Doha Forum launches significant new global governance initiative at Tokyo Conference

Doha Forum launches significant new global governance initiative at Tokyo Conference
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Mubarak Ajlan Al-Kuwari, Executive Director of the Doha Forum, emphasized in his opening remarks that multilateral institutions are facing increasing pressure, leading to a more fragmented and uncertain global governance structure. (ANJ)
Doha Forum launches significant new global governance initiative at Tokyo Conference
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This event, in collaboration with the JIIA, launched a new joint research initiative focused on the evolving landscape of global governance. (ANJ)
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Updated 12 sec ago

Doha Forum launches significant new global governance initiative at Tokyo Conference

Doha Forum launches significant new global governance initiative at Tokyo Conference
  • This event, in collaboration with JIIA, launched a new joint research initiative
  • Over the next year, the Doha initiative aims to unite leading scholars and experts

TOKYO: The Doha Forum Tokyo Conference took place in Tokyo on Wednesday and explored the engaging theme of “Prospects for International Order and Global Governance: A World Without Navigators.”

This event, in collaboration with the Japan Institute of International Affairs (JIIA), launched a new joint research initiative focused on the evolving landscape of global governance.

Mubarak Ajlan Al-Kuwari, Executive Director of the Doha Forum, emphasized in his opening remarks that multilateral institutions are facing increasing pressure, leading to a more fragmented and uncertain global governance structure.

“How can we ensure fairness, stability, and accountability in a multipolar world?” he asked. “What principles and partnerships can guide us through this evolving landscape? These questions are central to a new strategy launched today by the Doha Forum and JIIA.”

Over the next year, the Doha initiative aims to unite leading scholars and experts to focus on the role of middle powers in restoring trust, fostering cooperation, and strengthening the rules-based international system.

Panelists and speakers at the conference on Wednesday included Professor Ken Endo and Professor Satoshi Ikeuchi, both from the University of Tokyo; Professor Maiko Ichihara from Hitotsubashi University; and Professor Naoko Eto from the University.

Additionally, Professor Abdullah Baabood, Chair of the State of Qatar for Islamic Area Studies at the Faculty of International Research and Education, also participated as a speaker.

Jaber Jaralla Al-Marri, the Ambassador of the State of Qatar to Japan, attended the event with around 100 participants from the Japanese business, academic, diplomatic, and expert communities.

Panelists discussed current affairs in the Middle East and the role of effective players, such as Qatar and Japan, as the world witnesses the declining power of major global players, including the United States of America.

They highlighted the unique contributions of Qatar and Japan in this changing landscape, from their diplomatic efforts to their economic influence, and the potential for them to shape the future of global governance.


US sends third-country deportees under secrecy to the small African kingdom of Eswatini

Updated 1 min 3 sec ago

US sends third-country deportees under secrecy to the small African kingdom of Eswatini

US sends third-country deportees under secrecy to the small African kingdom of Eswatini
The US has already deported eight men to another African country, South Sudan
McLaughlin said the men sent to Eswatini, who are citizens of Vietnam, Jamaica, Cuba, Yemen and Laos, had arrived on a plane, but didn’t say when or where

CAPE TOWN: The United States sent five men it describes as “barbaric” criminals to the small African nation of Eswatini in an expansion of the Trump administration’s largely secretive third-country deportation program, the US Department of Homeland Security said Tuesday.

The US has already deported eight men to another African country, South Sudan, after the Supreme Court lifted restrictions on sending people to countries where they have no ties. The South Sudanese government has declined to say where those men, also described as violent criminals, are after it took custody of them nearly two weeks ago.

In a late-night post on X, Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the men sent to Eswatini, who are citizens of Vietnam, Jamaica, Cuba, Yemen and Laos, had arrived on a plane, but didn’t say when or where.

She said they were all convicted criminals and “individuals so uniquely barbaric that their home countries refused to take them back.”

The men “have been terrorizing American communities” but were now “off of American soil,” McLaughlin added.

McLaughlin said they had been convicted of crimes including murder and child rape and one was a “confirmed” gang member. Her social media posts included mug shots of the men and what she said were their criminal records. They were not named.

Like in South Sudan, there was no immediate comment from Eswatini authorities over any deal to accept third-country deportees or what would happen to them in that country. Civic groups there raised concerns over the secrecy from a government long accused of clamping down on human rights.

