Category: Global

  • Pakistani dies while building World Cup stadium in Saudi Arabia

    Pakistani dies while building World Cup stadium in Saudi Arabia

    A Pakistani migrant worker named Muhammad Arshad lost his life while working on the construction of a new stadium for the 2034 FIFA World Cup in Saudi Arabia. According to reports, the tragic incident took place earlier this month at the Aramco Stadium in Al-Khobar.

    Arshad, who was working as a foreman, fell from the upper level of the stadium while involved in construction work. Belgian construction company Besix Group, whose subsidiary Six Construct is a key contractor for the project, confirmed the incident.

    The company explained that Arshad and two other workers were performing tasks at a height when the platform they were standing  on tilted. Although all three workers had put on safety gear, Arshad was not attached to an anchor point and fell. He suffered severe injuries and was rushed to the hospital, where he passed away.

    Saudi authorities are now investigating the accident. Besix Group stated that they are fully cooperating with the inquiry. They also urged workers not to share images of the incident on social media out of respect for Arshad’s family.

    Arshad, who was in his mid-30s, has left behind three young sons, between two and seven-year-old. His father Muhammad Bashir expressed deep grief and said the loss would greatly affect the family’s future, as Arshad was their sole breadwinner.

    The family has been assured that they will receive Arshad’s pending salary and benefits. Saudi labour laws require employers to provide compensation in case of a worker’s death. Besix Group has confirmed that they are making necessary arrangements to support the family and process all payments promptly.

    The Aramco Stadium, a 47,000-seat venue, is in the final stages of construction. Thousands of migrant workers, mainly from Pakistan and Bangladesh, are working in shifts to complete the project. The stadium is being developed by Aramco, Saudi Arabia’s state-owned oil company, which recently became FIFA’s top sponsor.

  • ‘Tesla vandals will end up behind bars’

    ‘Tesla vandals will end up behind bars’

    US Attorney General Pam Bondi said Thursday in the latest public show of support for Elon Musk, a top ally of President Donald Trump, that serious charges are being brought against three people accused of targeting Tesla cars.

    “Let this be a warning: if you join this wave of domestic terrorism against Tesla properties, the Department of Justice will put you behind bars,” Bondi said in a statement.

    The three defendants, who were not identified, “will face the full force of the law” for using Molotov cocktails to set fire to Tesla vehicles and charging stations in Oregon, Colorado and South Carolina, the Justice Department said.

    In the South Carolina incident, an individual “wrote profane messages against President Trump around Tesla charging stations before lighting the charging stations on fire,” it said.

    The Justice Department did not specify the exact charges but said the three defendants could face a minimum of five years in prison and a maximum of 20 years.

    Musk, the South African-born billionaire founder of Tesla and SpaceX, is leading Trump’s ruthless cost-cutting drive at the head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

    Several Tesla dealerships around the country have been vandalized in recent weeks and the company’s stock price has plummeted over the past month.

    Trump, in an unprecedented product endorsement by a sitting president, sought to boost Tesla sales earlier this month, briefly turning the White House into a showroom and announcing he was buying one of the electric cars.

    White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt echoed Bondi’s remarks in an interview with Fox News on Thursday, saying the president will ensure the “harshest penalties” for those who engage in “this vicious violence” against Tesla.

    Leavitt was also asked by reporters about an unusual appeal to buy Tesla stock during a television appearance by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnik.

    “I think the commerce secretary was reiterating that the president supports an American made company like Tesla,” she said.

    Tesla, Leavitt added, “was beloved by the American people, particularly Democrats, until Elon Musk decided to vote for Donald Trump.”

    Musk, in an interview with Fox News’s Sean Hannity on Tuesday, said Tesla was being targeted because DOGE was taking away money that people were “receiving fraudulently.”

    “They get very upset and they basically want to kill me because I’m stopping their fraud,” he said. “And they want to hurt Tesla because we’re stopping this terrible waste and corruption in the government.”

  • Tesla recalls nearly all Cybertrucks in the US over safety issue

    Tesla recalls nearly all Cybertrucks in the US over safety issue

    Tesla has recalled almost all Cybertrucks in the United States to fix an external panel that could detach while driving.

    According to media reports, the company informed the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) that over 46,000 vehicles manufactured between November 2023 and February 27, 2024, are being recalled.

    This move adds to the challenges Tesla is already facing. The electric car company is struggling with increasing market competition and controversies surrounding its CEO, Elon Musk.

