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Little daylight between US and Israel evident as Rubio and Netanyahu meet

US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee (R) is shown a painting of Jerusalem during a visit to the Beit Hanassi presidential residence, in Jerusalem, on September 15, 2025.
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US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee (R) is shown a painting of Jerusalem during a visit to the Beit Hanassi presidential residence, in Jerusalem, on September 15, 2025. (AFP)
US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee holds a binder, ahead of a joint press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio (not pictured) at the Prime Minister's Office in Jerusalem on September 15, 2025. (AFP)
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US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee holds a binder, ahead of a joint press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio (not pictured) at the Prime Minister's Office in Jerusalem on September 15, 2025. (AFP)
Little daylight between US and Israel evident as Rubio and Netanyahu meet
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US Secretary of State Marco Rubio (C-L) and Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (C-R) visit the Western Wall Tunnels, underneath the Jewish holy site, in the old city of Jerusalem on September 14, 2025. (AFP)
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Little daylight between US and Israel evident as Rubio and Netanyahu meet

Little daylight between US and Israel evident as Rubio and Netanyahu meet
  • Most of the hostages have since been released in ceasefires brokered in part by Qatar or other deals
  • One of Rubio’s reasons for visiting was to show support for Israel as it expects to face growing international condemnation of the war at the upcoming United Nations General Assembly session

JERUSALEM: Israel and the United States showed a unified front on Monday in the face of growing international anger over Israel’s airstrikes on Hamas leaders in Qatar and its intensifying bombardment of Gaza City.
As Arab and Muslim leaders met in Doha to condemn Israel’s attack last week in Qatar and new rounds of criticism were aired over Israeli plans to occupy Gaza City, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio stood shoulder-to-shoulder in Jerusalem and downplayed the furor that had, at least for a short time, taken the Trump administration aback.
Rubio plans to pay a quick visit to Qatar on Tuesday, as the administration appears keen to ease tensions between its two close allies, before flying on to London to join President Donald Trump on his state visit to Britain.




Israeli President Isaac Herzog (R) and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio shake hands ahead of their meeting at the Beit Hanassi presidential residence, during Rubio's visit in Jerusalem on September 15, 2025. (AFP)

“We understand they’re not happy about what happened,” Rubio told Fox News. But “we still have Hamas, we still have hostages, and we still have a war. And all those things still have to be dealt with, and we are hopeful that Qatar and all of our Gulf partners will continue to add something constructive.”
There were no signs of US frustration with Israel’s latest actions, although Trump had made clear his displeasure with Israel’s unilateral strike on Hamas in Qatar.
US and Israel agree on destroying Hamas
Both Netanyahu and Rubio said the only way to end the conflict in Gaza is through the elimination of Hamas and the release of the remaining 48 hostages — around 20 of them believed to be alive — setting aside calls for an interim ceasefire in favor of an immediate end to the conflict.
Hamas has said it will only free the remaining hostages in return for Palestinian prisoners, a lasting ceasefire and an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.
Rubio had come to Israel seeking answers from Netanyahu about how Israel intended to proceed in Gaza and assess its interest in Qatar retaining a mediating role.
“Your presence here in Israel today is a clear message that America stands with Israel. You stand with us in the face of terror,” said Netanyahu.
The Doha attack, which killed at least five lower-ranking Hamas members and a member of the Qatari security forces, appears to have paused mediation efforts.
Rubio later met with families of the hostages, who aired concerns that Israel’s latest offensive could doom their loved ones and called on the Trump administration to swiftly resume negotiations, according to a statement from the main group representing relatives of the captives.
Footage shows strike on Gaza high-rise
Israel destroyed another high-rise building in Gaza City as it moved ahead with its offensive. Video footage showed the explosion and the tower’s collapse. Later, people could be seen scrambling up a mound of gray ruins.
In recent days, Israel has destroyed multiple high-rises after evacuation warnings. It accused Hamas of putting surveillance equipment in them, without providing evidence.
Airstrikes overnight and into Monday killed at least 18 people, including children, according to local hospitals.
One strike hit a tent housing a family, killing seven, and another hit a tent on the roof of a building, killing a local journalist, Mohammed Al-Kuifi, and another person, according to Shifa Hospital in Gaza City. A strike in central Gaza killed four people, according to Al-Awda Hospital.
Israel says it only targets militants and blames civilian deaths on Hamas because it is entrenched in populated areas.
“It was another night of horror. ... The situation is tragic and getting worse day by day,” said Mohammed Saber, a resident in Gaza City.
Rubio downplayed US concerns about Israel’s latest operations in Gaza City, and Netanyahu gave no indication that Israel would let up on its offensive.
US and Israel reject calls for Palestinian state
One of Rubio’s reasons for visiting was to show support for Israel as it expects to face growing international condemnation of the war at the upcoming United Nations General Assembly session. A number of European countries and Canada have said they intend to recognize a Palestinian state over fervent US and Israeli objections.
Some Israeli politicians have hinted that Israel may respond by annexing part of the West Bank. Rubio said statehood recognition is counterproductive to creating a state through negotiations and suggested that such proclamations are self-serving.
“The only impact they actually have is it makes Hamas feel more emboldened,” he said. “It’s actually served as an impediment to peace.”
Israel and the Palestinians have not held serious or substantive peace talks since Netanyahu returned to office in 2009.
Netanyahu, who strongly opposes Palestinian statehood, said “it is clear that if unilateral actions are taken against us, it simply invites unilateral actions on our part.”
Palestinians flee to the south
Israel has been urging Palestinians in Gaza City to head south. But there is little space for people to shelter in Muwasi, a sprawling, crowded tent camp that Israel has designated as a humanitarian zone and where it has regularly carried out strikes on what it says are militant targets.
COGAT, the Israeli military body in charge of civilian affairs in Gaza, said it has increased the amount of food, medical equipment and shelter supplies it allows into Gaza, including 20,000 tents brought in since May. It said it has also repaired water lines and power lines for desalination plants.
On Monday, images showed a steady stream of Palestinians walking and driving along the narrow road by the sea that Israel designated a safe corridor.
The war in Gaza began when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting 251. Most of the hostages have since been released in ceasefires brokered in part by Qatar or other deals.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 64,871 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which doesn’t say how many were civilians or combatants. The ministry, which is part of the Hamas-run government and staffed by medical professionals, says women and children make up around half the dead.


