Bangladesh detains Hasina era ex-election chief

Bangladesh detains Hasina era ex-election chief
Police officers escort KM Nurul Huda, center, Bangladesh’s former chief election commissioner, to a court in Dhaka on Monday. (AFP)
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Updated 23 June 2025

Bangladesh detains Hasina era ex-election chief

Bangladesh detains Hasina era ex-election chief
  • KM Nurul Huda is accused of rigging past polls in favor of former leader

DHAKA: A Bangladesh court on Monday remanded in custody the former elections chief for his alleged role in rigging the vote in favor of now-ousted autocrat Sheikh Hasina.

KM Nurul Huda, 77, was ordered to be detained for four days while questioning continues, a day after a mob who smashed into his home and assaulted him eventually handed him to the police.

On Sunday, the powerful Bangladesh Nationalist Party filed a case against Huda and other former election commissioners it accuses of rigging past polls in favor of Hasina, whose 15 years in power ended in an mass uprising in August 2024.

Interim leader Mohammed Yunus has said elections will be held in early April 2026 — the first in the South Asian nation of around 170 million people since the student-led revolt ousted Hasina.

Police put a helmet on Huda while taking him to the court for protection.

Yunus’s government warned last month that political power struggles risked jeopardizing gains that have been made, saying that holding elections by mid-2026 would give them time to overhaul democratic institutions.

Hasina’s rule saw widespread human rights abuses and her government was accused of politicizing courts and the civil service, as well as staging lopsided elections.

Hasina, 77, remains in self-imposed exile in India, where she fled after she was ousted last year.

She has defied orders to return to Dhaka to face charges amounting to crimes against humanity. Her trial in absentia continues.


Russia attacks Ukraine’s power grid as Moscow worries over US Tomahawk missiles

Russia attacks Ukraine’s power grid as Moscow worries over US Tomahawk missiles
Updated 13 sec ago

Russia attacks Ukraine’s power grid as Moscow worries over US Tomahawk missiles

Russia attacks Ukraine’s power grid as Moscow worries over US Tomahawk missiles
  • Kyiv regional governor said two employees of Ukraine’s largest private energy company were wounded in the strikes
  • Zelenskyy said Russia had launched “more than 3,100 drones, 92 missiles, and around 1,360 glide bombs” over the past week

Russia attacked Ukraine’s power grid overnight, part of an ongoing campaign to cripple Ukrainian energy infrastructure before winter, and expressed “extreme concern” over the US potentially providing Tomahawk cruise missiles to Ukraine.
Kyiv regional Gov. Mykola Kalashnyk said two employees of Ukraine’s largest private energy company DTEK were wounded in Russian strikes on a substation. Ukraine’s Energy Ministry said that infrastructure was also targeted in the regions of Donetsk, Odesa and Chernihiv.
“Russia continues its aerial terror against our cities and communities, intensifying strikes on our energy infrastructure,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky wrote on X, noting that Russia had launched “more than 3,100 drones, 92 missiles, and around 1,360 glide bombs” over the past week.
Zelensky called for tighter secondary sanctions on buyers of Russian oil. “Sanctions, tariffs, and joint actions against the buyers of Russian oil — those who finance this war — must all remain on the table,” he wrote, adding he had a “very productive” phone call with US President Donald Trump, in which they discussed strengthening Ukraine’s “air defense, resilience, and long-range capabilities,” along with “details related to the energy sector.”
Their discussion followed an earlier conversation on Saturday, Zelensky said, during which the leaders agreed on Sunday’s topics.
In an interview with Fox News Channel’s “The Sunday Briefing” after his call with Trump, Zelensky was asked whether Trump had approved the Tomahawks.
“We work on it,” he said. “And I’m waiting for president to yes. Of course we count on such decisions, but we will see. We will see.”
Zelensky said Friday that he was in talks with US officials about the possible provision of various long-range precision strike weapons, including Tomahawks and more ATACMS tactical ballistic missiles.
Trump, who has been frustrated by Russia in his efforts to end the war, said last week that he has “sort of made a decision” on whether to send Tomahawks to Ukraine, without elaborating. A senior Ukrainian delegation is set to visit the US this week.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said in remarks published Sunday that “the topic of Tomahawks is of extreme concern.”
“Now is really a very dramatic moment in terms of the fact that tensions are escalating from all sides,” he told Russian state television reporter Pavel Zarubin.
Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, also said in comments released Sunday that he doubts the US will provide Ukraine with Tomahawk cruise missiles.
“I think we need to calm down in this regard. Our friend Donald … sometimes he takes a more forceful approach, and then, his tactic is to let go a little and step back. Therefore, we shouldn’t take this literally, as if it’s going to fly tomorrow,” Lukashenko told Zarubin, who posted them on his Telegram channel on Sunday.
Ukraine’s energy sector has been a key battleground since Russia launched its all-out invasion more than three years ago.
The latest attacks on Ukraine’s energy grid came after Russian drone and missile strikes wounded at least 20 people in Kyiv, damaged residential buildings and caused blackouts across the country Friday, which Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko described as “one of the largest concentrated strikes” against Ukraine’s energy infrastructure.
Each year, Russia has tried to cripple the Ukrainian power grid before the bitter winter season, apparently hoping to erode public morale. Winter temperatures run from late October through March, with January and February the coldest months.
Ukraine’s air force said Saturday that its air defenses intercepted or jammed 103 of 118 Russian drones launched against Ukraine overnight, while Russia’s Defense Ministry said it had shot down 32 Ukrainian drones over Russian territory.


