Sri Lanka politician shot dead inside office

Sri Lanka politician shot dead inside office
Devotees offer prayers on the occasion of 'Diwali', the Hindu festival of lights at a temple in Colombo on October 20, 2025. (Photo by Ishara S. KODIKARA / AFP)
Updated 1 min 45 sec ago

Sri Lanka politician shot dead inside office

Sri Lanka politician shot dead inside office
  • A Sri Lankan opposition politician was shot dead in his office on Wednesday, police said, the latest in a wave of assassinations and the first to target a political figure

COLOMBO: A Sri Lankan opposition politician was shot dead in his office on Wednesday, police said, the latest in a wave of assassinations and the first to target a political figure.
Lasantha Wickramasekara, 38, the council chairman of the coastal city of Weligama, was meeting with constituents when a gunman burst in and fired multiple times with a revolver.
No one else was wounded, and the gunman fled the scene.
“An investigation is underway to track down the killer,” police said in a statement, adding that the motive for the attack remains unclear.
Wickramasekara was a member of the opposition Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) party, which has been locked in a bitter power struggle with the ruling party over control of the Weligama council.
Sri Lanka has seen a surge in violent crime this year, much of it linked to drug gangs and organized crime.
Official figures show at least 50 people have been killed in more than 100 shootings.
This marks the first assassination of a politician since President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s government came to power last year, pledging to restore law and order.
The most brazen attack was in February when a gunman dressed as a lawyer shot dead a suspect inside a courthouse in Colombo.


Modi and Trump talk trade as India, US seek to repair ties

Updated 7 sec ago

Modi and Trump talk trade as India, US seek to repair ties

Modi and Trump talk trade as India, US seek to repair ties
NEW DELHI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Wednesday he had held a conversation with Donald Trump, with the US president saying the pair had discussed trade as the countries negotiate a deal that could mend strained ties.
Relations plummeted in August when Trump raised tariffs on Indian exports to the United States to 50 percent and US officials accused India of financing Russia’s war in Ukraine by buying Moscow’s discounted oil.
During a ceremony to mark Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights, on Tuesday, Trump told reporters he had spoken by phone with Modi.
“We talked about trade — we talked about a lot of things, but mostly the world of trade,” Trump said while lighting candles for the celebration at the White House. “He’s very interested in that.”
Modi thanked Trump for the call, saying on X that he hoped “our two great democracies continue to illuminate the world with hope.”
India has yet to secure a formal trade deal with the United States, despite being among the first nations to initiate negotiations with Washington after Trump began his second term.
Trump also repeated his claim — first made on October 15 — that India would cut Russian oil purchases. New Delhi has neither confirmed nor denied any policy shift.
India, one of the world’s largest crude oil importers, relies on foreign suppliers for more than 85 percent of its oil needs.
Traditionally reliant on Middle Eastern producers, New Delhi started buying heavily discounted Russian crude in 2022, taking advantage of Western sanctions that limited Moscow’s export options.
Several other sources of friction have strained Washington’s relationship with India this year.
They include Trump’s assertions that he achieved a ceasefire between India and Pakistan to end an intense four-day conflict over the contested region of Kashmir in May. Modi has said there was no such mediation by a world leader.
And last month, the Trump administration hiked fees for H-1B skilled-worker visas to $100,000. Indians make up roughly three-quarters of all H-1B recipients.
Trump and Modi may yet meet this month at the ASEAN summit of Southeast Asian leaders in Malaysia, which Trump is set to attend.
New Delhi has not confirmed whether Modi will participate, as India is not a member of the 10-nation bloc.
But some Indian newspapers have reported that he may attend.

Pakistan launches semiconductor training initiative, eyes collaboration with

Pakistan launches semiconductor training initiative, eyes collaboration with
Updated 7 min 4 sec ago

Pakistan launches semiconductor training initiative, eyes collaboration with

Pakistan launches semiconductor training initiative, eyes collaboration with

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Tuesday launched a national semiconductor training program to develop chip-design expertise and reduce dependence on foreign technology, with officials saying the country also plans to work closely with ’s semiconductor industry.

The five-year INSPIRE Initiative, valued at Rs 4.8 billion ($17.2 million), aims to train around 3,200 young professionals and establish nine university clusters and six state-of-the-art integrated-circuit laboratories.

Officials said the program will bridge academia, industry and the public sector to build the foundations of Pakistan’s semiconductor ecosystem.

“We have launched two programs,” said Dr. Naveed Shirwani, head of the country’s semiconductor task force. “One will make it easier for Pakistani companies to do business in without spending any money, and the other connects our young talent with Saudi semiconductor firms.”

“The National Semiconductor Hub of has declared Pakistan its first spoke, linking the two countries to work together,” he added.

Semiconductors, the tiny chips powering everything from smartphones and vehicles to medical equipment and defense systems, have become a global strategic priority.

Supply-chain disruptions in recent years have prompted countries to localize design and production capacity to secure what many now regard as a cornerstone of economic and national security.

Shirwani said the effort of his team went beyond training or chip design, describing it as a step toward “digital sovereignty.”

He maintained if Pakistan did not have control over its own data, connectivity or ability to extract knowledge from it, it would be hard to say it was truly in its possession.

He also pointed out that these capabilities depended cybersecurity and semiconductors. You can’t run a hospital or a school if we don’t have our own semiconductors.

