Category: World

  • Netanyahu Threatens To End Gaza Ceasefire If Israeli Hostages Are Not Released By Saturday Noon

    Netanyahu Threatens To End Gaza Ceasefire If Israeli Hostages Are Not Released By Saturday Noon

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatened Tuesday evening to end the Gaza ceasefire deal if Hamas failed to release captives by Saturday noon.

    “If Hamas does not return our hostages by noon on Saturday, the ceasefire will be terminated, and the Israeli army will return to intense fighting until Hamas is finally defeated,” Netanyahu said in a video statement after a four-hour security cabinet meeting.

    The Israeli premier said that he instructed the army “to mobilize forces inside and around the Gaza Strip.”

    The threat came one day after Hamas said that it would delay the next hostage release in response to Israeli violations of the ceasefire agreement.

    Local Palestinian authorities have listed a series of Israeli violations of the deal, including the shooting of civilians and denying access to relief materials, including tents and caravans for displaced civilians in Gaza.

  • ‪Trump Signs Order Giving Elon Musk’s DOGE Power To Direct Federal Agencies

    ‪Trump Signs Order Giving Elon Musk’s DOGE Power To Direct Federal Agencies

    US President Donald Trump has signed an executive order giving billionaire Elon Musk’s unofficial Department of Government Efficiency the power to direct federal agencies in cost-reduction efforts.

    According to the Tuesday executive order, federal agencies are instructed to work with Musk’s team on job cuts and hiring limitations. Each agency must plan for major reductions in staff and limit hiring to “essential positions,” the White House summary said.

    Trump, alongside Musk in the Oval Office, praised his work, which has proved controversial with both the public and legal scholars, who have called it unconstitutional. Trump also called on Musk to take on further responsibilities.

    Excluding sectors like national security, law enforcement, and immigration, Trump’s order is an unprecedented attempt to shrink the nation’s 2.2 million federal workforce while bypassing Congress’ constitutional “power of the purse.”

    Under the constitutional separation of powers, money allocated by Congress must be spent, and can only be cut by another act of Congress.

    Musk said his team is investigating the net worth of federal workers, adding that a high net worth may indicate potential fraud.

    “There are quite a few people in the bureaucracy who have ostensibly a salary of a few hundred thousand dollars but somehow managed to accrue tens of millions of dollars in net worth,” he said. “We’re just curious as to where it came from.”

    Critics of Musk say that under the Constitution’s guarantee against unreasonable searches and seizures, he has no right to examine federal workers’ personal financial records without a judge’s warrant.

    In demonstrations, members of the public and Congress have protested giving Musk access to government databases, including sensitive material.

  • Kremlin: ‘Significant Part Of Ukraine Wants To Be Russia’

    Kremlin: ‘Significant Part Of Ukraine Wants To Be Russia’

    Addressing the three-year conflict between Moscow and Kyiv in a Fox News interview that aired Monday, Trump said: “(Ukraine) may make a deal, they may not make a deal. They may be Russian someday, or they may not be Russian someday.”

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Tuesday that the situation in Ukraine “largely corresponds to President Trump’s words.”

    “The fact that a significant part of Ukraine wants to become Russia, and has already, is a fact,” he told reporters, referring to Moscow’s 2022 annexation of four Ukrainian regions.

    “Any phenomenon can happen with a 50 percent probability — either yes or no,” Peskov added.

    Trump has said ending the fighting is one of his priorities for his first months in the White House, but is yet to outline specific proposals for how he plans to bring the two sides to the negotiating table.

    Both Moscow and Kyiv have publicly welcomed his focus on ending the conflict.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has said he is ready for direct talks with Trump on a possible agreement, while the New York Post reported over the weekend that Trump had told them he had already spoken to Putin privately over the issue.

    The Kremlin declined to confirm or deny the call.

    Energy strikes

    Both Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky have previously ruled out direct talks with each other, and there appears to be little ground where the two could strike a deal.

    Kyiv fears that any settlement that does not include hard military commitments for its security — such as NATO membership or the deployment of Western peacekeeping troops — will just allow the Kremlin time to regroup and rearm for a fresh offensive.

    Putin is demanding that Ukraine withdraw from swathes of its south and east that Kyiv still has control over, and considers closer ties between Ukraine and NATO inadmissable.

    Zelensky has meanwhile rejected any territorial concessions to Moscow, though he has acknowledged that Ukraine might have to rely on diplomatic means to secure the return of some territory.

    Russia says it has annexed five regions of Ukraine — Crimea in 2014 and then Donetsk, Kherson, Lugansk and Zaporizhzhia in 2022 — though it does not have full control over them.

    Zelensky will meet US Vice President JD Vance at the Munich Security Conference on Friday, the Ukrainian president’s spokesman told AFP.

    Trump will also dispatch his special envoy Keith Kellogg to Ukraine later this month to further discuss a possible roadmap for ending the conflict.

    Both armies are trying to secure an advantage on the battlefield ahead of possible talks.

    Russia’s defence ministry said Tuesday its troops had captured the small village of Yasenove in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region.

    Overnight the two sides traded long-range attacks on each other’s energy infrastructure.

    Ukraine’s General Staff said its forces had struck an oil refinery in Russia’s Saratov region, sparking a fire.

    “Strikes on strategic targets involved in the Russian armed aggression against Ukraine will continue,” it said in a statement.

    The governor of the Russian region had earlier reported a drone attack on an industrial site, without specifying where.

    Russia’s defence ministry also said it had struck Ukrainian gas and energy sites that support Kyiv’s army in an overnight aerial attack.

    Naftogaz, the Ukrainian national gas company, confirmed one of its facilities in the eastern Poltava region had been damaged in the “massive” Russian attack overnight.

    Temporary power cuts — frequent across Ukraine — were put in place Tuesday morning following the strike.

    Moscow has pursued a months-long bombing campaign against Ukrainian energy infrastructure, claiming the attacks targeted facilities that aid Kyiv’s military.

    Ukraine has carried out its own strikes on Russian energy and military installations, and Moscow has accused it of using US- and British-supplied missiles to strike deep inside Russian territory.

    (AFP)

  • Trump Signs Order To Pause Enforcement Of Foreign Bribery Law

    Trump Signs Order To Pause Enforcement Of Foreign Bribery Law

    US President Donald Trump issued an executive order on Monday, instructing the Justice Department to pause the enforcement of a law that bans US companies and foreign businesses from bribing foreign officials to secure business deals.

    The order directs Attorney General Pam Bondi to suspend prosecutions under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) until new guidelines are prepared.

    According to a White House factsheet, US companies are “harmed by FCPA over-enforcement because they are prohibited from engaging in practices common among international competitors, creating an uneven playing field.”

    The FCPA, passed in 1977, bans Americans and certain foreign companies from bribing foreign officials. In 1998, it was expanded to include foreign entities involved in bribery in the US.

    “It sounds good, but it hurts the country,” Trump said of the FCPA, as he signed the executive order at the White House.

    Trump stated that US anti-corruption laws are blocking deals because businesses “don’t want to feel like every time they pick up the phone, they’re going to jail.”

  • Trump says Hamas Should Free All Hostages By Midday Saturday Or ‘Let Hell Break Out’

    Trump says Hamas Should Free All Hostages By Midday Saturday Or ‘Let Hell Break Out’

    U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday that Hamas should release all hostages held by the militant group in Gaza by midday Saturday or he would propose canceling the Israel-Hamas ceasefire and “let hell break out.”

    Trump cautioned that Israel might want to override him on the issue and said he might speak to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    But in a wide-ranging session with reporters in the Oval Office, Trump expressed frustration with the condition of the last group of hostages freed by Hamas and by the announcement by the militant group that it would halt further releases.

