Australia chides Beijing over South China Sea mid-air incident

Australia chides Beijing over South China Sea mid-air incident
Above, a Royal Australian Navy P-8 Poseidon flies near Scarborough Shoal of the South China Sea on Sept. 3, 2025. (AFP)
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Australia chides Beijing over South China Sea mid-air incident

Australia chides Beijing over South China Sea mid-air incident
  • The Australian Poseidon was flying a surveillance patrol over the South China Sea on Sunday when it was approached by a Chinese fighter jet

SYDNEY: Australia on Monday rebuked Beijing for “unsafe” military conduct, accusing a Chinese warplane of dropping flares near an Australian surveillance plane over the South China Sea.
The Australian Poseidon was flying a surveillance patrol over the South China Sea on Sunday when it was approached by a Chinese fighter jet, Australia’s defense department said.
The Chinese jet released flares in “close proximity” to the Australian aircraft, the defense department added, endangering the crew onboard.
It was the latest in a string of episodes between China and Australia in the increasingly contested airspace and shipping lanes of Asia.
“Having reviewed the incident very carefully, we’ve deemed this to be both unsafe and unprofessional,” Defense Minister Richard Marles told reporters.
Marles said Australia had raised the encounter with Chinese diplomats in both Canberra and Beijing.
Australia would continue to conduct freedom-of-navigation exercises in the region, Marles added.
A Chinese fighter jet was accused of intercepting an Australian Seahawk helicopter in international airspace last year, dropping flares across its flight path.
In 2023, a Chinese destroyer was accused of bombarding submerged Australian navy divers with sonar pulses in waters off Japan, causing minor injuries.
China claims almost all of the South China Sea, despite an international ruling in 2016 concluding this has no legal basis.


UN weather agency urges action to close gaps in disaster warning systems

Updated 10 sec ago

UN weather agency urges action to close gaps in disaster warning systems

UN weather agency urges action to close gaps in disaster warning systems
GENEVA: The World Meteorological Organization urged action to close gaps in a global system of surveillance meant to protect people from extreme weather, saying on Monday that such early warnings were particularly needed in developing countries.
Convening a special meeting in Geneva, the WMO said that in the past five decades, weather, water and climate-related hazards have killed more than 2 million people, with 90 percent of those deaths occurring in developing countries.
WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo has made boosting early-warning systems a priority but still only 55 percent of countries have built up the surveillance capacity, data from the UN weather agency shows.
“Many millions of people lack protection against dangerous weather which is inflicting an increasing toll on economic assets and vital infrastructure,” the WMO said in a statement.
The number of countries using early-warning systems has doubled in three years to 119. But a WMO assessment of 62 countries showed half of them possess only basic capacity and 16 percent have less than basic capacity.
However, the WMO is seeing progress in Africa, including Mozambique and Ethiopia, with more countries having functioning websites and issuing standardized alerts.
“Early warning means early action. Our goal is to not only warn the world it is to empower it,” Saulo said in a opening speech to the conference in Geneva.
Deaths from disasters are six times higher and the number of people affected is four times higher in countries with limited multi-hazard early warning systems, the WMO has found.
The head of Switzerland’s Federal Department of Home Affairs, Elisabeth Baume-Schneider, told delegates at the conference that no country or region was spared from the impact of climate change and extreme weather.
She pointed to the example of how the regular monitoring of a mountain glacier allowed scientists to warn about its imminent collapse in May 2025, allowing for the evacuation of the Swiss village of Blatten.
“Permafrost melt will inevitably lead to more glacier collapses and rockfalls,” making early warning systems vital, she said.