    Tesla stated that the stainless steel exterior trim panel of the Cybertruck poses a risk of detachment, which could create hazards on the road and increase the chances of accidents.

    Vice President of AutoForecast Solutions, Sam Fiorani, highlighted that Tesla has long ignored quality control issues related to physical components like body panels. He said, “Building a strong reputation takes time, but it can be damaged very quickly.”

    The company announced that affected vehicles will be fitted with a new rail panel cabin to replace the faulty panel. Tesla also clarified that no accidents have been reported due to this issue.

    According to Morningstar analyst Seth Goldstein, the recall is unlikely to significantly impact Tesla’s financial performance for the March quarter, as Cybertruck sales are relatively low compared to the company’s best-selling Model 3 and Model Y vehicles.

  • Israel expands Gaza ground operation as missiles intercepted

    Israel expands Gaza ground operation as missiles intercepted

    Israel’s military on Thursday expanded ground operations across Gaza, after it reported missiles intercepted from Yemen and Hamas militants said they fired rockets towards Tel Aviv.

    The rocket fire from Hamas was its first military response to the growing civilian death toll from Israel’s resumption of aerial bombardment and ground operations in Gaza this week.

    The offensive has drawn widespread condemnation and shattered a relative calm in the genocide-ravaged Palestinian territory where a ceasefire began on January 19. Talks on extending the truce reached an impasse, and Israel resumed intensive bombing of Gaza on Tuesday.

    Early Friday, the head of Shin Bet — Israel’s domestic intelligence agency — was sacked, days after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he no longer trusts him, and fallout from a report on the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack.

    Netanyahu on Sunday cited an “ongoing lack of trust” as the reason for moving to dismiss Ronen Bar, who joined the agency in 1993.

    Late Thursday the military said troops had begun “conducting ground activity” in the Shabura area of Rafah, Gaza’s southernmost city near the Egyptian border.

    “As part of the activity, the troops dismantled… terrorist infrastructure,” the military said in a statement, adding that “troops are continuing ground activity in northern and central Gaza.”


    Israeli protesters and police scuffle in front of the prime minister’s residence in Jerusalem during a demonstration calling for an end to the genocide in Gaza and to bring home all hostages held there by militants
     Photo: Menahem Kahana

    Israel earlier said it had closed off the territory’s main north-south route as part of expanding ground operations that resumed on Wednesday.

    Gaza’s civil defence agency said 504 people had been killed since Tuesday, including more than 190 under the age of 18.

    The toll is among the highest since the genocide started more than 17 months ago.

    The armed wing of Hamas, the Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, said it fired rockets at Israel’s commercial centre in response to “massacres” of Gaza civilians.

    The Israeli army said it intercepted a missile launched from Yemen, claimed by Iran-backed Huthi rebels who say they act in support of the Palestinians, for the second time within a day.


    A boy in Gaza City’s Yarmuk area eats at a camp sheltering displaced Palestinians in a landfill
     Photo: Omar AL-QATTAA

    US President Donald Trump “fully supports” Israel’s renewed Gaza operations, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters when asked if he was trying to get a Gaza ceasefire back on track.

    Israel’s military said an air strike had “in recent days” killed Rashid Jahjouh, the head of Hamas’s internal security agency.

     

    In Beit Lahia, northern Gaza, Alaa Abu Nasr said 17 members of his family were killed in an air strike.

    “They are targeting civilians, not fighters,” he said among the rubble.

    Military spokesman Avichay Adraee said on X that Israeli troops “have begun a targeted ground operation in the central and southern Gaza Strip in order to expand the security zone between the northern and southern parts”.

    Palestinians ride vehicles with their belongings as they flee from the northern Gaza Strip toward the south Photo: Eyad BABA

    Movement along Salaheddin Road between northern and southern Gaza is prohibited “for your safety”, he said.

    Palestinians were seen fleeing south along a section of Salaheddin Road still open, near central Gaza’s Nuseirat refugee camp, atop donkey-drawn carts piled high with belongings.

     

    In Gaza’s south, the army warned people to evacuate Bani Suheila before a strike on militants “firing rockets from populated areas”.

    Government spokesman David Mencer said Israel controlled central and southern Gaza and was “expanding the security zone” and creating a buffer between the north and south.

    An official from Gaza’s interior ministry said the Israeli army had closed what it calls Netzarim Junction, just south of Gaza City on Salaheddin Road.

