing customer budgets.
“A new golden age of international sustainable travel is here,” said chief executive Gwendoline Cazenave, adding that customers were “wanting to go further by rail than ever before”.
The introduction of the new trains, which will replace some older ones, will lead to a 30% increase in trains that service London.
The firm is also planning for the proposed new fleet to service a direct line to Geneva from both Amsterdam and Brussels.
It said it was working with partners to get the new lines up and running.
It is not clear if the routes to Frankfurt and Geneva will include stops on the way for passengers to board or leave.
Depot space
However, Eurostar’s proposals are not set in stone.
Its Temple Mills railway storehouse in east London is the only depot in the UK able to accommodate the larger trains used in continental Europe and which is already linked to the cross-Channel line.
All the infrastructure along the line, including Temple Mills, is owned by London St Pancras Highspeed, a government organisation previously known as HS1.
Currently, it used exclusively by Eurostar who operates the line on a long-term lease.
But there are several other firms that want to start operating services between London and mainland Europe. These include Spanish start-up Evolyn, Richard Branson’s Virgin and a partnership between Gemini Trains and Uber.
The Office of Rail and Road (ORR) has told the BBC it was reviewing proposals from these firms to use Temple Mills, as well as Eurostar’s plans to increase services.
The regulator has already said the depot had enough space to either house an expanded Eurostar fleet or accommodate a rival company’s trains – but not both.
The ORR said it would make a decision on who gets to use the depot by the end of October, but the prospect of losing vital space at Temple Mills to its rivals could severely derail Eurostar’s plans to expand its services.
In this event, the firm has previously said it would “continue to encourage private investment in new depot facilities beyond Temple Mills, of which there are many options”.
Eurostar’s announcement came as the firm reported a 5% boost in passengers in 2024 compared with the previous year.
It saw a record 19.5 million passengers last year across all of its services.
The company also said it will increase the frequency of its most popular route between London and Paris.
Currently, Eurostar’s London trains go to Paris, Brussels and Amsterdam, and during the ski season, the French Alps.
It also runs trains within France, Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium.
Getlink, which owns the Channel Tunnel, signed an agreement in February with London St Pancras Highspeed to increase the number of services running to Europe.
Two BTS stars finish military service as fans await comeback
Two members of K-pop powerhouse BTS have completed their mandatory military service, prompting fan frenzy and anticipation for their comeback.
RM and V greeted fans with salutes and a saxophone performance after being discharged on Tuesday. V asked fans to “wait just a little longer” for BTS to reunite.
All seven members are set to finish their military service by the end of this month and their agency Hybe had hinted at a reunion. They went on hiatus in 2022 at the height of their global fame.
Hundreds of fans, some whom flew in from overseas, gathered in front of Hybe’s headquarters in central Seoul to celebrate RM’s and V’s return on Tuesday.
Many of them were dressed in purple, BTS’ signature colour, and carried large banners and photographs of the two K-pop idols.
South Korea requires all able-bodied men aged 18 to 28 to serve for about two years in the military so the country can be ready to fight the North.
On Tuesday, Hybe displayed a banner saying “We are back”, along with the official logos of BTS and ARMY – an acronym for the band’s fan group, which stands for Adorable Representative MC for Youth – on its building.
“This feels incredible. To be here in Seoul, to see the place where BTS grew up and started singing and dancing. It’s amazing,” Janya, who flew in from the UK, told The Korea Herald.
“I want to say to RM and V that you are a massive inspiration, and I love you so much!” the 28-year-old said.
“It’s been a long, long time without you. I’m so glad you’re back and finally free to do whatever you want to do,” said Ivory from Australia.
Hannah Chung, who lives in London, told AFP news agency that she planned her trip two years ago “because I knew the members will be out by then”.
She is counting on a chance to see the band at the annual BTS Festa, a celebration of the band’s debut, that will take place on Friday.
Earlier during their discharge in Chuncheon, RM thanked fans for waiting for them to complete their national duties.
“Now, I’m ready to hit the ground running again as RM of BTS. Thank you to everyone who waited and looked after us,” he said.
V said the military tenure was a “time for me to reset both physically and mentally”.
“I really want to run to ARMY as soon as I can. Thank you for waiting for us during our military service,” he said.
The septet debuted in 2013, but it wasn’t until 2017 when a highly successful US tour propelled their blend of pop, hip-hop and R&B – mostly in Korean – onto the global stage.
Since then, they have become the most-streamed group on Spotify, the first K-pop act to top the US iTunes chart and several Billboard charts, and one of the most awarded groups in history.
The band’s name is short for Bangtan Boys, or “Bulletproof Boy Scouts” in Korean.
BTS has actively advocated for youth issues, including through a mental health initiative with Unicef.
It has also addressed the United Nations General Assembly and met with former US President Joe Biden to discuss the rise in anti-Asian hate crimes.
The band had previously won a deferral – when in 2020, the nation’s parliament passed a bill allowing them to delay their duties until the age of 30.
In 2022, the oldest member of the group, Jin, enlisted, and the others followed suit.
Huckabee suggests Muslim countries should give up land for Palestinian state
The US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee has suggested “Muslim countries” should give up some of their land to create a future Palestinian state.
In an interview with the BBC, Huckabee said “Muslim countries have 644 times the amount of land that are controlled by Israel”.
“So maybe, if there is such a desire for the Palestinian state, there would be someone who would say, we’d like to host it,” he said.
The ambassador also strongly criticised US allies including the UK and Australia for sanctioning two far-right Israeli ministers over “repeated incitements of violence against Palestinian communities” in the occupied West Bank.
In his interview, the ambassador called a two-state solution – a proposed formula for peace between Israel and the Palestinians that has generally received international backing, including from multiple US administrations – “an aspirational goal”.
The two-state solution envisages an independent Palestinian state in the occupied West Bank and in Gaza, with East Jerusalem as its capital. It would exist alongside Israel.
In a separate interview with Bloomberg, Huckabee said the US was no longer pursuing the goal of an independent Palestinian state.
State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce later said the ambassador “speaks for himself”, and it is the president who is responsible for US policy in the Middle East.
Later this month at the United Nations in New York, French and Saudi diplomats will host a conference aimed at laying out a roadmap for an eventual Palestinian state.
Although Huckabee did not say where any future Palestinian state could be located specifically or whether the US would support such an effort, he called the conference “ill-timed and inappropriate”.
“It’s also something that is completely wrongheaded for European states to try to impose in the middle of a war,” he said, arguing that it would result in Israel being “less secure”.
“At what point does it have to be in the same piece of real estate that Israel occupies?” he said on the BBC’s Newshour programme.
“I think that’s a question that ought to be posed to everybody who’s pushing for a two-state solution.”
Asked if the US position was that there could not be a Palestinian state in the West Bank, Huckabee said: “I wouldn’t say there can never be, what I would say is that a culture would have to change.
“Right now the culture is that it’s OK to target Jews and kill them and you’re rewarded for it. That has to change.”
Israel rejects a two-state solution. It says any final settlement must be the result of negotiations with the Palestinians, and statehood should not be a precondition.
Huckabee has previously been a strong supporter of the idea of a “greater Israel”, seeking permanent Israeli control of the Occupied Palestinian Territories, and using the biblical term “Judea and Samaria” for the West Bank.
Some of his language echoes positions frequently taken by ultranationalist groups in Israel. Some in this movement, including far-right ministers in the Israeli governing coalition, have argued for the expulsion of Palestinians from the occupied West Bank and Gaza, saying any future Palestinian state could exist in Arab or Muslim countries.
If such a policy was enacted, rights groups and European governments say it would be a clear violation of international law.
Sanctions ‘shocking’
The ambassador also reacted to the sanctioning of National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, which was part of a joint move announced by the UK, Norway, Australia, Canada and New Zealand on Tuesday.
British Foreign Secretary David Lammy said the Israeli officials had “incited extremist violence and serious abuses of Palestinian human rights”. The men were banned from entering the UK and will have any assets in the UK frozen.
Israel registered strong objections to the move, and Huckabee called it a “shocking decision”.
“I have not yet heard a good reason for why these two elected ministers have been sanctioned by countries that ought to respect the country’s sovereignty and recognise that they have not conducted any criminal activity,” he said.
The war in Gaza began after Hamas attacked Israel in October 2023, killing some 1,200 people and taking around 251 others hostage.
There are 56 hostages still being held by Hamas in Gaza, at least 20 of whom are believed to be alive.
Since October 2023, at least 54,927 Palestinians have been killed, according to the territory’s Hamas-run ministry of health. The UN estimates that more than a quarter of them are children.
Gangster tells BBC why India’s biggest hip-hop star was murdered
It was a killing that shocked India: Punjabi hip-hop star Sidhu Moose Wala shot dead through the windscreen of his car by hired gunmen.
Within hours, a Punjabi gangster named Goldy Brar had used Facebook to claim responsibility for ordering the hit.
But three years after the murder, no-one has faced trial – and Goldy Brar is still on the run, his whereabouts unknown.
Now, BBC Eye has managed to make contact with Brar and challenged him about how and why Sidhu Moose Wala became a target.
His response was coldly articulate.
“In his arrogance, he [Moose Wala] made some mistakes that could not be forgiven,” Brar told the BBC World Service.
“We had no option but to kill him. He had to face the consequences of his actions. It was either him or us. As simple as that.”
On a warm May evening in 2022, Sidhu Moose Wala was taking his black Mahindra Thar SUV for its usual spin through dusty lanes near his village in the northern Indian state of Punjab when, within minutes, two cars began tailing him.
CCTV footage later showed them weaving through narrow turns, sticking close. Then, at a bend in the road, one of the vehicles lurched forward, cornering Moose Wala’s SUV against a wall. He was trapped. Moments later, the shooting began.
Mobile footage captured the aftermath. His SUV was riddled with bullets, the windscreen shattered, the bonnet punctured.
In trembling voices, bystanders expressed their shock and concern.
“Someone get him out of the car.”
“Get some water.”
“Moose Wala has been shot.”
