Japan’s emperor begins a weeklong visit to Mongolia that will honor POWs

Japan’s emperor begins a weeklong visit to Mongolia that will honor POWs
Japanese Emperor Naruhito alongside Empress Masako arrive at the Chinggis Khaan International Airport near Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. (AP)
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Updated 06 July 2025

Japan’s emperor begins a weeklong visit to Mongolia that will honor POWs

Japan’s emperor begins a weeklong visit to Mongolia that will honor POWs
  • The emperor said it’s part of his effort at atonement and remembrance of the tragedy of war fought in the name of his grandfather, Emperor Hirohito

TOKYO: Japan’s Emperor Naruhito began a weeklong visit to Mongolia on Sunday during which he plans to honor thousands of Japanese prisoners of World War II who were held under harsh conditions in the country.

Naruhito’s visit marks the 80th anniversary of the end of WWII. In recent years, he has toured some of the places where the bloodiest battles and bombings occurred, including Iwo Jima, Okinawa and Hiroshima. The emperor has said it’s part of his effort at atonement and remembrance of the tragedy of war fought in the name of his grandfather, Emperor Hirohito.

While the vast majority of Japanese soldiers were taken to Siberia, around 12,000 to 14,000 ended up in Mongolia, which was fighting alongside the Soviets against Japan.

Most of the POWs were put to hard labor and construction work for the Mongolian government’s headquarters, a state university and a theater that are still preserved in the capital Ulaanbaatar. The prisoners toiled under harsh conditions and scarce food. Japanese records show about 1,700 of them died in Mongolia.

“As we mark the 80th anniversary of the end of the war this year, we should never forget the pain and sorrow of the people,” Naruhito said last week. “I believe it is important to not forget those who died, deepen understanding of the wartime past and to nurture the peace-loving heart.”

Naruhito had previously visited Mongolia as crown prince in 2007.


23 miners rescued after 43 hours trapped in Colombian gold mine

23 miners rescued after 43 hours trapped in Colombian gold mine
Updated 8 sec ago

23 miners rescued after 43 hours trapped in Colombian gold mine

23 miners rescued after 43 hours trapped in Colombian gold mine

BOGOTA, Colombia: Twenty-three workers were rescued Wednesday after spending 43 hours trapped in a collapsed underground gold mine in northern Colombia. The miners were met with applause as they emerged from the La Reliquia mine, located in the Antioquia department.
Colombia’s National Mining Agency reported that the main entrance to the mine had collapsed on Monday due to a “geomechanical failure.” A video released by the ANM shows the first rescued miners walking out under their own power, using a rope to climb the steep entrance to the shaft. Their health status was not immediately disclosed.
The miners’ families had been waiting for hours and celebrated their rescue with tears and applause.
The mine is on land belonging to Canada’s Aris Mining Corp. but is operated by a local mining cooperative. Aris Mining said earlier that it had provided the trapped workers with food, water and ventilation during the rescue efforts. The mine has about 60 employees and accounts for a “small portion” of the company’s total gold production in the area.
Aris runs two mining concessions in Colombia, which last year produced about 6.6 tons of gold. Colombia’s gold production climbed to 67 tons per year in 2024, supported by high prices for the precious metal.
A report published in 2023 by Colombia’s Human Rights Ombudsman said that more than 80 percent of Colombia’s gold is mined by informal operators with no licenses, including artisanal miners but also members of rebel groups.
The precarious conditions at some gold mines in Colombia have led to fatal accidents. On Saturday the bodies of seven miners were found at an illegal mine in Cauca province. Rescue teams took nine days to reach the trapped workers.


Trump will sign TikTok executive order on Thursday, source says

Trump will sign TikTok executive order on Thursday, source says
Updated 1 min 49 sec ago

Trump will sign TikTok executive order on Thursday, source says

Trump will sign TikTok executive order on Thursday, source says

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump will sign an executive order on Thursday that declares a deal being negotiated by the White House to sell TikTok’s US operations will meet requirements set out in a 2024 law, a White House source with knowledge of the matter said.
Earlier this week, the White House said Trump will declare that a deal to divest TikTok’s US operations from its Chinese owner ByteDance will meet requirements set out in a law passed by Congress that bans the short video app unless its Chinese owner is ended.
Trump has credited TikTok, which has 170 million US users, with helping him win re-election last year and has 15 million followers on his personal account. The White House also launched an official TikTok account last month.
Trump has delayed enforcement of the law through mid-December amid efforts to extract TikTok’s US assets from the global platform, line up American investors and ensure that the new ownership qualifies as a full divestiture needed under the 2024 law.
A further extension is expected in the executive order on Thursday.