    “As far as I’m concerned, if all of the hostages aren’t returned by Saturday at 12 o’clock, I think it’s an appropriate time. I would say, cancel it and all bets are off and let hell break out. I’d say they ought to be returned by 12 o’clock on Saturday,” Trump said.

    He said he wanted the hostages released en masse, instead of a few at a time. “We want ’em all back.”

    Trump also said he might withhold aid to Jordan and Egypt if they don’t take Palestinian refugees being relocated from Gaza. He is to meet Jordan’s King Abdullah on Tuesday.

    The comments came on a day of some confusion over Trump’s proposal for a U.S. takeover of Gaza once the fighting stops.

    He said Palestinians would not have the right of return to the Gaza Strip under his proposal to redevelop the enclave, contradicting his own officials who had suggested Gazans would only be relocated temporarily.

    In an excerpt of an interview with Fox News channel’s Bret Baier broadcast on Monday, Trump added that he thought he could make a deal with Jordan and Egypt to take the displaced Palestinians, saying the U.S. gives the two countries “billions and billions of dollars a year.”

    Asked if Palestinians would have the right to return to Gaza, Trump said: “No, they wouldn’t because they’re going to have much better housing.”

    “I’m talking about building a permanent place for them,” he said, adding it would take years for Gaza to be habitable again.

    In a shock announcement on Feb. 4 after meeting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington, Trump proposed resettling Gaza’s 2.2 million Palestinians and the U.S. taking control of the seaside enclave, redeveloping it into the “Riviera of the Middle East.”

    IGNITE THE REGION

    Trump’s suggestion of Palestinian displacement has been repeatedly rejected by Gaza residents and Arab states, and labeled by rights advocates and the United Nations as a proposal of ethnic cleansing.

    Senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri said Trump’s statement that Palestinians would not be able to return to Gaza was “irresponsible.”

    “We affirm that such plans are capable of igniting the region,” he told Reuters on Monday.

    Netanyahu, who praised the proposal, suggested Palestinians would be allowed to return. “They can leave, they can then come back, they can relocate and come back. But you have to rebuild Gaza,” he said the day after Trump’s announcement.

    U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who will depart later this week for his first visit to the Middle East in the office, said on Thursday that Palestinians would have to “live somewhere else in the interim,” during reconstruction, although he declined to explicitly rule out their permanent displacement.

    The State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the disparity between Rubio and Trump’s most recent remarks on the plan.

    Trump’s comments come as a fragile ceasefire reached last month between Israel and Hamas is at risk of collapse after Hamas announced on Monday it would stop releasing Israeli hostagesover alleged Israeli violations of the agreement.
    Israel’s Arab neighbors, including Egypt and Jordan, have said any plan to transfer Palestinians from their land would destabilize the region.

    Rubio met Egypt’s Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty in Washington on Monday. Egypt’s foreign ministry said Abdelatty told Rubio that Arab countries support Palestinians in rejecting Trump’s plan. Cairo fears Palestinians could be forced across Egypt’s border with Gaza.

    Trump said in the Fox News interview that between two and six communities could be built for the Palestinians “a little bit away from where they are, where all of this danger is.”

    “I would own this. Think of it as a real estate development for the future. It would be a beautiful piece of land. No big money spent,” he said.

  • No Right Of Return For Palestinians Under Gaza Plan: Trump

    No Right Of Return For Palestinians Under Gaza Plan: Trump

    US President Donald Trump said in comments aired Monday that Palestinians who leave the besieged Gaza Strip under his widely panned ownership plan for the coastal enclave will not be allowed to return.

    “We’ll build safe communities a little bit away from where they are, where all of this danger is. In the meantime, I would own this. Think of it as a real estate development for the future, it would be a beautiful piece of land,” Trump said during an interview with Fox News.

    Asked directly by the interviewer if Palestinians would “have the right to return,” Trump said flatly, “No, they wouldn’t, because they’re going to have much better housing.”

    “In other words, I’m talking about building a permanent place for them, because if they have to return now, it will be years before you could ever… it’s not habitable. It will be years before it could happen. I’m talking about starting to build and I think I could make a deal with Jordan, I think I could make a deal with Egypt, you know, we give them billions and billions of dollars a year,” he added.

    Trump rolled out his proposal in the midst of an ongoing ceasefire that has halted Israel’s war on Gaza after 15 months. His plan to take ownership of Gaza has been roundly rejected on the world stage, but Trump has insisted that he will see it through, repeatedly claiming he can force Egypt and Jordan to settle Palestinian refugees — claims they have publicly rebuffed, as have the Palestinians.

    Jordan’s King Abdullah is slated to visit the White House this week.

    Trump’s plan shares strong similarities to one publicly put forward by his son-in-law Jared Kushner in March 2024, when the president’s one-time advisor lauded the Palestinian territory’s “very valuable” Mediterranean property.

    “Gaza’s waterfront property could be very valuable if people would focus on building up livelihoods,” Kushner said during an interview at Harvard University. “It’s a little bit of an unfortunate situation there, but I think from Israel’s perspective I would do my best to move the people out and then clean it up.”

    Israel’s war on Gaza has left the besieged enclave in ruins, with half of its housing damaged or destroyed and nearly 2 million people displaced amid severe shortages of sanitation, medical supplies, food, and clean water. Over 47,000 people have been killed.

    In November, the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, citing war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza. Separately, Israel faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice.

  • FBI Discovers Around 2,400 Secret JFK Assassination Records: Report

    FBI Discovers Around 2,400 Secret JFK Assassination Records: Report

    The FBI discovered about 2,400 records tied to US President John F. Kennedy’s 1963 assassination, according to a report by Axios on Monday.

    The still-secret records are contained in 14,000 pages of documents the FBI found in a review prompted by President Donald Trump’s Jan. 23 executive order to release all of JFK’s assassination records. The records were never provided through a task force that was supposed to review and disclose the documents, Axios reported.

    Conspiracy theories about Kennedy’s Nov. 22, 1963 assassination at Dealey Plaza in Dallas, Texas have been talked about for 61 years, fueled by the government’s reluctance to release all of the documents.

    The existence of the new JFK documents was disclosed to the White House on Friday, and a further review of those records could reveal more information as to what happened in one of the most scrutinized tragedies in American history. The release of the new documents could also change the federal procedures for vetting and releasing information related to government events.

    “This is huge. It shows the FBI is taking this seriously,” assassination expert Jefferson Morley told Axios.

    Morley is also the vice president of the nonpartisan Mary Ferrell Foundation, the nation’s largest source of online records of Kennedy’s killing.

    “The FBI is finally saying, ‘Let’s respond to the president’s order,’ instead of keeping the secrecy going,” added Morley.

    Under the 1992 JFK Records Act, assassination records were supposed to be handed over to the JFK Assassination Records Review Board and then to the National Archives, which were to be fully disclosed in 2017 during Trump’s first term in the White House. However, the Axios report revealed that the newly discovered records had not been submitted or vetted by either of those entities.

    At the advice of the CIA in 2017, Trump delayed disclosure of the records that the government had identified. President Joe Biden then ordered a limited release of the records, which continued to promote the public’s view of the government’s shroud of secrecy.

    Experts say that the remaining records to be disclosed are unlikely to definitively prove whether Lee Harvey Oswald was the sole gunman who pulled the trigger or if he was part of a broader conspiracy to assassinate Kennedy, but it could put to rest the cover-up of documents that critics have blamed on the government for more than a half century.

    Despite Trump’s order to release all of the JFK assassination records, sources told Axios that the various intelligence agencies with records of the assassination are still recommending redactions.

    “When POTUS hears about this stonewalling, he’s gonna hit the roof,” a White House official told Axios.

