Author: AFP

  • Animals killed as fire rips through Bangkok pet market

    Animals killed as fire rips through Bangkok pet market

    A fire ripped through pet shops next to Bangkok’s famed Chatuchak market early Tuesday, killing caged dogs, cats, birds and snakes, and damaging more than 100 stalls, police said.

    The fire is believed to have started in the ornamental fish zone in Srisomrat Market, adjacent to the bigger Chatuchak, around 4:00 am (2100 GMT), according to Tivakorn Prongseng, a police inspector investigating the case.

    The blaze spread to more than 100 stalls across about 1,300 square metres (14,000 square feet), he told AFP.

    There were no reports of human casualties, but multiple caged animals were found dead at the market, which belongs to the State Railway of Thailand, he said.

    The fire was extinguished by 6:00 am, and the cause is being investigated, Tivakorn added.

    Local media reported that hundreds of pets had died in the fire, but Tivakorn said it was too early to say how many had perished.

    The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration has set up a presence at the scene to gather information from affected shop owners.

    Bangkok Governor Chadchart Sittipunt visited the site and said people could help affected shop owners by offering to house surviving animals.

    Fires have previously damaged sections of the neighbouring, tightly packed Chatuchak market, which sells everything from antiques and electronics to dishwares and food.

    The market is a top tourist draw, but also a popular shopping destination for locals.

    Conservation groups have previously raised concerns about the sale of live animals in the area, with periodic raids on sellers netting endangered species.

  • Ceasefire agreement in Gaza coming close at hand?

    Ceasefire agreement in Gaza coming close at hand?

    The UN Security Council gave a green signal to a US-proposed ceasefire plan on Monday aimed at ending the Israeli attacks in Gaza.

    The proposition consists of a three-stage ceasefire and captive-release proposal laid out on May 31 by President Biden, prompting the “parties to fully implement its terms without delay and without condition”.⁠

    As per the plan, Israel will withdraw its military forces from Gaza’s populated areas, Hamas will release the remaining captives and humanitarian aid would be allowed into Gaza “at scale”.⁠

    A temporary ceasefire will be in effect for six weeks at first, with the possibility of extension as negotiators work towards a permanent cessation of hostilities.

    As per the resolution, Israel has agreed to the plan and urged Hamas to also agree to it as well.

    However, Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Netanyahu, have recently vowed to continue the operations until Hamas is completely eradicated, raising doubts about their commitment to the ceasefire agreement.

    Hamas has expressed approval of the resolution and signalled readiness to engage in indirect talks regarding the implementation of the agreement’s principles.

  • Coalition government to moderate Modi’s Hindu nationalism

    Coalition government to moderate Modi’s Hindu nationalism

    India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi will have to moderate his Hindu-nationalist agenda to assuage his coalition partners, but they will likely let him press on with his foreign and economic policies, analysts say.

    Modi, forced into a coalition government after a shock election setback left him without an outright majority for the first time in a decade, unveiled his third-term cabinet on Monday.

    Key posts are unchanged — including the defence, finance, foreign and interior ministers — and the cabinet remains dominated by his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

    “Modi opts for continuity,” The Hindustan Times headline read Monday.

    “BJP and Modi are still solidly occupying the… driving seat,” the Times of India wrote in its editorial.

    Nevertheless, this term will require “more dexterous deal-making within the parliament for policies that require tweaking of laws,” said Ashok Malik, from The Asia Group business consultancy.

    ‘Pushed to the background’

    Before the polls, when the right-wing BJP boasted of winning a super majority, minorities including many in the 200-million-plus Muslim population were worried.

    Modi’s decade as premier has seen him cultivate an image as an aggressive champion of the country’s majority Hindu faith.

    His government revoked the constitutional autonomy of India’s Muslim-majority region Kashmir, and backed the construction of a temple on grounds where a mosque stood for centuries before it was torn down by Hindu zealots in 1992.