Landslide victory of Turk Cypriot moderate offers fresh hope for talks

Landslide victory of Turk Cypriot moderate offers fresh hope for talks
Updated 23 min 36 sec ago

Landslide victory of Turk Cypriot moderate offers fresh hope for talks

Landslide victory of Turk Cypriot moderate offers fresh hope for talks
  • Center-left Tufan Erhurman won a commanding 62.7 percent of Turkish Cypriot votes in Sunday’s election, final results on Monday showed, after campaigning on a platform of promising to re-invigorate stalled peace negotiations with Greek Cypriots

NICOSIA: A landslide victory for a moderate candidate in a Turkish Cypriot presidential election offers a glimmer of hope in breaking an eight-year impasse in peace talks on the ethnically split island, diplomats and analysts said.
Center-left Tufan Erhurman won a commanding 62.7 percent of Turkish Cypriot votes in Sunday’s election, final results on Monday showed, after campaigning on a platform of promising to re-invigorate stalled peace negotiations with Greek Cypriots.
“The mood music among everyone I have spoken to is hopeful, optimistic and pleasantly surprised,” one western diplomat said.
Defeated incumbent Ersin Tatar, whose two-state solution demand was widely opposed by Greek Cypriots, trailed with 35 percent of the vote.
Greek Cypriot leader Nikos Christodoulides congratulated Erhurman, saying he hoped to meet soon.
“The key question is whether Christodoulides can respond positively to this huge shift,” said analyst Fiona Mullen at Cypriot-based consultancy Sapienta Economics.
Cyprus was split in a Turkish invasion in 1974 after a brief Greek-inspired coup, and relations between ethnic Greek and Turkish Cypriots have been strained since peace talks collapsed in 2017.
In recent years, Turkish Cypriots have opened a war-abandoned Greek Cypriot resort town to tourists, while Greek Cypriots have intensified legal action against developers building on properties belonging to displaced Greek Cypriots in the north — measures that have dented the enclave’s construction sector.
Outgoing leader Tatar had lobbied strongly for international recognition of the breakaway Turkish Cypriot state, but was unable to lift its isolation.
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, who had supported Tatar’s two-state policy, said the election result showed the democratic maturity of Turkish Cypriots.
But at least one of his allies, the far-right Devlet Bahceli of the Nationalist Movement Party, said the result was unacceptable and called for north Cyprus to cede to Turkiye.
The size of Erhurman’s victory suggested “people were fed up,” Mullen said.
“My hunch is that voters saw that the more antagonistic Tatar approach was getting them nowhere,” she said.


French police hunt Louvre jewel thieves

French police hunt Louvre jewel thieves
Updated 17 min 53 sec ago

French police hunt Louvre jewel thieves

French police hunt Louvre jewel thieves
  • The heist reignited a row over a lack of security in France’s museums

PARIS: The hunt was on Monday for the band of thieves who stole eight priceless royal pieces of jewelry from the Louvre Museum in the heart of Paris in broad daylight.
Officials said a team of 60 investigators was working on the theory that the raid was planned and executed by an organized crime group.
The heist reignited a row over a lack of security in France’s museums, with Justice Minister Gerald Darmanin admitting Monday to security flaws in protecting the Louvre.
“What is certain is that we have failed, since people were able to park a furniture hoist in the middle of Paris, get people up it in several minutes to grab priceless jewels, and give France a terrible image,” he told France Inter radio.
After several other robberies from French museums in recent months, Interior Minister Laurent Nunez had acknowledged Sunday that securing them was a “major weak spot.”
The thieves arrived between 9:30 and 9:40 am (0730 and 0740 GMT) Sunday, shortly after the museum opened to the public at 9:00 am, a source close to the investigation said.
They used a truck with an extendable ladder like those used by movers to get access to the Apollo Gallery, home to the royal collection, and cutting equipment to get in through a window and open the display cases.
A brief clip of the raid, apparently filmed on the phone of a visitor to the museum, was broadcast on French news channels.
The masked thieves stole nine 19th-century items of jewelry, one of which — the crown of the Empress Eugenie — they dropped and damaged as they made their escape.
It is covered in 1,354 diamonds and 56 emeralds, according to the museum’s website.

Seven-minute raid

Eight “priceless” items of jewelry were stolen, the culture ministry said Sunday.
The list they released included an emerald-and-diamond necklace that Napoleon gave his wife Empress Marie-Louise.
Also stolen was a diadem that once belonged to the Empress Eugenie, which is dotted with nearly 2,000 diamonds, and a necklace that once belonged to Marie-Amelie, the last queen of France. It has eight sapphires and 631 diamonds, according to the Louvre’s website.
The whole raid took just seven minutes and is thought to have been carried out by an experienced team, possibly “foreigners,” Nunez said.
The intervention of the museum’s staff forced the thieves to flee, leaving behind some of the equipment used in the raid, the culture ministry said.
The loot would be impossible to sell on in its current state, said Alexandre Giquello, president of the leading auctioneer house Drouot.

