Philippines summons Chinese envoy over sanctions against former senator

Philippines summons Chinese envoy over sanctions against former senator
A marine soldier stands guard at Likas Island, one of the islands occupied by the Philippines in the disputed South China Sea on June 5, 2025, during a routine maritime patrol. (AFP)
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Updated 08 July 2025
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Philippines summons Chinese envoy over sanctions against former senator

Philippines summons Chinese envoy over sanctions against former senator
  • Francisco Tolentino was banned from mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau over ‘egregious conduct’ detrimental to relations between Manila and Beijing
  • He lost his bid for a second term in the Philippines’ midterm elections in May

MANILA: The Philippines’ foreign ministry has summoned China’s ambassador to Manila over Beijing’s imposition of sanctions against former senator Francis Tolentino, the president’s office said on Tuesday.

Tolentino, who lost his bid for a second term in the Philippines’ midterm elections in May, was banned from mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau over “egregious conduct” detrimental to relations between Manila and Beijing.

Tolentino helped in approving laws last year that defined the country’s sea lanes and maritime zones, which China opposed. He also accused the Chinese embassy of contracting a firm that maintains troll farms to sow disinformation.

“The imposition of punitive measures ... is inconsistent with the norms of mutual respect and dialogue that underpin relations between two equal sovereign states,” presidential press officer Claire Castro told a briefing.

Manila’s foreign ministry said it summoned Chinese ambassador Huang Xilian on Friday. China’s embassy in Manila said in a statement the ambassador notified the Philippines’ foreign ministry of China’s decision to impose sanctions on Tolentino.

“It should be noted that such sanctions fall purely within China’s legal prerogative, and there are consequences for hurting China’s interests,” the embassy said.

The Chinese foreign ministry has previously accused some Filipino politicians of making “malicious remarks and moves” that hurt ties between the two nations.

Relations between China and the Philippines have soured under President Ferdinand Marcos over a longstanding dispute in the South China Sea.

In 2016, an international tribunal ruled Beijing’s sweeping claims to the waterway had no basis in international law. China has rejected the decision. Several other countries in Southeast Asia also claim parts of the South China Sea.


UN peacekeeping forces to be cut 25 percent due to budget strains: official

UN peacekeeping forces to be cut 25 percent due to budget strains: official
Updated 12 sec ago
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UN peacekeeping forces to be cut 25 percent due to budget strains: official

UN peacekeeping forces to be cut 25 percent due to budget strains: official

UNITED NATIONS: The United Nations will be forced to reduce its peacekeeping forces worldwide by around 25 percent due to a lack of funding, largely linked to US aid cuts, a senior official said Wednesday.

About 13,000 to 14,000 military and police personnel, as well as their equipment, will have to be repatriated, the official said on condition of anonymity, with “a large number of civilian staff in missions” also to be affected.

 


At least 20 killed in Myanmar junta attack as paramotors widen air war

At least 20 killed in Myanmar junta attack as paramotors widen air war
Updated 08 October 2025
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At least 20 killed in Myanmar junta attack as paramotors widen air war

At least 20 killed in Myanmar junta attack as paramotors widen air war
  • The military has previously rejected accusations that it targets civilians
  • A spokesperson for the US State Department said it was deeply disturbed by reports of the attack

NAYPYIDAW: A 30-year-old protester was taking part in a gathering against Myanmar’s ruling junta on a festival day in the central region of Sagaing on Monday when he heard the distinctive noise of fan blades cutting through the air.

Minutes later, explosives were dropped by a motorized paraglider, also known as a paramotor.

“I was thrown away,” said the protester, asking not to be named for fear of retribution from the junta.

“Initially, I thought the whole lower part of my body had been severed. I touched it and I realized the legs are still there.”

At least 20 people were killed in the attack by the junta, according to the eyewitness, Amnesty International, the shadow National Unity Government and an armed resistance group in the area. It is also the latest instance of Myanmar’s well-armed military using paramotors as part of its widening range of aerial weaponry, including aircraft and drones, deployed in an expanding civil war.

