Category: Global

  • Angry passenger sets airport sofa on fire after deportation

    Angry passenger sets airport sofa on fire after deportation

    In an unusual incident at Beirut’s Rafic Hariri International Airport, a passenger set a sofa on fire in protest against his deportation.

    According to foreign media reports, the fire broke out in the General Security deportation office within the airport. Civil Defence personnel responded immediately and managed to extinguish the flames before the situation escalated.

    Reports suggest that the passenger, who had arrived from abroad, was denied entry and ordered to be deported. Enraged by the decision, he ignited a sofa inside the airport premises. The fire brigade quickly took control of the situation, and no flight schedules were disrupted as a result of the incident.

    Caretaker Minister of Public Works and Transport, Dr Ali Hamieh, along with the Director General of Civil Aviation, Fadi Al-Hassan, visited the airport to assess the situation.

    Preliminary investigations indicate that the passenger was deported for violation of rules, including smoking on the plane. Upon being sent to the deportation office, he set fire to a piece of furniture in an act of defiance against the authorities’ decision.

  • You can be arrested for proposing on Valentine’s Day here…

    You can be arrested for proposing on Valentine’s Day here…

    February 14 marks Valentine’s Day worldwide to celebrate love, but in some countries, any attempt to celebrate the occasion, especially a marriage proposal, can lead to imprisonment.

    A number of Muslims believe that this tradition conflicts with Islamic values and is not viewed favourably in conservative circles, mostly in Islamic countries.

    According to foreign media, the Malaysian government has officially banned Valentine’s Day celebrations.

    The government’s position is that “Valentine’s Day is ruining young people and pushing them towards moral degradation.”

    In Malaysia, proposing to someone in a public place on February 14 can lead to arrest.

    Previously, in 2010, the Iranian government also officially banned the celebration of February 14. According to the authorities,  “It is a Western culture and promotes illicit relationships.”

    In Iran, an unmarried couple seen together on February 14 can be sent to jail.

    Similarly, in 2017, after a citizen filed a petition against celebrating the occasion, the Islamabad High Court banned it at the official level and in public places.  

    Other countries where Valentine’s Day is not officially recognised include Saudi Arabia and Uzbekistan.

  • Elon Musk says working to shut USAID down

    Elon Musk says working to shut USAID down

    Elon Musk has called for the closure of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) as two senior security officials were reportedly placed on leave for blocking his team’s access to classified materials.

    Musk, the billionaire owner of Tesla and SpaceX who has become the president’s most powerful backer, called USAID a “criminal organisation” after reports that his team was blocked from accessing restricted areas at the agency’s Washington, DC headquarters.

    “Time for it to die,” Musk posted on his social media platform X.


    President Trump claimed the agency was “run by radical lunatics” and said he was considering its future.

    The assault on the agency tasked with humanitarian relief overseas marks a significant new front in Trump’s move to give unprecedented power to Musk to upend government departments and counter what the pair consider wasteful official spending and overreach.


    “USAID is a criminal organization,” Musk wrote on his X platform, replying to a video alleging USAID involvement in “rogue CIA work.”


    In a subsequent post, Musk doubled down and, without giving evidence, asked his 215 million X followers, “Did you know that USAID, using YOUR tax dollars, funded bioweapon research, including Covid-19, that killed millions of people?”


    He did not elaborate on the allegations, which officials in the previous administration linked to a Russian disinformation campaign.


    USAID has “been run by a bunch of radical lunatics, and we’re getting them out… and then we’ll make a decision (on its future),” Trump said Sunday without elaborating.


    He underscored his support for the billionaire, telling reporters Sunday night he felt Musk was “doing a good job.”


    Trump initially froze all aid spending for three months. Though he subsequently issued waivers for food and other humanitarian aid to continue, aid workers say uncertainty reigns with the future of the organization as an independent agency far from assured.


    USAID, an independent agency established by an act of Congress, manages a budget of $42.8 billion meant for humanitarian relief and development assistance around the world.


    A senior official from a US-based organization feared the prioritization of “emergency” assistance was part of a broader plan in which Washington would discontinue funds for anything else.


    There have been reports Trump wants to roll USAID into the State Department. His team did not respond to AFP’s calls for comment.


    During a talk hosted on his X platform at midnight Washington time (0500 GMT Monday), Musk said Trump “agreed that we should shut it (USAID) down.”