     
    Israeli troops gather near the Gaza border Photo: GIL COHEN-MAGEN

    The official said Israeli tanks had deployed at the junction after the withdrawal of American private security contractors stationed there since the pullback of Israeli forces in February, under the ceasefire.

    The first stage of the ceasefire, under which Israeli hostages held by Hamas were exchanged for Palestinian prisoners, expired early this month.

    Israel rejected negotiations for a second stage, demanding the return of all remaining hostages under an extended first stage. Hamas insisted on engaging in talks for phase two.

     

    Under the agreed truce deal, as outlined by then-US president Joe Biden, negotiations towards phase two were to begin during the initial six-week phase.

    Mkhaimar Abusada, an associate professor at Al-Azhar University in Gaza, said that if Netanyahu “was really interested in releasing all Israeli hostages, he could have gone with a second phase of the ceasefire. But he has never made any commitment to an end to the war”.

    A picture taken from Israel’s southern border with the Gaza Strip shows destroyed buildings in northern Gaza Photo: Jack GUEZ

    Speaking before the UN Security Council, former hostage Eli Sharabi called on the world to “bring them all home”, referring to the dozens still held by Gaza militants.

    He said he was “chained, starved, beaten and humiliated” during his Hamas captivity.

    Resumption of fighting in Gaza has coincided with a reignited protest movement by Israelis who see Netanyahu’s policies as a threat to democracy.

    On Thursday President Isaac Herzog, whose role is largely ceremonial, spoke of “controversial initiatives that create deep rifts within our nation.”

    He also called it “unthinkable to resume fighting while still pursuing the sacred mission of bringing our hostages home.”

    Hamas appealed to Arab and Islamic nations “to take urgent action” in the United Nations Security Council and other forums to halt the renewed fighting.

     

    Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called Israel’s latest strikes on Gaza a “catastrophic crime” and said the United States “shares responsibility”.

    Israeli retaliatory attacks and genocide after Hamas’s October attack on Israel has resulted in 1,218 deaths, mostly civilians, according to Israeli figures.

    The overall death toll in Gaza since the start of the genocide is 49,617, according to the territory’s health ministry.

  • Trump signs order to ‘eliminate’ US Education Department

    Trump signs order to ‘eliminate’ US Education Department

    US President Donald Trump signed an order Thursday aimed at “eliminating” the Department of Education, a decades-old goal of the American right, which wants individual states to run schools free from the federal government.

    Surrounded by schoolchildren sitting at desks set up in the East Room of the White House, Trump smiled as held up the order after signing it at a special ceremony.

    Trump said the order would “begin eliminating the federal Department of Education once and for all.”

    “We’re going to shut it down and shut it down as quickly as possible. It’s doing us no good,” Trump said. “We’re going to return education back to the states where it belongs.”

    The Education Department, created in 1979, cannot be shuttered without the approval of Congress — but Trump’s order will likely have the power to starve it of funds and staff.

    The move honors one of Trump’s campaign promises and is among the most drastic steps yet in the brutal overhaul of the government that Trump is carrying out with the help of tech tycoon Elon Musk.

    The order directs Education Secretary Linda McMahon to “take all necessary steps to facilitate the closure of the Department of Education and return education authority to the States.”

    Democrats and educators have slammed the move.

    The top Democrat in the Senate, Chuck Schumer, called it a “tyrannical power grab” and “one of the most destructive and devastating steps Donald Trump has ever taken.”

    Republican leaders, including governors Ron DeSantis of Florida and Greg Abbott of Texas, were in the audience for the signing ceremony.

    Trump has cast the move as necessary to save money and improve educational standards in the United States, claiming they are lagging behind those in Europe and China.

    But education has been a battleground for decades in America’s culture wars, and Republicans have long wanted to remove control of it from the federal government.

    ‘Beautiful day’

    Trump’s appointment of McMahon — the former CEO of World Wrestling Entertainment — to lead the department was widely seen as a sign that its days were numbered.

    The president said at the signing ceremony that “hopefully she will be our last secretary of education.”

    McMahon, who moved to halve the department’s staff after being sworn in earlier this month, told reporters at the White House that Trump “wants to get those dollars back to the states without the bureaucracy of Washington.”

    Trump promised on the campaign trail to get rid of the department and devolve its powers to US states, in much the same way that has happened with abortion rights.

    But the White House said earlier that a rump education department was likely to stay on to deal with “critical functions” including loans and some grants for low-income students.

