Viral ‘adventure’ of Algerian teens crossing to Spain sparks debate on migration crisis

Viral ‘adventure’ of Algerian teens crossing to Spain sparks debate on migration crisis
Spanish coast guard boats carrying migrants arrive at the harbour of Algeciras at the harbour of Algeciras on July 30, 2018. (File/AFP)
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Viral ‘adventure’ of Algerian teens crossing to Spain sparks debate on migration crisis

Viral ‘adventure’ of Algerian teens crossing to Spain sparks debate on migration crisis
  • Resource-rich Algeria has Africa’s third-largest economy but many of its 47 million people wish to emigrate, and their motives are not restricted to poverty

TUNIS: Viral TikTok videos showing seven Algerians teenagers arriving by boat in Spain have sparked debate over rising youth migration in a country where half the population is estimated to be under 30.
The clips, originating in early September, show the teens cutting across the sea in a small recreational boat, with one video drawing 3.4 million views.
Another shows one of the boys, the youngest of whom was said to be just 14, patting the motor as a self-appointed captain shouted: “Spain!“
Many in Algeria have blamed their parents for allowing the trip, while others see an example of an issue long fueled by a lack of opportunities in the country and endemic corruption.
One of the teens, identifying himself on TikTok as “Ouais Belkif,” later went live on the app to field questions from viewers about their voyage.
He recommended using a maritime navigation app called Navionics Boating, saying it could be used offline once the charts were downloaded. “It works both on iPhone and Android,” he said.
He also recounted how they “stole the boat at night and set off” from La Perouse, a town at the eastern edge of the bay of Algiers, and how they stocked gasoline by filling a friend’s moped at a petrol station then secretly syphoning its tank in bottles for the trip.
Stolen boat, or rented? 
“Some wondered what we were up to, but we wouldn’t say anything,” Belkif said.
Yet a Spanish migrant-rescue NGO worker told AFP on condition of anonymity that their plans were not secret.
Their parents had contacted him in advance, he said, in case the teens went missing, adding that the boat theft claims were “a tall tale.”
“The boat was rented out by one of the boys’ father,” he said.
The teens were now at a juvenile center in the custody of Spanish immigration services, the NGO worker said.
None of the parents AFP reached out to agreed to be interviewed. A school teacher who allegedly taught three of the youths also declined to comment.
The youngest of the teens, whom they called “le petit” (the little one), was an aspiring football player on the municipal team, one local told AFP, also on condition of anonymity.
He said that after the boy tried out for Paradou AC — an Algiers club known for its youth academy — but was turned down, he “thought he would have a better chance of playing professionally in Spain.”
Algerian authorities rarely issue statements on irregular migration.
The Defense Ministry’s magazine El Djeich denounced reports as stemming from “malicious media agendas” seeking to “convey a false image of Algeria.”
It called the incident “an isolated act” that did not “reflect the reality of Algerian society,” citing “higher levels of irregular migration” in other countries.
But Europe’s border agency Frontex says irregular crossings on western Mediterranean routes have risen by 22 percent compared to last year, with departures from Algeria accounting for over 90 percent of the 11,791 crossings it detected on those routes this year.
‘Escape and adventure’ 
El Djeich said Algeria had “carried out major projects... for the benefit of ambitious young people who are offered vast future prospects.”
Resource-rich Algeria has Africa’s third-largest economy but many of its 47 million people wish to emigrate, and their motives are not restricted to poverty.
“It’s a mixed phenomenon driven by multiple factors like limited opportunities, political grievances and restricted mobility,” said Ahlam Chemlali, an EU migration researcher at Aalborg University in Copenhagen.
“People feel the changes that were promised never came,” she said.
Yet, “migration can also simply be about autonomy,” Chemlali added. “Younger people just want more of life. They sometimes want thrill, escape and adventure.”
Algerian sociologist Nacer Djabi said another factor was that “younger people now view borders differently.”
As they are “more connected” on social media, “they’re more globalized than older generations,” he said.
Djabi also spoke of political frustrations after Algeria’s quelled 2019 mass protests, saying that youths sought “more social freedoms” in the conservative country.
But he also noted that it was not just young men attempting the crossing, saying “government workers, families and lone girls are doing it, too.”
All seven teenagers were set to resume school this month.