A spokesperson for Myanmar’s junta did not respond to calls seeking comment.

The military has previously rejected accusations that it targets civilians. A spokesperson for the US State Department said it was deeply disturbed by reports of the attack. “We urge the military regime to cease its violence and bombing civilians, release all unjustly detained prisoners, allow unhindered humanitarian access, and begin genuine dialogue with opposition groups,” the spokesperson said.

The Southeast Asian nation has been gripped by protests and a nationwide armed rebellion since 2021 following the military’s ouster of an elected civilian government.

PARAMOTORS DEPLOYMENT ON THE RISE

The attack at Sagaing’s Chaung-U township took place just before 8 p.m. local time on Monday as local residents gathered in a field, said the eyewitness and a spokesman for a local anti-junta armed resistance group.

“The military has used paramotors to bomb this area approximately six times before this latest incident,” Ko Thant, an information officer for the Chaung-U Township People’s Defense Force, told Reuters.

The junta’s first recorded use of paramotors, which can seat up to three soldiers to drop bombs or fire at targets, was in December 2024 and they have since been deployed more widely, according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project. The military also used paramotors to carry out attacks in parts of Myanmar hit by a deadly earthquake in March, the United Nations said in April.

“Paramotors are typically deployed in areas of mixed control or where resistance groups have minimal equipment, such as lacking access to the 7.62 cartridges and weapons required to shoot them down,” ACLED Senior Analyst Su Mon said in a July report.

In some areas rebels have claimed to have shot down a junta paramotor, according to a statement issued by the Burma Revolution Rangers group in April. With frontlines stretching from the northern Kachin hills to the western coastal state of Rakhine, the junta is increasingly relying on aerial power, with 1,134 airstrikes between January and May, far higher than corresponding figures of 197 and 640 in 2023 and 2024, according to ACLED.

In the aftermath of the strike in Chaung-U township, the 30-year-old protester said he crawled into a nearby ditch and hid there until his friends pulled him out.

“This is mass murder,” he said, referring to the junta’s attack. “They are committing it openly.”


Afghan Taliban foreign minister heads for first visit to India to foster ties abroad

Afghan Taliban foreign minister heads for first visit to India to foster ties abroad
Updated 08 October 2025
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Afghan Taliban foreign minister heads for first visit to India to foster ties abroad

Afghan Taliban foreign minister heads for first visit to India to foster ties abroad
  • Muttaqi begins first visit to India since the group’s 2021 takeover, seeking stronger political and trade ties
  • Trip follows UN travel ban waiver, underscores Taliban efforts to gain regional legitimacy

KABUL: Afghanistan’s Taliban foreign minister left for New Delhi on Wednesday, his ministry said, in what would be the first visit to India by a Taliban leader since the group seized power in 2021.

The trip highlights Taliban efforts to expand engagement with regional powers in a quest for economic ties and eventual diplomatic recognition. So far, Russia is the only country to have formally recognized the Taliban administration.

Afghan Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi will hold talks with Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar and other officials on political, economic and trade issues, the Afghan foreign ministry added.

Historically, India and Afghanistan had friendly relations but New Delhi shut its embassy in Kabul after the 2021 US withdrawal from the war-shattered country and the return to power of the Taliban.

India opened a small mission a year later to facilitate trade, medical support and humanitarian aid.

New Delhi does not officially recognize the Taliban government but has taken tentative steps to thaw ties with meetings and talks between senior officials in their respective foreign ministries.

Muttaqi’s trip was made possible after the UN Security Council Committee temporarily lifted a travel ban on him to allow diplomatic engagements abroad, India’s foreign ministry said last week.

Discussions during Muttaqi’s trip will center on bilateral cooperation, trade exchanges, exports of dry fruit, facilities in the health sector, consular services and various ports, the Afghan Taliban foreign ministry said last week.

On Tuesday, Muttaqi attended a regional meeting in Moscow where Afghanistan’s neighbors including India, Pakistan, Iran, China and several Central Asian countries issued a joint statement opposing the deployment of foreign military infrastructure in the region.