But it was too late. He was declared dead on arrival at hospital – hit by 24 bullets, a post-mortem would later reveal. The 28-year-old rapper, one of modern-day Punjab’s biggest cultural icons, had been gunned down in broad daylight.
A cousin and a friend who had been in the car with Moose Wala at the time of the ambush were injured, but survived.
Six gunmen were eventually identified. They carried AK-47s and pistols. In the weeks that followed the murder, about 30 people were arrested and two of the suspected armed men were killed in what the Indian police described as “encounters”.
Yet even with arrests piling up, the motive remained murky.
Goldy Brar, who claims to have ordered the hit, wasn’t in India at the time of the killing. He is believed to have been in Canada.
Our conversation with him unfolded over six hours, pieced together through an exchange of voice notes. It gave us a chance to find out why Moose Wala had been killed and to interrogate the motives of the man who claimed responsibility.
Sidhu Moose Wala was born Shubhdeep Singh Sidhu in a Jat-Sikh family in rural Punjab, before moving in 2016 to Canada to study engineering – a journey familiar to hundreds of thousands in the Punjabi diaspora.
But it was there, far from his village of Moosa – the inspiration for his rap name – that he reinvented himself as one of Punjabi music’s most influential artists. In just five years, Moose Wala became the unmistakable voice of Punjabi hip-hop.
With his signature swagger, flashy style, and lyrical grit, Moose Wala sang openly about identity and politics, guns and revenge, pushing the boundaries of what Punjabi music had been willing to say.
He was fascinated by rapper Tupac Shakur, who had been murdered, aged 25, in 1996. “In terms of personality, I want to be like him,” Moose Wala once told an interviewer. “The day he died, people cried for him. I want the same. When I die, people should remember that I was someone.”
Over a brief but explosive career, the singer spotlighted the darker undercurrents of India’s Punjab region – gangster culture, unemployment, and political decay – while evoking a deep nostalgia for village life.
Moose Wala was also a global force. With more than five billion views of his music videos on YouTube, a Top 5 spot in the UK charts, and collaborations with international hip-hop artists including Burna Boy, Moose Wala swiftly built a fan base stretching across India, Canada, the UK and beyond, powered by a diaspora that saw him as both icon and insurgent.
But fame came at a cost. Despite his rising star and socially conscious lyrics, Moose Wala was drifting into dangerous territory. His defiant attitude, visibility, and growing influence had drawn the attention of Punjab’s most feared gangsters. These included Goldy Brar, and Brar’s friend Lawrence Bishnoi, who even then was in high-security jail in India.
Not much is known about Brar, apart from the fact he is on the Interpol Red Notice list, and is a key operative in a network of gangsters operated by Bishnoi – orchestrating hits, issuing threats and amplifying the gang’s reach. It is thought he emigrated to Canada in 2017, just a year after Moose Wala himself, and initially worked as a truck driver.
Bishnoi, once a student leader steeped in Punjab’s violent campus politics, has grown into one of India’s most feared criminal masterminds.
“The first [police] cases filed against Lawrence Bishnoi were all related to student politics and student elections… beating a rival student leader, kidnapping him, harming him,” according to Jupinderjit Singh, deputy editor of Indian newspaper the Tribune.
This led to a spell in jail which hardened him further, says Gurmeet Singh Chauhan, Assistant Inspector General of the Anti-Gangster Task Force of Punjab Police.
“Once he was in jail, he started to get deeper into crime. Then he formed a group of his own. When it became an inter-gang thing, he needed money for survival. They need more manpower, they need more weapons. They need money for all that. So, for money, you have to get into extortion or crime.”
Now 31, Bishnoi runs his syndicate from behind bars – with dedicated Instagram pages and a cult-like following.
“So while Bishnoi sits in jail, Brar handles the gangs,” says Assistant Inspector General Chauhan.
Securing BBC Eye’s exchange with Brar took a year of chasing – cultivating sources, waiting for replies, gradually getting closer to the kingpin himself. But when we got through to Brar, the conversation cast new light on the question of how and why he and Bishnoi came to see Moose Wala as an enemy.
One of the first revelations was that Bishnoi’s relationship with Moose Wala went back several years, long before the singer’s killing.
“Lawrence [Bishnoi] was in touch with Sidhu [Moose Wala]. I don’t know who introduced them, and I never asked. But they did speak,” said Brar.
“Sidhu used to send ‘good morning’ and ‘good night’ messages in an effort to flatter Lawrence.”
A friend of Moose Wala’s, who spoke anonymously, also told us that Bishnoi had been in touch with Moose Wala as early as 2018, calling him from jail and telling him he liked his music.
Brar told us that the “first dispute” between them came after Moose Wala had moved back to India. It began with a seemingly innocuous match of kabbadi – a traditional South Asian contact team sport – in a Punjabi village.
Moose Wala had promoted the tournament which was organised by Bishnoi’s rivals – the Bambiha gang – Brar told us, in a sport where match-fixing and gangster influence are rampant.
“That’s a village our rivals come from. He was promoting our rivals. That’s when Lawrence and others were upset with him. They threatened Sidhu and said they wouldn’t spare him,” Brar told BBC Eye.
Yet the dispute between Moose Wala and Bishnoi was eventually resolved by an associate of Bishnoi’s called Vicky Middhukhera.
But when Middukhera himself was gunned down by gangsters in a parking lot in Mohali in August 2021, Brar told us Bishnoi’s hostility towards Sidhu Moose Wala reached the point of no return.
The Bambiha gang claimed responsibility for killing Middukhera. The police named Moose Wala’s friend and sometime manager Shaganpreet Singh on the charge sheet, citing evidence that Singh had provided information and logistical support to the gunmen. Singh later fled India and is believed to be in Australia. Moose Wala denied any involvement.
The Punjab police told the BBC there was no evidence linking Moose Wala to the killing or to any gang-related crime. But Moose Wala was friends with Shaganpreet Singh, and he was never able to shake off the perception that he was aligned with the Bambiha gang – a perception that may have cost him his life.
Although he can cite no proof of Moose Wala’s involvement, Brar remains convinced that the singer was somehow complicit in the killing of Middukhera. Brar repeatedly told us that Shaganpreet Singh had assisted the gunmen in the days before Middukhera’s shooting – and inferred that Moose Wala himself must have been involved.
“Everyone knew Sidhu’s role, the police investigating knew, even the journalists who were investigating knew. Sidhu mixed with politicians and people in power. He was using political power, money, his resources to help our rivals,” Brar told BBC Eye.
“We wanted him to face punishment for what he’d done. He should have been booked. He should have been jailed. But nobody listened to our plea.
“So we took it upon ourselves. When decency falls on deaf ears, it’s the gunshot that gets heard.”
We put it to Brar that India has a judicial system and the rule of law – how could he justify taking the law into his own hands?
“Law. Justice. There’s no such thing,” he says. “Only the powerful can… [obtain] justice, not ordinary people like us.”
He went on to say that even Vicky Middukhera’s brother, despite being in politics, has struggled to get justice through India’s judicial system.
“He’s a clean guy. He tried hard to get justice for his brother lawfully. Please call him and ask how that’s going.”
He appeared unrepentant.
“I did what I had to do for my brother. I have no remorse whatsoever.”
Outside the UK, watch on YouTube, or listen on BBC.com
The killing of Moose Wala has not just resulted in the loss of a major musical talent, it has also emboldened Punjab’s gangsters.
Before the singer’s murder, few outside Punjab had heard of Bishnoi or Brar.
After the killing, their names were everywhere. They hijacked Moose Wala’s fame and converted it into their own brand of notoriety – a notoriety that became a powerful tool for extortion.
“This is the biggest killing that has happened in the last few decades in Punjab,” says Ritesh Lakhi, a Punjab-based journalist. “The capacity of gangsters to extort money has gone up. [Goldy Brar]’s getting huge sums of money after killing Moose Wala.”
Journalist Jupinderjit Singh agrees: “The fear factor around gangsters has risen amongst the public.”
Extortion has long been a problem in the Punjabi music industry, but now after Sidhu’s murder, Singh says: “It’s not just people in the music and film industry who are being extorted – even local businessmen are receiving calls.”
When BBC Eye quizzed Brar on this, he denied this was the motive, but did admit – in stark terms – that extortion was central to the gang’s working.
“To feed a family of four a man has to struggle all his life. We have to look after hundreds or even thousands of people who are like family to us. We have to extort people.
“To get money,” he says, “we have to be feared.”
Budget airline Jetstar Asia to close in weeks, customers offered refunds
Singapore-based budget airline Jetstar Asia will close down at the end of July, with affected passengers to be offered full refunds.
The low-cost airline has struggled with rising supplier costs, high airport fees and increased competition in the region. More than 500 employees will be laid off.
The shutdown of Jetstar Asia will not impact the operations of Australia-based Jetstar Airways, nor those of Jetstar Japan, according to its part-owner Qantas.
The budget carrier will offer a progressively reduced service over the next seven weeks and travellers will be notified if their flight is affected. Passengers with tickets to fly after the 31 July closure will be contacted by the airline.
Some affected customers could be moved onto alternative flights operated by the Qantas Group. Jetstar Asia is advising people who booked through a travel agent or separate airline to contact those providers directly.
Sixteen routes across Asia will be impacted by the shutdown, including flights from Singapore to destinations in Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines.
The closure of Qantas’ low-cost arm will provide Australia’s national airline with A$500m ($325.9m; £241.4m) to invest towards renewing its fleet of aircraft. It will also redeploy 13 planes for routes across Australia and New Zealand.
“We have seen some of Jetstar Asia’s supplier costs increase by up to 200%, which has materially changed its cost base,” said Qantas Group Chief Executive Vanessa Hudson in a statement.
The discount airline, which has operated flights for over 20 years, is set to make a A$35m loss this financial year.
Fifty one per cent of the company is owned by Singapore firm Westbrook Investments, with the remainder held by Qantas.
Former customers have expressed their shock and sadness at its closure.
In a comment under Jetstar Asia’s Facebook post about the shutdown, one user said they were “very saddened to hear this news about a very warm, efficient, wonderful airline”.