    Trump’s order also calls for the release of records related to the June 5, 1968 assassination of JFK’s brother, Robert F. Kennedy (RFK), as well as the assassination of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. (MLK) on April 4, 1968. The records of both RFK and MLK are expected to be released by March 9.

  • US Justice Department Orders Dismissal of NYC Mayor’s Corruption Case

    US Justice Department Orders Dismissal of NYC Mayor’s Corruption Case

    The US Justice Department on Monday ordered federal prosecutors in Manhattan to dismiss corruption charges against New York Mayor Eric Adams.

    The directive was made in a letter from acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove, according to multiple US news outlets.

    The Justice Department argued that the indictment last fall disrupted his ability to tackle illegal immigration and violent crime, while also limiting his cooperation with President Donald Trump’s immigration policies.

    Adams had been accused of accepting campaign donations from foreign nationals and engaging in wire fraud and bribery.

    He had pleaded not guilty to five charges, including bribery, conspiracy, and violations of campaign finance violations.

    The mayor called the charges politically motivated, and pledged to fight them in court to clear his name.

    Bove, who represented Trump in his criminal trial last year, said the Justice Department “reached this conclusion without assessing the strength of the evidence or the legal theories on which the case is based.”

    The Manhattan US Attorney’s office, which initiated the case, has yet to comment.

    Three days before his inauguration, Adams met Trump at his Florida golf club, continuing efforts to strengthen ties with the administration.

  • Google Officially Changes Name of Gulf of Mexico to Gulf of America In Maps For US Users

    Google Officially Changes Name of Gulf of Mexico to Gulf of America In Maps For US Users

    Tech firm Google officially changed the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America in its Maps app following a change instituted by US President Donald Trump.

    Google said that within the US, it follows the US Geological Survey’s Geographic Names Information System, which has formally adopted Trump’s name change for the body of water spanning much of Mexico’s east coast and the US South.

    Users in the US now see “Gulf of America,” while those in Mexico continue to see the original name. Users outside of the two nations will see the original name with Trump’s preferred name in parentheses.

    Apple Maps continues to maintain the original name.

    Among successive waves of executive orders issued by Trump was one renaming the body of water that has been known as the Gulf of Mexico for centuries.

    The order also changed the name of Alaska’s Mount Denali, the name used for the mountain that has the highest peak in North America, back to Mount McKinley.

  • The Voice Of Italy’s Defence Minister Was Faked Using AI In A Scam Targeting Tycoons

    The Voice Of Italy’s Defence Minister Was Faked Using AI In A Scam Targeting Tycoons

    Italy’s business elite has been roiled by a scam that used an artificial intelligence-generated voice mimicking Italian defence minister Guido Crosetto to ask tycoons to wire millions to overseas bank accounts to help pay ransoms to free Italian journalists kidnapped overseas.

    The scam targeted some of Italy’s most powerful business barons, including Pirelli chair Marco Tronchetti Provera, fashion designer Giorgio Armani, Prada chair Patrizio Bertelli, Tod’s owner Diego Della Valle, former Inter Milan owner Massimo Moratti and members of the billionaire Beretta and Menarini families, a person with knowledge of the investigation said.

    While many were immediately suspicious, at least one was persuaded to transfer €1mn to overseas bank accounts, after being falsely reassured that he would be reimbursed by the Bank of Italy later for the payment. So far, three Milanese businesspeople have filed formal complaints to the city’s prosecutor’s office, including one who fell victim to the scam.

    Authorities familiar with the case say the fraud involved multiple rounds of calls from people posing as Crosetto’s staff and the apparent use of AI to convincingly simulate Crosetto’s voice. Targets were told that Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s government needed their help to rescue Italian journalists kidnapped in the Middle East.

    “The voice of the minister was reproduced,” a defence ministry official said. “It was asking for money to pay ransom for Italian journalists kidnapped in the world. The fake Crosetto said, ‘I cannot pay with ministry money, but you will get the money back from the Bank of Italy’. It was a hoax. It was not true.”

    Investigators said the calls appeared to come from telephone numbers belonging to the defence minister’s staff — which they believed had been cloned.

    The scammers moved just weeks after Meloni’s government negotiated a high-profile hostage swap in which a young Italian journalist, Cecilia Sala, was freed from Tehran’s notorious Evin Prison, in exchange for Rome returning an Iranian engineer wanted in the US for a scheme that provided sophisticated US drone technology to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards.

    Crosetto first sounded the alarm of “a serious ongoing scam” in a social media post last week, saying he wanted to raise public awareness so that “no one runs the risk of falling into the trap”.

    The minister said he first discovered the fraud after being contacted by a prominent entrepreneur whom he had not previously met and who had transferred a large sum to a bank account detailed by a fake “General Giovanni Montalbano” after speaking to someone that the businessman was convinced was Crosetto himself.

    Crosetto said he later received calls from several other top entrepreneurs that had been contacted by people purporting to be members of his staff trying to organise the rescue of Italian journalists in the Middle East.

    The Bank of Italy on Friday warned that fraudsters were improperly using its name and logo to promise that the central bank would reimburse money that wealthy entrepreneurs invested as contributions to the fake rescue scheme.

    “Banca d’Italia is in no way related to any of these requests,” the statement said, as it warned people not to respond and report such overtures to relevant authorities.

    Italy’s business elite are not the first to be targeted by scams preying on wealthy individuals eager to do discreet favours for a government seeking to rescue hostages.

    A decade ago in France, more than 150 corporate chiefs, heads of state, ambassadors and religious leaders were contacted in an audacious scam when a man claiming to be then French defence minister Jean-Yves Le Drian requested millions of euros for top-secret government operations, including freeing French journalists held hostage in Syria.

    Though most sensed something awry, the scammers managed to collect $85mn, including nearly $20mn from the late Aga Khan, leader of the world’s Ismaili Muslims. The ringleader Gilbert Chikli, a Franco-Israeli, was convicted on multiple counts of fraud in 2020 and sentenced to 11 years in prison.

  • ‪‘Go To Hell’ Julius Malema Fires Back At Elon Musk After Calling Him A ‘International Criminal’‬

    ‪‘Go To Hell’ Julius Malema Fires Back At Elon Musk After Calling Him A ‘International Criminal’‬

    Elon Musk, in a tweet made on Sunday, said Malema committed a serious crime and should be punished accordingly.

    The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), a South African Marxist–Leninist and pan-Africanist political party, has fiercely rejected comments made by billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk, who called for the party’s leader, Julius Malema, to be declared an international criminal.

    The American businessman and Tesla CEO, on Sunday, called for immediate sanctions against the South African politician and lawmaker Julius Malema over a controversial speech he made in 2018 targeting white people.

    According to the White House, Musk is officially serving under President Donald Trump as a special government employee.

    In November 2024, as President-elect at the time, Trump tapped Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to head the ‘Department of Government Efficiency’ (DOGE).

    In a viral video from 2018, Malema declared that his party, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), sought to remove Nelson Mandela Bay Mayor Athol Trollip solely because of his race.

    The politician said: “We have taken a decision that we are going to remove the mayor of PE [Port Elizabeth],” he made the statement while addressing a crowd at the Standard Bank Arena in Johannesburg during the launch of the party’s election registration campaign.

    “Why? Why not [mayor of DA-led Johannesburg Herman] Mashaba, why not Solly [Msimanga – mayor of DA-led Tshwane]? Because the mayor of DA in PE is a white man. So, these people, when you want to hit them hard – go after a white man. They feel a terrible pain, because you have touched a white man.”

    He clarified that this did not mean the EFF would refrain from targeting Mashaba and Msimanga, adding that they would eventually be “touched”.