    ‘Unelected billionaire’

    The X session — attended by businessman Vivek Ramaswamy and two Republican senators — was on Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), tasked with slashing federal spending.


    Without providing details, Musk said “tremendous progress” had been made.


    “If we can get that deficit in half, from two trillion (dollars) to half, and we can get the economic growth to match… that means there will be no inflation,” Musk said, adding he would be focusing on “fraud and waste.”


    DOGE was founded as part of the so-called “executive office of the president,” as a temporary 18-month organization under the repurposed United States Digital Service.


    It does not enjoy full status as a government department, which would require Congress’s approval, and Musk is neither federal employee nor a government official. It is unclear to whom DOGE is accountable.


    CNN reported that two senior security officials at USAID were put on forced leave after they barred staff from Musk’s DOGE from accessing classified documents.


    PBS also reported DOGE staff attempted to gain access to “secure spaces.”


    Trump’s senior aide Steven Cheung posted on X that the PBS report was “not even remotely true at all.”


    USAID’s account on X had been disabled, AFP confirmed, and its website was still offline.


    Democratic Senator Chris Murphy has criticized the “total destruction” of the agency.


    “The people elected Donald Trump to be President — not Elon Musk,” Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wrote on X.


    “Having an unelected billionaire, with his own foreign debts and motives, raiding US classified information is a grave threat to national security.”

  • Taliban govt-run corporation takes over luxury Kabul Serena hotel

    Taliban govt-run corporation takes over luxury Kabul Serena hotel

    Kabul (AFP) – Afghanistan’s Taliban government took over management of Kabul’s famed Serena hotel on Saturday, a hotel statement said, a luxury property targeted by Taliban attacks during their insurgency.

    The Kabul Serena Hotel was run for nearly 20 years by the Aga Khan Fund for Economic Development in the Afghan capital and was popular with business travellers and foreign guests.

    “Kabul Serena Hotel shall be closing its operations effective February 01, 2025,” a statement from Serena on Friday night said.

    Hotel operations are now handled by the Hotel State Owned Corporation (HSOC), the statement added.

    “Since opening in 2005, Kabul Serena Hotel has been an integral part of Kabul’s social fabric, an iconic presence in the city, and a symbol of our unwavering commitment to the people of Afghanistan,” the statement said.

    Taliban government spokesmen did not immediately respond to requests for comment and AFP journalists were not allowed onto the property on Saturday morning.

    On Saturday, the hotel’s website only showed the statement about the handover and Kabul has been removed from the Serena brand’s list of destinations.

    The Switzerland-based organisation also did not respond to AFP requests for comment.

    The Serena has been the target of multiple deadly attacks by the Taliban before they swept to power in 2021, ousting the foreign-backed government.

    In 2014, just weeks before a presidential election, four teenage gunmen with pistols hidden in their socks managed to penetrate several layers of security, killing nine people, including an AFP journalist and members of his family.

    In 2008, a suicide bombing left six dead, in an attack blamed on the current Taliban interior minister, Sirajuddin Haqqani.

    In 2021, the United States and Britain warned their citizens to avoid hotels in Afghanistan, singling out the Serena, underlining the shaky security situation in the aftermath of the Taliban takeover.

    In the years since their return to power, however, the Taliban authorities have worked to attract tourism to Afghanistan, touting a return to security.

    Calls for aid not to be politicised

    Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities on Wednesday said humanitarian aid should not be politicised, saying around 30 non-governmental groups had suspended activities in the country since the United States froze virtually all foreign assistance.

    The United States is the largest aid donor in dollar terms globally and in Afghanistan, one of the poorest countries, which is reliant on foreign aid in multiple sectors, including emergency food assistance and healthcare.

    After taking office on January 20, US President Donald Trump ordered a 90-day pause to reassess the country’s global assistance funding.

     

    “Aid groups or countries should not use humanitarian aid for political gains,” economy ministry spokesman Abdul Rahman Habib told AFP.

    “Around 31 local and foreign NGOs funded by USAID (US Agency for International Development) have seen operations supported by America suspended,” he said, adding that operations funded by other donors were ongoing.

  • Hamas frees two Israeli hostages as next ceasefire swap begins

    Hamas frees two Israeli hostages as next ceasefire swap begins

    Hamas on Saturday released two out of three Israeli hostages in the fourth exchange of the ceasefire deal, ahead of the expected release of 183 Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails.