Another thanked the airline for “opening up and popularising the budget travel market”.
All employees affected by Wednesday’s announcement will be provided with redundancy benefits.
“We have an exceptional team who provide world leading customer service and best in class operational performance and our focus is on supporting them through this process and helping them to find new roles in the industry,” said Jetstar Group chief executive Stephanie Tully.
Qantas, Australia’s national carrier, will continue to provide low-cost flights to Asia through its Jetstar Airways arm, which offers services from Australia to destinations in Thailand, Indonesia and Japan, among others.
Jetstar Asia was launched in 2004 as Qantas looked to gain a foothold in the growing low-cost air travel market in Asia, but has faced increased competition from other budget outlets including AirAsia and Scoot.
US-China talks end with plan for Trump and Xi to approve
The US and China say they have agreed in principle to a framework for de-escalating trade tensions between the world’s two biggest economies.
US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the deal should result in restrictions on rare earth minerals and magnets being resolved.
Both sides said they would now take the plan to their presidents – Donald Trump and Xi Jinping – for approval.
The announcement came after two days of negotiations in London between top officials from Beijing and Washington.
Chinese exports of rare earth minerals, which are crucial for modern technology, were high on the agenda of the meetings.
Last month, Washington and Beijing agreed a temporary truce over trade tariffs but each country has since accused the other of breaching the deal.
The US has said China has been slow to release exports of rare earth metals and magnets which are essential for manufacturing everything from smartphones to electric vehicles.
Meanwhile, Washington has restricted China’s access to US goods such as semiconductors and other related technologies linked to artificial intelligence (AI).
“We have reached a framework to implement the Geneva consensus,” Lutnick told reporters.
“Once the presidents approve it, we will then seek to implement it,” he added.
The new round of negotiations followed a phone call between Donald Trump and China’s leader Xi Jinping last week which the US President described as a “very good talk”.
“The two sides have, in principle, reached a framework for implementing the consensus reached by the two heads of state during the phone call on June 5th and the consensus reached at the Geneva meeting,” China’s Vice Commerce Minister Li Chenggang said.
When Trump announced sweeping tariffs on imports from a number of countries earlier this year, China was the hardest hit. Beijing responded with its own higher rates on US imports, and this triggered tit-for-tat increases that peaked at 145%.
In May, talks held in Switzerland led to a temporary truce that Trump called a “total reset”.
It brought US tariffs on Chinese products down to 30%, while Beijing slashed levies on US imports to 10% and promised to lift barriers on critical mineral exports. It gave both sides a 90-day deadline to try to reach a trade deal.
But the US and China have since claimed breaches on non-tariff pledges.
US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said China had failed to rollback restrictions on exports of rare earth magnets.
Beijing said US violations of the agreement included stopping sales of computer chip design software to Chinese companies, warning against using chips made by Chinese tech giant Huawei and cancelling visas for Chinese students.
Ahead of this week’s talks, the Chinese Ministry of Commerce said on Saturday that it had approved some applications for rare earth export licences, although it did not provide details of which countries were involved.
Trump said on Friday that Xi had agreed to restart trade in rare earth materials.
Average Australian home passes A$1m amid housing crisis
The average price of an Australian home has surpassed A$1m ($652,000; £483,000) for the first time, as the nation grapples with a housing affordability crisis.
Figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) this week estimate the average home was worth A$1,002,500 in the March quarter, up 0.7% from the previous quarter.
The nation is home to some of the least affordable cities on Earth, where buying or renting a place is increasingly out of reach for many Australians.
Experts say the crisis is being driving by a lack of homes, a growing population, tax incentives for property investors, and inadequate investment in social housing.
The country’s most populous state, New South Wales (NSW), continues to have the priciest homes on average, at A$1.2m, followed by Queensland at A$945,000, according to the ABS.
The agency’s Mish Tan said the states of Western Australia, South Australia and Queensland were the “main drivers of the rise”.
While the average price of homes climbed in all states and territories in the March quarter, the annual growth rate is slowing, she added.
The figures take in Australia’s 11.3 million dwellings – including the full gamut of property types, from freestanding homes, to terrace houses and apartments.
Michael Fotheringham, head of the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute, is not surprised to see the $1m benchmark crossed.
Though a “daunting” and “compelling” statistic, he says it is the result of a years-long national trend of home prices outpacing wages and leaving the housing system “very strained”.
“This isn’t just an affordability problem for lower income households – this is very much a problem for medium-income households as well,” he said.
“Globally we’re seeing the term housing crisis being used in many developed countries,” he added, “[but] our housing prices have risen sharply so it’s one of the less affordable countries overall.”
Rental availability has also been a problem in recent years, and there isn’t enough social housing to meet demand either.
The average price of a home in Britain is about half that of Australia (£560,000), while homes in Canada will, on average, set you back about A$763,000 (C$680,000), according to the Canadian Real Estate Association.
Canada is facing similar challenges to Australia, Dr Fotheringham said, but the UK is markedly different as it has more council estates and social housing in the mix.
However, the UK and Australia do share what he called “ambitious housing targets” with Australia hoping to build 1.2 million homes and the UK 1.5 million homes within the next five years.
Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese – who won a second term last month at an election where housing was a top issue – on Tuesday said his government was looking to further reduce red tape for developers. They have long complained that planning laws prevent them from building enough homes.
“One of the things that we have to do is to make it easier,” he said, according to the Sydney Morning Herald, adding “developers say that it’s just too complex [and it] adds to costs as well”.
‘Un-American’ or ‘necessary’? Voters divided on Trump’s LA protest crackdown
US President Donald Trump has sent thousands of National Guard troops and hundreds of US Marines to Los Angeles as protests take place against the administration’s ramped-up immigration enforcement.
While the president’s allies cheer him on, both the governor of California and the mayor of Los Angeles say Trump is overstepping his authority and stoking tensions.
Everyday Americans are no less divided over the issue. But do they feel it is the president or the protesters who have gone too far?
Here’s what six voters had to say about the news.
Eric Kaiser, 46, Independent
I’ve seen some different takes on the legality of it, but it feels to me like the federal government is being very, very heavy-handed on this, which is concerning to me since protest is a protected form of expression in this country.
I’m concerned that this sets Americans against Americans, and specifically American military against American citizens.
The Trump administration is going about [the ICE raids] in an interesting manner… While making unilateral raids like these, they’re making a lot of mistakes and those mistakes are costing people their freedoms. [The Trump administration] is not admitting to their mistakes and they’re not following due process.
We have laws in this country for a reason.
Demesio Guerrero, 70, Republican
It’s a shame that people who have come to this country to set themselves up are doing this, the riots.
I tend to think that many of the rioters are people with criminal histories. Violent protesters.
People that want to be here to create a future and have a family in this generous country would not be doing that. Many are even waving Mexican flags. That’s so shameful.
I respect the president in so many ways. He is a guy who knows how to get things done. He’s the law-and-order president. What was he supposed to do? Let them burn trash? Let them destroy Los Angeles?
Lori Gregory, 62, Democrat
When I saw they called on the National Guard, I just started crying because he’s weaponising everything he possibly can. There’s no free speech, there’s no dissent – it’s Hitler’s playbook all over again.
It’s heartbreaking, really.
I just feel for the people he’s targeting. It’s wrong, it’s so un-American. It’s so against what this country was founded for.
I’m just shocked. I probably shouldn’t be, but I just can’t believe it’s happening. I can’t believe the military and the National Guard are supporting this.
- How protests erupted after rumours of immigration raid
- Analysis: This is a political fight Trump is eager to have
Jim Sullivan, 55, Republican
This goes far beyond just protest, in my view. This is an attack on our sovereignty and our civil society. We can debate immigration policy, but violence and chaos should not be tolerated.
[But Trump is] the one who’s going to push the envelope to the legal limit, and if he can get by with more, he will, I think.
That’s one of my concerns about this whole thing. I’m not 100% on board with it, but at the same time, I think something has to be done. It’s not getting taken care of.
My trepidation is about precedent…I feel like everything we do, when we set new precedents, it will become new norms and not the exception.
Devynn De Velasco, 22, Independent
When watching clips, I saw some mostly peaceful protests. It seems like Trump is just mad that they’re happening, rather than trying to prevent them from being violent.
More and more, he’s become a president who uses his power to enforce his will [rather] than the will of the people.
I wonder to what extent is he going to keep doing this.
It’s extremely valid that people are protesting ICE, because in all honesty there is very little proof of due process for people who have been taken by ICE and wrongfully detained.
Ross Barrera, 59, Republican
When state and local governments fail to support federal law – in this case deportation orders – the military deployment is necessary to protect lives, property and the movement of commerce.
The protesters are blocking major highways, disrupting commerce, destroying and burning police cars, and interfering with police orders to disperse in certain areas.
Everyone has the right to protest, but you don’t have the right to make me or others listen to you.
Creating violence so I can have your attention comes with consequences.
- Everything we know about the demonstrations
- Trump’s deportation drive is perfect storm in city of immigrants
- LA’s chaotic weekend of protests in maps and pictures
Austrians hold vigil to mourn 10 victims of school shooting
Thousands of people in Austria have held a candlelight vigil for the victims of a school shooting in which 10 people were killed.
Police said the 21-year-old suspect, a former student, took his own life in a school bathroom shortly after the gun attack in Graz on Tuesday – the deadliest in the country’s recent history.
In a statement on Wednesday, police said they found a “farewell letter” and a non-functional pipe bomb during a search of the suspect’s home. Authorities have not confirmed the gunman’s motive.
The incident, which left a further 12 people injured, took place at Dreierschützengasse secondary school in the north-west of the city.
Six females and three males were killed in the attack, and a seventh female died later in hospital. Austria’s APA news agency has reported that seven of those killed were pupils.
At the vigil on Tuesday night, Graz residents said they wanted to turn the city’s main square into a sea of candles, and that is what they did.
