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President seeks end to crisis engulfing Nepal

President seeks end to crisis engulfing Nepal
People react as members of Nepal army, dressed in traditional army uniform, fires a gun during the final day of Indra Jatra festival to worship Indra, Kumari and other deities and to mark the end of monsoon season, amid the prohibitory orders following Monday’s deadly anti-corruption protests triggered by a social media ban, which was later lifted, in Katmandu, Nepal, September 11, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 11 September 2025

President seeks end to crisis engulfing Nepal

President seeks end to crisis engulfing Nepal
  • President Ramchandra Paudel appealed to “all parties to be confident that a solution to the problem is being sought, as soon as possible“
  • Army chief General Ashok Raj Sigdel has launched talks with key figures and “representatives of Gen Z,” a military spokesperson said

KATMANDU: Nepal’s president said Thursday he was seeking an end to the crisis that has engulfed the Himalayan nation since deadly protests this week ousted the prime minister and left parliament in flames.

The army has imposed a curfew in the Himalayan nation of 30 million people, with soldiers patrolling the largely quiet streets for a second day after the worst violence in two decades.

President Ramchandra Paudel appealed to “all parties to be confident that a solution to the problem is being sought, as soon as possible.”

Army chief General Ashok Raj Sigdel has launched talks with key figures and “representatives of Gen Z,” a military spokesperson said, referring to the loose umbrella title of the youth protest movement.

Demonstrations began on Monday in Katmandu against the government’s short-lived ban on social media and over corruption, with at least 19 people killed in the crackdown.

A day later, protests escalated into an outpouring of rage nationwide, with government offices, a Hilton Hotel and other buildings set on fire.

In the chaos, more than 13,500 prisoners broke out of jails countrywide, leaving security forces scrambling to regain control. Only around 250 have been recaptured, according to Nepal’s security forces and an Indian border official.

“Our first demand is the dissolution of parliament,” Sudan Gurung, a key figure among the Gen Z protesters, told reporters on Thursday.

“My humble request to everyone, including political parties: please don’t send the same old leaders,” he said, saying the protesters were not seeking power themselves.

“We don’t need positions in government,” he said. “We need real reform.”

Protests fed into longstanding economic woes in Nepal, where more than a fifth of people aged 15-24 are unemployed, according to the World Bank, with GDP per capita just $1,447.

- ‘Every effort’ -

KP Sharma Oli, 73, a four-time prime minister, resigned Tuesday. His home was set ablaze the same day and his whereabouts are unknown.

Constitutionally, 80-year-old Paudel should invite the leader of the largest parliamentary party to form a government.

But much of the political old guard has vanished from view.

“I am consulting and making every effort to find a way out of the current difficult situation in the country, within the constitutional framework,” said Paudel, whose presidential offices were also set on fire.

Former chief justice Sushila Karki is the leading choice for interim leader, a Gen Z protester representative said Thursday, although their backing is not unanimous.

“Right now, Sushila Karki’s name is coming up to lead the interim government — we are now waiting for the president to make a move,” said Rakshya Bam, an activist who was among those at the army meeting on Wednesday.

Journalist Pranaya Rana said there were “divisions,” but it was “natural in a decentralized movement like this that there are going to be competing interests.”

Karki, 73, Nepal’s first woman chief justice, has told AFP that “experts need to come together to figure out the way forward,” and that “the parliament still stands.”

Katmandu Mayor Balendra Shah, a 35-year-old former engineer and rapper, was also among the names suggested as a potential interim leader.

But Shah said in a post on Facebook that he “fully supports the proposal” of Karki.

“The job of this interim government is to hold elections, to give a new mandate to the country,” he said.


Germany to back France-led two-state solution to Israel-Palestine conflict, Bloomberg News reports

Updated 9 sec ago

Germany to back France-led two-state solution to Israel-Palestine conflict, Bloomberg News reports

Germany to back France-led two-state solution to Israel-Palestine conflict, Bloomberg News reports
Germany is planning to support a United Nations resolution on Friday

BERLIN: Germany’s government has decided to back a France-led proposal for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday, citing people familiar with the plan.
Germany is planning to support a United Nations resolution on Friday adopting the declaration, led by France and Ƶ, the report added.
Reuters could not immediately verify the report.