Nepal chooses a 2-year-old girl as new living goddess worshipped by both Hindus and Buddhists

Nepal chooses a 2-year-old girl as new living goddess worshipped by both Hindus and Buddhists
Updated 30 September 2025

Nepal chooses a 2-year-old girl as new living goddess worshipped by both Hindus and Buddhists

Nepal chooses a 2-year-old girl as new living goddess worshipped by both Hindus and Buddhists
  • Aryatara Shakya was chosen as the new Kumari – or virgin goddess – replacing the incumbent who is considered by tradition to become a mere mortal upon reaching puberty
  • The girls are selected between the ages of 2 and 4 and are required to have unblemished skin, hair, eyes and teeth

KATMANDU: A two-year-old girl chosen as Nepal’s new living goddess was carried by family members from their home in an alley in Katmandu to a temple palace Tuesday during the country’s longest and most significant Hindu festival.
Aryatara Shakya, at 2 years and 8 months, was chosen as the new Kumari or “virgin goddess,” replacing the incumbent who is considered by tradition to become a mere mortal upon reaching puberty.
Living goddesses are worshipped by both Hindus and Buddhists. The girls are selected between the ages of 2 and 4 and are required to have unblemished skin, hair, eyes and teeth. They should not be afraid of the dark.
During religious festivals the living goddess is wheeled around on a chariot pulled by devotees. They always wear red, pin up their hair in topknots and a “third eye” is painted on their forehead.
Family, friends and devotees paraded Shakya through the streets of Katmandu on Tuesday, before entering the temple palace which will be her home for several years.
Devotees lined up to touch the girls’ feet with their foreheads, the highest sign of respect among Hindus in the Himalayan nation, and offered her flowers and money. The new Kumari will bless devotees including the president on Thursday.
“She was just my daughter yesterday, but today she is a goddess,” said her father Ananta Shakya.
He said there were already signs she would be the goddess before her birth.
“My wife during pregnancy dreamed that she was a goddess and we knew she was going to be someone very special,” he said.
The former Kumari Trishna Shakya, now aged 11 years old, left from a rear entrance on a palanquin carried by her family and supporters. She became the living goddess in 2017.
Tuesday is the eighth day of Dashain, a 15-day celebration of the victory of good over evil. Offices and schools are closed as people celebrate with their families.
Kumaris live a sequestered life. They have few selected playmates and are allowed outside only a few times a year for festivals.
Former Kumaris can face difficulties adjusting to normal life, learning to do chores and attending regular schools. According to Nepalese folklore, men who marry a former Kumari will die young, and so many girls remain unmarried.
Over the past few years, there have been many changes in tradition and the Kumari is now allowed to receive an education from private tutors inside the temple palace and even have a television set. The government also now offers retired Kumaris a small monthly pension.


Lewis Hamilton says the death of his dog Roscoe is ‘one of the most painful experiences’

Lewis Hamilton says the death of his dog Roscoe is ‘one of the most painful experiences’
Updated 29 September 2025

Lewis Hamilton says the death of his dog Roscoe is ‘one of the most painful experiences’

Lewis Hamilton says the death of his dog Roscoe is ‘one of the most painful experiences’
  • Hamilton missed a tire testing day last week as he cared for Roscoe, who was at the time in a coma following a pneumonia infection
  • The 12-year-old Roscoe has been a regular sight in the F1 paddock for much of Hamilton’s career and has 1.4 million followers on Instagram