In the whispering silence, thousands of mostly young people gathered over the course of the evening, alone or clutching the arms or shoulders of their friends. They lit candles, cried, or stood for a while in prayer or contemplation.
Then they slowly came forward to hand candles to volunteers who arranged them carefully on the steps of the fountain.
The Archbishop Johann fountain is known as the heart of the old town of Graz, in front of the city hall. On Tuesday night it became a symbol of the grief, and solidarity, of the people of Austria.
“When you hear about it, you have so much sympathy for the people, maybe you could have known someone,” Felix Platzer, a passerby at the vigil, told the Reuters news agency.
“This is an example of solidarity and you grieve together and together it is easier to cope,” he added.
Three days of mourning have been declared in Austria, and a nationwide minute’s silence will be held on Wednesday at 10:00 local time in memory of the victims.
Flags on the Hofburg Palace in Vienna, where the President Alexander Van der Bellen has his office, will fly at half mast.
The school where the attack took place will remain closed until further notice.
Austrian Chancellor Christian Stocker said Tuesday was a “dark day in [the] history of our country” and declared the shooting a “national tragedy”.
“A school is more than just a place to learn – it is a space for trust, for feeling comfortable and for having a future,” he told the conference, adding this safe place had been “violated”.
“In these difficult hours, being human is our strongest point,” he said.
The attack “strikes our country right at its heart”, Stocker said in the immediate aftermath.
“These were young people who had their whole lives ahead of them.”
Gunman was former student
The gunman, who has not yet been named, was a former Dreierschützengasse student who didn’t graduate from the school, Interior Minister Gerhard Karner told a news conference on Tuesday afternoon.
Karner added it was now the job of the criminal office to investigate.
Officers also confirmed the gunman was not known to police before the attack.
Current information suggests the shooter legally owned the two guns used in the attack and had a firearms licence, police added.
Local media outlets have reported the suspect used a pistol and a shotgun to carry out the shooting.
He was an Austrian man from the wider Graz region who acted alone, police said.
Police said they began an operation at 10:00 local time (09:00 BST) after gunshots were heard from inside the school.
A specialist Cobra tactical unit – which handles attacks and hostage situations – was deployed to the school, police said.
Authorities evacuated all pupils and teachers from the building. Police confirmed the school had been secured and there was no further danger posed to members of the public.
“Locally, we have seen people crying on the streets, talking to friends that have been at the school when the shooting happened, who have maybe lost a friend,” said Fanny Gasser, a journalist for the Austrian daily newspaper Kronen Zeitung.
She told BBC News “everybody knows somebody” at the school because Graz – despite being the second-largest city in Austria – is “not that big”.
She said the school was likely unprepared for the possibility of an attack. “We are not living in America, we are living in Austria, which seems like a very safe space.”
Local mayor Elke Kahr called the incident a “terrible tragedy”.
European Commission Vice-President Kaja Kallas said she was “deeply shocked” by the news. “Every child should feel safe at school and be able to learn free from fear and violence,” she posted on X.
Witnesses heard gunshots
Astrid, a woman living with her husband Franz in the ground floor flat of the residential building next to the school, told the BBC she had just finished hanging out the washing when she heard gunfire.
She said: “I heard shots. Lots of them, one after the other. ‘Poof… poof… poof…. poof… poof…’ again and again. I went into the flat to my husband and I told him: ‘Someone is shooting!’
“He thought it was maybe something else, but we heard I reckon 30 to 40 shots. Then my husband rang the police.”
“We saw one pupil at the window – it looked like he was getting ready to jump out… but then he went back inside,” Franz said, adding they also saw a teacher.
The pair later saw the students had “got out of the school on the ground floor, from the other side” where they “gathered on the street”, Franz said.
Queues to give blood
By Tuesday afternoon, long queues had formed outside a blood donation centre in Graz.
“Today is a hard day for all of us in Graz. I’m here to [donate] my blood to help other people who need it,” 25-year-old Stephanie Koenig told Reuters news agency.
“Today I’m here because I wanted to do something. I felt helpless with the news,” Johanna, 30, said.
Another person standing in line told Reuters giving blood felt like the “only way possible to help”.
The incident is the deadliest mass shooting in the country’s recent history.
In 2020, jihadist gunman Kujtim Fejzulai shot four people dead and wounded 23 others on a rampage through Vienna’s busy nightlife district.
Meanwhile, in 2016, a gunman opened fire at a concert in the town of Nenzing, killing two people before shooting himself dead. Eleven other people were injured in the attack.
Record number of drone attacks signals dangerous shift in war
Large-scale Russian drone attacks on Ukrainian cities are on the rise.
Monday night’s bombardment, while not record breaking, was typical of the new norm.
For several hours after midnight, drones buzzed incessantly over Kyiv.
It seemed they were coming from almost every direction, as searchlights raked the sky and skeins of orange tracer fire rose from air defence units stationed around the city.
As each drone approached, the streets would echo with the deep rattle of heavy machine gun fire.
From our hotel, a fire could be seen raging in the distance, as a fiery orange moon, nearly full, slowly faded as if unwilling to compete.
Loud explosions would mark a successful interception, or a drone reaching its target.
Sitting underneath all this drama, it is hard to keep a sense of perspective.
The word “massive” is routinely used in official statements.
But a glance at the statistics tells an unmistakable story: away from the front lines, Ukraine is in the midst of the most sustained bombardment since the early stages of Russia’s full-scale invasion, with a sharp increase in the number of drones.
In the three months before August last year, Russia fired a total of 1,100, according to a report by Ukraine’s general staff.
A steep rise followed, with 818 drones recorded in August, 1,410 in September and more than 2,000 in October.
But the numbers just keep going up.
In May, for the first time, the number of drones exceeded 4,000. This month is likely to set a new record.
Since the start of June, Russia has fired an average of 256 projectiles every 24 hours, according to figures compiled by the Ukrainian air force.
The overwhelming majority of these are drones, including Shahed-type models and various decoys designed to confuse Ukraine’s air defence systems.
Russia first started using Iranian-supplied Shaheds – the word means “martyr” – in late 2022.
But by the following summer, it was producing its own variant, known as Geran, at a special economic zone in Yelabuga, in the Russian republic of Tatarstan.
According to Artem Dehtiarenko, spokesman for Ukraine’s security service, the SBU, 25,000 drones have been produced there, with a further 20,000 assembled from previously supplied Iranian components.
Of 315 detected during Monday night’s bombardment, 250 were actual strike drones, according to Ukraine’s air force spokesman, Yurii Ihnat.
“Most of them were headed specifically for Kyiv,” he told the Ukrainian RBC news agency.
A total of seven ballistic and cruise missiles were also fired at the capital.
It meant another sleepless night for Kyiv’s long-suffering population.
“It’s become more intense,” Katya, a Kyiv resident told me.
“It used to be easier emotionally. Now it’s somehow become harder.”
And it’s not just the intensity of the strikes. After hundreds of similar nights, people in Kyiv can sense the subtle shifts in technology as Russia develops its capability.
“There are more drones with a slightly different sound than before,” Katya said.
The SBU’s Dehtiarenko says Russia is making constant modifications.
“Russian engineers have been tasked with increasing their destructive power in order to maximise devastation and civilian casualties,” he said.
“In addition, efforts are being made to make the Geran drones less vulnerable to Ukrainian air defences.”
Apartment blocks and office buildings were among the locations hit on Monday. Kyiv generally avoids saying if damage was caused to anything that might be considered a military target.
But a statement from the culture ministry said that for the first time, Kyiv’s St Sophia cathedral felt the impact.
St Sophia’s is a Unesco World Heritage Site and one of Ukraine’s most significant cultural and religious monuments, with spectacular 11th Century mosaics and frescoes.
A blast wave is said to have damaged a plastered cornice on the eastern façade but not affected the interior.
“However, any vibrational impact caused by explosions poses a serious threat to the integrity of the structure,” the ministry said in a statement.
UK sanctions far-right Israeli ministers for ‘inciting violence’ against Palestinians
The UK has sanctioned two far-right Israeli ministers over “repeated incitements of violence against Palestinian communities” in the occupied West Bank.
Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich will both be banned from entering the UK and will have any assets in the UK frozen as part of the measures announced by the foreign secretary.
It is part of a joint move with Australia, Norway, Canada and New Zealand announced on Tuesday.
In response, Israel said: “It is outrageous that elected representatives and members of the government are subjected to these kind of measures.”
David Lammy said Finance Minister Smotrich and National Security Minister Ben-Gvir had “incited extremist violence and serious abuses of Palestinian human rights”.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio condemned the move, writing on X: “These sanctions do not advance US-led efforts to achieve a ceasefire, bring all hostages home, and end the war”.
He urged the nations to reverse the sanctions, adding that the US “stands shoulder-to-shoulder with Israel.”
The US Ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, joined Rubio’s condemnation, describing the move as a “shocking decision” in an interview with the BBC.
Smotrich and Ben-Gvir have also been criticised for their stance on the war in Gaza. Both ministers oppose allowing aid into the Strip and have called for Palestinians there to be resettled outside the territory.
The Foreign Office said: “As Palestinian communities in the West Bank continue to suffer from severe acts of violence by extremist Israeli settlers which also undermine a future Palestinian state, the UK has joined Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Norway in stepping up the international response.”
After the announcement, Lammy said: “These actions are not acceptable. This is why we have taken action now – to hold those responsible to account.
“We will strive to achieve an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the immediate release of the remaining hostages by Hamas which can have no future role in the governance of Gaza, a surge in aid and a path to a two-state solution.”
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said the cabinet would meet next week to respond to what he called an “unacceptable decision”.
The Foreign Office added that the five nations are “clear that the rising violence and intimidation by Israeli settlers against Palestinian communities in the West Bank must stop”.
In a statement it said the sanctions against the ministers “cannot be seen in isolation from events in Gaza where Israel must uphold International Humanitarian Law”.
The ministers lead ultra-nationalist parties in the governing coalition, which holds an eight-seat majority in parliament. The support of Ben-Gvir’s Otzma Yehudit (Jewish Power) party, which holds six seats, and Smotrich’s Religious Zionism party, which holds seven seats, is crucial to the government’s survival.