“There has been a notable lack of official communication from the Eswatini government regarding any agreement or understanding with the US to accept these deportees,” Ingiphile Dlamini, a spokesperson for the pro-democracy group SWALIMO, said in a statement sent to The Associated Press. “This opacity makes it difficult for civic society to understand the implications.”

It wasn’t clear if they were being held in a detention center, what their legal status was or what Eswatini’s plans were for the deported men, he said.

An absolute monarchy
Eswatini, previously called Swaziland, is a country of about 1.2 million people between South Africa and Mozambique. It is one of the world’s last remaining absolute monarchies and the last in Africa. King Mswati III has ruled by decree since 1986.

Political parties are effectively banned and pro-democracy groups have said for years that Mswati III has crushed political dissent, sometimes violently. Groups like SWALIMO have called for democratic reforms.

Pro-democracy protests erupted in Eswatini in 2021, when dozens were killed, allegedly by security forces. Eswatini authorities have been accused of conducting political assassinations of pro-democracy activists and imprisoning others.

Because Eswatini is a poor country with a relative lack of resources, it “may face significant strain in accommodating and managing individuals with complex backgrounds, particularly those with serious criminal convictions,” Dlamini said.

While the US administration has hailed deportations as a victory for the safety and security of the American people, Dlamini said his organization wanted to know the plans for the five men sent to Eswatini and “any potential risks to the local population.”

US is seeking more deals
The Trump administration has said it is seeking more deals with African nations to take deportees from the US Leaders from some of the five West African nations who met last week with President Donald Trump at the White House said the issue of migration and their countries possibly taking deportees from the US was discussed.

Some nations have pushed back. Nigeria, which wasn’t part of that White House summit, said it has rejected pressure from the US to take deportees who are citizens of other countries.

The US also has sent hundreds of Venezuelans and others to Costa Rica, El Salvador and Panama, but has identified Africa as a continent where it might find more governments willing to strike deportation agreements.

Rwanda’s foreign minister told the AP last month that talks were underway with the US about a potential agreement to host deported migrants. A British government plan announced in 2022 to deport rejected asylum-seekers to Rwanda was ruled illegal by the UK Supreme Court last year.

‘Not a dumping ground’
The eight men deported by the US to war-torn South Sudan, where they arrived early this month, previously spent weeks at a US military base in nearby Djibouti, located on the northeast border of Ethiopia, as the case over the legality of sending them there played out.

The South Sudanese government has not released details of its agreement with the US to take deportees, nor has it said what will happen to the men. A prominent civil society leader there said South Sudan was “not a dumping ground for criminals.”

Analysts say some African nations might be willing to take third-country deportees in return for more favorable terms from the US in negotiations over tariffs, foreign aid and investment, and restrictions on travel visas.

Philippines appeals for help to rescue nationals trapped in scam hubs

Philippines appeals for help to rescue nationals trapped in scam hubs
Updated 4 min 1 sec ago

Philippines appeals for help to rescue nationals trapped in scam hubs

Philippines appeals for help to rescue nationals trapped in scam hubs
  • More than 200 Filipinos were freed from a compound on Myanmar’s Myawaddy in April
  • Government says nationals ‘still trapped inside different scam centers’ in Southeast Asia

MANILA: The Philippines is appealing to foreign governments for help in rescuing its nationals believed to be trapped in scam hubs across mainland Southeast Asia, the Department of Foreign Affairs said on Wednesday.

For several years, the cyberscam industry has proliferated in Southeast Asia, especially in border areas of Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Thailand.

More than 220,000 people from all over the world — many trafficked to the region — have been working in scam hubs in Cambodia and Myanmar alone, according to UN Office on Drugs and Crime data.

UNODC’s April 2025 report estimates that they generate about $40 billion annually, from romance scams, cryptocurrency fraud, fake investment platforms, online gambling, phishing and impersonation scams.

The presence of Filipinos in these operations came to the spotlight when at least 200 of them were freed in late February and March from a scam center located in an office complex in Myawaddy on Myanmar’s border with Thailand.

It was unclear at the time how many more Philippine nationals remained there, but the Department of Foreign Affairs has been receiving reports of Filipinos “still trapped inside different scam centers” in Southeast Asia.

The DFA said it is working closely with its embassies and consulates in Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia “to persistently devote efforts and resources in extending all possible assistance to our Filipinos in distress, while requesting the authorities of the host countries for their invaluable cooperation.”