Feeling hopeless in custody, many drop claims to remain in the US, leave voluntarily

Feeling hopeless in custody, many drop claims to remain in the US, leave voluntarily
Updated 10 min 35 sec ago

Feeling hopeless in custody, many drop claims to remain in the US, leave voluntarily

Feeling hopeless in custody, many drop claims to remain in the US, leave voluntarily
  • His case is an exemplar of the impact of the Trump administration’s aggressive efforts to deport millions of migrants on an accelerated timetable, casting aside years of procedure and legal process in favor of expedient results

SEATTLE: Ramón Rodriguez Vazquez was a farmworker for 16 years in southeast Washington state, where he and his wife of 40 years raised four children and 10 grandchildren. The 62-year-old was a part of a tight-knit community and never committed a crime.
On Feb. 5, immigration officers who came to his house looking for someone else took him into custody. He was denied bond, despite letters of support from friends, family, his employer and a physician who said the family needed him.
He was sent to a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center in Tacoma, Washington, where his health rapidly declined in part because he was not always provided with his prescription medication for several medical conditions, including high blood pressure. Then there was the emotional toll of being unable to care for his family or sick granddaughter. Overwhelmed by it all, he finally gave up.
At an appearance with an immigration judge, he asked to leave without a formal deportation mark on his record. The judge granted his request and he moved back to Mexico, alone.
His case is an exemplar of the impact of the Trump administration’s aggressive efforts to deport millions of migrants on an accelerated timetable, casting aside years of procedure and legal process in favor of expedient results.
Similar dramas are playing out at immigration courts across the country, accelerating since early July, when ICE began opposing bond for anyone detained regardless of their circumstances.
“He was the head of the house, everything — the one who took care of everything,” said Gloria Guizar, 58, Rodriguez’s wife. “Being separated from the family has been so hard. Even though our kids are grown, and we’ve got grandkids, everybody misses him.”
Leaving the country was unthinkable before he was held in a jail cell. The deportation process broke him.
‘Self deport or we will deport you’
It is impossible to know how many people left the US voluntarily since President Donald Trump took office in January because many leave without telling authorities. But Trump and his allies are counting on “self-deportation,” the idea that life can be made unbearable enough to make people leave voluntarily.
The Justice Department’s Executive Office for Immigration Review, which oversees immigration courts, said judges granted “voluntary departure” in 15,241 cases in the 12-month period that ended Sept. 30, allowing them to leave without a formal deportation mark on their record or bar to re-entry. That compares with 8,663 voluntary departures for the previous fiscal year.
ICE said it carried out 319,980 deportations from Oct. 1, 2024 to Sept. 20. Customs and Border Protection declined to disclose its number and directed the question to the Department of Homeland Security.
Secretary Kristi Noem said in August that 1.6 million people have left the country voluntarily or involuntarily since Trump took office. The department cited a study by the Center for Immigration Studies, a group that advocates for immigration restrictions.
Michelle Mittelstadt, spokesperson for the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank, said 1.6 million is an over-inflated number that misuses the Census Bureau data.
The administration is offering $1,000 to people who leave voluntarily using the CBP Home app. For those who don’t, there is a looming threat of being sent to a third country like Eswatini, Rwanda, South Sudan or Uganda,.
Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the voluntary departures show that the administration’s strategy is working, and is keeping the country safe.
“Ramped-up immigration enforcement targeting the worst of the worst is removing more and more criminal illegal aliens off our streets every day and is sending a clear message to anyone else in this country illegally: Self-deport or we will arrest and deport you,” she said in a statement sent to The Associated Press.
“They treat her like a criminal”
A Colombian woman dropped her asylum claim at a June appearance in a Seattle immigration court, even though she was not in custody.
“Your lawyer says you no longer wish to proceed with your asylum application,” the judge said. “Has anyone offered you money to do this?” he asked. “No, sir,” she replied. Her request was granted.
Her US citizen girlfriend of two years, Arleene Adrono, said she planned to leave the country as well.
“They treat her like a criminal. She’s not a criminal,” Adrono said. “I don’t want to live in a country that does this to people.”
At an immigration court inside the Tacoma detention center, where posters encourage migrants to leave voluntarily or be forcibly deported, a Venezuelan man told Judge Theresa Scala in August that he wanted to leave. The judge granted voluntary departure.
The judge asked another man if he wanted more time to find a lawyer and if he was afraid to return to Mexico. “I want to leave the country,” the man responded.
“The court finds you’ve given up all forms of relief,” Scala said. “You must comply with the government efforts to remove you.”
“His absence has been deeply felt”
Ramón Rodriguez crossed the US border in 2009. His eight siblings who are US citizens lived in California, but he settled Washington state. Grandview, population 11,000, is an agricultural town that grows apples, cherries, wine grapes, asparagus and other fruit and vegetables.
Rodriguez began working for AG Management in 2014. His tax records show he made $13,406 that first year and by 2024, earned $46,599 and paid $4,447 in taxes.
“During his time with us, he has been an essential part of our team, demonstrating dedication, reliability, and a strong work ethic,” his boss wrote in a letter urging a judge to release him from custody. “His skills in harvesting, planting, irrigation, and equipment operation have contributed significantly to our operations, and his absence has been deeply felt.”
His granddaughter suffers from a heart problem, has undergone two surgeries and needs a third. Her mother doesn’t drive so Rodriguez transported the girl to Spokane for care. The child’s pediatrician wrote a letter to the immigration judge encouraging his release, saying without his help, the girl might not get the medical care she needs.
The judge denied his bond request in March. Rodriguez appealed and became the lead plaintiff in a federal lawsuit that sought to allow detained immigrants to request and receive bond.
On September 30, a federal judge ruled that denying bond hearings for migrants is unlawful. But Rodriguez won’t benefit from the ruling. He’s gone now and is unlikely to come back.