Speaking at the inauguration of a new settlement in the West Bank, Smotrich said he felt “contempt” towards the UK’s move.
“Britain has already tried once to prevent us from settling the cradle of our homeland, and we cannot do it again,” he said. “We are determined, God willing, to continue building.”
The minister was alluding to the period when Britain governed Palestine and imposed restrictions on Jewish immigration, most significantly from the late 1930s to late 1940s.
Israel has built about 160 settlements housing some 700,000 Jews since it occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem in the 1967 Middle East war.
The vast majority of the international community considers the settlements illegal under international law – a position supported by an advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) last year – although Israel disputes this.
Speaking in the Commons on Tuesday, Foreign Office Minister Hamish Falconer said that 2024 had seen the “worst settler violence” in the West Bank in the past two decades and this year was “on track to be just as violent”.
Commenting on the sanctions imposed on the two ministers, Falconer said they were “responsible for inciting settler violence” in the West Bank which has “led to the deaths of Palestinian civilians and the displacement of whole towns and villages”.
Falconer said Smotrich and Ben-Gvir had continued their “appalling” rhetoric despite warnings from the UK government, and so action was taken.
The possibility of sanctioning these two ministers has long been in the pipeline.
In October, Lord Cameron said he had planned to sanction the pair, when he was foreign secretary from 2023-24, as a way of putting pressure on Israel.
The UK’s decision reflects growing popular and parliamentary pressure to take further action against the Israeli government for its operations both in Gaza and the West Bank.
It also comes after a steady escalation of pressure by the UK and other allies.
Last month the leaders of Britain, France and Canada issued a joint statement saying that Israel was at risk of breaking international law. The UK also broke off trade talks with Israel.
In the Commons last month, Lammy described remarks by Smotrich about “cleansing” Gaza of Palestinians as “monstrous” and “dangerous” extremism.
Timeline of UK-Israel tensions
- 19 May: UK, France and Canada denounce expanded Israeli offensive on Gaza and continuing blockade, warn of “concrete” response; Israeli PM calls move “huge prize” for Hamas
- 20 May: UK suspends free trade talks with Israel, sanctions settlers, and summons Israel’s ambassador; Israel foreign ministry calls move “regrettable”
- 22 May: Israeli PM links criticism of Israel by leaders of UK, France and Canada to deadly shooting of two Israeli embassy staff in Washington DC on 21 May
- 10 June: UK sanctions Israeli ministers Smotrich and Ben-Gvir for advocating forced displacement of Palestinians from Gaza; Israel’s foreign minister calls move “outrageous”
Conservative shadow home secretary Dame Priti Patel did not directly comment on the sanctions, but said: “We have been clear that the British government must leverage its influence at every opportunity to ensure the remaining hostages [held by Hamas] are released, that aid continues to reach those who need it, and a sustainable end to the conflict is achieved.”
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey welcomed the sanctions, but said it was “disappointing” that the Conservative government and Labour “took so long to act”.
It is 20 months since Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to the unprecedented Hamas-led cross-border attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
At least 54,927 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.
Solved after 47 years: The mystery of the North Sea message in a bottle
The mystery of a North Sea message in a bottle found on a Swedish island after 47 years has been solved by BBC Scotland News.
Friends Ellinor Rosen Eriksson and Asa Nilsson found the washed-up bottle earlier this year.
The damp and faded letter was hard to read, but they were able to make out the name Addison Runcie, the year 1978, and an address in Cullen, Banffshire.
It has now been established the letter referred to fisherman James Addison Runcie who had been on board the fishing boat Loraley, but who died in 1995. It was written by his then crewmate Gavin Geddes – who was amazed to be told it had been found 47 years after they dropped it overboard.
The two finders in Sweden said it was “fantastic” the mystery of the source had been solved, and Jim’s sister described the story unfolding as “amazing”.
Ellinor, 32, and Asa, 55, found the bottle on Sweden’s west coast back in February.
“I was out exploring the Vaderoarna islands with my best friend Asa,” Ellinor said.
“We both love searching for beach finds, and that day we took the boat out to Torso, the northernmost island in the archipelago.
“Deep in the bushes on the island, Asa spotted something unusual – a thick glass bottle sticking out of the ground.”
Inside was a damp note that was almost unreadable.
They laid it out in the sun to dry, and were eventually able to make out some text.
The full date appeared to be: “14.9.78”.
They could also make out the name and address “Addison Runcie, Seatown, Cullen, Banffshire, Scotland”.
Ellinor said they were “completely amazed” to find a “real message in a bottle”, and hoped to discover the story behind it.
They posted about it on social media in the hope of learning more.
On closer inspection, the letters “es” could also be made out before Addison Runcie, as well as the number 115 before the address.
BBC Scotland News then established that James Addison Runcie had lived at that Seatown address in Cullen at the time – the “es” was the end of James – and started to investigate more.
Jane Worby, 78, who now lives at the house, described it as “nice to have a little bit of history” when told of the story.
“It does catch the imagination,” she said of the message in a bottle. “It almost makes me want to do it myself.”
Jim Runcie – who was known locally as Peem – died in 1995 at the age of 67.
The story took an unexpected twist when we spoke to Gavin Geddes, one of Jim’s former crewmates on the Buckie-registered Loraley, which sailed out of Peterhead.
“As soon as I saw the letter I thought that is definitely my writing,” Gavin, 69, said.
Gavin, who lives a few miles from Cullen in Rathven, said he remembered writing it, and even compared his own hand-writing to confirm it.
They had put a “couple of bottles” overboard, and had wanted one to be from Jim Runcie.
“We put one away for Jim – and now that’s the only one found in 47 years,” he said.
“Now at least we got one reply.”
Mr Runcie’s sister Sandra Taylor, 83, happened to be visiting Cullen where she is originally from, and was stunned to be told the story behind the find in Sweden.
“It’s absolutely amazing,” she said.
“To be bobbing around in the sea for 40-odd years and then just all of a sudden go onto the shore, it’s unbelievable.
“The name and address means it was definitely him.
“All my family were in fishing, and it was never going to be anything but the sea for Jim. He was a fisherman all his life.”
Asked what she thought her older brother would have made of it all, she said: “He would have been in stitches, he would find it hard to believe.
“He would have poured out a dram and said ‘cheers’.”
Back in Sweden, Ellinor and Asa described finding out where the message came from as meaning the world to them.
“This is such a cosy and fantastic story,” Ellinor said.
“Finding a message in a bottle from someone far away, on a freezing February day, far out on a remote island with your best friend, that’s truly magical.”
She explained that if they had known how it would turn out, they would have tried to save the bottle itself too.
“I myself come from a fishing family and absolutely love the sea, spending time on the islands and searching for treasures,” she said.
“Where I live, we call this activity vraga – it means going out to find something lost or hidden, and to uncover its story. And that’s exactly what we’ve done here, with your amazing help.”
Ellinor added: “Asa and I would absolutely love to come to Cullen one day – to talk about the bottle and the story, and experience your beautiful coast and community.
“We are truly thrilled about this.”
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Thomas Tuchel’s demand for England to play with a smile backfired badly as the head coach and his players felt the full fury of their own supporters after an embarrassing defeat to Senegal.
It is exactly one year to the start of the 2026 World Cup, and if this abysmal performance is a realistic indicator of England’s hopes next summer, then the German will need to conjure up a miracle in the next 12 months.
No discernible plan. No identity. No improvement – arguably even a regression – since Sir Gareth Southgate stepped down after defeat by Spain in the Euro 2024 final in Berlin.
England’s Euro 2024 was a tournament of big moments, such as Jude Bellingham’s overhead kick in the win against Slovakia, rather than big performances.
This has continued under Tuchel – but minus the big moments.
The brave new era has been a false start, despite three wins against modest opposition, and even Tuchel must have been shocked to experience the hostility aimed in his and his team’s direction by those fans who remained inside the City Ground at the end of this 3-1 loss.
He may offer up the mitigating circumstances as he made 10 changes from the 1-0 World Cup qualifying win against Andorra, plus this was a friendly at the end of a long season. But it was still a sobering, alarming evening as Senegal outclassed England.
England were dismal against Andorra. They were worse in defeat to Senegal.
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Tuchel suffers first defeat as England manager against Senegal
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England fans turn on Tuchel
It was not meant to be like this – not after only four games – but England’s fans have made their displeasure clear about the direction the team are taking under Tuchel since he succeeded Southgate.
The sound of fury was heard when Cheikh Sabaly killed England off with Senegal’s late third, the anger rising again when the final whistle went moments later.
The German was meant to usher in a fresh atmosphere after Southgate’s eight years in charge, but Tuchel was made noisily aware that England’s followers do not like what they have seen. They expected to have more to be optimistic about a year out from the World Cup.
We have already seen paper aeroplanes, the time-honoured sign of Wembley’s boredom, against Latvia and Albania. Here at the City Ground, where England were welcomed ecstatically before kick-off, fans cut straight to jeering, with shouts of “disgraceful” as the players made their way off.
This is still a tenure in its infancy, but there is no doubt Tuchel is feeling some heat after an uncomfortable few days that saw the Three Lions flirt with humiliation against Andorra before being well beaten by their visitors.
He can now gather his thoughts before England face Andorra and Serbia in September, but the honeymoon – if any head coach of the country actually gets one – is well and truly over.
Time catches up with Walker & Henderson
Tuchel, perhaps understandably, made 10 changes for the friendly with Senegal, but there are few decisions he has taken since assuming control that can be described as successful.
Others, meanwhile, have been simply head-scratching.
The recall of Jordan Henderson, who turns 35 next week, was mystifying and raised questions about whether Tuchel believes he has enough leaders in his squad, even flagging up the veteran’s influence in training.
The Ajax midfielder made his first start for England since 17 November 2023 against Andorra but had little impact or influence. Surely this experiment with a fine international servant is over.
And if ever a player performed in the manner that suggested his England career is coming to a close, it was the cruel exposure of 35-year-old Kyle Walker against Senegal on his 96th appearance.