    “But we are starting with this whiteness. We are cutting the throat of whiteness. Trollip will not be a mayor after the 6th of April, if they give us that date,” he said.

    Reacting to these remarks about seven years later, Elon Musk, in a tweet made on Sunday, said Malema committed a serious crime and should be punished accordingly.

    “Immediate sanctions for Malema and declaration of him as an international criminal!” the Tesla CEO wrote.

    However, in a statement, the EFF dismissed Musk’s remarks as part of a broader imperialist agenda and accused him of meddling in South Africa’s domestic affairs.

    The EFF claims that his influence over the United States government has emboldened him to attack political leaders who oppose Western imperialism.

    The party maintains that Malema, known for his radical stance on land expropriation without compensation and African economic emancipation, has been unfairly labelled by Musk and other right-wing forces.

    EFF accused Musk of acting as a global “billionaire maniac” who seeks to manipulate governments for his own business interests. The party further stated that Musk’s alleged interference is an attempt to undermine South Africa’s sovereignty and weaken its relations with the United States.

    A screenshot of the fierce exchange between Musk and Malema on X.

    As a countermeasure, the EFF has vowed that Musk’s satellite internet service, Starlink, will not operate in South Africa unless it complies with local regulations, including a 30% local ownership requirement. The party also called for Musk’s enterprises to be rejected by progressive nations such as Russia, China, and India.

    The statement partly reads, “The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) is not fazed by the declaration made by owner of X (formerly known as Twitter), Space X, Starlink, Tesla and recently the so-called director for the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) in the United States of America, who has made a declaration that the President of the EFF Julius Malema must be declared an international criminal.

    “As part of the general hysteria that has overtaken governance in the United States of America (USA), Musk has assumed the role of a global billionaire maniac, whose grotesque wealth has overwhelmed him and made him think of himself as a supreme ruler of not only the Oval Office, but of all nations of the world.

    “The Commander in Chief and President of the EFF has been at the forefront of struggles for the African continent and the diaspora since his activism as a young person in the former liberation movement of South Africa. Central to his perspective not only on Economic Freedom and the emancipation of African people, has been a staunch opposition to Western imperialism and all of its manifestations.

    “It is therefore not surprising that Julius Malema would be declared an enemy by the global capitalist establishment, an agenda advanced by the likes of deranged individuals such as Elon Musk. However, the misconception and mischaracterization of the President of the EFF as genocidal is a sideshow that seeks to undermine the ideas which he represents.

    “The EFF and all people who have been at the yolk of oppression perpetuated by the USA and its allies are bound to naturally be the quintessential enemies of billionaires who capture states and manipulate narratives, and misuse their control of governments to cast aspersions against their natural enemies.

    “The EFF takes this opportunity to tell Elon Musk and all of his allies, in the USA, in Israel and the right wing groups in South Africa which have mobilized Musk, to collectively go to hell.

    “The principle remains that equality in South Africa is rooted in the return of the land to African people, and this will be achieved through expropriation without compensation. Additionally, the EFF makes a firm commitment that Elon Musk’s Starlink will never operate in South Africa, without complying to local legislation which demands that there must be 30% local ownership.

    “The offense that Musk has made against the leader of the EFF constitutes a meddling in our domestic affairs which we do not take lightly, and he must be viewed as an imperialist who seeks to undermine the economic and political sovereignty of South Africa through sanctions, and is part of mischievous attempts to severe relations between South Africa and the United States of America.

    “The EFF declare Elon Musk as an enemy of South Africa, and a capturer of governance in the USA who will lead to that nations downfall. All progressive nations, including Russia, China, India, and all African states ought to isolate and reject all enterprises pursued by Elon Musk in their nations.

    “Elon Musk has captured the Presidency of the USA and has weaponized his office as an instrument to pursue his business interests globally. His nefarious influence must be opposed and undermined by all nations which respect their sovereignty and seek to maintain independence.”

    “The EFF will not be cowed into submission, retreat nor capitulation from its principled and unwavering commitment to confront imperialism and its surrogates like Elon Musk anywhere and everywhere it rises its ugly head,” the statement added.

  • Netanyahu Suggests Saudi Arabia Create Palestinian State on Its Land

    Netanyahu Suggests Saudi Arabia Create Palestinian State on Its Land

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected the condition of establishing a Palestinian state as part of normalisation with Saudi Arabia, proposing instead that the Kingdom create a state for Palestinians on its land.

    In an interview with Israel’s Channel 14, Netanyahu responded to a question about Saudi Arabia’s demand for a Palestinian state as part of the deal, saying, “The Saudis can create a Palestinian state in Saudi Arabia; they have a lot of land over there.”

    Netanyahu argued that a Palestinian state would pose a security threat to Israel, citing Gaza, which he described as a Palestinian state controlled by Hamas, as an example of the risks involved.

    He emphasised that peace between Israel and Saudi Arabia is not only possible but likely.

    Despite Netanyahu’s assertion, Saudi Arabia’s official stance, reiterated by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, remains firm on the establishment of a Palestinian state as a prerequisite for normalisation with Israel.

    The Saudi Foreign Ministry reaffirmed this position last week, making it clear that Riyadh’s demand for a Palestinian state is non-negotiable.

    Netanyahu also claimed that Israel had engaged in secret negotiations with Saudi Arabia over the past three years, stressing that he would not make any agreement that would endanger the state of Israel.

  • Hamas Freed Three Israeli Hostages, Whose Gaunt Appearance Shocked Israelis

    Hamas Freed Three Israeli Hostages, Whose Gaunt Appearance Shocked Israelis

    Palestinian militant group Hamas on Saturday handed over three Israeli hostages whose gaunt appearance shocked Israelis, and Israel began freeing dozens of Palestinians in the latest stage of a ceasefire aimed at ending the war in Gaza.

    Ohad Ben Ami and Eli Sharabi, who were taken hostage from Kibbutz Be’eri during the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, and Or Levy, who was abducted that day from the Nova music festival, were led onto a Hamas podium by gunmen.

    The three men appeared thin, weak and pale, in worse condition than the 18 other hostages already freed under the truce agreed in January after 15 months of war.

    Ohad Ben Ami, a hostage held in Gaza since the deadly October 7, 2023 attack, is released by Hamas militants as part of a ceasefire and a hostages-prisoners swap deal between Hamas and Israel in Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip, February 8. Reuters

    “He looked like a skeleton, it was awful to see,” Ohad Ben Ami’s mother-in-law, Michal Cohen, told Channel 13 News as she watched the Hamas-directed handover ceremony, which included the hostages answering questions posed by a masked man as militants armed with automatic rifles stood on each side.

    In another show of force by Hamas, which has paraded fighters during previous releases, dozens of its militants deployed in central Gaza as it handed hostages over to the International Committee of the Red Cross.

    The hostages were then driven in ICRC cars to Israeli forces and into Israel, where they had tearful reunions with family members, and flown to hospitals. “We missed you so much,” the mother of Or Levy, Geula, said as she hugged her son.

    Families and supporters react as they celebrate the release of Ohad Ben Ami and Eli Sharabi, who were taken from Kibbutz Be’eri and held in Gaza since the deadly October 7, 2023 attack, as part of a ceasefire deal in Gaza between Hamas and Israel. Reuters

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the sight of the frail hostages was shocking and would be addressed.

    Israel’s President Isaac Herzog described the release ceremony as cynical and vicious. “This is what a crime against humanity looks like,” he said.

    The Hostage Families Forum said the images of the hostages evoked images of survivors of Nazi concentration camps during the Holocaust. “We have to get ALL THE HOSTAGES out of hell,” it said.

    In exchange for the hostages’ release, Israel was freeing 183 Palestinian prisoners, some convicted of involvement in attacks that killed dozens of people, as well as 111 detained in Gaza during the war.