    Ofer Kalderon and Yarden Bibas were paraded on a stage before being released to the Red Cross in Khan Yunis in southern Gaza, AFP journalists reported, while Keith Siegel is set to be freed in a similar ceremony at Gaza City’s port in the north.

    Israel’s military later confirmed that Bibas and Kalderon were back on Israeli territory.

    After holding them hostage for more than 15 months, Gaza began releasing captives on January 19, as the first phase of a ceasefire with Israel took effect.

     
     

    Hamas have so far handed over 18 hostages to the International Committee of the Red Cross in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, many of them women and minors.

    Later Saturday, Israel will free 183 prisoners, the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club advocacy group said.

    “The updated number of prisoners to be released tomorrow is 183,” the Club’s spokeswoman Amani Sarahneh said Friday, after previously announcing that 90 prisoners would be freed.

    During their October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, after which Israel began genocide in Gaza, American-Israeli Siegel from the Kfar Aza kibbutz community, and Bibas and French-Israeli Kalderon from kibbutz Nir Oz were taken hostage by Hamas.

    They took a total of 251 people hostage that day. Of those, 76 remain in Gaza, including at least 34 the military says are dead.

    Those seized include Bibas’s wife and two children, whom Hamas has declared dead, although Israeli officials have not confirmed that.

    The two Bibas boys — Kfir, the youngest hostage whose second birthday was earlier this month, and his older brother Ariel whose fifth birthday was in August — have become symbols of the hostages’ ordeal.

    The children were taken along with their mother, Shiri. Hamas says an Israeli air strike in November 2023 killed all three.

    “Our Yarden is supposed to return tomorrow and we are so excited but Shiri and the children still haven’t returned,” the Bibas family said on Instagram Friday.

    “We have such mixed emotions and we are facing extremely complex days.”

    “Hamas, where are the Bibas babies?” Israel’s foreign ministry posted on X.

    “483 days have passed. Where are they?”

     

    Crowds mostly absent

    Ahead of both exchanges in Khan Yunis Gaza and Gaza City, scores of masked Hamas fighters stood sentry, apparently to control onlookers.

    In contrast to Thursday’s frenzied exchange which drew Israeli condemnation, large crowds were mostly absent.

    Green Hamas and Palestinian flags flew at the Gaza port in a strong breeze.

    Ranks of heavily armed Hamas fighters held portraits of the group’s slain leaders, including military chief Mohammed Deif, accused by Israel of being a mastermind of the October 7 attack and whose death was confirmed on Thursday.

    The arrangements for hostage handovers in Gaza have sometimes been chaotic, particularly Thursday’s release in Khan Yunis.

    Israel briefly delayed its prisoner release on Thursday in protest, and the ICRC urged all parties to improve security.

     

    When Saturday’s hostage release is completed, Gaza’s key Rafah border crossing with Egypt is expected to reopen, a Hamas official and a source with knowledge of discussions told AFP.

    “The mediators informed Hamas of Israel’s approval to open Rafah crossing tomorrow, Saturday, after the completion of the fourth batch of prisoner exchange,” the Hamas official said.

    Rafah was a vital entry point for aid into Gaza before the Israeli military seized the Palestinian side of the crossing in May.

    The EU’s top diplomat Kaja Kallas said on Friday the bloc has deployed a monitoring mission at the crossing “to support Palestinian border personnel and allow the transfer of individuals out of Gaza, including those who need medical care”.

    ‘Where’s Dad?’

    On Thursday, Israeli authorities released 110 inmates from Ofer prison, including high-profile former commander Zakaria Zubeidi, 49, who received a hero’s welcome in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

    On Friday, he called for “all our Palestinian people” to be freed from Israeli jails.

    “The situation of the prisoners is very difficult and we hope for their urgent release,” Zubeidi told AFP.

    Also freed was Hussein Nasser, who received little attention from the crowd but was at the centre of his daughter’s world.

    “Where’s Dad?” Raghda Nasser, 21, asked tearfully as she moved through the crowd, an AFP correspondent reported.

    Her mother was pregnant with her when he was jailed 22 years ago.

    “I just visited him behind the glass in Israeli prisons. I cannot express my feelings,” Raghda said.

    The fragile ceasefire’s 42-day first phase hinges on the release of a total of 33 hostages in exchange for around 1,900 people, mostly Palestinians, in Israeli jails.