The right-back was the first player to appear for England aged 35 or over since Frank Lampard in June 2014.
Walker, who has struggled on loan at AC Milan from Manchester City, switched off at the far post when Ismaila Sarr equalised for Senegal and was then booked for a wild challenge before being subsequently targeted by the visitors.
What does this say about Tuchel’s opinion of Trent Alexander-Arnold, who saw his former Liverpool team-mate Curtis Jones selected ahead of him at right-back against Andorra, with Walker then preferred on Tuesday night?
Tuchel is clearly unconvinced by the new Real Madrid’s signing’s defensive qualities, but surely he offers more than the fading, slowing Walker and a midfielder in Jones pressed into service in his position.
Chelsea captain Reece James is another right-back option, but Tuchel chose to deploy him as a makeshift left-back against Andorra.
On current evidence, there can be no place for either Henderson or Walker at the World Cup. Time has caught up with them.
Striker Ivan Toney was summoned from Al-Ahli and the Saudi Pro League as Tuchel tested out alternatives to the ever-reliable Harry Kane, but the former Brentford player was called into action only in the 88th minute at the end of this Senegal setback.
Once again, a puzzling move from Tuchel.
No identity and no improvement
Do England have any clear identity under Tuchel? Has there been any noticeable improvement since he took over?
It’s early days, but the answer on both counts must be an emphatic “no”.
England, as they did under Southgate and others, comfortably and unspectacularly see off the game’s minnows in qualifying, beating Latvia, Albania and Andorra with Tuchel in charge.
Even then, alarm bells have been ringing, especially when England struggled to overcome Andorra, ranked 173rd in the world and just above Grenada and Nepal, in their third World Cup qualifier.
These are the sort of results and performances that led to condemnation of Southgate, even though he took England to successive European Championship finals.
Tuchel has not been able to inspire any sort of upturn in quality. But there is also no obvious direction of travel under him so far.
The coach who employed three central defenders with wing-backs at Chelsea has yet to use this tactic with England, and time is running out before the real action starts at the World Cup next summer.
Tuchel has been robbed of the influence of the injured John Stones and does not seem totally sold on Crystal Palace’s Marc Guehi, so he is going through the card of alternatives, with Levi Colwill and Trevoh Chalobah the latest cabs off the rank against Senegal.
He seems focused on pace and power, hence the inclusion of Newcastle United’s Dan Burn, but none of the pieces are fitting together.
Tuchel has yet to nail down the best position to utilise the prodigious talents of Bellingham, who once again showed the flash of temper that boils beneath the surface when he had a late goal disallowed against Senegal.
Bellingham can be a threat as a number 10, a conventional midfield player, or even pushed forward close to the striker. He can even operate in wider positions.
The problem for Tuchel is working out which role is best and settling it within England’s team.
The coach seems no further forward in working out his attacking options, seemingly throwing selections at the wall and seeing what sticks.
He picked Kane, Cole Palmer, Morgan Rogers and Noni Madueke against Andorra. Kane was joined by Bukayo Saka, Anthony Gordon and Eberechi Eze for the loss to Senegal.
Kane and Saka look starters but elsewhere looks a puzzle, with the possibility that Manchester City’s Phil Foden could come back into the picture if he starts next season well.
Tuchel has widespread and attractive alternatives – but he currently seems well away from working out what is best for England and what system to use.
Twelve months may seem like a long way away, but time passes quickly and it once again flags up the wisdom of Tuchel deciding to start work on 1 January despite being appointed in October.
Was this three wasted months when time was of the essence for him and England?
England captain Kane moved to provide context when he told BBC Radio 5 Live: “This is only the manager’s second camp and we have a lot of young players and inexperienced players at this level and international football is different to club football. But these aren’t excuses, this is the reality. We have to be ready for the next season.”
Tuchel, in case we forget, was the first England manager to win his first three qualifiers without conceding a goal. But to suggest this was achieved in a fashion that was impressive, or is a source of optimism for the World Cup, would be delusion on the grand scale.
‘World Cup is not next week’
Is it all bad for Tuchel and England? Not at all.
England have won their three World Cup qualifiers and he still has 12 months before his impact can truly be measured.
And, at the heart of it all remains captain Kane, who scored his 73rd England goal on his 107th appearance.
He has scored in all four of England’s games under Tuchel – the first time a player has netted in each of an England manager’s first four matches in charge.
Kane clearly enjoys playing under Tuchel, with 48 goals in 49 appearances under the German (44 at Bayern Munich and four for England), with this his best goals-per-game record (0.98) under any manager in his entire career.
Tuchel is also still upbeat, despite recent evidence, telling BBC Radio 5 Live: “It is a tough learning, but we need to stay calm. We need to accept the criticism and get better.
“We took a very serious approach with the line-up against Andorra to give the signal that this is what counts, and here we made a lot of changes to let them show what they show in training.
“I felt we played with a bit of relief and more risk when we were 2-1 down. We had combinations and through balls. This shows me that the expectations we have of ourselves are holding us back.
“The World Cup is not next week. We have two more games in September and then we meet again in the World Cup season. We need these kinds of matches to learn.”
It is to be hoped that Tuchel’s optimism is justified.
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After a busy 10 days in which £400m was spent by Premier League clubs, the transfer window has officially closed – six days before it opens again.
This summer has seen an unusual, two-part transfer window to allow clubs to sign players for the Fifa Club World Cup which begins on Sunday, 15 June (01:00 BST).
The window will open once more on Monday, 16 June, before closing on Monday, 1 September at 19:00 BST for Premier League, EFL and Scottish Premiership clubs.
Fifa rules state transfer windows cannot last more than 16 weeks in a calendar year, hence the split this summer.
Manchester City and Chelsea are the two Premier League clubs competing at the Club World Cup in the United States, but any team from a league with sides at the tournament could participate in the window.
So who made their early moves?
Chelsea & Man City strengthen for Club World Cup
Premier League clubs have already spent £400m in initial transfer fees before the new season. That dwarfs the tallies of top-flight clubs in Germany, Spain, Italy, France and Saudi Arabia.
There’s still a long way to go to match last summer’s final tally of £1.98bn spent by Premier League clubs on player transfers, while the record outlay of £2.36bn was set in summer 2023.
Chelsea begin their Club World Cup campaign against Los Angeles FC on 16 June, while City play Moroccan side Wydad AC on 18 June.
Both sides have new faces in their touring party, with City landing Wolves left-back Rayan Ait-Nouri for £31m and bringing in goalkeeper Marcus Bettinelli from Chelsea as cover.
They also announced the signing of attacking midfielder Rayan Cherki from Lyon before the deadline for an initial fee of £30.45m.
Chelsea have spent more than any other club so far, splashing out £89.5m to bring in Liam Delap (£30m), Dario Essugo (£18.5m) and Mamadou Sarr (£12m), with Estevao Willian (£29m) joining after agreeing a move a year ago.
Manchester United are not in the Club World Cup but have made the most expensive move yet, spending £62.5m on Wolves forward Matheus Cunha.
That deal has already eclipsed the biggest fee in the Premier League last summer, when Spurs spent an initial £55m on striker Dominic Solanke from Bournemouth.
Real make case for their defence
Bournemouth to the Bernabeu is not a well-trodden path in football history but Real Madrid have spent £50m on Cherries centre-half Dean Huijsen.
The Spanish giants activated his release clause, with the Spain international having as many as seven offers on the table, including Chelsea, Liverpool, Arsenal and Newcastle.
Real, of course, also chose to spend several million euros to bring forward the long-awaited signing of Liverpool defender Trent Alexander-Arnold so he could feature in the United States.
The 26-year-old would have been able to leave Liverpool on a free transfer when his contract expired on 30 June.
But Real moved early thanks to the financial incentive of the winner of the 32-team tournament potentially earning up to £97m in prize money.
Borussia Dortmund have gone down a familiar path by bringing in Jobe Bellingham – younger brother of Real and England midfielder Jude – from Sunderland for an initial £27.8m.
Any other big moves?
Liverpool replaced Alexander-Arnold with Dutch full-back Jeremie Frimpong from Bayer Leverkusen, while the Bundesliga side took goalkeeper Mark Flekken from Brentford.
The Bees in turn signed Liverpool keeper Caoimhin Kelleher, while across the city Everton turned forward Carlos Alcaraz’s loan move from Flamengo into a permanent one.
And Sunderland may have lost the younger Bellingham, but they broke their own transfer record ahead of their top-flight return by signing French midfielder Enzo le Fee for £19m following his loan spell from Roma.
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Tyler Weaver had just completed a practice round with two-time champion Brooks Koepka. Then came a warm down session on a range full of the world’s best golfers – all watched by his mum, dad and brother.
Life has taken a surreal turn for the 20-year-old amateur from Suffolk, who makes his major debut in the US Open, which starts here at Oakmont on Thursday.
Big time sport runs in the family. Tyler’s dad Jason is a former leading flat racing jockey and his grandad Eric was a professional footballer for Swindon Town.
With such thoroughbred sporting credentials, Tyler is currently proving a big golf hit at Florida State University. And by finishing joint third in a 36-hole US Open qualifier in Atlanta, he can now rub shoulders with the world’s best in Pennsylvania.
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It is a dream scenario.
“100%,” Tyler told BBC Sport in an interview that you can listen to in full on 5 Live’s US Open preview programme on Wednesday from 21:00 BST.
“Playing a major has always been a dream of mine, so to be here, it’s a little bit surreal. But I’m going to go out and compete and do as good as I can.”
Remaining composed down the finishing stretch in Atlanta, when he knew the goal of playing his maiden major was within touching distance, was proof of the rapid progress he is making.
“Obviously I was nervous,” he admitted. “Knowing how much each shot meant and what it could lead to. So I just stuck to my processes and I’m just really happy to be here.
“It definitely gives you a lot of confidence and you can learn from being under those pressure situations and that’s what I’m going to keep trying to do.”
His 22-year-old brother Max will be his caddie at one of the sport’s toughest venues. They both started playing golf in Newmarket at an early age.