LONDON: Lewis Hamilton says his bulldog Roscoe, a fixture in the Formula 1 paddock, has died following days of medical treatment and that putting him to sleep was “one of the most painful experiences” of the seven-time F1 champion’s life.
Hamilton missed a tire testing day last week as he cared for Roscoe, who was at the time in a coma following a pneumonia infection. Roscoe died on Sunday evening, Hamilton posted on Instagram on Monday.
“After four days on life support, fighting with every bit of strength he had, I had to make the hardest decision of my life and say goodbye to Roscoe. He never stopped fighting, right until the very end,” Hamilton said.
The 12-year-old Roscoe, who Hamilton called his “best friend” in a post on X, has been a regular sight in the F1 paddock for much of Hamilton’s career and has 1.4 million followers on Instagram.
“Although I lost Coco (Hamilton’s dog who died in 2020), I have never been faced with putting a dog to sleep before, though I know my mum and many close friends have,” he added.
“It is one of the most painful experiences and I feel a deep connection to everyone who has gone through the loss of a beloved pet. Although it was so hard, having him was one of the most beautiful parts of life, to love so deeply and to be loved in return.”


Latin superstar Bad Bunny will headline the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show

Latin superstar Bad Bunny will headline the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show
Updated 29 September 2025

Latin superstar Bad Bunny will headline the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show

Latin superstar Bad Bunny will headline the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show
  • This comes after his historic Puerto Rico residency this month, which drew over half a million fans
  • Bad Bunny is also leading all nominees at the Latin Grammys in November. With three Grammys and 12 Latin Grammys

LOS ANGELES: Bad Bunny will bring his Latin trap and reggaeton swagger to the NFL’s biggest stage next year: The Grammy winner will headline the Apple Music Super Bowl halftime show in Northern California.
The NFL, Apple Music and Roc Nation announced Sunday that Bad Bunny will lead the halftime festivities from Levi’s Stadium on Feb. 8 in Santa Clara, California.
The Puerto Rican superstar’s selection comes amid another career-defining run: He’s fresh off a historic Puerto Rico residency this month that drew more than half a million fans and is leading all nominees at the Latin Grammys in November. He has become one of the world’s most streamed artists with albums such as “Un Verano Sin Ti,” an all-Spanish-language LP.
Bad Bunny will host “Saturday Night Live” on Oct. 4.
“What I’m feeling goes beyond myself,” Bad Bunny said in a statement. “It’s for those who came before me and ran countless yards so I could come in and score a touchdown… this is for my people, my culture, and our history. Ve y dile a tu abuela, que seremos el HALFTIME SHOW DEL SUPER BOWL.”
Roc Nation founder Jay-Z said in a statement that what Bad Bunny has “done and continues to do for Puerto Rico is truly inspiring. We are honored to have him on the world’s biggest stage.”
The 31-year-old artist born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio has won three Grammys and 12 Latin Grammys. He has become a global ambassador for Latin music, starred in films such as “Bullet Train,” “Caught Stealing” and “Happy Gilmore 2,” and collaborated with top fashion houses. He’ll enter the Latin Grammys as the leading nominee with 12, dethroning producer and songwriter Édgar Barrera.
Roc Nation and Emmy-winning producer Jesse Collins will serve as co-executive producers of the halftime show. Hamish Hamilton will serve as director.
“We know his dynamic performances, creative vision, and deep connection with fans will deliver the kind of unforgettable experience we’ve come to expect from this iconic cultural moment,” said Jon Barker, SVP of Global Event Production for the NFL.
Last year, Kendrick Lamar shined with guest SZA in New Orleans, setting the record for the most-watched Super Bowl halftime show with 133.5 million viewers. His performance surpassed the audience for Michael Jackson’s 1993 show.
“His music has not only broken records but has elevated Latin music to the center of pop-culture and we are thrilled to once again partner with the NFL and Roc Nation to deliver this historic performance to millions of fans worldwide,” said Oliver Schusser, the vice president of Apple Music and Beats. “We know this show will be unforgettable.”