    Critics feared another BJP landslide would see policies steamrolled through parliament that would further blur the line between state and religion — despite India’s secular constitution.

    But analysts said a coalition forces Modi to tread more carefully.

    “In a government with allies, the BJP’s key cultural agendas will all be pushed to the background,” Nistula Hebbar, political editor of The Hindu newspaper, told AFP.

    Instead, Modi is expected to focus on infrastructure, foreign affairs and economic reforms which “won’t be much of an issue” for the alliance, she added.

    “Very broadly, the economic policy and external strategy doesn’t face any challenges in continuity, or any serious philosophical or strategic challenges with allied or opposition parties,” said Malik.

    ‘Conciliatory Modi’

    Not so for his Hindu-nationalist agenda, however.

    Modi had promised to introduce a national common civil code to standardise laws across all religious communities, opposed by Muslim activists as an attack on their faith.

    India’s 1.4 billion people are subject to a common criminal law, but rules on personal matters such as marriage, divorce and inheritance vary.

    But the common code would require parties to “forge national consensus”, Malik said, which is now more doubtful given Modi’s reliance on coalition partners.

    Modi was also accused of ramping up rhetoric targeting India’s key religious divide to rally the Hindu majority to vote.

    With elections over, “Hindu-Muslim rhetoric may also take a back seat, at least for the time being,” said Neerja Chowdhury, from The Indian Express.

    BJP leaders also campaigned on a plank to remove affirmative quotas in government jobs and educational institutions for Muslims.

    A controversial revision of electoral boundaries based on population — that would have reduced the overall parliamentary punch of opposition areas — also likely faces the backburner.

    Hebbar said she expected to see “a different Modi, a more conciliatory Modi”.

    ‘People want jobs’

    For the policies he will push through, analysts say he will seek to expand welfare support for farming and poorer communities, seeking to shore up popularity in rural constituencies after electoral losses.

    In a symbolic first move, Modi on Monday approved the latest tranche of a massive cash handout for 93 million farmers, as well as building plans for 30 million homes for poor families.

    Modi has overseen India’s ascent to become the world’s fastest-growing major economy, and its fifth largest, but the world’s most populous country has a jobs crisis to match.

    Many saw unemployment as a key factor in BJP losses.

    “People want jobs,” said Malik. “And to satisfy this very legitimate need, you need to build the economy, and reform even faster.”

    Modi’s agenda will focus on infrastructure, reforming industrial policies and domestic manufacturing incentives in a bid to create an “economic spurt in the next five years”, he added.

    But analysts also say it is still to be seen how political dynamics will play out in a parliament where Modi faces a far more powerful opposition.

    “Modi has never handled a coalition because he has never had to rely on one,” Hebbar said.

    “It’s a new situation for everyone… but he is a quintessential politician and would be ready to do whatever is required”.

  • Air pollution linked to 135 million premature deaths: study

    Air pollution linked to 135 million premature deaths: study

    Pollution from man-made emissions and other sources like wildfires have been linked to around 135 million premature deaths worldwide between 1980 and 2020, a Singapore university said Monday.

    Weather phenomena like El Nino and the Indian Ocean Dipole worsened the effects of these pollutants by intensifying their concentration in the air, Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University (NTU) said, unveiling the results of a study led by its researchers.

    The tiny particles called particulate matter 2.5, or “PM 2.5”, are harmful to human health when inhaled because they are small enough to enter the bloodstream. They come from vehicle and industrial emissions as well as natural sources like fires and dust storms.

    The fine particulate matter “was associated with approximately 135 million premature deaths globally” from 1980 to 2020, the university said in a statement on the study, published in the journal Environment International.

    It found that people were dying younger than the average life expectancy from diseases or conditions that could have been treated or prevented, including stroke, heart and lung disease, and cancer.

    Weather patterns increased the deaths by 14 percent, the study found.

    Asia had the “highest number of premature deaths attributable to PM 2.5 pollution” at more than 98 million people, mostly in China and India, the university said.

    Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia and Japan also had significant numbers of premature deaths, ranging from 2 to 5 million people, it added.

    The study is one of the most expansive to date on air quality and climate, using 40 years of data to give a big-picture view of the effects of particulate matter on health.

    “Our findings show that changes in climate patterns can make air pollution worse,” said Steve Yim, an associate professor at NTU’s Asian School of the Environment, who led the study.

    “When certain climate events happen, like El Nino, pollution levels can go up, which means more people might die prematurely because of PM 2.5 pollution,” Yim added.

    “This highlights the need to understand and account for these climate patterns when tackling air pollution to protect the health of the global population.”

    The Singapore researchers studied satellite data from the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) on the levels of particulate matter in the Earth’s atmosphere.

    They analysed statistics on deaths from diseases linked to pollution from the US-based Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, an independent research centre.

    Information on weather patterns during the period was taken from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in the United States.

    The study focused only on the effects of ordinary weather patterns on air pollution, Yim said, adding that the impact of climate change will be the subject of future studies.

    Researchers from universities in Hong Kong, Britain and China were also involved in the study.

    The World Health Organization has said the “combined effects of ambient air pollution and household air pollution” are associated with 6.7 million premature deaths worldwide every year.

  • Modi sworn in for third term; a dozen ministries for allies

    Modi sworn in for third term; a dozen ministries for allies

    NEW DELHI: India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi was sworn in on Sunday for a third term after worse-than-expected election results left him reliant on coalition partners to govern.

    His office said he would appoint a 71-member cabinet, including 11 National Democratic Alliance (NDA) ally ministers.

    Modi’s Hindu-natio­nalist BJP ruled outright for the past decade but failed to repeat its previous two landslide wins this time around, defying exit polls. He was instead forced into quick-fire talks with the 15-member coalition NDA, which guaranteed him the parliamentary numbers to govern.

    Flanked by top BJP officials and party leaders of his coalition, Modi vowed in a ceremony marking his formal assumption of pow­er to “bear true allegiance to the constitution of India”.

    South Asian leaders from neighbouring Bangladesh, the Maldives and Sri Lanka attended the ceremony, but China and Pakistan did not.

    The crowd also included adoring BJP loyalists, as well as celebrities such as Bollywood legend Shah Rukh Khan and billionaire tycoons Gautam Adani and Mukesh Ambani, key Modi allies.

    But with Modi yet to announce details of his cabinet, the line of lawm­a­­kers also taking the oath of office was keenly wat­ched as an indication of who will be in government.

    Larger coalition parties have demanded hefty concessions in exchange for their support. Other coalition leaders to take the oath included Ram Mohan Naidu of the Telugu Desam Party, the largest BJP ally with 16 seats, and which media reports has extra­cted four cabinet seats.

    Rajiv Ranjan Singh also took the oath, from the BJP’s next biggest ally the Janata Dal (United) with 12 seats, which has reportedly two minister posts.

    Indian media reported widely that the top jobs including the four most powerful posts of the interior, foreign, finance and defence would remain in BJP’s control. The Hindus­tan Times described days of “hectic talks”, while the Times of India said the BJP had sought to “pare down” their partners’ demands.

    Modi’s previous cabinet had 81 ministers.

    ‘More consultation’

    But analysts said that the coalition would shift parliamentary politics and force Modi’s once domineering BJP into a somewhat more conciliatory approach.

    “In the past, the BJP has had confidence because of its sheer majority,” said Sajjan Kumar, head of the Delhi-based political research group PRACCIS. “The coalition will now force the BJP to engage in more consultation.”

    Political analyst Zoya Hasan of Jawaharlal Neh­ru University said Modi faced potential challenges ahead, warning he may be “meeting his match” in the “crafty politicians” of the TDP’s Chandrababu Naidu and JD(U)’s Nitish Kumar.