    Negotiations for a second phase of the deal are set to start on Monday, according to a timeline provided by an Israeli official.

    This phase is expected to cover the release of the remaining captives and to include discussions on a more permanent end to the war.

  • France detainee escapes during museum outing

    France detainee escapes during museum outing

    A detainee this week took advantage of a trip to a Paris museum to escape, a French prosecutor’s office said Friday, adding it had objected to him taking part in the first place.

    The 28-year-old, who had been placed in detention for violence, managed to run off at the busy Gare du Nord train and metro station on Wednesday during a day out to visit the Musee de l’Homme anthropological museum in Paris, it said.

    It was not immediately clear when he had been originally arrested or what he was doing at the train station.

    Prison guard union FO Justice said he had been on his way back to his detention centre in the Paris suburb of Villepinte at the time.

    He and five other inmates had been accompanied by five probation officers and a detention centre guard, who ran after the fugitive but failed to catch him, it said.

    The man is still on the run.

  • Aid experts dismiss Trump’s ‘Gaza condoms’ spending claim

    Aid experts dismiss Trump’s ‘Gaza condoms’ spending claim

    US aid experts on Wednesday rejected Donald Trump’s claim that the United States had spent $50 million to fund condoms for the genocide-battered Gaza Strip, which the president has sought to make a poster child for wasteful spending.

    “We identified and stopped $50 million being sent to Gaza to buy condoms for Hamas,” Trump told reporters, referring to the group that has ruled the Palestinian territory for nearly two decades.

    “And do you know what’s happened to them? They’ve used them as a method of making bombs.”

    Trump offered no evidence to back his claim, which prompted both vehement rejections and ridicule from relief agencies and experts.

    The United States sent no condoms to any part of the Middle East since 2019, according to a detailed report last year from the US Agency for International Development (USAID).

    Its only family planning contribution to the region was a small shipment of injectable and oral contraceptives worth $45,680 that was sent to Jordan in 2023, the report said.

    International Medical Corps, a humanitarian aid organisation, said it received about $68 million from USAID for its Gaza operations since October 7, 2023 — the day Hamas launched a major attack on Israel –- which paid for two field hospitals providing lifesaving care.

    “No US government funding was used to procure or distribute condoms,” the organisation said in a statement.

    ‘Dangerous’

    On Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt claimed the $50 million expenditure was discovered in Trump’s first week by the budget office and the new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) led by tech billionaire Elon Musk.

    She called it a “preposterous waste of taxpayer money.”

    “The White House claim that DOGE uncovered $50 million in funding for condoms in Gaza is quite obviously untrue,” Matthew Kavanagh, director of Georgetown University’s Center for Global Health Policy and Politics, told AFP.

    “It does not even make sense.”

    A back-of-the-envelope calculation suggests $50 million would buy over a billion condoms for Gaza’s adult population.

    “What’s going is here is NOT a billion condoms for Gaza,” Jeremy Konyndyk, president of Refugees International, wrote on X, the Musk-owned site formerly called Twitter.

    “What’s going on is that the bros at DOGE apparently can’t read (government) spreadsheets.”

    Jesse Watters, host of a conservative-leaning talk show on Fox News, said that Hamas were using the non-existent US shipments to make “condom bombs,” floating explosives-laden balloons into Israel — a claim echoed by Trump.

    Soon after returning to office for a second term on January 20, Trump ordered a 90-day freeze in foreign assistance.

    He has vowed a review to ensure that aid conforms with policies of his administration, which opposes abortion, transgender rights and diversity programs.

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in a memo that the United States was freezing nearly all aid disbursement except for emergency food and military aid to Egypt and Israel.

    “What seems clear is the administration is taking a large grant to support healthcare infrastructure in Gaza and mischaracterising it in order to justify the dangerous halt to lifesaving aid programs around the world,” Kavanagh said.

  • ‘She texted me’: Heartbreaking story of Pakistani couple breaks internet after wife dies in US crash

    ‘She texted me’: Heartbreaking story of Pakistani couple breaks internet after wife dies in US crash

    A 26-year-old Pakistani woman was among the 64 passengers on American Airlines Flight 5342 that crashed on Wednesday night following a collision with a U.S. military Black Hawk training helicopter.



    While speaking to reporters, Asra Hussain Raza’s husband, 25-year-old Hamaad Raza, shared that the last message he received was a text that said, “We are landing in 20 minutes.” His replies, however, were never sent. It was while Hamaad was waiting at the airport to receive her that the plane collided with the helicopter. 