    Cheering crowds greeted the buses as they arrived in Gaza, embracing the freed detainees, some of them weeping with joy and tearing prison-issued bracelets off their wrists.

    Among those freed in Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, was Eyad Abu Shkaidem, sentenced to 18 life terms in Israel for masterminding suicide attacks in revenge for Israel’s 2004 assassinations of Hamas leaders.

    “Today, I am reborn,” Shkaidem told reporters as the crowd cheered.

    The Palestinian Red Crescent medical service said six of the 42 released in the West Bank were in poor health and were taken to hospital. Some prisoners complained of ill-treatment. “The occupation humiliated us for over a year,” said Shkaidem.

    PAINFUL RETURN

    Some hostages face a painful return. Sharabi’s two teenage daughters and his British-born wife were slain in the Hamas attack on Kibbutz Be’eri, where one in 10 residents was killed.

    Israel’s Channel 12 said Sharabi had not been told about their deaths and asked where they were when he arrived.

    Levy will be reunited with his three-year-old son. His wife was killed in the attack.

    Dr Hagar Mizrachi from Israel’s Ichilov Hospital said the hostages exhibited severe weight loss and malnutrition.

    Or Levy, Eli Sharabi and Ohad Ben Ami, hostages held in Gaza since the deadly October 7, 2023 attack, are released by Hamas militants as part of a ceasefire and a hostages-prisoners swap deal between Hamas and Israel. Reuters.

    Sixteen Israeli and five Thai hostages have been released so far and 583 Palestinian prisoners and detainees have been freed.

    The first 42-day phase of the ceasefire, mediated by Washington, Cairo and Doha, has largely held since it took effect on January 19.

    Netanyahu sent a delegation for talks in Doha on Saturday, Israel’s Channel 12 reported, citing a political source.

    Concern the deal might collapse before all remaining 76 hostages are free has grown since President Donald Trump’s surprise call for Palestinians to be moved from Gaza and for the enclave to be handed to the United States and developed into the “Riviera of the Middle East”.

    Arab states and Palestinian groups have rejected Trump’s proposal, which critics said would amount to ethnic cleansing. Hamas said on Saturday its armed display at the hostage handover showed it could not be excluded from post-war Gaza arrangements.

    Netanyahu welcomed Trump’s intervention and his defence minister has ordered the military to make plans to allow Palestinians who wish to leave Gaza to do so.

    Under the ceasefire deal, 33 Israeli children, women and sick, wounded and older men are to be released during the first stage in exchange for almost 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees.

    Negotiations on a second phase began this week aimed at returning the remaining hostages and agreeing on a full withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza in preparation for a final end to the war.

    Hamas-led gunmen killed some 1,200 people and seizing more than 250 as hostages in the October 7, 2023 attack, according to Israeli tallies.

    The offensive Israel launched in response in Gaza has killed more than 47,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health authorities, and devastated much of the enclave.

  • ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan First To Be Hit By US Sanctions

    ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan First To Be Hit By US Sanctions

    International Criminal Court Prosecutor Karim Khan is the first person to be hit with economic and travel sanctions authorized by US President Donald Trump that target the war crimes tribunal over investigations of US citizens or US allies, two sources briefed on the matter told Reuters on Friday.

    Khan, who is British, was named on Friday in an annex – not yet made public – to an executive order signed by Trump a day earlier, a senior ICC official and another source, both briefed by US government officials, told Reuters. They spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a confidential matter.

    The sanctions include freezing of US assets of those designated and barring them and their families from visiting the United States.

    Waiting the 60 days

    The order directed Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, in consultation with Secretary of State Marco Rubio, to submit a report within 60 days naming people who should be sanctioned.

    The ICC on Friday condemned the sanctions, pledging to stand by its staff and “continue providing justice and hope to millions of innocent victims of atrocities across the world, in all situations before it.” Court officials met in The Hague on Friday to discuss the implications of the sanctions.

    THE INTERNATIONAL Criminal Court in The Hague. (credit: PIROSCHKA VAN DE WOUW/REUTERS)

    The International Criminal Court, which opened in 2002, has international jurisdiction to prosecute genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes in member states or if a situation is referred by the UN Security Council.

    Dozens of countries warned on Friday that the US sanctions could “increase the risk of impunity for the most serious crimes and threaten to erode the international rule of law.”

    “Sanctions would severely undermine all situations currently under investigation as the Court may have to close its field offices,” the 79 countries – who make up about two-thirds of the court’s members – said in a statement.

    UN deal with US

    Under an agreement between the United Nations and Washington, Khan should be able to regularly travel to New York to brief the UN Security Council on cases it had referred to the court in The Hague. The Security Council has referred the situations in Libya and Sudan’s Darfur region to the ICC.

    “We trust that any restrictions taken against individuals would be implemented consistently with the host country’s obligations under the UN Headquarters agreement,” deputy UN spokesperson Farhan Haq said on Friday.

    Khan was most recently in New York last week to brief the Security Council on Sudan.

    “International criminal law is an essential element to fighting impunity, which is unfortunately widespread,” Haq said. “The International Criminal Court is its essential element, and it must be allowed to work in full independence.”

    Trump’s move on Thursday – repeating action he took during his first term – coincided with a visit to Washington by Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who – along with his former defense minister and a leader of Palestinian militant group Hamas – is wanted by the ICC over the war in the Gaza.

    During a visit to the US Congress on Friday, Netanyahu praised Trump’s move, describing the court as a “scandalous” organization “that threatens the right of all democracies to defend themselves.”

    (Reuters)

  • Judge Blocks Trump’s Plan To Put USAID Workers On Leave

    Judge Blocks Trump’s Plan To Put USAID Workers On Leave

    A federal judge ordered a temporary block Friday on Trump administration orders that would have placed thousands more workers of the U.S. Agency for International Development on leave, and would have given agency workers abroad just a 30-day deadline to return to the U.S.

    U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols, a Trump appointee, agreed with arguments by two government employee associations that both orders exposed U.S. aid and development workers abroad to unwarranted risk and hardship.

    Nichols pointed to accounts from workers abroad that the Trump administration, in its rush to shut down the agency and its programs abroad, had cut workers off from many of the ways they needed to reach the U.S. government in case of a health or safety emergency.

    “Administrative leave in Syria is not the same as administrative leave in Bethesda,” the judge said in his order Friday night.

    But the judge declined the employee groups’ request to grant a temporary block on a Trump administration funding freeze that has shut down the six-decade-old agency and its work, pending more hearings on the workers’ lawsuit.

    Nichols stressed in the hearing earlier Friday on the request to pause the Trump administration’s actions that his order was not a decision on the employees’ request to roll back the administration’s swiftly moving destruction of the agency.

    “CLOSE IT DOWN,” Trump said on social media of USAID before the judge’s ruling.

    The American Foreign Service Association and the American Federation of Government Employees argue that Trump lacks the authority to shut down the six-decade-old aid agency without approval from Congress. Democratic lawmakers have made the same argument.

    Trump’s administration moved quickly Friday to literally erase the agency’s name. Workers on a crane scrubbed the name from the stone front of its Washington headquarters. They used duct tape to block it out on a sign and took down USAID flags. Someone placed a bouquet of flowers outside the door.

    The Trump administration and billionaire Elon , who is running a budget-cutting Department of Government Efficiency, have made USAID their biggest target so far in an unprecedented challenge of the federal government and many of its programs.

    Administration appointees and Musk’s teams have shut down almost all funding for the agency, stopping aid and development programs worldwide. They have placed staffers and contractors on leave and furlough and locked them out of the agency’s email and other systems. According to Democratic lawmakers, they also carted away USAID’s computer servers.