 


In minutes, Mexico’s rains swept away homes and people

In minutes, Mexico’s rains swept away homes and people
Updated 17 min 52 sec ago

In minutes, Mexico’s rains swept away homes and people

In minutes, Mexico’s rains swept away homes and people
  • The disaster zone is the Sierra Madre Oriental, a mountain range that runs parallel to Mexico’s east coast
  • Huauchinango, with 100,000 residents, is one of the largest communities in the disaster zone

HUAUCHINANGO: Standing near the lifeless body of her sister, Rosalia Ortega is grateful to have found her in the river of mud that suddenly swept away her house as torrential rains pounded this Mexican mountain town.
At least 44 people have died since Thursday as floods wreaked a trail of destruction in the hardest-hit states of Hidalgo, Puebla, Queretaro and Veracruz.
“We’re sad, but at least we’re going to give her a Christian burial,” Ortega, 76, told AFP in the town of Huauchinango, in Puebla, a state east of Mexico City that according to official reports saw nine deaths and substantial damage.
The disaster zone is the Sierra Madre Oriental, a mountain range that runs parallel to Mexico’s east coast and is dotted with villages.
On Thursday, well after dark, a rain-swollen mountain river overflowed its banks in Huauchinango and within minutes robbed local residents of their homes and, in some cases, their loved ones.
That’s what happened to Maria Salas, a 49-year-old cook who is sheltering from the rain with an umbrella, watching two soldiers guarding the entrance to her neighborhood.
Salas lost five relatives when their house collapsed, and her own home was destroyed by a landslide.
“I can’t get my belongings, I can’t sleep there,” she said. “I have nothing.”
The grieving families are struggling to pay for funerals and, if anything is left over, to recuperate something from lost or damaged homes.
Huauchinango, with 100,000 residents, is one of the largest communities in the disaster zone and one of a very few that could be accessed Saturday.

Rivers of mud

The floodwaters swept away everything in their path, forming heavy rivers of mud that also rendered uncollapsed homes unusable.
“It was knee-deep,” says Petra Rodriguez, a 40-year-old domestic worker whose house was surrounded by water on both sides.
She and her husband and two sons managed to escape, holding hands so that if the water took one of them, “it would take us all,” she said.
In another part of town, teacher Karina Galicia, 49, showed AFP her mud-damaged, musty house. She and her family were able to run out; had they not, “we would have been buried,” she said.
In less damaged houses, neighbors are trying to remove water with plastic bottles, brooms and shovels.
Adriana Vazquez, 48, climbed a rough path strewn with stones and mud to see if anything was left of a relative’s house.
What she found was a jumble of wood and tin houses levelled by a landslide. Soldiers were using a backhoe to remove a pile of debris from the street.
Her relative “answered the telephone,” Vasquez said, but she could hardly hear anything and hopes that was due to a poor connection.
About 100 small communities are incommunicado due to road closures and power outages that have made telephone contact and travel difficult.
Mexico has been hit by particularly heavy rains throughout 2025, with a rainfall record set in the capital, Mexico City.
Meteorologist Isidro Cano told AFP that the intense rainfall since Thursday was caused by a seasonal shift and cloud formation as warm, humid air from the Gulf of Mexico rises to the mountaintops.