Trump administration joins Republicans’ campaign to police speech in reaction to Kirk’s murder

Trump administration joins Republicans’ campaign to police speech in reaction to Kirk’s murder
Updated 22 min 33 sec ago

Trump administration joins Republicans’ campaign to police speech in reaction to Kirk’s murder

Trump administration joins Republicans’ campaign to police speech in reaction to Kirk’s murder

Vice President JD Vance on Monday jumped onto the conservative movement demanding consequences for those who have cheered Charlie Kirk’s killing, calling on the public to turn in anyone who says distasteful things about the assassination of his friend and political ally.
“When you see someone celebrating Charlie’s murder, call them out,” Vance urged listeners on the slain activist’s podcast Monday. “And hell, call their employer.”
Vance’s call also included a vow to target some of the biggest funders of liberal causes as conservatives stepped up their targeting of private individuals for their comments about the killing. It marked an escalation in a campaign that some warned invoked some of the darkest chapters of American history.
“The government involvement in this does inch this closer to looking like McCarthyism,” said Adam Goldstein of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, referring to the 1950s campaign to root out communists that led to false allegations and ruined careers. “It was not a shining moment for free expression.”
Campaign broadens to those who quote Kirk critically
Republican-controlled states such as Florida, Oklahoma and Texas have launched investigations of teachers accused of inappropriate statements after last week’s assassination on a college campus in Utah. The US military has invited members of the public to report those who “celebrate or mock” the killing and said some troops have already been removed for their comments.
At the same time, the Trump administration has vowed to target what it contends is a “vast” liberal network that inspired the shooter, even as authorities maintain it appears he acted alone and the investigation is ongoing.
The campaign has broadened to include even those whose statements were critical of Kirk without celebrating his assassination.
The Washington Post fired Karen Attiah, an opinion columnist, for posts on the day of the shooting that lamented how “white America” was not ready to solve gun violence and that quoted Kirk denigrating the intelligence of prominent Black women such as Michelle Obama.
Goldstein worried there were many cases like Attiah’s of people targeted for simply quoting Kirk or failing to mourn his passing adequately: “That’s one of the key symptoms of cancel culture,” he said. “Trying to paint everyone with the same brush.”
Conservatives coined the term cancel culture for what they claimed was persecution of those on the right for their views, especially related to the COVID-19 pandemic and Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol, leading to campaigns to get regular people fired.
It was a significant cause for President Donald Trump, who pledged to end it during his campaign last year. But after the Kirk killing, he and his administration have instead leaned into it from the right.
A hero to conservatives, a provocateur to many Democrats
A father of two and Christian conservative, Kirk was a hero to many Trump Republicans for his fiery warnings about the dangers of Democrats and ability to organize young voters for the GOP. But Kirk also was a provocateur and supporter of Trump’s attempt to overturn his 2020 election loss who left a long record of partisan quips that enraged many on the left.
“According to Kirk, empathy is a made-up new-age term, so keep the jokes coming. It’s what he would have wanted,” read one post on X that Melvin Villaver Jr., a Clemson University music professor, re-posted the day of the killing, according to a screenshot circulated by college Republicans demanding his firing. Clemson eventually fired one staffer and suspended Earl and another professor after intense pressure from elected South Carolina Republican officials.
Other targeted posters, such as Army Lt. Col. Christopher Ladnier, simply quoted Kirk on the day of his assassination. These included Kirk calling the Civil Rights Act a “beast” that “has now turned into an anti-white weapon,” his criticism of Martin Luther King Jr. and his statement that some gun deaths are the cost of a robust Second Amendment that protects other rights.
Ladnier, who has been targeted by conservative activists online, said in a Facebook message to The Associated Press that he would respond “when/if” his chain of command takes action.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott approvingly posted a video of a student at Texas Tech University on Friday who was arrested after a confrontation at a campus vigil for Kirk, writing: “This is what happened to the person who was mocking Charlie Kirk’s assassination at Texas Tech.”
Top Republicans vow to go after ‘domestic terrorist network’