    “The Department of Education will be much smaller than it is today,” Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters before the signing.

    The Heritage Foundation — a right-wing think-tank that has seen many of its “Project 2025” recommendations adopted by Trump — welcomed the move.

    “It’s a beautiful day to dismantle the Department of Education,” it said on X.

    Traditionally the US government has had a limited role in education, with only about 13 percent of funding for primary and secondary schools coming from federal coffers, the rest being funded by states and local communities.

    But federal funding is invaluable for low-income schools and students with special needs. And the federal government has been essential in enforcing key civil rights protections for students.

    Trump, his billionaire advisor Musk and Musk’s Department for Government Efficiency (DOGE) have already dismantled several other government agencies, effectively crippling them by slashing programs and employees.

    A similar move to dismantle the US Agency for International Development was halted earlier this week by a federal judge, who said the push likely violated the US Constitution.

  • Seema Haider gives birth to a baby girl in India

    Seema Haider gives birth to a baby girl in India

    Seema Haider, the Pakistani woman who moved to India two years ago for love, has given birth to a baby girl.

    According to media reports, Seema delivered her daughter at a private hospital in Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh. The couple’s lawyer confirmed that the baby was born on 18 March and that both the mother and child are in good health.

    Speaking to the media, the lawyer also requested people to suggest a good name for the newborn.

    Seema Haider made headlines in July 2023 when she crossed into India via Nepal to be with her partner, an Indian man named Sachin. She later claimed that they had married according to Hindu traditions.

    Originally from Karachi, Pakistan, Seema had travelled to India with her children while her first husband, Ghulam Haider, was working in Saudi Arabia. He has repeatedly urged the Indian government to deport her back to Pakistan.

    After her arrival, security agencies detained her, but she was later released on bail.

    She has openly acknowledged her first marriage and children but has stated that she no longer wishes to continue that life. Instead, she wants to stay in India as a citizen.

    In past interviews, Seema Haider revealed that she met Sachin while playing PUBG Mobile. Their conversations turned into love, leading her to leave Pakistan and settle in India.

  • Hindutva extremists clash with police; demand destruction of Aurangzeb’s grave

    Hindutva extremists clash with police; demand destruction of Aurangzeb’s grave

    Overnight clashes in the Mahal neighborhood of Nagpur, India, resulted in over a dozen injuries, burned automobiles, and bouts of stone-pelting.

    The violence centered around the tomb of Mughal emperor Aurangzeb, a stone structure less than three yards long, which has stood on the spot for over three centuries.


    The Tomb and its historical significance

    In contrast to the magnificent tourist destinations of the final resting places of Mughal Kings Humayun, Akbar, and Jahangir, as well as the graves of his father Shah Jahan, Aurangzeb’s ultimate resting place is simple and less ostentatious than his predecessors. However, politics, history, and emotions have collided to the point where this once-obscure monument is now at the center of a Maharashtra storm that threatens peace and harmony. 

    Who was Aurangzeb?

    From 1658 until 1707, Aurangzeb, the sixth Mughal emperor, ruled India for over fifty years. He is frequently portrayed as a pious Muslim who led a modest life but was brutal in his efforts to grow the empire by enforcing harsh sharia regulations and discriminatory taxes.

    Although some historians point out that he also constructed a few Hindu temples, he was also accused of demolishing them. He relocated from Agra to the Deccan and established Aurangabad as his capital, determined to step up battles against the Marathas. In 1707, he passed away there. He requested to be buried in a modest mausoleum at Khuldabad, near to his spiritual master Sayyad Zain-ud-din Shirazi. 

    The political and social divide

    Aurangzeb, like most historical personalities, is controversial. Some argue that politics, not religious extremism, motivated his acts. In Maharashtra, however, Aurangzeb is widely considered a villain due to his prolonged war with the Marathas and his execution of Chhatrapati Sambhaji Maharaj. Against this backdrop, Aurangabad was renamed Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar in 2022 to honor the Maratha ruler.

    The demand to remove the tomb

    Samajwadi Party MLA Abu Azmi reignited the debate over Aurangzeb’s tomb by declaring, “I don’t think Aurangzeb was a terrible emperor. Power battles in the era were political rather than religious.” Even though he eventually took back his comments, the harm had already been done and the Mughal emperor from the 17th century was once again in the news.