Starmer sacks Mandelson as UK ambassador to US over Epstein links

Starmer sacks Mandelson as UK ambassador to US over Epstein links
Updated 27 min 54 sec ago

Starmer sacks Mandelson as UK ambassador to US over Epstein links

Starmer sacks Mandelson as UK ambassador to US over Epstein links
  • Mandelson was twice forced to resign from Tony Blair’s Labour government in the late 1990s and early 2000s over allegations of misconduct
  • His dismissal as US envoy causes a political and diplomatic headache for the British PM as he prepares for next week’s visit of US President Donald Trump

LONDON: UK leader Keir Starmer sacked his ambassador in Washington Peter Mandelson on Thursday following “reprehensible” fresh revelations about the diplomat’s friendship with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Dubbed the “Prince of Darkness” during his years as a media spin doctor, Mandelson was twice forced to resign from Tony Blair’s Labour government in the late 1990s and early 2000s over allegations of misconduct.
His dismissal as US envoy causes a political and diplomatic headache for the British prime minister as he prepares for next week’s visit of US President Donald Trump, who is himself facing questions over his ties to Epstein.
It is the second high-profile departure from the UK government in the past week, after Starmer’s former deputy Angela Rayner resigned last Friday for underpaying a property tax.
Starmer is still trying to reboot his increasingly unpopular government.
The prime minister asked top diplomat Yvette Cooper to withdraw Mandelson after emails he wrote to Epstein after he was convicted came to light, her office said.
“The emails show that the depth and extent of Peter Mandelson’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein is materially different from that known at the time of his appointment,” it said.
“In particular Peter Mandelson’s suggestion that Jeffrey Epstein’s first conviction was wrongful and should be challenged is new information.
“In light of that, and mindful of the victims of Epstein’s crimes he has been withdrawn as ambassador with immediate effect.”

- ‘Fight for release’ -

In a letter to embassy staff, reported by the BBC, Mandelson called serving in the role the “privilege of my life.”
“The circumstances surrounding the announcement today are ones which I deeply regret,” the letter added.
“I continue to feel utterly awful about my association with Epstein 20 years ago and the plight of his victims.”
Mandelson said he was departing with Anglo-American relations in “really good condition.”
The sacking followed Bloomberg reporting that Mandelson sent supportive messages to Epstein while the financier was being investigated in the United States for sexual offenses in 2008.
The Labour party grandee sent emails telling Epstein he was following closely and “here whenever you need.”
Mandelson also reportedly told Epstein to “fight for early release” shortly before he received an 18-month sentence for admitting procuring a child for prostitution.
“I think the world of you,” Mandelson, a former Labour minister and ex-European trade commissioner, wrote the day before Epstein began his sentence.
A spokesman for Starmer said it was “self-evident” the prime minister “found the content of these emails reprehensible.”
He denied claims that Starmer had shown poor judgment by appointing Mandelson less than a year ago when it had been publicly known that he had stayed friends with Epstein after his conviction.

- ‘Best pal’ -

“The Prime Minister has taken prompt and decisive action,” the spokesman insisted.
Following the newspaper reports, the 71-year-old Mandelson told the BBC that he had “relied on assurances of (Epstein’s) innocence that turned out later to be horrendously false.
“His lawyers claimed that it was a shakedown of him, a criminal conspiracy. I foolishly relied on their word which I regret to this day,” he added.
His position appeared increasingly precarious after one government minister said he was “completely disgusted” by the messages while another said the emails were “really disturbing and sickening.”
Several Labour MPs had publicly urged Starmer to fire Mandelson. Some are now calling for him to quit the UK parliament’s unelected upper chamber, the House of Lords.
The smooth-talking political veteran had only started in the key diplomatic post earlier this year, tasked with building a close relationship with Trump.
But his position began to become untenable after it emerged that Mandelson called Epstein his “best pal” and an “intelligent, sharp-witted man” in a 2003 letter.
The letter was one of many included in a book compiled to mark the now notorious financier’s 50th birthday. Its contents were published by a US congressional panel investigating Epstein’s sex crimes case.