The DFA called on overseas-based nationals to help prevent the recruitment of Filipinos into such operations, and urged relatives of victims “to provide verified information on their kin that they believe may be trapped in scam hubs in the vicinity of the Myanmar-Thai border.”

The rescue of Philippine nationals in April helped to shed light on new patterns of their recruitment by scam syndicates.

An investigation by the Philippine Interagency Council Against Trafficking showed that many of them came from the Philippines’ middle class and were often educated individuals — not necessarily unemployed — seeking better opportunities abroad.

The offers usually came through unofficial channels such as social media, advertising roles in call centers, marketing, customer service or chat support — often based in Thailand.

But once they reached Thailand, instead of the jobs they were promised, the victims were transported across the border into the high-security compounds where they were forced to scam people globally.

Their rescue is complicated by the fact that many hubs operate in lawless border zones or semi-autonomous regions controlled by militias, such as Myanmar’s Karen State, limiting diplomatic and law enforcement reach.


Pencak silat, Indonesia’s ancient martial art, gains new footing in UAE

Pencak silat, Indonesia’s ancient martial art, gains new footing in UAE
Updated 13 min 16 sec ago

Pencak silat, Indonesia’s ancient martial art, gains new footing in UAE

Pencak silat, Indonesia’s ancient martial art, gains new footing in UAE
  • Earliest evidence of pencak silat in Indonesia can be traced back 1,300 years 
  • Abu Dhabi hosted 20th World Pencak Silat Championship last December

JAKARTA: Indonesia’s traditional martial art that blends combat and artistic performance, pencak silat, has been gaining popularity in the UAE, which has played host to several international tournaments to promote the discipline worldwide. 

The traditions of pencak silat entered the UNESCO Intangible Heritage List in 2019. While its earliest origins can be traced back to the seventh century, pencak silat has evolved over the centuries, with the term widely used today often credited to Indonesia’s West Java province and Sumatra island.  

The martial art is also popular in neighboring countries like Malaysia, Vietnam, and Singapore, and has been included in the Southeast Asian Games since 1987 and at the 2018 Asian Games hosted by Indonesia. 

In the UAE, there has been a growing interest in pencak silat, with Abu Dhabi hosting the 20th World Pencak Silat Championship and the 5th Junior World Pencak Silat Championship simultaneously last December, marking the first time such tournaments took place in the Middle East.

“These two championships became the largest in pencak silat history, with 57 countries represented and over 1,100 athletes, officials, referees, and judges in attendance,” Muhammad Sadri, chief of the social and cultural affairs department at the Indonesian Embassy in Abu Dhabi and a deputy chairman of the events’ organizing committee, told Arab News. 

“In the context of international relations, pencak silat serves as a powerful tool for soft diplomacy, fostering mutual understanding, cultural exchange, and friendship between nations.”

In recent years, pencak silat gained global traction through rising Indonesian martial artists, such as Iko Uwais and Yayan Ruhian, who performed the tradition in famous film franchises, including “The Raid” and “John Wick.” 

While the Indonesian Embassy in Abu Dhabi has been promoting pencak silat since 2000, its recent rise to international prominence has helped boost its popularity in the UAE. 

Following the global pencak silat tournaments last year, the discipline has since been recognized by the UAE Sports for All Federation. 

“The response from both the UAE government and the public has been overwhelmingly positive. Pencak silat has attracted growing interest not only from the Indonesian diaspora, but also from Emiratis and expatriates of various nationalities who have begun participating in regular training sessions,” Sadri said, referring to weekly pencak silat classes held at the embassy. 

Indonesian authorities see pencak silat as “one of the most unique and meaningful expressions” of Indonesia’s heritage, and a “living embodiment” of the country’s core values of discipline, respect, humility, and strength in harmony.

The UAE “provides an ideal and strategic platform to introduce and celebrate this treasured Indonesian tradition with the world,” Sadri said. 

“By promoting pencak silat in the UAE, the embassy is not only preserving a vital part of Indonesian heritage, but also inspiring youth, strengthening people-to-people connections, and opening up new avenues for collaboration in the fields of sport, education, and cultural diplomacy.”

Beyond its sporting element, pencak silat also covers mental and spiritual aspects, as well as life philosophy, while its techniques range from unarmed skills to others incorporating the use of traditional weapons, such as machete, dagger, and trident. 