  • Wildfires in south Lebanon after Israeli bombardment: media, rescuer

    Wildfires in south Lebanon after Israeli bombardment: media, rescuer

    Beirut, Lebanon: Israeli strikes Saturday on southern Lebanon sparked massive wildfires, state media and a first responder said, the latest fallout from escalating cross-border violence involving Hezbollah.

    Hezbollah has traded near-daily fire with Israeli forces in the nine months since the Gaza genocide began.

    Lebanon’s official National News Agency (NNA) said on Saturday that “Israeli artillery bombarded today the outskirts of the town of Alma al-Shaab with incendiary phosphorus shells, causing fires in the forests that spread to the vicinity of some homes”.

    Fire sweeps over fields targeted by Israeli artillery on the outskirts of the southern Lebanese village of Rmeish on June 4, 2024, amid ongoing cross-border clashes between Israeli troops and Hezbollah fighters. Photo by Kawnat HAJU / AFP.

    It added that the fire had reached “large areas of olive trees”.

    Lebanese authorities and several international rights groups have accused Israel of using white phosphorus rounds in its strikes on its northern neighbour.

    White phosphorus, a substance that ignites in contact with oxygen, can be used as an incendiary weapon.

    Its use as a chemical weapon is prohibited under international law, but it is allowed for illuminating battlefields and can be used as a smokescreen.

    Rescuer Ali Abbas of the Risala Scout association, affiliated with Hezbollah ally the Amal movement, told AFP that “Israel deliberately bombs forested areas with phosphorus with the aim of starting fires.”

    According to him, rescuers on the grounds have been struggling to extinguish the flames, while the Lebanese military avoids sending helicopters to assist for fear of more Israeli attacks.

    Further east, the NNA reported that “a large fire broke out at positions belonging to the Lebanese army and UNIFIL”, the UN peacekeeping mission, in the area of the border village of Mais al-Jabal.

    It is located near the UN-demarcated Blue Line between Lebanon and Israel.

    A security source told AFP on condition of anonymity that fires broke out near military positions but have not reached them or caused any casualties.

    The UN peacekeepers in a statement reported a “bushfire near one of their positions in Hula”, which was put out with help from Lebanese troops and civil defence forces.

    “The fire didn’t cause any damage to UNIFIL assets or personnel,” it said.

    The NNA said, “Several landmines exploded, and firefighting operations are still continuing” in the area.

    The border violence, which began on October 8, has killed 456 people in Lebanon, primarily fighters but including about 90 civilians, according to an AFP tally.

    On the Israeli side of the border, at least 15 soldiers and 11 civilians have been killed, according to the army.

  • Rahul Gandhi nominated to lead India’s opposition: party secretary

    Rahul Gandhi nominated to lead India’s opposition: party secretary

    New Delhi, India – Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s main rival Rahul Gandhi was nominated on Saturday to lead India’s opposition in the next parliament, the general secretary of Gandhi’s Congress party said.

    “All participants unanimously passed the resolution that Rahul Gandhi should take the position of leader of opposition in the parliament,” K.C. Venugopal told a news conference after a meeting of the party’s executive.

  • Pakistan power crisis deepened by mountain tourism

    Pakistan power crisis deepened by mountain tourism

    Skardu (Pakistan) (AFP) – In the mountainous valleys of Pakistan, 18-hour daily power cuts have meant local teacher Aniqa Bano uses her fridge as a cupboard for storing books and kitchen utensils.

    Load shedding is typical across much of fuel-short Pakistan, but few areas consistently suffer the same prolonged outages as Skardu city.

    A surge in mountain tourism, driven by climbers and Pakistanis looking to escape heatwaves, is rapidly depleting the limited energy supply at the gateway to ascend K2, the world’s second-highest peak.

    While higher-end hotels can supplement their supply with solar panels or fuel generators, many locals cannot afford such luxuries.

    “We have to reinvent everything that once used electricity,” said Bano.