Netherlands plans to ban imports from Israel’s Jewish settlements

A drone view of Neve Daniel, a Jewish settlement in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. (File/Reuters)
A drone view of Neve Daniel, a Jewish settlement in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. (File/Reuters)
Updated 11 September 2025

Netherlands plans to ban imports from Israel’s Jewish settlements

A drone view of Neve Daniel, a Jewish settlement in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. (File/Reuters)
  • Netherlands is a leading global buyer of Israeli goods, but Van Weel did not say what volume of goods are currently imported from Jewish settlements

AMSTERDAM: The Dutch government plans to ban imports of goods produced in Jewish settlements in Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories over Israel’s plans for the West Bank and its military offensive in Gaza, the foreign minister told parliament.
The Netherlands imposed travel bans on two far-right Israeli cabinet ministers in July, accusing them of inciting violence against Palestinians and calling for an “ethnic cleansing” of Gaza, but the government had been reluctant to take further steps until now.
Last month, former Foreign Minister Casper Veldkamp resigned because he said he felt no support within the cabinet to take additional measures against Israel.
But his successor, David van Weel, told parliament late on Wednesday he had instructed his department to draft a government decree on the import ban, saying the measure would be implemented as soon as possible.
The Netherlands is a leading global buyer of Israeli goods, but Van Weel did not say what volume of goods are currently imported from Jewish settlements.
Most of the international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law. The Israeli government deems settlements legal under its own laws, while some so-called “outposts” are illegal but often tolerated and sometimes later legalized.
The Netherlands also supports the European Commission’s plans to suspend trade-related measures in a European Union agreement with Israel, Van Weel said.


UN halts Afghan returnee aid over curbs on women staff

UN halts Afghan returnee aid over curbs on women staff
Updated 11 September 2025

UN halts Afghan returnee aid over curbs on women staff

UN halts Afghan returnee aid over curbs on women staff
  • “UNHCR was compelled to halt activities at its encashment centers across Afghanistan,” the UN’s refugee agency said
  • The UN said it was ending its support for returnees due to operational concerns

KABUL: The United Nations said Thursday that it has suspended its assistance to Afghans returning from neighboring countries after the Taliban government prevented women staff members from working.
“On 9 September, in light of instructions from the de facto authorities preventing Afghan female staff from working, UNHCR was compelled to halt activities at its encashment centers across Afghanistan,” the UN’s refugee agency said.
It explained that these are places where Afghans returning from Pakistan and Iran receive money and other support.
The UN said in a separate statement that its women employees had been prevented from accessing their workplaces in several locations across the country this week.
“Security forces are visibly present at the entrances of UN premises in Kabul, Herat, and Mazar-i-Sharif to enforce the restriction. This is particularly concerning in view of continuing restrictions on the rights of Afghan women and girls,” the statement said.
The Taliban authorities have been back in power for four years in Afghanistan after ousting a US-backed government, and have drawn international criticism for their human rights record, particularly the treatment of women.
The International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants in July for two senior Taliban leaders, accusing them of crimes against humanity over the persecution of women and girls, who are banned from most education and work.
Women and girls are also barred from parks and gyms, and from traveling without a male guardian.
The UN said it was ending its support for returnees due to operational concerns. For cultural reasons it needs female employees to interview the many women returning from neighboring countries.
The organization said it is holding discussions with the Taliban government in hopes of getting its female staff back to work.
Pakistan has hosted Afghans fleeing violence for more than four decades, from the Soviet invasion to the 2021 Taliban takeover.
However Pakistan’s government, citing an uptick in violent attacks and insurgent campaigns, launched a crackdown in 2023 to evict them, painting the population as “terrorists and criminals.”
More than 2.1 million Afghans have returned from Pakistan and Iran so far this year, according to the United Nations refugee agency.
They join earlier rounds of mass expulsions from the neighboring countries, deported or driven out by fear of arrest.


Germany’s Rheinmetall to produce shells at new plant in Ukraine, Kyiv says

Germany’s Rheinmetall to produce shells at new plant in Ukraine, Kyiv says
Updated 11 September 2025

Germany’s Rheinmetall to produce shells at new plant in Ukraine, Kyiv says

Germany’s Rheinmetall to produce shells at new plant in Ukraine, Kyiv says
  • Kyiv is seeking help from its Western partners to scale up its domestic arms industry

KYIV: German arms giant Rheinmetall plans to manufacture artillery shells for Ukrainian forces at a future production plant in Ukraine, Kyiv’s defense minister said on Thursday.


“On September 9, land was allocated in a safe region of Ukraine, where a new plant will be built to manufacture Rheinmetall shells for the needs of the Defense Forces,” Denys Shmyhal wrote on X.
Kyiv is seeking help from its Western partners to scale up its domestic arms industry as it fends off Russian forces in the fourth year of Moscow’s invasion.