It also draws heavily from nature, with many styles taking inspiration from the movements of animals and natural elements, such as the silat harimau, or tiger style, from West Sumatra, which mimics the ferocity and agility of a tiger. 

In its inscription, UNESCO highlighted how the practice strengthens comradeship and maintains social order, while also providing entertainment in traditional ceremonies. 

“Pencak silat is not merely about physical combat — it is about character-building, cultural identity, and human connection. It offers values that transcend borders: discipline, resilience, and harmony,” Sadri said. 

He said the discipline “is not only a reflection of Indonesia’s past, but also a contribution to the future — as a universal platform for peace, empowerment, and international cooperation.”


Sweden jails four men in killing of hip hop star

Sweden jails four men in killing of hip hop star
Updated 13 min 8 sec ago

Sweden jails four men in killing of hip hop star

Sweden jails four men in killing of hip hop star
  • A total of four men were charged over the killing
  • “The shooting was akin to an execution and caused the victim severe suffering,” judge Anne Rapp said

STOCKHOLM: A Swedish court on Wednesday sentenced four men ages 19 to 22 to prison terms for their roles in the killing of a rapper in last year.

Masked 26-year-old rapper C. Gambino — whose real name was Karar Ramadan, and not to be confused with American rapper Childish Gambino — was the victim of a shooting in a parking garage in the city of Gothenburg on June 4, 2024.

A total of four men were charged over the killing, two of which had been charged with “murder or aiding and abetting murder” — but the court could not definitely establish that the two had fired the killing shots.

“The shooting was akin to an execution and caused the victim severe suffering,” judge Anne Rapp said in a statement.

“Furthermore, the crime had its origins in a conflict between criminal networks and was committed using firearms in a public place, which is a particularly aggravating factor,” Rapp added.

The investigation had not shown that the rapper himself was active in a criminal network, but people in his entourage were reportedly linked to these networks, said the court.

One of the four men, aged 22, was sentenced to life imprisonment for aiding and abetting murder because he had participated in the planning and preparation of the murder, notably by providing the car used by the perpetrators.

The car was later burned and completely destroyed.

A 20-year-old man was found guilty of both aiding and abetting murder and aggravated harboring of a criminal was sentenced to 15 years and six months in prison.

A third man, aged 21, was sentenced for aiding and abetting murder to 12 years and six months in prison.

A fourth man, aged 19, was handed a much lesser 10-month prison term for protecting a criminal and vandalism.

C. Gambino was named hip hop artist of the year at the 2024 Swedish recording industry’s Grammis Awards the month before his murder.

Another award-winning Swedish rapper, Einar, was shot and killed in Stockholm in a gang conflict in October 2021.

The Scandinavian country has struggled to contain surging gang violence in recent years, with shootings and bombings now weekly occurrences.


Russia seizes $150 mn cocaine haul hidden in banana shipment

Russia seizes $150 mn cocaine haul hidden in banana shipment
Updated 21 min 43 sec ago

Russia seizes $150 mn cocaine haul hidden in banana shipment

Russia seizes $150 mn cocaine haul hidden in banana shipment
  • Cocaine smuggling into Russia has surged over the past two years
  • The cocaine packages were discovered in a “hidden cavity” under the bananas

MOSCOW: Russia said Wednesday it had seized 820 kilograms (1,800 pounds) of cocaine hidden under a shipment of bananas, calling it its largest bust of drugs from Latin America this year.

Cocaine smuggling into Russia has surged over the past two years, according to Russia’s Izvestia newspaper.

Drug traffickers are increasingly looking to the country as a transit hub, in part because the Ukrainian port of Odesa has become inaccessible due to Russia’s offensive, the paper said.

Russia’s customs service, working jointly with the FSB security service, said it had uncovered a batch worth “more than 12 billion rubles ($153 million)” stashed in banana containers.

The cocaine packages — disguised in briquettes bearing the label of a French luxury fashion brand — were discovered in a “hidden cavity” under the bananas, it added.

It carried out the bust after a tip-off from “foreign colleagues about the intention of a South American criminal group to organize a smuggling channel for cocaine supplies to Russia.”

It said an investigation had been opened into large-scale drug trafficking, a charge that in Russia carries maximum penalty of life imprisonment.

Russia has a zero-tolerance policy toward drug use and smuggling, handing heavy sentences to those convicted of trafficking small amounts of narcotics — including foreigners.