National ‘humiliation’

It was the first theft from the Louvre since 1998, when a painting by Camille Corot was stolen and never seen again.
Sunday’s raid relaunched a debate over what critics says is poor security at the nation’s museums, far less secure than banks and increasingly targeted by thieves.
Last month, criminals broke into Paris’s Natural History Museum, making off with gold samples worth $700,000.
The same month, thieves stole two dishes and a vase from a museum in the central city of Limoges, the losses estimated at $7.6 million.
Sunday’s robbery sparked angry political reactions.
“How far will the disintegration of the state go?” said far-right National Rally party leader Jordan Bardella on social media, calling the theft “an unbearable humiliation for our country.”
President Emmanuel Macron said on social media that “everything” was being done to catch the perpetrators and recover the stolen treasures.


Zelensky ready to join Putin, Trump at Budapest summit if invited

Zelensky ready to join Putin, Trump at Budapest summit if invited
Updated 20 October 2025

Zelensky ready to join Putin, Trump at Budapest summit if invited

Zelensky ready to join Putin, Trump at Budapest summit if invited
  • ‘If I am invited to Budapest, if it is an invitation in a format where we meet as three, or as it’s called, shuttle diplomacy’

KYIV: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said he would be ready to join Russian President Vladimir Putin and US counterpart Donald Trump at their summit in Hungary if he is invited.
Trump and Putin said they would meet in the Hungarian capital, possibly in a matter of weeks, as the US leader continues to try to broker a peace deal to end the three-and-a-half-year war, triggered by Russia’s 2022 invasion.
“If I am invited to Budapest – if it is an invitation in a format where we meet as three or, as it’s called, shuttle diplomacy, President Trump meets with Putin and President Trump meets with me – then in one format or another, we will agree,” Zelensky told reporters in remarks released on Monday.
The Ukrainian president criticized the choice of Hungary, which has a terse relationship with Kyiv and is seen as the most Kremlin-sympathetic member of the European Union.
“I do not believe that a prime minister who blocks Ukraine everywhere can do anything positive for Ukrainians or even provide a balanced contribution,” Zelensky said, referring to Hungarian leader Viktor Orban.
Kyiv has said it is ready to join a three-way meeting between Zelensky, Putin and Trump in a number of neutral countries, including Turkiye, Switzerland and the Vatican.
in 1994, Moscow signed a memorandum in Budapest aimed at ensuring security for Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan in exchange for them giving up numerous nuclear weapons left from the Soviet era.
“Another ‘Budapest’ scenario wouldn’t be positive either,” Zelensky said.
Trump has been aiming for a speedy end to the years-long conflict in Ukraine since he returned to White House earlier this year, pushing for a series of direct talks between Ukrainian and Russian officials and hosting Putin for a summit in Alaska – diplomatic efforts that have ultimately not lead to any breakthrough.


Serious, popular, besties with Trump: Italy’s Meloni marks three years

Serious, popular, besties with Trump: Italy’s Meloni marks three years
Updated 20 October 2025

Serious, popular, besties with Trump: Italy’s Meloni marks three years

Serious, popular, besties with Trump: Italy’s Meloni marks three years
  • As a stateswoman, Meloni appears to have a seat at every table, almost a regular at the White House and recently the only woman leader to attend the signing of the Gaza ceasefire in Egypt
  • Meloni is way off the late Berlusconi’s record of nine years as prime minister, but her coalition stands out for its longevity among the 70-odd post-war governments in Italy