    “This is a full-scale gutting of virtually all the personnel of an entire agency,” Karla Gilbride, the attorney for the employee associations, told the judge.

    Justice Department attorney Brett Shumate argued that the administration has all the legal authority it needs to place agency staffers on leave. “The government does this across the board every day,” Shumate said. “That’s what’s happening here. It’s just a large number.”

    Friday’s ruling is the latest setback in the courts for the Trump administration, whose policies to offer financial incentives for federal workers to resign and end birthright citizenship for anyone born in the U.S. to someone in the country illegally have been temporarily paused by judges.

    Earlier Friday, a group of a half-dozen USAID officials speaking to reporters strongly disputed assertions from Secretary of State Marco Rubio that the most essential life-saving programs abroad were getting waivers to continue funding. None were, the officials said.

    Among the programs they said had not received waivers: $450 million in food grown by U.S. farmers sufficient to feed 36 million people, which was not being paid for or delivered; and water supplies for 1.6 million people displaced by war in Sudan’s Darfur region, which were being cut off without money for fuel to run water pumps in the desert.

    The judge’s order involved the Trump administration’s decision earlier this week to pull almost all USAID workers off the job and out of the field worldwide. Besides the 2,200 workers temporarily protected from being put on leave, the fate was not clear of others who work with the agency and have been laid off, furloughed or put on leave.

    Trump and congressional Republicans have spoken of moving a much-reduced number of aid and development programs under the State Department.

    Within the State Department itself, employees fear substantial staff reductions following the deadline for the Trump administration’s offer of financial incentives for federal workers to resign, according to officials who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal. A judge temporarily blocked that offer and set a hearing Monday.

    The administration earlier this week gave almost all USAID staffers posted overseas 30 days, starting Friday, to return to the U.S., with the government paying for their travel and moving costs. Diplomats at embassies asked for waivers allowing more time for some, including families forced to pull their children out of schools midyear.

    In a notice posted on the USAID website late Thursday, the agency clarified that none of the overseas personnel put on leave would be forced to leave the country where they work. But it said that workers who chose to stay longer than 30 days might have to cover their own expenses unless they received a specific hardship waiver.

    Rubio said Thursday during a trip to the Dominican Republic that the government would help staffers get home within 30 days “if they so desired” and would listen to those with special conditions.

    He insisted the moves were the only way to get cooperation because staffers were working “to sneak through payments and push through payments despite the stop order” on foreign assistance. Agency staffers deny his claims of obstruction.

    Rubio said the U.S. government will continue providing foreign aid, “but it is going to be foreign aid that makes sense and is aligned with our national interest.”

    (AP)

  • Former French President Sarkozy Fitted With Ankle Bracelet For One-Year Corruption Sentence

    Former French President Sarkozy Fitted With Ankle Bracelet For One-Year Corruption Sentence

    Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy on Friday began serving a one-year sentence with an electronic ankle bracelet following his conviction for corruption and influence-peddling in a wiretapping case.

    Sarkozy had the bracelet fitted on Friday afternoon, according to Paris prosecutors.

    His sentence, finalized on Dec. 18 when the Court of Cassation rejected his appeal, allows him to serve the term under house arrest with monitored mobility.

    Under the conditions of his sentence, Sarkozy is permitted to leave his resident between 8 am and 8 pm local time.

    His curfew is extended until 9.30 pm on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays due to his ongoing trial over alleged Libyan financing of his 2007 presidential campaign, which is set to continue at a Paris court until April 10.

    Sarkozy was summoned to the court in late January to be informed of the terms of his sentence.

    According to judicial sources, he did not immediately request conditional release, despite French law allowing inmates 70 and over to apply for such measures under specific conditions, Franceinfo reported.

    The 70-year-old center-right politician was wiretapped in 2013 after suspicions that he illegally funded his election campaign from Libyan sources.

    Investigators found that the former president was using two other phone lines registered under the name Paul Bismuth. Sarkozy only communicated with his lawyer Thierry Herzog via those two numbers.

    Sarkozy, who led the country in 2007-2012, and his lawyer Thierry Herzog were accused of bribing Gilbert Azibert, a former judge in the Cassation Court in 2014 to obtain information about a judiciary investigation.

    In exchange, Sarkozy promised the judge a prestigious job in Monaco.

  • Who Is Aga Khan IV: Death, Family, Horse’s Kidnapping, Net Worth, Career And More

    Who Is Aga Khan IV: Death, Family, Horse’s Kidnapping, Net Worth, Career And More

    The Aga Khan IV, a revered spiritual leader, philanthropist, and one of the world’s wealthiest men, passed away at the age of 88 in Lisbon, Portugal. As the 49th hereditary Imam of the Shia Ismaili Muslims, he led a global community of around 15 million followers while also overseeing an expansive philanthropic and business empire.

    His passing marks the end of an era for the Ismaili community, with his successor set to be announced following the reading of his will.

    A Life of Wealth, Leadership, and Service

    Born Prince Karim al-Hussaini on 13 December 1936 in Geneva, Switzerland, the Aga Khan inherited his title in 1957 at just 20 years old following the death of his grandfather, Aga Khan III. His appointment was a break from tradition, bypassing his father, Prince Aly Khan, due to his grandfather’s belief that the rapidly changing world required a young and dynamic leader.

    According to Yahoo News, the Aga Khan was a direct descendant of the Prophet Muhammad through his daughter, Fatima, and son-in-law, Ali. While he was a spiritual leader, he never claimed divine status, instead positioning himself as a guide for his followers in both religious and secular matters.

    Beyond his religious duties, he was known for his vast wealth, philanthropy, and passion for horse racing. He owned some of the world’s finest racehorses and famously bred Shergar, the legendary stallion who was stolen in Ireland in 1983 and never recovered.

    A Billionaire With a Passion for Philanthropy

    The Aga Khan’s fortune was estimated at £10.5 billion ($13.3 billion), per Times Now News. His wealth came from a combination of family inheritance, extensive business investments, and contributions from his followers, who were expected to tithe a portion of their earnings.

    Despite his immense fortune, he was deeply committed to philanthropy. In 1967, he founded the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN), one of the world’s largest private development agencies, which operates in over 30 countries. The network focuses on healthcare, education, rural development, and cultural preservation, improving the lives of millions in impoverished regions.

    According to AUB, the AKDN’s annual budget for non-profit development activities exceeds £785 million ($1 billion), funding hospitals, universities, and microfinance institutions worldwide.

    A Complex Personal Life

    While his public life was defined by philanthropy and leadership, the Aga Khan’s personal life was often scrutinised. He was married twice and had four children.

    His first wife, Princess Salimah Aga Khan, formerly Sarah Frances Croker Poole, was a British model whom he married in 1969. The couple had three children—Princess Zahra, Prince Rahim, and Prince Hussain—before divorcing in 1995.

    Three years later, he married Princess Inaara Aga Khan, born Gabriele Renate Thyssen, a German aristocrat. They had one son, Prince Aly Muhammad, but their marriage ended in a highly publicised divorce battle, eventually settled in 2014.

    His eldest son, Prince Rahim, 53, has been named his successor.

    A Global Legacy and Royal Connections

    Throughout his life, the Aga Khan moved within elite circles, often appearing at high-profile events alongside world leaders and royals. He was a close friend of King Charles III, whom he hosted at his lavish estate in France. He was also photographed with Queen Elizabeth II, Prince William, and Kate Middleton at various official engagements.

    The Aga Khan’s impact was particularly felt in the UK, where he was granted British citizenship and maintained strong ties with the government. His contributions to architecture and Islamic culture led to the establishment of the Aga Khan Programme for Islamic Architecture at Harvard and MIT, as well as the Aga Khan Award for Architecture, which recognises excellence in the field.