Tails of the city: Paris rats find unlikely political ally

Tails of the city: Paris rats find unlikely political ally
Updated 29 September 2025

Tails of the city: Paris rats find unlikely political ally

Tails of the city: Paris rats find unlikely political ally

PARIS: It has black button eyes and long, thin whiskers that tremble when it looks around curiously.
Unlike most rats, this one has a name, Plume, and gets to enjoy the rare privilege of wandering around Paris on the shoulder of its owner, a local politician.
Gregory Moreau, a Paris district deputy mayor, is on a mission to reconcile residents with the capital’s population of rats which, it is said, outnumber the inner city’s two million human residents by a big margin.
“Hello, have you ever seen a rat?,” Moreau asked an unsuspecting woman carrying two shopping bags around a market in Belleville, a bustling eastern Parisian neighborhood. “Look what I’m carrying on my shoulder.”
The woman eyed the rodent skeptically, then broke out in a smile. “Is that Ratatouille?,” she asked, a reference to the titular character of the Disney animated film about a rat that can cook.
Myths and tales about rats have been part of Paris folklore for centuries, giving the rodents an overwhelmingly unfavorable rap.
“Rats have a bad image because they spread the plague in the 14th century,” said Moreau, who is a member of the PA animal rights party and a qualified physics theorist.
But these days, he said, the role of rats in the transmission of illnesses is negligible, except perhaps for leptospirosis, a bacterial infection transmitted from animals to humans that occurs mostly in the countryside.
Moreau never tires of campaigning, including by distributing leaflets with pictures of cute-looking rats in front of the Eiffel Tower, and by urging passers-by to recognize the usefulness of the rodents.

‘Fantasy world’ 

“They eat about 100 tons of waste in Paris every day,” he said, thus preventing the city’s sewer system from clogging up.
When challenged about complaints of too many rats in playgrounds and parks, Moreau acknowledges a need for rodent control.
But, he says, there are gentler methods than traditional rat poison, which he calls both cruel and ultimately inefficient because rodents become immune to its toxicity and often learn to avoid the bait in the first place.
Moreau said it makes more sense to avoid leaving food waste in the streets, which is a problem in Paris, especially around fast-food outlets.
“If the rats don’t find food they don’t multiply as much,” he said.
Predictably, the rat-friendly deputy mayor has encountered opposition, most ferociously from Geoffroy Boulard, district mayor in a chic western neighborhood of Paris.
Boulard has been viewed as the capital’s top rodent-hater ever since local paper “Le Parisien” published a picture of him holding four dead rats dangling by their tails.
Boulard’s anti-rat credentials even earned him an invitation to last year’s inaugural edition of the National Urban Rat Summit in New York.
“Anyone claiming that we should co-exist with rats lives in a fantasy world,” Boulard said.
Any let-up in the fight would “threaten public health,” said Boulard, who has installed traps in his district that attract rats with food before killing them via an app-controlled mechanism.
The traps, costing 800 euros ($940) each, kill about 800 rats per year — only a tiny part of the rat population.
But Boulard says fewer reports of rat sightings from concerned citizens on a designated website suggest that his approach is working.


Popular Egyptian ‘strong man’ goes for another jaw-dropping challenge: Pulling a ship with his teeth

Popular Egyptian ‘strong man’ goes for another jaw-dropping challenge: Pulling a ship with his teeth
Updated 29 September 2025

Popular Egyptian ‘strong man’ goes for another jaw-dropping challenge: Pulling a ship with his teeth

Popular Egyptian ‘strong man’ goes for another jaw-dropping challenge: Pulling a ship with his teeth
  • Ashraf Mahrous, also known by his nickname Kabonga, was recognized by Guinness in June 2021, for pulling a 15,730-kg truck with his teeth
  • In February 2024, the international franchise also recognized him for cracking and eating 11 raw eggs in 30 seconds
  • Mahrous, 6 feet 3 inches tall and weighing 155 kilograms (341 pounds), hopes someday to pull a plane using only his eyelid muscles

HURGHADA, Egypt: With nothing but grit, muscle and an iron jaw, a hugely popular Egyptian wrestler geared up for an extraordinary challenge Saturday: pulling a 700-ton ship across the water with a rope held only by his teeth.
“Today, I have come to break the world record,” Ashraf Mahrous said in an interview in Egypt’s Red Sea resort of Hurghada after the challenge.
It was no easy task but Ashraf Mahrous, also known by his nickname Kabonga, has dazzled before with his astonishing strength. Earlier this year, he pulled a train. He has also singlehandedly pulled a locomotive and four years ago, a truck.
With each achievement, his popularity has soared — children run after him in the streets, where he’s known simply as “strong man.”
With the ship pull, Mahrous, a 44-year-old native of the port city of Ismalia, hopes to get yet another recognition from the Guinness World Records.