Spain’s PM says he will send warship to protect Gaza aid flotilla

Spain’s PM says he will send warship to protect Gaza aid flotilla
Updated 43 min 58 sec ago

Spain’s PM says he will send warship to protect Gaza aid flotilla

Spain’s PM says he will send warship to protect Gaza aid flotilla
  • The Global Sumud Flotilla is using about 50 civilian boats to try to break Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza
  • Spain will dispatch a naval vessel from Cartagena to assist the flotilla in emergency

Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on Wednesday he will join Italy in sending a military warship to protect an international flotilla seeking to deliver aid to Gaza after it was attacked by drones off Greece.
Sanchez told a press conference in New York where he has been attending the UN General Assembly that the citizens of 45 countries were on board to deliver food to the population of Gaza and express solidarity with their suffering.
“The government of Spain insists that international law be respected and that the right of our citizens should be respected to sail through the Mediterranean in safe conditions,” he said.
“Tomorrow we will dispatch a naval vessel from Cartagena with all necessary resources in case it was necessary to assist the flotilla and carry out a rescue operation.”
The Global Sumud Flotilla is using about 50 civilian boats to try to break Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza, with many lawyers and activists on board, including Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg.
The vessels were attacked by 12 drones in international waters 30 nautical miles (56 km) off the Greek island of Gavdos, said Marikaiti Stasinou, a spokesperson for March to Gaza Greece, which is part of the flotilla.
Thunberg told Reuters on Monday that they had drones flying over them each night.
“This mission is about Gaza, it isn’t about us. And no risks that we could take could even come close to the risks the Palestinians are facing every day,” Thunberg said in a video call from the ship.


More Afghans arrive in Germany after limbo in Pakistan

More Afghans arrive in Germany after limbo in Pakistan
Updated 24 September 2025

More Afghans arrive in Germany after limbo in Pakistan

More Afghans arrive in Germany after limbo in Pakistan
  • Afghans were accepted under refugee scheme set up by previous German government
  • Scheme, however, was frozen after conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz took office in May

Berlin: A new group of Afghans who had been promised refuge in Germany arrived in the country on Wednesday, the latest to escape months of limbo in Pakistan.

An interior ministry spokesman told AFP that 28 Afghans landed at Hanover airport in the early afternoon.

The Afghans were accepted under a refugee scheme set up by the previous German government which was frozen after conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz took office in May.

Since then around 2,000 Afghans have been stuck in Pakistan, where they have been threatened with deportation back to Afghanistan.

Some of those affected have mounted successful legal challenges against the German government, forcing the authorities to allow them entry.

A first group of 47 Afghans who won their cases arrived in Germany earlier this month, and those who came on Wednesday had also been successful in the courts.

According to the initiative Airbridge Kabul, set up to help those affected, the latest group — five men, 10 women and 13 children — arrived on a commercial flight from Islamabad.

However, around 250 Afghans who had been waiting to go to Germany have been deported from Pakistan in recent weeks.

A foreign ministry spokesman said on Wednesday that none of them has as yet been able to return to Pakistan.

The German scheme was aimed at Afghans who had worked with German forces in Afghanistan or who were deemed at particular risk from the Taliban, for example journalists, lawyers and human rights activists.

Since Merz’s conservative-led coalition government took power in May, it has put the process on ice as part of a wider push to toughen immigration policy.

Thousands of Afghans waiting in Pakistan to resettle in the United States and several other Western countries are facing a similar predicament as sentiment toward refugees hardens.

Pakistan has been mounting its own crackdown on Afghans without residence permits since 2023, with officials insisting the country cannot be a “transit camp” for those waiting to resettle in the West.


Famed ‘sponge cities’ Chinese architect dead in Brazil plane crash

Famed ‘sponge cities’ Chinese architect dead in Brazil plane crash
Updated 24 September 2025

Famed ‘sponge cities’ Chinese architect dead in Brazil plane crash

Famed ‘sponge cities’ Chinese architect dead in Brazil plane crash
  • The 62-year-old was considered a leading figure in sustainable urban planning
  • The award-winning Yu was in Brazil for the recording of a documentary about his work

SAO PAULO: Chinese architect Kongjian Yu, known for his so-called nature-mimicking “sponge cities,” has died in a small plane crash in Brazil with two filmmakers documenting his work, police said Wednesday.
The 62-year-old was considered a leading figure in sustainable urban planning; his “sponge cities” replacing concrete surfaces with natural features that better absorb water in flood situations.
The award-winning Yu was in Brazil for the recording of a documentary about his work when he perished with two filmmakers and the pilot in a plane crash late Tuesday in Brazil’s Mato Grosso do Sul state.
Police said the cause of the accident was not known.
The other three deceased were documentary makers Luiz Fernando Feres da Cunha Ferraz and Rubens Crispim Jr, as well as the pilot, who owned the aircraft.
Brazil’s Council of Architecture and Urbanism, which recently hosted Yu as a speaker at an international conference, said his “sponge cities” concept has been applied in more than a thousand projects in 250 cities.
“His contribution has influenced environmental public policies in China and other countries,” it said in a statement expressing condolences to the architect’s family, friends and colleagues.