Authorities say Kirk was shot by 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, who grew up in a conservative household in southern Utah but was enmeshed in “leftist ideology,” according to the state’s Republican governor, Spencer Cox.
Robinson is expected to appear in court for the first time Tuesday, at which point Cox said investigators may reveal more about what motivated the attack. The governor said the suspect, who allegedly carved memes onto his bullet casings, appeared radicalized by the “dark corners of the Internet.”
On Monday, Vance was joined on Kirk’s podcast by Stephen Miller, Trump’s deputy chief of staff, who vowed to crack down on what he called the “vast domestic terrorist network” he blamed for Kirk’s death.
Alluding to free speech concerns, Vance said: “You have the crazies on the far left that say, ‘Oh, Stephen Miller and JD Vance, they’re going to go after constitutionally protected speech.’”
But he added: “No no no! We’re going to go after the NGO network that foments, facilitates and engages in violence,” — a reference to non-governmental organizations.
The White House did not immediately return a request seeking clarity on the remarks, including which groups might be targeted.
The idea of a retribution campaign against individuals or groups for expressing a particular viewpoint has alarmed many.
“Just having that ideology, just believing differently than some other American is not illegal,” Republican Sen. James Lankford of Oklahoma said on CNN on Sunday.
Instead, he said any groups that have been involved in illegal or violent acts should be targeted.
Killing as a pretext to go after political rivals
On Kirk’s show, Vance talked about the need for unity after the assassination, but then dismissed it as impossible given what he described as the left’s embrace of political violence.
Democratic officials have roundly condemned Kirk’s murder. Democrats also have been victims of political violence recently, including the June assassination of the speaker of the Minnesota House and her husband, and the 2022 beating of former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband in their San Francisco home.
Caitlin Legacki of Stop Government Censorship, formed to fight the Trump administration’s use of government against its political rivals, said it was one thing for people making abhorrent statements to face consequences.
“When we get concerned is when there appears to be a concerted effort in the government to use this tragedy to punish political opponents,” she said.


Sudan’s diaspora steps up as millions displaced by war look for survival and hope

Sudan’s diaspora steps up as millions displaced by war look for survival and hope
Updated 16 September 2025

Sudan’s diaspora steps up as millions displaced by war look for survival and hope

Sudan’s diaspora steps up as millions displaced by war look for survival and hope
  • Amid the world’s largest displacement crisis, Sudanese abroad are keeping families alive with remittances, soup kitchens and aid networks
  • Doctors, activists and community groups in the UK and other countries are mobilizing to fill the gaps caused by dwindling international aid

LONDON: When Dr. Marwa Gibril left her medical practice in the UK to return to Port Sudan in January, she knew she was entering a country in collapse. Cholera was spreading, health workers were fleeing, and millions had been displaced from their homes.

Yet for Gibril — a family physician trained in Britain with a master’s degree in public health from Harvard — the decision was clear. She wanted to be with her family, use her medical skills, and support Sudan’s health system in crisis.