 

A triumph by the Red Sea
The scene was set Saturday at the shore in Hurghada. Mahrous first pulled a 700-ton ship, and to affirm his challenge he pulled two ships weighing approximately 1,150 tons together.
“I pulled them both, thanks to God, to prove to my friends and the whole world that God blessed me by being the strongest man in the world,” Mahrous said.
He said the current Guinness World Record is a 614-ton ship set in 2018.
Mahrous said he will send videos and photos of his attempt to Guinness World Records to be evaluated.
In preparation for the feat, Mahrous followed a protein- and iron-rich diet, consuming at least a dozen eggs, two whole chickens, and 5 kilograms (11 pounds) of fish every day — all while training for two hours, three times a day.
It wasn’t his first ship pull. Six years ago, he tried for two hours before he managed to pull a 4,000-ton ship in the water, a rope strapped to his shoulders, for about 30 meters. The event was caught on video.
″I grunted and yelled as I pulled the ship, and I spoke to it, saying ‘It’s either me or you today,’” he told The Associated Press recently at his local gym in Cairo, where he trains daily.
Mahrous believes that speaking with the object he pulls beforehand helps him establish a connection and is key to his success. “It’s important for me to treat the object that I will pull as part of my body that moves along with my heart beat,” he said.
 

Egyptian wrestler Ashraf Mahrous pulls a 700-ton ship across the water with a rope held only by his teeth at the marina of the Red Sea resort of Hurghada, Egypt, on Sept. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

An extraordinary child
Mahrous, 190 centimeters (6 feet 3 inches) tall and weighing 155 kilograms (341 pounds), said his strength emerged early.
As a child, he would carry his friends for fun and haul heavy loads, several gas cylinders at once on a wheelbarrow. He was 9 when his father lost his job as a contractor in Iraq and after that, Mahrous began knocking on doors, offering to lift heavy items for some cash.
Once, he accidentally broke a friend’s arm when he tried to pull him as they played. He helped people move bricks, sandbags and other heavy materials — and he was fast. He loved sports and trained in kung fu, kickboxing and even established a wrestling team in Cairo.
It was only when his friends saw him easily flip giant tires 10 times in a row in a deserted courtyard at their gym and push a car using only a finger that they encouraged him to go for a world record.
“I was inspired by people who broke records and felt like they are no better than me,” he said. Now he’s less fearful of injuries and more concerned about failing to accomplish a pull.
 

Egyptian wrestler Ashraf Mahrous celebrates after he manages to pull a 700-ton ship across the water with a rope held only by his teeth at the marina of the Red Sea resort of Hurghada, Egypt, on Sept. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

Past recognitions
In March, he was formally recognized by Guinness World Records for the heaviest rail pull: He pulled a train weighing 279 tons with a rope held by his teeth for a distance of nearly 10 meters (33 feet). At the time, he received two other certificates, for the heaviest locomotive pull and for the fastest 100-meter road vehicle pull.
Mahrous, who is also president of the Egyptian Federation for Professional Wrestlers, was previously recognized by Guinness in June 2021, for pulling a 15,730-kilogram truck with his teeth. And in February 2024, the international franchise recognized him for cracking and eating 11 raw eggs in 30 seconds.
He wears a mouthguard during pulling events but says he has no concerns about his teeth. Instead of going to a dentist, he uses a miswak — a traditional teeth-cleaning twig rich in anti-bacterial compounds that help prevent decay.
He says he takes no supplements but eats, sleeps and works out at least twice every day.
His ambitions are far from over. Next, he plans to send a request to the Egyptian presidency for permission to pull a 263,000-ton submarine.
He also hopes someday to pull a plane using only his eyelid muscles.