     

    Upon hearing the tragic news, he prayed that she is rescued from the river, in hopes that maybe she made it alive.

     

    The crash took place minutes before the airplane was set to land at Reagan National Airport near Washington DC, on Wednesday night when it collided with an Army helicopter in midair, after which both aircraft plunged into the Potomac River.

     

    In an interview with Reuters, his father, Dr. Hashim Raza, revealed that the couple met at Indiana University Bloomington. Asra had studied corporate finance and was a “straight-A student”.

     

    She then completed her master’s degree in public health from Columbia University and began a job with a consulting group in Washington DC. Her goal, as per the father-in-law, was to work for the government to improve public health and help people,

     

    Hashim Raza would also push her to open a restaurant as she was “a great cook” and made Indian, Italian, and Chinese food.

     

    Asra was on her way back from Wichita, Kansas, where she would travelled to every month to assist in improving the hospital’s operations when the collision took place only minutes before her landing. 

     

    “She was an extremely caring person,” he said.”

     

    Hamaad Raza lives in the state of Missouri and has reportedly been married to Asra for two years now. He presently works as an accountant at Ernst & Young.

     

    Dr Hashim is originally from Karachi, Pakistan, and graduated from Dow University. He is now among Missouri’s most distinguished doctors and is currently working at the Missouri Baptist Medical Center.

     

    Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif conveyed his sorrow over the loss of lives, expressing his condolences to US President Donald Trump and the American people on X (formerly Twitter).

     

    “Deeply saddened by the tragic news of a mid-air accident between a passenger plane and a military helicopter in Washington DC. Our thoughts and prayers are with US President Donald Trump and the American people at this difficult time,” he wrote.

    Black box recovery

    Investigators on Thursday recovered the black boxes from a passenger plane that collided mid-air with a military helicopter over Washington’s Potomac River, killing all 67 people, as rescuers pulled bodies from the freezing water.

    US President Donald Trump launched a political attack, blaming diversity and inclusion policies championed by his Democratic predecessors for causing the incident.

    Trump’s politicization of the tragedy came as the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said it had recovered the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder from the Bombardier jet operated by an American Airlines subsidiary that collided with an Army Black Hawk helicopter late Wednesday.

    “The recorders are at the NTSB labs for evaluation,” the agency said in a statement to AFP.

    According to a New York Times report, staffing was thin in the control tower at Reagan National Airport, where the airliner was about to land when the collision occurred.

    One controller, rather than the usual two, was handling both plane and helicopter traffic, the Times quoted a preliminary Federal Aviation Administration report as saying.

    A fireball erupted in the night sky and both aircraft tumbled into the icy Potomac, leaving rescue crews to search for victims in the dark and cold.

    Over 40 bodies had been recovered as of Thursday evening, according to US media reports.

    The passenger plane was carrying 64 people and the Black Hawk had three aboard.

    Trump politicizes crash

    The collision — the first major crash in the United States since 2009 — occurred as American Eagle Flight 5342 from Wichita, Kansas came in to land.

    Reagan National is a major airport located a short distance from downtown Washington, the White House and the Pentagon. The airspace is extremely busy, with civilian and military aircraft a constant presence.

    Just 24 hours before the collision, another plane coming in to land at Reagan National had to make a second approach after a helicopter appeared near its flight path, The Washington Post and CNN reported, citing an audio recording from air traffic control.

  • Iraqi man who burned Holy Quran killed in Sweden

    Iraqi man who burned Holy Quran killed in Sweden

    An Iraqi refugee in Sweden who repeatedly desecrated the Holy Quran in 2023, sparking outrage in Muslim countries, has been shot dead in the south of Stockholm, investigators said Thursday, with Sweden’s prime minister suggesting “a foreign power” might have been involved.

    Prosecutor Rasmus Oman confirmed that an investigation has been opened into the murder of 38-year-old Salwan Momika,  leading to five arrests. 

    “We’re in the very early stages… there’s a lot of information gathering. Five people have been detained suspected of involvement in the crime,” Oman said.

    Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson told reporters at a press conference: “I can guarantee that the security services are deeply involved in this because there is obviously a risk that there is also a link to foreign power.”

    A Stockholm court was set to rule on Thursday whether Momika, a Christian Iraqi, was guilty of inciting ethnic hatred but said it has postponed its ruling until February 3 as a result of his death.