Bangladesh launches typhoid vaccination drive to combat drug-resistant threat

Bangladesh launches typhoid vaccination drive to combat drug-resistant threat
Updated 12 October 2025

Bangladesh launches typhoid vaccination drive to combat drug-resistant threat

Bangladesh launches typhoid vaccination drive to combat drug-resistant threat
  • Bangladeshi health workers are vaccinating children through schools, community clinics and door-to-door visits, with special attention to urban slums and remote rural areas

DHAKA: Bangladesh launched a nationwide vaccination campaign on Sunday to protect millions of children from typhoid, a deadly and increasingly drug-resistant disease that poses a growing public health threat.
The month-long campaign aims to immunize around 50 million children aged between nine months and 15 years with a single dose of the Typhoid Conjugate Vaccine. Approved and pre-qualified by the World Health Organization, the vaccine provides protection for up to five years and is being administered free under the government’s Expanded Programme on Immunization.
The vaccination push comes amid rising concerns over drug-resistant typhoid strains across South Asia. Since 2016, Pakistan has battled an outbreak resistant to nearly all antibiotics except one.
Bangladeshi health workers are vaccinating children through schools, community clinics and door-to-door visits, with special attention to urban slums and remote rural areas. The drive will continue until November 13, after which TCV will be included in Bangladesh’s routine immunization schedule.
Typhoid is caused by Salmonella Typhi bacteria and spreads through contaminated food and water. It causes fever, nausea, stomach pains and pink spots on the chest, and in severe cases can lead to complications in the gut and head that can be fatal.
Bangladeshi researchers have recently detected ceftriaxone-resistant strains — a troubling sign, as ceftriaxone remains one of the few effective treatments available.
Health experts warn that without urgent preventive measures, resistant strains could make typhoid much harder to treat. Supported by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, the TCV campaign is expected to reduce infections and slow the spread of resistance.

 


Tokyo governor to visit , three other Arab countries

Tokyo Governor KOIKE Yuriko will visit the Middle East for a week at the end of October, Tokyo Metropolitan Government said.
Tokyo Governor KOIKE Yuriko will visit the Middle East for a week at the end of October, Tokyo Metropolitan Government said.
Updated 12 October 2025

Tokyo governor to visit , three other Arab countries

Tokyo Governor KOIKE Yuriko will visit the Middle East for a week at the end of October, Tokyo Metropolitan Government said.
  • From October 25 to November 2, Governor Koike will visit Dubai in the United Arab Emirates, Riyadh and Jeddah in , Kuwait, and Giza in Egypt

TOKYO: Tokyo Governor KOIKE Yuriko will visit the Middle East for a week at the end of October, Tokyo Metropolitan Government has announced.

From October 25 to November 2, Governor Koike will visit Dubai in the United Arab Emirates, Riyadh and Jeddah in , Kuwait, and Giza in Egypt. She will attend international conferences, give lectures, and exchange opinions at the invitation of various governments and non-profit foundations. 

“Through this trip, she will aim to enhance Tokyo’s presence as a leading city in the international community and will also contribute knowledge gained from global inter-city collaboration to the administration of Tokyo,” the Metropolitan government said in a statement.

In Riyadh, Koike will attend the 9th Future Investment Initiative (FII9) – sometimes referred to as the “Davos Forum in the Desert” – at the invitation of the Future Investment Strategy Institute. She is planning to introduce Tokyo’s efforts to become an innovation and financial hub in Asia.

She will also work with TAKAHASHI Yoichi, a leading Tokyo manga artist and creator of “Captain Tsubasa,” to promote the appeal of Japan’s entertainment and creative fields, which are attracting global attention. 

She will also visit Jeddah, where she will exchange views with government officials in the region to explore the potential for inter-city collaboration, including economic and industrial development.

In Dubai, she will attend the 2025 Asia-Pacific City Summit and Mayors Forum (APCS2025) at the invitation of the UAE government. She will deliver a keynote speech at the conference, stressing the role of cities in global society and the importance of inter-city collaboration.

In Kuwait, at the invitation of the government, the delegation from Tokyo will tour the Kuwaiti capital region and hold discussions aimed at resolving common challenges in areas such as industry, startups, and women’s empowerment. 

This year marks the 35th anniversary of the friendship partnership between Tokyo and Cairo Governorate, and Koike will attend the opening ceremony of the Grand Egyptian Museum in Giza at the invitation of the Egyptian government.