    According to The Daily Mail, he was regarded as a bridge between the Islamic world and the West, advocating for tolerance and understanding across cultures.

    The Aga Khan’s Love for Horse Racing

    The Aga Khan was perhaps most famous in the sporting world for his passion for horse racing. His racing and breeding operation, based in France and Ireland, produced numerous Derby-winning thoroughbreds.

    His most legendary horse, Shergar, won the Epsom Derby in 1981 by a record-breaking 10 lengths before being stolen by masked gunmen two years later. The kidnappers, believed to be members of the IRA, demanded £2 million for Shergar’s return. However, after failed negotiations, the horse was never seen again.

    Despite this devastating loss, the Aga Khan remained dedicated to horse breeding and continued to be a dominant figure in the industry, winning multiple Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe and Epsom Derby titles.

    A Final Farewell

    The Aga Khan’s passing has left the Ismaili community in mourning, with tributes pouring in from political and religious leaders across the world.

    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau described him as an “extraordinarily compassionate global leader”, while statements from the Aga Khan Development Network highlighted his lifelong mission to improve the quality of life for people regardless of their religious affiliation.

    His funeral is set to take place in Lisbon, where he had been based for several years. His successor, widely expected to be Prince Rahim, will be formally announced following the reading of his will.

    The Aga Khan leaves behind not only a spiritual legacy but also a charitable empire, which will continue to impact millions around the world for generations to come.

  • Scientists Discover World’s Largest Underground Thermal Lake in Albania

    Scientists Discover World’s Largest Underground Thermal Lake in Albania

    A team of Czech scientists has discovered the world’s largest underground thermal lake in Albania, according to Czech media.

    The discovery came after years of exploration led by Czech speleologist Marek Audy, who had suspected the existence of a hidden thermal cave system in Albania’s southern Vromoner region, public broadcaster Radio Prague reported on Thursday.

    While mapping the area, near the Greek border, and tracking steam from numerous heated springs, scientists discovered a 100-meter-deep (328-foot) abyss.

    At its bottom, they found the lake, which measures 138 meters (452 feet) in length and 42 meters (137 feet) in width.

    With a circumference of 345 meters (1,131 feet), the lake can hold roughly three times the water volume of the main hall of Prague’s National Theater.

    Scientists say they now know that the surrounding hot springs are fed with water from the underground lake.

    “We believe this discovery could also contribute to the protection of the whole area and to a better understanding of its hydrology, because to this day, nobody knows how exactly these underground waters are connected to the surface,” team member Richard Bouda, a photographer and speleologist, told Radio Prague.

  • FACTBOX – USAID Cuts: Why Trump’s Funding Freeze Threatens Millions Worldwide

    FACTBOX – USAID Cuts: Why Trump’s Funding Freeze Threatens Millions Worldwide

    • Funding freeze raises concerns about future of global programs, including PEPFAR that allegedly saved over 25M lives

    The US Agency for International Development (USAID) is under political scrutiny as the Trump administration considers merging it with the State Department in an effort to streamline federal bureaucracy.

    As the world’s largest donor of humanitarian aid, the United States allocated $13.9 billion in 2024, accounting for 42% of all UN-tracked assistance. However, on Jan. 20, the White House announced a freeze on USAID’s budget, citing concerns over misaligned priorities.

    President Donald Trump suspended development assistance for 90 days to evaluate its alignment with his “America First” policy, a move that has sparked concern among global aid organizations.

    A White House statement asserted that USAID’s initiatives “do not align with American interests” and, in some cases, “destabilize world peace.”

    On Feb. 4, USAID announced that all direct-hire personnel, except those in mission-critical roles, would be placed on leave by Feb. 7. Additionally, overseas staff are set to be repatriated within 30 days.

    “It’s been run by a bunch of radical lunatics, and we’re getting them out,” Trump told reporters.

    Meanwhile, on Feb. 3, Elon Musk, head of the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, confirmed his involvement in the decision, stating: “I reviewed it thoroughly with (the president), and he concurred that we should shut it down.”

    What is USAID?

    Founded in 1961 by President John F. Kennedy under the Foreign Assistance Act, USAID is the US government’s primary agency for international humanitarian and development efforts.

    Its alleged aim is to reduce poverty, combat disease, provide humanitarian aid, and foster economic growth in developing nations, while advancing US foreign policy objectives.

    Operating in over 130 countries, USAID runs more than 60 regional missions and employs over 10,000 staff, with two-thirds based overseas.

    Most of its programs are executed through grants, cooperative agreements, and contracts with nonprofit organizations, universities, international groups, and foreign governments.

    How much is USAID’s budget and where does it go?

    In Fiscal Year 2023 (FY2023), the latest data existing, USAID-managed combined fund had a budget of over $40 billion, making up more than one-third of the total US foreign aid budget, according to a Congressional Research Service Report updated this January.

    USAID’s funding was primarily allocated across three key sectors: $16.8 billion to governance, $10.5 billion to humanitarian assistance, and $7.0 billion to health.

    Other key areas included administrative costs ($3.5 billion), agriculture ($1.3 billion), education ($1.1 billion), infrastructure ($0.7 billion), and economic growth ($0.7 billion).

    In FY2023, governance received the largest share, driven by substantial financial support for Ukraine, while humanitarian assistance surpassed the amount of health funding in FY2022.

    Health, historically the largest sector, continued to receive significant funding, largely supported by initiatives like PEPFAR (President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief) and COVID-19 relief efforts.

    Who gets the most support from USAID?

    According to the Congressional report, approximately 70 out of the 77 countries that the World Bank classifies as low and lower-middle-income nations received USAID assistance in 2023.

    On a regional basis, around 40% of USAID-managed funds for 2023 were allocated to Europe and Eurasia ($17.2 billion), followed by Sub-Saharan Africa ($12.1 billion), Middle East and North Africa ($3.9 billion), South and Central Asia ($1.9 billion), and other regions ($8.4 billion), according to an analysis of data from USASpending.gov.

    In FY2023, USAID-managed funds supported approximately 130 countries, with the top 10 recipients being Ukraine, Ethiopia, Jordan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Somalia, Yemen, Afghanistan, Nigeria, South Sudan, and Syria, in descending order of funding.

    Focusing solely on USAID funds for these countries, the disparity is stark, as Ukraine alone received $16 billion, the top beneficiary in FY2023, followed by Ethiopia with $1.6 billion and Jordan with $1.2 billion. Afghanistan received $1.08 billion, while Somalia was allocated $1 billion.

    The Democratic Republic of Congo received $0.9 billion, followed by Yemen, Nigeria, and Syria, each receiving $0.8 billion. South Sudan received the lowest among the top recipients, with $0.7 billion.

    What is the global impact of USAID freeze?

    The freeze on USAID funding is significantly impacting critical humanitarian and health programs across the globe.

    Ukraine’s military funding remains unaffected, but the funding freeze will impact infrastructure rebuilding, power generation, railway modernization (e.g., Mostyska–Lviv), border improvements with the EU, and agricultural support.

    NGOs countering Russian disinformation and monitoring human rights will also be affected, according to a report by the Center for Eastern Studies.

    Another major program disrupted by Trump’s orders is the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), including countries such as South Africa, where the government has warned that nearly 20% of its $2.3 billion annual HIV/AIDS program could be at risk.

    PEPFAR is the US government’s largest global health initiative aimed at combating HIV/AIDS. With over $110 billion invested, it is the biggest single-disease effort by any country. As of 2023, it has saved over 25 million lives, mainly in sub-Saharan Africa, according to USAID.