    Tourism boom

    Skardu is the largest city in the region of Gilgit-Baltistan, where almost impossibly high peaks tower over the Old Silk Road, still visible from a highway transporting tourists between cherry orchards, glaciers and ice-blue lakes.

    Normally home to around 200,000 people, Skardu becomes heavily bloated in summer when Pakistanis seek the relief of its cooler climate at 2,228 metres (7,310 feet) above sea level.

    The region hosted 880,000 domestic visitors in 2023, up from 50,000 in 2014.

    As the country grapples with energy shortages -– owing to dwindling forex reserves, mismanagement, rapid population growth and climate change –- the tourism boom has proved too much for local power.

    “Due to the increase in population and tourism activities, load shedding hours have increased,” Muhammad Yunus, a senior engineer for the regional government’s water and power department, told AFP.

    There are up to 22 hours of load shedding in winter and between 18 and 20 hours in summer — an increase of around 10 percent each year for the past six years, according to the department.

    Siddiqa, a tailor and handicraft maker who goes by one name, has seen her earnings fall alongside the number of hours of electricity.

    “When we started this business in 2014, there was no issue of power,” she told AFP. “Now, I have replaced all the electric machines and brought hand sewing machines.”

    “In the presence of light, we could prepare 10 to 12 suits every three days. Now, to prepare a single suit, it can take 10 to 15 days.”

    The tourism flow does not appear to be letting up any time soon. There are up to 15 domestic flights a week to the region and, since March, international flights began landing from Dubai.

    In Skardu alone, the number of hotels has increased more than fourfold since 2014, according to the tourism department.

    7,000 melting glaciers

    Owing to its remoteness, Gilgit-Baltistan is not connected to the national grid, so it relies on its own power generation from dozens of hydro and thermal plants.

    But Pakistan’s 7,000 glaciers — more than anywhere outside the poles — are rapidly melting.

    This can temporarily increase the availability of water for energy production, but the glaciers’ long-term ability to store and release water gradually decreases, affecting energy production.

    “The availability of water for hydroelectric plants is becoming unpredictable,” said Salaar Ali, head of the Department of Environmental Science, University of Baltistan.

    Damage to energy infrastructure is also a regular setback.

    Record heatwaves in 2022 caused dozens of glacial lakes to burst their banks, washing away more than 20 power plants, 50 bridges and countless homes.

    Inadequate planning and mismanagement of the power sector can also play a role, engineers have said.

    The Satpara dam on the edge of Skardu city, completed in 2008 for $26 million of aid funding, was supposed to supply 40,000 homes with power.

    But it generates just a fraction of its potential after plans to divert a river were halted, government engineers admit.

    “It has been full only once since its formation,” said Yunus, the engineer in Skardu.

    Without a reliable energy supply, Wajahat Hussain, a 36-year-old carpenter, uses a fuel generator to keep his business in operation — puffing out emissions that contribute to global warming.

    “We run the generator to fulfil the demands,” he told AFP. “There is no work without the generator.”

  • India’s Modi readies for third term after securing coalition

    India’s Modi readies for third term after securing coalition

    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was preparing Thursday to be sworn in for a third term after an unexpectedly close election that forced his party into a coalition government.

    Modi’s Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which ruled for the past decade with an outright majority, had been expecting another landslide win.

    But results of the six-week election released Tuesday ran counter to exit polls, seeing the BJP lose its majority and sending it into quick-fire talks to lock in a 15-member coalition that would allow it to govern.

    That grouping — the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) — announced late Wednesday that they had agreed to form a government.

    “We all unanimously choose respected NDA leader Narendra Modi as our leader,” a BJP-issued alliance statement said.

    The alliance holds 293 seats in parliament, giving it control of the 543-seat body.

    Indian media reports said Modi would be sworn in as prime minister on Saturday.

    Modi’s new reliance on “the minefield of coalition politics” means he faces the prospect of a far tougher-than-expected third term, the Hindustan Times warned in its Thursday editorial.