“This is the first step,” he continued. “We are starting training, but eventually we have to establish our entire semiconductor industry. We have no other choice.”

Information Technology Minister Shaza Fatima said the initiative marked Pakistan’s movement toward a trillion-dollar global market projected to need one million skilled workers by 2030.

“We are trying to create a complete chip-design and research ecosystem for Pakistan,” she said, stressing that international collaboration would be critical.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, who inaugurated the program, said nations that control artificial intelligence and semiconductors “will control the future of the world.”

He assured the participants at the gathering that his administration would provide additional funding to keep the initiative rolling whenever required.

- This story originally appeared on


Germany to pay local US military staff during shutdown

Germany to pay local US military staff during shutdown
Updated 45 min 12 sec ago

Germany to pay local US military staff during shutdown

Germany to pay local US military staff during shutdown
  • The trade union Verdi on Tuesday said that local staff have continued being paid during past US government shutdowns, but expressed fears that the current Trump administration appeared likely to halt paycheques

BERLIN: Germany plans to pay some 11,000 local employees at US military bases in the country whose paycheques have been impacted by the government shutdown in Washington, the finance ministry said Wednesday.
“The federal government will initiate an unscheduled expenditure to ensure that October salaries are paid on time,” a ministry spokeswoman said.
The trade union Verdi on Tuesday said that local staff have continued being paid during past US government shutdowns, but expressed fears that the current Trump administration appeared likely to halt paycheques.
The union contended that doing so would be a clear violation of German law, and urged a solution to prevent any missed pay.
The finance ministry spokeswoman told AFP on Wednesday that it currently remains unclear whether US payments might still come through despite the shutdown.
But the federal government in Berlin and the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate struck the deal to guarantee salaries will be paid and avoid any issues, she said.
The German government anticipates being reimbursed for the payroll cost once the US side makes payment, according to the spokeswoman.
Berlin’s contribution is “a sign of solidarity with the US armed forces stationed in Germany and their civilian employees,” she added.


Louvre reopens for first time after jewel heist

Louvre reopens for first time after jewel heist
Updated 59 min 52 sec ago

Louvre reopens for first time after jewel heist

Louvre reopens for first time after jewel heist
  • First visitors began entering the world-famous institution, though the museum said the Apollo Gallery remains closed
  • Disappointed tourists were turned away at the entrance of the Louvre in the heart of Paris the day after the theft

PARIS: The Louvre reopened its doors to visitors on Wednesday, three days after it had been shuttered over the theft of precious royal jewelry, an AFP journalist saw.
From 9:00 a.m. (0700 GMT), the museum’s usual opening time, the first visitors began entering the world-famous institution, though the museum said the Apollo Gallery, where Sunday’s theft occurred, remains closed.
Scores of investigators are looking for Sunday’s culprits, working on the theory that it was an organized crime group that clambered up a ladder on a truck to break into the museum, then dropped a diamond-studded crown as they fled.
They made off with eight priceless pieces, including an emerald-and-diamond necklace that Napoleon I gave his wife Empress Marie-Louise and a diadem that once belonged to the Empress Eugenie, which is dotted with nearly 2,000 diamonds.
Disappointed tourists were turned away at the entrance of the Louvre in the heart of Paris the day after the theft, and it remained closed on Tuesday as per its regular schedule.
The world’s most visited museum, last year it welcomed nine million people to its extensive hallways and galleries.
The theft reignited a row over the lack of security in French museums, after two other institutions were hit last month.


Taiwan reports its first case of African swine fever

Taiwan reports its first case of African swine fever
Updated 44 min 30 sec ago

Taiwan reports its first case of African swine fever

Taiwan reports its first case of African swine fever
  • Taiwan will isolate the virus strain before officially reporting it to the World Organization of Animal Health

TAIPEI: Taiwan reported its first cases of African swine fever on Wednesday and authorities culled at least 195 pigs and ordered a ban on the movement and slaughter of pigs across the island.
The Ministry of Agriculture said that samples from dead pigs from a farm in the coastal city of Taichung had tested positive for African swine fever on Tuesday.
Animal protection and quarantine authorities immediately went to the farm and “preventively culled 195 pigs,” the ministry said. The authorities then supervised the cleaning and disinfection of the farm and established a control zone with a radius of 3 kilometers (1.9 miles) from the center of the affected farm.
Authorities also ordered a five-day ban on the movement and slaughtering of pigs across the island starting at noon on Wednesday.
Taiwan will isolate the virus strain before officially reporting it to the World Organization of Animal Health, Agriculture Minister Chen Junne-jih said in a press conference.
“However, virus isolation takes two weeks, but we can’t wait,” Chen added. “We must implement the highest standards to prevent and control this suspected case of African swine fever.”
African swine fever, which is nearly always fatal to swine, does not affect humans or other animals outside of the pig family.
This is Taiwan’s first-ever reported case of the virus, Chen said. The island prohibits bringing in any meat or meat products without proper inspection and quarantine, with fines up to 1 million Taiwan dollars (about $32,500).
“The most likely route of transmission is from outside Taiwan, through the illegal importation of pork products, which ultimately find their way to pig farms through food waste systems,” Chen added.
In 2019, millions of pigs were culled in China and Vietnam as the virus spread through Asia.
Currently, the only Asian country with a confirmed ongoing African swine fever outbreak is South Korea, according to the World Organization of Animal Health’s October report on the virus situation worldwide. Twelve countries in Europe are also battling the virus.