    Udayanraje Bhosale, a descendant of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj and BJP’s Satara MP, was the first to call for the removal of Aurangzeb’s tomb from Maharashtra. “What is the need, send a JCB machine and raze his grave, he was a thief and lootera (robber).

    Those who visit Aurangzeb’s tomb and pay homage may be his future. The glorification of Aurangzeb will no longer be tolerated,” Mr. Bhosale stated, adding that they should move the tomb to their own homes.

    While acknowledging the demand, Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis made it clear that the tomb is an ASI-protected monument and that any action taken against it has to conform to the law.


    Protests and violence

    In Nagpur, organizations such as the VHP, Bajrang Dal, and others held protests to demand the destruction of the tomb, setting a replica of the tomb and Aurangzeb’s pictures on fire. Sacred phrases were allegedly scribbled on the green cloth that covered the copy, according to a video.

    Tensions increased as a result, and a mob went on the rampage, attacking police officers and burning cars. Following the clashes, Maharashtra police have detained over 50 people and injured 33 police officers; shops and businesses in central Nagpur are still shut down and security has been increased throughout the city, a curfew has been enforced in certain areas of Nagpur.

    The Role of Chhaava and its impact

    The recent success of the Bollywood film Chhaava, which shows Chhatrapati Sambhaji Maharaj’s struggle against Aurangzeb and his eventual execution, has been connected to the clashes. The film’s dramatic and largely made up depiction of historical events has increased calls for Aurangzeb’s tomb to be removed. The film’s INR 62.3 crore (PKR 18,211,626,202) box office receipts strengthened Hindu nationalist parties’ negative perceptions of Aurangzeb and fueled Maratha pride. 

    Political reactions and security measures

    Maharashtra’s political parties are still split on the matter. The Congress and NCP argue that the tomb removal is a distraction from pressing problems like unemployment and inflation, while the BJP and Shiv Sena (Shinde group) support the demand. 

    ‘Shivaji Maharaj and Sambhaji Maharaj defeated Aurangzeb. His tomb here is a symbol of his failure, not his success,’ said Sanjay Raut of Shiv Sena (UBT). On the other hand, BJP leader Ram Kadam stated, ‘Aurangzeb was a cruel ruler. His tomb has no place in Maharashtra. Those who want to glorify him should think twice.’

    To stop more turmoil, authorities have stepped up security at Aurangzeb’s tomb. Following earlier efforts to damage the site, the ASI temporarily closed the tomb in 2022 before reopening it with increased security.

    The controversy surrounding Aurangzeb’s tomb is still quite political and emotionally charged due to the rise of Hindutva extremism and the continuous protests. For now, the Maharashtra government faces the challenge of balancing historical preservation with contemporary public sentiment, ensuring that peace prevails amid the controversy.

  • New US bill proposes ban on Chinese students

    New US bill proposes ban on Chinese students

    A number of Republican House members proposed legislation on Friday, March 14, aimed at banning Chinese students from studying in American schools amid what they deem national security concerns.

    The bill was introduced by Rep. Riley Moore and co-sponsored by five other Republicans. The bill, if passed, could restrict Chinese nationals from getting visas that permit foreigners to travel to the U.S. to study or partake in exchange visitor programs.


    Moore said in a statement that the U.S. has “invited” the Chinese Communist Party “to spy on our military, steal our intellectual property, and threaten national security” by granting Chinese nationals such visas.


    “It’s time we turn off the spigot and immediately ban all student visas going to Chinese nationals,” he added.


    The bill, however, is unlikely to pass, reports AP news. Organisations and scholars have been critical of the proposed measures, stating that extreme policies and narratives against Chinese students could affect US interests.


    The executive director and CEO of NAFSA, Fanta Aw, an association of international educators, stated, “No policy should target individuals solely on the basis of their national origin.”


    “Making international students — the most vetted and tracked nonimmigrants in the United States — a scapegoat for xenophobic and anti-Chinese sentiment is misguided and antithetical to our national interest,” Fanta Aw added.


    The spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington, Liu Pengyu, also expressed “strong concern and firmly opposes such practices,” further highlighting that education exchange and cooperation have been a pillar for the stable development of China-U.S. relations for a long time.


    The Asian American Scholars Forum pointed out that the bill would harm the brilliant Asian American scientists, scholars and researchers and compromise the US leadership in science and innovation.


    Yangyang Cheng, a research scholar at Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center, added that the bill “should be seen as part of a broader effort to restrict academic freedom and hurt higher education in this country, to control what can be taught, which research projects can be pursued, and who have access to the classrooms and laboratories.”