ROME: Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni marks three years in office this week with her far-right party more popular than ever, her government remarkably durable and the economy stable, if not exactly booming.
“She’s a serious person,” said Giulia Devescovi, a 31-year-old doctor who joined a rally with hundreds of supporters of Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party in Florence earlier this month.
“She’s perhaps one of the best prime ministers since Silvio Berlusconi,” she told AFP among a sea of Brothers of Italy flags.
Meloni is way off the late Berlusconi’s record of nine years as prime minister, but her coalition stands out for its longevity among the 70-odd post-war governments in Italy.
Her party tops opinion polls with support levels consistently above the 26 percent it secured to win 2022 elections, which saw Meloni installed as Italy’s first woman prime minister on October 22 that year.
In three regional elections in recent weeks, her party increased its support, even in Tuscany, a bastion of the left.
Headlining the campaign event in the picturesque Piazza San Lorenzo in central Florence, Meloni railed at the left who she said were happy to see Italy confined to junior partner to EU giants France and Germany.
She particularly noted the economic progress of her indebted country, emphasising that borrowing costs are now lower than those of France.
“A leading nation like Italy doesn’t act as anyone’s spare tyre,” she declared to cheers and applause from the crowd.

- Stands up to the men -

As a stateswoman, Meloni appears to have a seat at every table, almost a regular at the White House and recently the only woman leader to attend the signing of the Gaza ceasefire in Egypt.
There, US President Donald Trump interrupted a speech on his peace efforts for the Middle East to praise Meloni as “incredible,” a “very successful politician” and a “beautiful young woman.”
“Italians are proud of the way she represents them on the international stage. And she communicates brilliantly,” noted one European diplomat.
In Garbatella, the working-class neighborhood of Rome where Meloni grew up, local resident Martina Ladina agreed.
“When she speaks with the other heads of state, she speaks all these languages — she manages to stand up to the men,” the 36-year-old told AFP last week.
“She’s got balls.”

- Doing little -

For Lorenzo Pregliasco, founder of the YouTrend polling institute, the prime minister’s diplomatic “activism” has “consolidated her image as leader” while “she has not suffered any major slip-ups.”
On the domestic front, too, he noted that she has not made major changes that might alienate her electorate.
“I don’t think it’s a contradiction that doing little in government is accompanied by stable support — I believe it’s one of the reasons,” Pregliasco told AFP.
Irregular immigration — a key campaign issue for Meloni and her allies — is down, but the government has also ramped up the number of visas for non-EU legal workers.
Rome has cut taxes, toughened penalties for protesters and has taken steps on judicial reform, but has yet to confront the structural issues that many believe hold Italy back.
Surveys show that Italians are most concerned about purchasing power, with wages stagnating.
Another major complaint is the state of the public health system, investment in which has not kept pace with inflation.
Italy hopes its deficit will fall within EU limits this year, but debt remains an eye-watering 135 percent of gross domestic product.
And growth is forecast to be just 0.5 percent this year, despite Italy having already received 140 billion euros ($163 billion) under the EU’s post-Covid recovery plan, with more expected by 2026.
“Look, we haven’t performed miracles,” Meloni acknowledged in Florence, but insisted that “Things are getting better.”

- Credible alternatives -

Pregliasco noted the solidity of Meloni’s coalition, which includes the far-right League of Matteo Salvini and Berlusconi’s conservative Forza Italia.
This contrasts with the divided opposition, represented by the left-wing Democratic Party and the Five Star Movement.
“They don’t necessarily love Giorgia Meloni” but “a significant portion of Italian voters don’t see any truly credible alternatives,” the analyst said.
The PD and Five Star have been cooperating more, fielding joint candidates in elections — and recently have sought to harness waves of anger over Gaza.
Hundreds of thousands of people have taken to the streets in recent weeks, demanding Meloni take a tougher line on Israel over its actions in Gaza, and for Italy to join other European countries in recognizing a Palestinian state.
Back in Garbatella, there was no love for Meloni among locals Maria, Mirella and Lucrezia, who were happy to chat with AFP as long as they did not have to give their surnames.
“I voted for her once... I wouldn’t vote for her now. She’s a very smart girl but in practice she hasn’t done much,” said Maria, 68, sitting on a bench with her friends.
Mirella, 62, didn’t mince her words: Meloni “is a big fascist. She says she isn’t, but she is.”
Lucrezia, 58, complained about high taxes, the straining public health care system and a lack of police on the streets.
“But she has gorgeous earrings,” she quipped.