“We were always playing,” Max told me. “And Tyler always seemed to just keep up with me, in whatever it was.
“So his golf swing was always a little bit better than mine. And he’s now even faster than me. So I’m just trying to hunt him down.”
Younger siblings can get on your nerves. “They are annoying, yes,” Max laughed. “But I couldn’t be prouder. It’s a special week being here.”
Dad and mum Fiona will be walking every step of the way when Tyler tees off late on the first day at 14:31 local time (19:31 BST).
“It’s fiercely competitive in the family,” said Jason, who rode more than 1,000 winners before retiring from racing aged 30 in 2002.
“They both picked up a club early. They saw me going out, chopping it around, and they’re much better than I could ever dream of being.”
By practicing alongside Koepka, the US Open winner in 2017 and 2018, Tyler could tap into one of the championship’s most successful minds.
“He went to Florida State as well,” Tyler pointed out. “So he likes to help out the programme and I’m here with my head coach, Trey Jones.
“And luckily enough, Brooks was able to get in a practice round with me. And being out there with him was really special, learning off him.
“I was asking a lot of questions and yeah, it was amazing. He just said a really big thing at US Opens is keeping doubles off the card.
“He said, it takes only one hole to make up from a bogey. But a double bogey is two birdies. And birdies out here are really tough, so that’s a big thing.”
Tyler’s every move will be watched carefully at the Links Club in Newmarket, where members raised money to buy equipment for their most promising junior to help develop his game.
“It means a lot to me and I just want to thank all those people back at home that have helped me since I was a young kid,” said the former English Under-18 champion. “I can’t thank them enough.”
Being based in the US, Tyler is welcoming the fact that this week is proving something of a family reunion. But he is also ambitious to perform well in golf’s most challenging arena.
“Obviously making the cut and getting into contention would be great,” Tyler said. “But being out here with my family after being away from them for so long is really special.”
And there is no wiping the smile from the face of his dad. “We are excited,” Jason beamed. “We’re ready, and looking forward to the week.
“A late start and then an early one (08:45 local on Friday). It’s the bounce of the ball. We’re going to give it our best shot.
“The boys are in great condition. I’m extremely proud, and they’re ready.”
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Third T20, Utilita Bowl, Southampton
England 248-3 (20 overs): Duckett 84 (46), Smith 60 (26); Rutherford 1-20
West Indies 211-8 (20 overs): Powell 79 (45); Wood 3-31
Scorecard
Ben Duckett’s inventive 84 helped big-hitting England blast their way to a record score on home soil as they wrapped up a series clean sweep with a 37-run victory over West Indies in the third T20.
Duckett’s knock came off 46 balls as he shared a 120-run stand with fellow opener Jamie Smith, who made a 26-ball 60, which provided the backbone of England’s total of 248-3.
Skipper Harry Brook and Jacob Bethell continued the momentum as they peppered the boundary to finish unbeaten on 35 and 36 respectively, as a dispirited West Indies bowling attack ran out of ideas.
England’s total was their highest in T20s on their own turf, eclipsing the 234-6 they made against South Africa at Bristol in July 2022, and was their second highest anywhere.
West Indies gamely approached the chase as Rovman Powell cracked an unbeaten 79 while captain Shai Hope smeared three sixes in his 45 as the tourists finished on 211-8.
It helped ensure the margin of defeat for the tourists was more modest than might have been anticipated as left-arm quick Luke Wood finished the pick of England’s bowlers with 3-31.
The win maintained Brook’s impressive start as England white-ball captain as he chalked up his sixth victory from as many matches in charge.
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England v West Indies: Third T20 Highlights
England batters run riot – the stats
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England’s total of 248-3 at Southampton was the joint-highest T20 international score overall in the country. Australia made the same total against England on the same ground in 2013.
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With a combined total of 459 runs this was the highest scoring T20 international in England, beating the 457 aggregate between England and Australia in 2013.
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It was England’s second-highest T20 score overall behind the 267-3 they made against West Indies at the Brian Lara Stadium in Trinidad in 2023.
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England failed to score any runs off just 25 balls – the fewest number of dot balls they have faced in a T20.
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Ben Duckett’s half-century of 20 balls was the joint-fourth fastest half-century by an Englishman in T20s.
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England’s run-rate of 12.16 in the powerplay was their quickest in a T20 series of at least three matches. Their total of 83-0 was their second-highest in the six-over block too.
Deft Duckett stars amid batting bonanza
A quick pitch and an England team rediscovering their white-ball swagger, up against a demoralised West Indies bowling attack, proved to be an heady cocktail for the Southampton crowd as they lapped up an evening of audacious run-scoring.
England’s openers bristled with intent from the get-go, as the right-left hand combination of Smith and Duckett wreaked havoc.
Duckett liberally sprinkled runs to all angles, with his innings full of nifty reverse sweeps, deft cuts and clever scoops.
Alzarri Joseph stuck a paw out to a brutal Duckett drive on the up when he was on 37, but such was the ferocity of the strike it still flew to the boundary leaving the West Indies quick with a bruise but nothing more.
Six overs in, England were 83-0 and it already felt the like the match was over as a contest as the shoulders of those wearing maroon started to droop.
The diminutive Duckett dovetailed well with the taller Smith, as West Indies’ attack struggled to find the right length against England’s innovative strokeplay.
Thrust up the order by Brendon McCullum to open in place of Phil Salt, who is absent on paternity leave, Smith has taken to the role like the manor born as he used his levers to good effect.
Three consecutive sixes spanked off the bowling of Gudakesh Motie will have had the England coach purring before Smith dropped one inside the ropes to the biggest boundary and into the hands of Shimron Hetmyer.
A century beckoned for Duckett, and the opportunity to join Jos Buttler and Dawid Malan as one of only three English players with hundreds in all three formats.
However, the 30-year-old misjudged a sweep and was bowled behind his legs by left-arm spinner Akeal Hosein with the milestone tantalisingly within his grasp. Duckett thumped his pad with his bat in frustration.
It briefly took the sting out of England’s assault before Brook and Bethell played yet more eye-catching strokes en route to an imposing total.
End-of-term feel for Windies
If England were ruthless West Indies were rudderless as this match marked the end of a pretty chastening tour.
A 3-0 drubbing in the one-day international series was followed up by the same scoreline in the three T20s which have followed.
Indeed, this is the first time West Indies have been ‘double’ clean swept by England in both a ODI and T20 series since 2012.
Here they were again cumbersome in the field and struggled to know how to contain England with the ball. Romario Shepherd’s economy rate was 19 across two overs and Hosein, their most economical bowler, still went for 10.50 an over.
Evin Lewis pumped Luke Wood’s for six off the first ball of West Indies’ innings, but there was an end-of-term feel to the early part of the chase.
Certainly the callous disregard for anything tossed up by spinners Liam Dawson, Adil Rashid and Bethell early in the innings suggested some of their top order were already in the departure lounge.
West Indies skipper Hope, and the man he succeeded in the form of Powell, at least showed some fight during what always looked to be a forlorn effort.
It does not help their cause that one of their best players – and one of the best T20 batters in the world – has seemingly turned his back on them.
Nicholas Pooran, who was not part of this tour, announced his retirement from international cricket on Monday at the age of 29 and has prioritised franchise paydays.
With eight months to go until the World Cup in India and Sri Lanka there is much for West Indies coach Daren Sammy to ponder.
‘A clear blueprint of Brook’s team’ – what they said
England captain Harry Brook: “I’m very pleased. The lads have put a really good shift in. To top off the series like we have tonight is really pleasing.
“I like the depth in the batting, it gives the lads at the top permission to go out there and get us off to a flier like they did today.”
West Indies captain Shai Hope: “We haven’t really put a complete game together in this series. We just need to find ways to do it. We need to keep chipping away and try to get as good as we can.”
England head coach Brendon McCullum talking to Sky Sports: “It’s been a really good two weeks. We have seen a clear blueprint of how Harry Brook wants this cricket team to run.
“I have let Harry find his way [with captaincy]. He doesn’t like to make things complicated. He likes to keep it simple. His calmness and ability to keep it simple rubs on other guys. He has captained a lot of sides growing up. He’s got great friendships.
“We haven’t conquered the world but we have made a nice start over the last couple of weeks. It’s good positive signs.”
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Published31 January
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“I want to do it my way,” Lando Norris says. It’s a comment that encapsulates where he is, just over a third of the way through a Formula 1 season that could end with him as world champion.
The McLaren driver is talking at the team’s factory, before this weekend’s Canadian Grand Prix, and he’s contemplating a number of things.
There’s the in-house title battle with team-mate Oscar Piastri; the way to approach racing with Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, still in the championship picture himself, despite his apparent moment of madness at the last race in Spain; and Norris’ own struggles to make the most of a McLaren car that is the class of the field but with which the 25-year-old Briton has admitted to struggling a little this season.
Specifically, right now, he’s exploring his and his team’s approach to having two extremely closely matched drivers in the fastest car in the field, allowing them to race each other and trying to stop their egos tearing the team apart, as has tended to happen in F1 in the past.
McLaren are asking Norris and Piastri to put the team first while chasing the individual dream they have both held since they were little boys. And so far it has worked.
“I think it’s because I’m a great team-mate,” Norris says. He’s smiling, as he so often does. He’s a smiley guy. But he means it.
“That’s not saying anything in the wrong way,” he adds. “Even though your team-mate’s always your biggest competitor, and the guy you want to beat and need to beat more than anyone, I’ve always wanted to have a good time, and have laughs and make jokes, and enjoy my life.
“That’s what I’m here to do at the end of the day, enjoy my life. And we want to do that together.
“We are different people, different characters, but both guys who know deep down we want to beat each other. But we also want to enjoy our journey.”
Usually in F1, expecting team-mates to remain on friendly, or even cordial, terms while competing for the biggest prize in their sport never works.
Racing drivers by their nature are selfish. Sooner or later, the pursuit of the individual goal takes over, and the relationship ends up going sour. Usually as a result of some on-track incident; sometimes just through the intensity of the situation.