    Police responded late Wednesday to a call about a shooting in an apartment building in the city of Sodertalje, where Momika lived.

    They found a man who had been shot and who later died in hospital, a police statement said.

    Several media outlets reported that the shooting had been broadcast live on social media, videos of which are circulating all over the internet. 

    The newspaper Aftonbladet said that the attacker was able to gain entry into the building through the roof.

    In August, Momika and fellow protester Salwan Najem were charged with “agitation” against Muslims on four occasions in the summer of 2023.

    According to the charge sheet, the two desecrated the holy book, including burning it, while making derogatory remarks about Muslims — on one occasion outside a Stockholm mosque.

    “I’m next on the list,” Najem wrote on X after Momika’s death, telling Swedish media that he had received death threats.

    Relations between Sweden and several Middle Eastern countries were strained by the pair’s activities. 

    Iraqi protesters stormed the Swedish embassy in Baghdad twice in July 2023, starting fires within the compound on the second occasion.

    In August of that year, Sweden’s intelligence service Sapo raised its threat level to four on a scale of five after the Quran burnings had made the country a “prioritised target”.

    The Swedish government condemned the desecrations while repeating the Western narrative of constitutionally protecting freedom of speech and assembly laws in the country. 


    ‘Don’t want to harm’ Sweden

    Speaking to Aftonbladet in April 2023, Momika had said he never intended thr desecration to cause any trouble in Sweden, where he had lived since 2018.

    “I don’t want to harm this country that received me and preserved my dignity,” he said.

    In October 2023, the Swedish Migration Agency revoked his residency permit, citing false information in his original application, but he was granted a temporary one as it said there was an “impediment to enforcement” of a deportation to Iraq.

    The month before, Iraq had requested his extradition over one of the burnings.

    In March 2024, Momika left Sweden to seek asylum in Norway, telling AFP that Sweden’s freedom of expression and protection of human rights was “a big lie”.

    Norway deported him back to Sweden several weeks later.

    Before arriving in Sweden, Momika’s social media accounts tell a story of an erratic political career in Iraq.

    It included links to a Christian armed faction during the fight against the Islamic State, the creation of an obscure Syriac political party, rivalries with influential Christian paramilitaries and a brief arrest.

    He also joined the massive anti-corruption protests that gripped Iraq in late 2019, which were met with a crackdown that killed over 600 people nationwide.

    In October 2023, a Swedish court convicted another man of inciting ethnic hatred with a 2020 Quran burning, the first time the country’s court system had tried anyone on charges of desecrating Muslim’s holy book.

    Prosecutors have previously said that under Swedish law, the burning of the Quran can be seen as a critique of the book and religion and thus be protected under free speech.

    However, depending on the context and statements made at the time, it can also be considered “agitation against an ethnic group”.

  • Tired of alcoholic husbands, two Indian women marry each other

    Tired of alcoholic husbands, two Indian women marry each other

    Two Indian women from Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh, have tied the knot after becoming fed up with their alcoholic and abusive husbands.

    The two women named Kavita and Gunja, left their homes and married each other in a temple in Deoria, it has emerged. 


    Indian media reports suggest that the two women first connected with each other on Instagram, and their friendship grew as they kept in touch for six years. Tired of the abuse they had to suffer at the hands of their husbands, who also happened to be alcoholics, Kavita and Gunja decided to elope and get married. 


    While performing the Hindu marriage rituals, Gunja took on the role of the groom and put vermillion (sindoor) on Kavita’s forehead. They also performed other wedding rituals, including exchanging garlands and performing the seven vows commonly known as pheras.


    While talking to the media, one woman said that her husband was an alcoholic, and she left him because he used to assault her daily. She has four children, all of them girls. She wanted to return to her parents’ house after enduring repeated violence but then she decided to marry her Instagram friend. 


    The other woman told the reporters that her husband was also a drunkard and used to accuse her of infidelity. 


    “We were tormented by our husbands’ drinking and abusive behaviour. This pushed us to choose a life of peace and love. We have decided to live in Gorakhpur as a couple and work hard to sustain ourselves,” Gunja asserted in her interaction with the media.


    Kavita and Gunja also stressed that they are determined to live together and would not let anyone separate them. As for their future plans, they said that they currently do not have a permanent home. However, they will rent a place to live in Gorakhpur.