    “Consensus building will have to be the bedrock of governance,” it added, noting the right-wing BJP will have to “recalibrate its expansion plans”.

    ‘New chapter of development’

    While Modi faces a more complicated political environment at home, he won the plaudits of leaders around the world.

    US President Joe Biden congratulated Modi on his coalition’s victory, and the State Department said the United States hoped to work with the Hindu nationalist leader on a “free and open” Asia.

    “The friendship between our nations is only growing,” Biden wrote, while French President Emmanuel Macron congratulated his “dear friend”.

    China congratulated Modi and said it was “ready to work” with its neighbour, while the coalition’s win was also applauded by Britain, the European Union, Japan and Russia.

    Modi, 73, insisted on Tuesday night that the election results were a victory that ensured he would continue his agenda.

    “Our third term will be one of big decisions and the country will write a new chapter of development,” Modi told a crowd of cheering supporters in the capital New Delhi after his win. “This is Modi’s guarantee.”

    ‘Play the coalition game’

    Commentators and exit polls had projected an overwhelming victory for Modi, who critics have accused of leading the jailing of opposition figures and trampling on the rights of India’s 200-million-plus Muslim community.

    But the BJP secured 240 seats in parliament, well down from the 303 it won five years ago and 32 short of a majority on its own.

    The main opposition Congress party won 99 seats in a remarkable turnaround, almost doubling its 2019 tally of 52.

    “Today’s masters are not as strong as they were,” Christophe Jaffrelot, a professor at King’s College London, wrote in The Hindu daily on Thursday.

    “For the first time in his political career, Narendra Modi will have to play the coalition game.”

    Congress party president Mallikarjun Kharge said the result was a vote against Modi “and the substance and style of his politics”.

    “It is a huge political loss for him personally, apart from being a clear moral defeat as well,” he told party leaders at an opposition alliance meeting.

    In a personal sting, Modi was re-elected to his constituency representing the Hindu holy city of Varanasi with a far lower margin of 152,300 votes. That compared with nearly half a million votes five years ago.

    “Elections expressed a yearning for the defence of constitutional values and citizen dignity,” Ashutosh Varshney, a political scientist at Brown University, wrote in the Indian Express on Thursday.

    Varshney argued Modi’s setback reflected concerns about what the “idea of India” meant to voters — against a backdrop of a “rise of animosities and polarisation in society, people’s concern about rights and the steeply rising inequalities”.

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    © Agence France-Presse

  • Tokyo govt to launch dating app to boost birth rate

    Tokyo govt to launch dating app to boost birth rate

    Japan’s capital will launch its own dating app as early as this summer as part of government efforts to boost the plunging national birth rate, a Tokyo official said Tuesday.

    Users will be required to submit documentation proving they are legally single and sign a letter stating they are willing to get married.

    Stating one’s income is common on Japanese dating apps, but Tokyo will require a tax certificate slip to prove the annual salary.

    “We learned that 70 percent of people who want to get married aren’t actively joining events or apps to look for a partner,” a Tokyo government official in charge of the new app told AFP.

    “We want to give them a gentle push to find one,” he said.

    It’s not unusual for municipalities to organise matchmaking events in Japan, where births dropped to a new low in 2023, but it is rare for a local government to develop an app.

    An interview will be required to confirm a user’s identity as part of the registration process for the Tokyo app, which has been on a test run for free since late last year.

    Many social media users expressed scepticism over the plans, with one saying, “is this something the government should be doing with our tax?”

    Others wrote they were interested as they would feel safer.

    Last year Japan recorded more than twice as many deaths as new babies.

    Births fell for the eighth consecutive year to 758,631, a drop of 5.1 percent, preliminary government data showed. The number of deaths stood at 1,590,503.

    The nation is facing growing labour shortages, and Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has promised policies including financial aid for families, easier childcare access and more parental leave.