Think Nigel Mansell and Nelson Piquet, Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost, Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso, Hamilton and Nico Rosberg.
McLaren are tying to pull off something more or less unique in modern F1 history. They say they expect their drivers to come together at some point, but they also believe they can manage that, thanks to their transparent approach with them from the start.
It sounds like an impossible dream. But there’s something about the personalities of Norris and Piastri that makes you think that maybe, just maybe, it might work.
They are so different in some ways. Norris wears his heart on his sleeve; Piastri is as cool and reserved as they come. Yet, as a pair, they seem to get why this is important.
“I’m employed by the team, and I have to drive and race for them,” Norris says. “As a number one, it is a constructor. That’s what we have to win in the end of the season. But then there’s the individual championship.
“Everyone’s seen plenty of championships as team-mates turn sour and go in the wrong direction. And that normally leads to many things, like a domino effect of things starting to fail. And that’s what we don’t want.
“We know we still want to race. We’re free to race against each other as individuals, but we also know our sole purpose is to race for McLaren, the team, the name we race under. And that’s something we’re both very proud of doing.”
McLaren believe that operating this way, rather than having one driver who is both usually faster than the other and also has priority in the team, raises their collective level higher.
Norris says there are “pros and cons” to having the guy in the same car as you being your main rival.
“The thing that makes it good is also the the thing that makes it bad,” he says. “Which is that you can see everything the other one is doing. You can learn from each other very easily.
“But the positive is, as a team, that brings us to performing at a very, very high level, and that’s only a benefit for the team.”
Not the ‘perfect or dream start’ but Norris ‘still happy’
Last year, Norris was the leading McLaren driver. Once the team were competitive, a few races into the season, it was him who took the title fight to Verstappen, was quicker much more often than not in qualifying, and won twice as many races as Piastri.
This year, the Australian has turned the tables. Six wins to Norris’ two; four poles to two; 7-4 ahead across all qualifying sessions; 10 points ahead in the championship.
Norris says it has “maybe not been the perfect or dream start”, but he says he’s “still happy” with his performances so far. “It’s been the start that is needed in order to fight for a championship,” he says.
Piastri’s upturn in form is one of the stories of the season. But ask Norris whether it has surprised him, and he says: “I wouldn’t say so. If I was on the outside, 100% I would agree. I’m not surprised, because I know the kind of driver he is. I know what he’s capable of doing. I know the talent he has. And I guess I see it more than anyone else.
“I’m the guy looking at what he does with his feet and with his hands, and how he drives the car. And I’m able to give probably a more accurate answer than anyone else on the outside.”
Norris and McLaren have been open about how a certain characteristic of their car has affected him. Team principal Andrea Stella explains this by saying: “The feeling coming from the front axle is relatively numb.”
Norris explains why this is a particular problem for him. “I can only say how I drive, and what I rely on, and it’s very much feeling through the steering wheel. That’s my primary source of feelings of how I can drive a car quickly.
“When I’m competing against the best in the world, you need everything to be giving you those cues, the best feelings, in order to be most accurate. If you’re missing that little thing, then it’s tough to be the best.
“I’ve had to work on exploring other ways to get the lap time out of myself, whether that’s more my feeling through my body or feet, to trying to work with the team on ways to kinda bring that feeling back through the steering wheel. That’s all part of the job.”
The challenge of racing Verstappen
Norris is talking a matter of days after he likened Verstappen’s controversial collision with Mercedes’ George Russell in the Spanish Grand Prix to something out of the Mario Kart game.
That comment was made in the green room before the podium while chatting to Piastri and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc. He did not want to expand on it to the media, and he still does not now, joking: “I don’t remember saying it.”
But he will talk about the challenge of racing Verstappen. The two are friends off track, but Spain was not the first time Norris had expressed public criticism of the way Verstappen goes racing.
He is asked how the on-track stuff does not blur into their off-track relationship.
“I don’t think he’s done anything untoward towards me,” Norris says. “He’s raced against me very, very toughly, as he has the right to do. He’s made my life very, very tough at times. And he has the right to do that.
“I’ve said it many times, I have a lot of respect for Max. The driver he is, the person he is, what he stands for all of the time. And what he’s achieved, his four world championships. That’s four more than me, and he’s had a lot more race wins than me.
“I admire those stats, those performances. But at the same time, everyone does what they believe is best. Everyone does what they believe is right. And they race for themselves.
“Some may be more aggressive than others. But everyone has flaws. I have them. Maybe he has them.
“I race in the aggressive way I believe is correct, and he does the same. The stewards are the ones who decide what is right and wrong.”
I ask how he races with someone whose philosophy of racing, as Verstappen expressed in a BBC Sport interview in November, is: “When I race with someone, he will not be able to overtake me around the outside.”
Norris says: “When you’re racing for wins, championships, against the best in the world, you can never expect things to be easy. You learn in go-karting that you can’t at all easily overtake around the outside. That is like a rule number one.
“But it can be done, and it will be done. But the number one goal for us is always to finish. Sometimes, when you try too hard, things can go wrong. You might end up not finishing the race, even though you might be in the right. So sometimes you’ve got to take the safer approach.”
Over his time in F1, Norris has been open about his struggles with self-belief. Verstappen transparently believes he’s the best. Does Norris believe that of himself?
“It’s a tricky question,” he says. “I do believe I’m the best driver. Maybe not on every given day, and every single day.
“I do believe that I can drive quicker and perform better than everyone else on the grid. But to perform at that level consistently is a very, very difficult thing, no matter what the conditions are, what car you’re in, who you’re against.
“That can be a more defining question. Maybe sometimes I find it hard to admit and just say. But I wouldn’t be racing in Formula 1, I wouldn’t be fighting for a world championship, if I didn’t believe deep down that I could be the best in the world.”
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If the casual football fan wasn’t already familiar with the name Rayan Cherki, they certainly are now.
Last week videos of his incredible goal during France’s 5-4 defeat by Spain in the Uefa Nations League semi-final went viral.
After controlling a bobbling pass and setting himself up in one touch, the 21-year-old rifled a hip-height volley on the swivel past Spanish goalkeeper Unai Simon at full stretch.
You just don’t see instinctive goals like that very often, certainly not from a player 15 minutes into his senior international debut.
Cherki is one of the most sought after talents in world football right now and has now signed for Manchester City in a £30.45m transfer from Lyon.
But who exactly is Cherki, and why is everyone so excited about him?
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‘An absolute master, a wizard with the ball’ – who is the magical Frenchman?
Cherki is only the latest talent fresh off the Lyon production line, but may be the best yet.
He joined Lyon at the age of seven from AS Saint-Priest and, aged 16 years and 140 days, Cherki became the youngest goalscorer in the Ligue 1 side’s history in a French Cup tie back in January 2020.
Before that in November 2019, a Champions League debut came against Zenit, while he also helped France reach the quarter-finals of the European Under-21 Championships in 2023.
Previously linked with Real Madrid, Liverpool, Manchester United and Chelsea, in 2020 he admitted to Lyon TV “my dream is to play for Real Madrid”.
His footballing idol is Cristiano Ronaldo, can play as a winger but his preference is a more central number 10 role.
Cherki has just enjoyed a break-out campaign in Ligue 1, providing 11 assists, 22 big chances – the most in the league – 13 through-balls and 48 successful dribbles.
A return of 12 goals in all competitions is by far the best of his short career, but it is his work and understanding of the game off the ball that has arguably improved the most this term.
French football expert Julien Laurens, speaking on the Euro Leagues podcast, said: “He has been incredible this season. Since he was 16 – even before that – the talent is there, left foot or right foot.
“A player at this level who takes corners with each foot depending on which side of the corner it is, to be an inswinger every time is just incredible.
“He is one of the greatest technicians in Europe right now.”
The stats support Cherki’s ambipedal qualities. Of the 44 shots he took with his feet in Ligue 1 last season, 22 came with the left and 22 with the right.
Cherki’s growing reputation was only enhanced by Thursday’s stunning international debut on Thursday against Spain, where he sparked France’s comeback from 5-1 down.
Three days later he made his full international debut as Les Bleus beat Germany 2-0 in the Nations League third-place play-off.
Laurens certainly isn’t Cherki’s only admirer.
France legend Thierry Henry has previously said he has “never seen a player in history who dribbles as quickly as him”, while Lyon’s captain Alexandre Lacazette described him as “special”.
The former Arsenal striker added: “This season, he has managed to raise his level. I would put [Mesut] Ozil in a different category but, with time, Rayan can get close to him.”
Cherki, also part of the France squad that finished runners-up at the 2024 Olympics, scored in both legs for Lyon against Manchester United in a Europa League quarter-final defeat last season.
Speaking to BBC Sport in April about him, Lyon’s former Arsenal player Ainsley Maitland-Niles said: “He is the best natural talent I’ve ever seen. An absolute master, a wizard with the ball.
“He is taking chances, assists and dragging us up the pitch by taking people on and nutmegging them – he is a genius.”
How would Cherki fit in?
Pep Guardiola will now have Cherki in his squad next season, but how would he fit in at Manchester City?
The Premier League club have wasted no time in strengthening after enduring their worst campaign since Guardiola took charge nine years ago.
A £46.3m deal has been agreed with AC Milan for Netherlands midfielder Tijjani Reijnders, while a £31m move for Wolves left-back Rayan Ait-Nouri has been completed.
With Reijnders capable of playing anywhere in midfield, Cherki will likely play in an advanced role just behind Erling Haaland.
Guardiola traditionally prefers his midfielders to keep the ball and be patient rather than play in a direct, transitional style. However, he now has a Kevin de Bruyne-shaped hole to fill following the Belgian’s departure.
Cherki could also be deployed on the right wing, with wide players Jeremy Doku and Savinho struggling for consistency last season and Jack Grealish open to leaving the club.
It’s an exciting time for a player who, in the space of seven days, has gone from making his international debut to joining one of the world’s best clubs.
That said, he clearly isn’t getting ahead of himself.
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Published26 July 2022
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