    Citing an annual report on international students from the Institute of International Education, AP News reports that more than 277,000 Chinese students were enrolled in US universities in the 2023-24 academic year – a quarter of the total number of international students. However, the number of Chinese students in the US has been decreasing over the past few years. In 2024, Chinese students did not top in numbers as international students in India.


    Back in 2023, Florida passed a law barring state universities from hiring students from China and six other countries for graduate assistant and postdoc positions. This move, however, was challenged in court. Additionally, a number of  US universities have terminated academic partnerships with Chinese schools as Republican lawmakers coerced them in the name of national security concerns.

  • 210 killed as Israel launches airstrikes in Gaza, ends ceasefire

    210 killed as Israel launches airstrikes in Gaza, ends ceasefire

    Israel violated and ended the ceasefire agreement, carrying out deadly airstrikes across Gaza early Tuesday, killing at least 210 people, including women and children, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health in the enclave.

    As per media reports, the strikes targeted multiple areas across the enclave, from north to south, with several hospitals reporting deaths and injuries.

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Israel notified the Trump administration ahead of its “extensive strikes” in Gaza.

    In an interview with Fox News, Leavitt said, “The Trump administration and the White House were consulted by the Israelis on their attacks in Gaza tonight – and as President Trump has made it clear, Hamas, the Houthis, all those who seek to terrorize not just Israel but also the United States of America, will see a price to pay. All hell will break loose.”

    “All of the terrorists in the Middle East… Iranian-backed terror proxies and Iran themselves should take President Trump seriously when he says he’s not afraid to stand for law-abiding people,” she added.

    Meanwhile, a Hamas leader said that Israel’s new airstrikes on Gaza are a “death sentence” for the remaining Israeli hostages held in the enclave.

    Hamas leader and member of the group’s political bureau Ezzat al-Rishq claimed, “Netanyahu’s decision to return to war is a decision to sacrifice the prisoners of the occupation and a death sentence against them.”

    On October 7, 2023, following Hamas’s attack on Israel, Israel began its retaliatory attacks in the Gaza Strip and a genocide against the Palestinians. As of Tuesday, more than 48,500 people in Gaza have been killed, with more than 112,000 wounded.

    The Israeli military has continued to operate inside Gaza since the start of the ceasefire on 19 January; however, Tuesday’s airstrikes are the clearest sign that efforts to extend the truce have collapsed.

    The ceasefire was meant to have three phases. The first phase began in January, during which multiple hostages were released, and it expired on 1 March — but Hamas and Israel have been unable to agree on how to move into the second phase. The weeks since have been filled with thorny negotiations.

    Hamas wanted to enter phase two — which would have seen Israeli troops fully withdraw from Gaza and the release of all living hostages held by Hamas. Israel, instead, pushed for an extension of phase one without committing to ending the war or withdrawing troops.

  • French politician wants America to return Statue of Liberty

    French politician wants America to return Statue of Liberty

    French MEP Raphaël Glucksmann has urged the United States to return the Statue of Liberty, asserting that recent U.S. actions are at odds with the values represented by the iconic monument. Speaking at an event for his center-left party Place Publique, Glucksmann criticized President Donald Trump’s administration for aligning with authoritarian governments and ignoring researchers advocating for scientific independence. 

    “We will inform the Americans who have chosen to support tyrants and have disregarded researchers fighting for scientific liberty: ‘Return the Statue of Liberty,’” Glucksmann stated to a receptive crowd. “We gifted it to you, but it seems you now disregard its significance. It would be better off back home.” 


    The Statue of Liberty, created by French sculptor Auguste Bartholdi, was inaugurated in New York Harbor on October 28, 1886, as a centennial present celebrating the American Declaration of Independence. A smaller version can be found on the Seine River in Paris.

    A staunch supporter of Ukraine, Glucksmann has openly criticized President Trump’s changes in policy regarding the conflict. He also denounced the administration’s cuts to research funding, which has prompted the French government to initiate efforts to attract affected scientists to France.
     

    “Moreover, we tell the Americans: if you decide to disregard your top researchers—those whose freedom, innovation, and critical thinking have driven your nation to a position of global prominence—we are prepared to welcome them,” Glucksmann continued. 

    Since President Trump returned to the White House in January, his administration has lowered federal funding for research and aimed to dismiss numerous federal employees working in the health and climate sectors.