    The funding freeze also poses a serious threat to HIV services in Ethiopia, potentially affecting 503,000 patients across 1,400 facilities, with risks of treatment disruptions, according to UNAIDS. The possible termination of 5,000 health workers and 10,000 data clerks, along with supply chain delays, could undermine critical diagnostics and HIV progress.

    A PEPFAR-funded program in Kenya has been suspended as well. Launched in 2022, the $32.5 million initiative aimed to provide HIV treatment, prevention, and support in Nairobi, Kajiado County, and beyond. The suspension has closed 150 clinics, affecting 72,000 HIV patients.

    The USAID funding freeze under the Trump administration is exacerbating Uganda’s Ebola outbreak, delaying critical aid and disrupting response efforts. The suspension has led to understaffed contact tracing and inadequate screening of departing international travelers, as reported by CBS News.

    The freeze on US foreign aid has also led to the suspension of many humanitarian programs in Latin America and Central America.

    In Colombia, at least three humanitarian organizations have suspended support operations for more than 41,000 people displaced by recent guerrilla violence, according to a report by The Guardian. A program aimed at integrating hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan migrants into Colombian society by providing job opportunities has also been paralyzed.

    In Brazil, two organizations assisting Venezuelan refugees have shut down their operations, and a program targeting the commercial sexual exploitation of children has been ordered to stop.

    In South Asia, the Trump administration’s aid freeze will cut off health services for 1.7 million people in Pakistan, including 1.2 million Afghan refugees, due to the closure of 60 facilities, according to the UN.

    In Bangladesh, around 600,000 people, including Rohingya refugees, risk losing maternal and reproductive health services, while UN officials have warned that Afghanistan could see “1,200 additional maternal deaths and 109,000 unintended pregnancies” from 2025 to 2028.

    What are Trump’s concerns about USAID?

    President Trump and his administration have voiced strong opinions against USAID, criticizing its foreign aid efforts for being “not aligned with American interests” and often “destabilizing world peace.”

    A White House statement criticized several USAID-funded projects, deeming them controversial or wasteful.

    These included $1.5 million for advancing “diversity, equity, and inclusion” in Serbia’s workplaces, $70,000 for a “DEI musical” in Ireland, and $2.5 million for electric vehicles in Vietnam.

    Additionally, $47,000 was allocated to a “transgender opera” in Colombia, and $2 million was spent on sex changes and “LGBT activism” in Guatemala.

    The statement also criticized $6 million for a tourism fund in Egypt, and claimed that USAID funds were used to support “al Qaeda-affiliated fighters in Syria.”

    Further, the statement criticized a spending on “personalized” contraceptives and millions used for “irrigation canals, farming equipment, and fertilizer” in Afghanistan, which the statement suggested “supported the Taliban’s poppy cultivation and heroin production.”

    The White House argued these examples were indicative of waste, fraud, and misuse of funds.

    Echoing these criticisms, Elon Musk described USAID as “beyond repair,” adding: “We don’t have ‘an apple with a worm in it,’ we have a ball of worms.”

     ⁠USAID’s funding of LGBTQ+ worldwide

    USAID has allocated substantial funds to various LGBTQ+ advocacy organizations, sparking criticism from the Trump administration.

    For example, Asociacion Lambda, based in Guatemala, has been allocated $1.9 million according to USASpending.gov.

    The organization’s official website describes its work as “Since its inception, it has fought for the equality, dignity and participation of LGBTIQ+ people,”

    In South Africa, OUT LGBT Well-Being is allocated $3.1 million. According to the organization’s official website, it works on promoting the well-being of the LGBTQ+o be able to secure “the empowerment, human rights and access to equitable services,”

    Another group that received criticism is Grupa Izadji, a Serbian NGO, another organization which the Biden administration allocated $1.5 million to.

    The organization states on their website thata “Our vision is a society in which LGBTI individuals have the opportunity to fully realize their potential,”

    However, Trump’s foreign aid freeze has halted funding for the group, cutting off expected support through the end of FY 2025.

    In India, USAID partnered with Johns Hopkins University to establish the country’s first transgender clinic, Mitr, providing health care services to the transgender community.

    (Anadolu Agency)

  • Trump Sanctions International Criminal Court, Calls It ‘Illegitimate’

    Trump Sanctions International Criminal Court, Calls It ‘Illegitimate’

    President Donald Trump has signed an executive order sanctioning the International Criminal Court, accusing it of “illegitimate and baseless actions targeting America and our close ally Israel”.

    The measure places financial and visa restrictions on individuals and their families who assist in ICC investigations of American citizens or allies.

    Trump signed the measure as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was visiting Washington.

    Last November, the ICC issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu over alleged war crimes in Gaza, which Israel denies. The ICC also issued a warrant for a Hamas commander.

    A White House memo circulated on Thursday accused the Hague-based ICC of creating a “shameful moral equivalency” between Hamas and Israel by issuing the warrants at the same time.

    Trump’s executive order said the ICC’s recent actions “set a dangerous precedent” that endangered Americans by exposing them to “harassment, abuse and possible arrest”.

    “This malign conduct in turn threatens to infringe upon the sovereignty of the United States and undermines the critical national security and foreign policy work of the United States government and our allies, including Israel,” the order said.

    The US is not a member of the ICC and has repeatedly rejected any jurisdiction by the body over American officials or citizens.

    The White House accused the ICC of placing constraints on Israel’s right to self-defence, while ignoring Iran and anti-Israel groups.

    In his first term in office, Trump imposed sanctions on ICC officials who were investigating whether US forces had committed war crimes in Afghanistan. Those sanctions were lifted by President Joe Biden’s administration.

    Last month, the US House of Representatives voted to sanction the ICC, but the bill foundered in the Senate.

    The ICC was founded in 2002 – in the wake of the dissolution of Yugoslavia and the Rwandan genocide – to investigate alleged atrocities.

    Over 120 countries have ratified the Rome Statute – which established the ICC – while another 34 have signed and may ratify in the future.

    Neither the US nor Israel is party to the Rome Statute.

    The ICC is a court of last resort and is meant to intervene only when national authorities cannot or will not prosecute.

    Trump’s executive order said that “both nations [the US and Israel] are thriving democracies with militaries that strictly adhere to the laws of war”.

    During his last weeks in office, President Biden also criticised the ICC’s warrant for Netanyahu, calling the move “outrageous” and saying there was no equivalence between Israel and Hamas.

    Trump’s signing of his latest executive order follows his announcement during a joint press conference with the Israeli prime minister on Tuesday of a plan for the US to “take over” Gaza, resettle its Palestinian population and turn the territory into the “Riviera of the Middle East”.

    After Arab leaders and the UN condemned the idea, the US president restated it on his Truth Social social media platform on Thursday.

    “The Gaza Strip would be turned over to the United States by Israel at the conclusion of fighting,” Trump wrote, referring to the war between Israel and Hamas that is currently under a ceasefire.

    He repeated that the plan would involve resettling Palestinians, and that no American soldiers would be deployed.

    His post did not make clear whether the two million residents of the Palestinian territory would be invited to return, leaving officials scrambling to explain.

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Wednesday any displacement would be temporary.

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Gazans would leave for an “interim” period while reconstruction took place.

    Netanyahu has praised Trump’s “remarkable” plan to re-make Gaza. On Thursday, Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz ordered the military to prepare for the “voluntary departure” of Gaza’s residents.

    He said the plan would include departures via land, sea and air.

    Trump signed the order as Netanyahu continued his visit to Washington, meeting lawmakers from both the Republican and Democratic parties on Capitol Hill.

    The Israeli prime minister also presented a golden pager to Trump.

    The gift was a reference to Israel’s deadly operation against Hezbollah in September last year, using booby-trapped communications devices.

    Dozens of people were killed and thousands injured in the attacks. Lebanese officials said civilians were hit in the explosions.