The statement was regarded as a signal of opposition to US President Donald Trump’s stated objective to retake control of the Bagram military base near Kabul.


France has a path to avoiding snap elections, caretaker PM Lecornu says

France has a path to avoiding snap elections, caretaker PM Lecornu says
Updated 08 October 2025
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France has a path to avoiding snap elections, caretaker PM Lecornu says

France has a path to avoiding snap elections, caretaker PM Lecornu says
  • Lecornu has held further consultations with political leaders spanning the center left to center right in an effort to defuse the crisis
  • “I told the President of the Republic ... that I believe the situation allows for (him) to name a prime minister in the next 48 hours,” Lecornu told France 2

PARIS: France’s caretake prime minister on Wednesday said he saw a path to forming a new government but that the “final stretch” would be difficult, adding that it was possible France have a new premier in the next 48 hours.

Sebastien Lecornu, France’s fifth prime minister in two years, tendered his and his government’s resignation on Monday, just hours after announcing the cabinet line-up, making it the shortest-lived administration in modern France.

But at President Emmanuel Macron’s request, Lecornu has held further consultations with political leaders spanning the center left to center right in an effort to defuse the crisis and avoid snap parliamentary elections.

“I told the President of the Republic ... that I believe the situation allows for (him) to name a prime minister in the next 48 hours,” Lecornu told France 2 after briefing Macron on his talks.

Macron has this week faced calls to hold a snap parliamentary elections or resign, in particular from far-right and hardleft politicians but also from some in the political mainstream. Lecornu said his talks with other parties showed there was a majority in parliament against a snap election.

Markets have taken fright at the political paralysis in the euro zone’s second biggest economy, with investors already jittery over the country’s yawning budget deficit.

However, French assets saw some improvement on Wednesday after Lecornu expressed cautious optimism over the possibility of a deal in the morning, with Paris’ CAC 40 index up 1.1 percent on the day. The French benchmark remains one of Europe’s laggards in 2025.

Ahead of Lecornu’s remarks,

French bonds

outperformed their euro zone peers on the possibility that the country’s parliament may agree a budget by the end of the year.

It was unclear when Macron would announce any decisions.

Lecornu made clear he would not be the next prime minister. He declined to say who might be the next prime minister, or what their political leaning would likely be, stressing that this was up to Macron to decide.


Germany repeals fast-track citizenship law

Germany repeals fast-track citizenship law
Updated 08 October 2025
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Germany repeals fast-track citizenship law

Germany repeals fast-track citizenship law
  • Dobrindt said that the government was sending a “clear signal“
  • “The German passport will be available as recognition of successful integration and not as an incentive for illegal migration”

BERLIN: The German parliament on Wednesday repealed a fast-track citizenship law introduced by the previous government, highlighting the souring public mood toward immigration in the country.

The measure made it possible to apply for German citizenship after three years, rather than the usual five, for those who could show they had integrated particularly well.

It was introduced by the previous government, led by the center-left SPD party, who argued it would attract more overseas workers to plug labor shortages in many industries.

But Friedrich Merz — from the center-right CDU, who took power in May — had pledged on the campaign trail to overturn the law as part of efforts to crack down on illegal immigration.

Ahead of the vote in parliament, Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt said that the government was sending a “clear signal.”

“The German passport will be available as recognition of successful integration and not as an incentive for illegal migration,” he said.

Merz’s coalition has taken a hard line on immigration, seeking to combat the growing popularity of the far-right Alternative for Germany, which came second in February’s general election.

Attitudes toward migration have hardened in recent years in Germany, particularly in areas where critics argue they have placed strains on public services.

A total of 450 lawmakers voted to repeal the law — including those from the SPD and AfD — while 134 voted against the measure.

The SPD, junior partners in Merz’s coalition, defended supporting repealing the fast-track program, arguing it was rarely used.

The new government has however left in place other key aspects of the previous coalition’s immigration reforms.

This includes lowering the number of years before a migrant can apply for German citizenship to five, from eight previously, and allowing dual citizenship in most cases.