“I had all this knowledge and skills and I thought it’s time to put them in the right place,” she told Arab News from Port Sudan, the relatively secure coastal city and de facto capital where her mother and brother have chosen to remain.

“It’s a combination of all this together that I have to pay part of it back to the country.”

Gibril’s return comes against the backdrop of Sudan’s most severe displacement crisis in modern history. The war between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which began in April 2023, has devastated the country.

Now in its third year, the conflict has caused widespread damage to civilian infrastructure. Both parties have been responsible for thousands of deaths and face accusations of rape, looting, and destruction of property. 

Sudan's army chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan gestures to soldiers inside the presidential palace after the Sudanese army said it had taken control of the building, in the capital Khartoum, Sudan March 26, 2025. (Reuters)

As of August 2025, more than 12 million people had been displaced: 7.7 million internally and 4.3 million as refugees or returnees in neighboring countries, making it the world’s largest displacement crisis, according to UN data.

Millions have lost homes, livelihoods, savings, and possessions. To survive, they rely on whatever resources they can preserve, the generosity of host communities, humanitarian assistance, and, critically, support from Sudanese relatives abroad.

Sudan’s modern history has been marked by cycles of migration, forced displacement, and internal upheaval, shaping both its culture and economy.

Waves of migration during Omar Bashir’s 30-year authoritarian Islamist rule sent skilled workers to Europe, North America and the Gulf, where many maintained close ties with families back home.

“The Sudanese diaspora have very strong ties with their home country of Sudan compared to other immigrants from other communities,” Gibril said.

“In general, Sudanese immigrants are recent, say, over the last 30 years, since Bashir’s time. We saw many politicians flee the country during different dictatorships. Even before this war, they went and left and sought refuge in the UK, US, and other Western countries.” 

Sudan's paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) soldiers secure a site where Lieutenant General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, the deputy head of the military council and head of RSF, attends a meeting in Khartoum, Sudan. (Reuters/File)

From the 1970s onwards, workers migrated in significant numbers, driven by political instability, limited opportunities, and economic decline at home. The remittances they sent back became a cornerstone of Sudan’s economy and a lifeline for families.

Outward migration was sometimes described by relatives as a dispersal — or shatat — a process that could weaken kinship ties. Yet diaspora support for relatives has remained strong, as shown by the outpouring of assistance in response to the war.

Nazar Yousif Eltahir is one of the founding members of the Sudanese Community in Oxford, a diaspora group established in 1996 to support families, provide supplementary schooling in Arabic, and coordinate cultural activities to celebrate Sudanese heritage.

“I continue to support my family financially amid the ongoing conflict,” Eltahir, who has relatives in White Nile state, told Arab News. “My stepmother, three sisters, and two brothers live in Sudan, facing severe challenges due to instability and shortages.

“My mother-in-law has found refuge in Cardiff (in the UK), while my brother-in-law and his children, as well as my sister-in-law and her children, are in Egypt. Tragically, my sister-in-law lost her husband last year in a landmine accident.” 

Lieutenant General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, deputy head of the military council and head of paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), addresses his supporters during a meeting in Khartoum, Sudan. (Reuters/File)

On the day he spoke to Arab News, Eltahir had been volunteering his time to help rehouse a recently arrived Sudanese refugee and had written to his local member of parliament seeking help in securing permission for another refugee to visit family in Egypt.

As a member of the executive committee of Sudanese Doctors for Peace and Development and a supporter of many similar causes, Eltahir says he hopes to raise awareness about the conflict in Sudan and support charitable efforts.

“My greatest hope for Sudan is the achievement of a humanitarian ceasefire, followed by a permanent truce and sustainable peace,” he said.

“I aspire to see a civilian-led government, along with judicial and security sector reforms, that will protect democracy, uphold the constitution, and guarantee equal citizenship for all.” 

IN NUMBERS:

• 51.7m Estimated total population of Sudan.

• 60.7% Adult literacy rate (ages 15+).

• $989 GDP per capita in 2024.

The Sudanese Community in Oxford is one of countless mutual aid organizations across the UK and the world that seek to balance the pressures of integration with efforts to preserve language, faith, and cultural traditions.

Beyond financial support, diaspora networks such as these have mobilized politically, arranging protests, lobbying governments, and raising international awareness during moments of crisis.

During the 2019 uprising that toppled Bashir, the diaspora played a “major and essential role in moving things,” said Gibril, helping to put Sudan at the center of global attention.

Today, however, she says their impact is less visible, partly because competing crises in Ukraine and Gaza dominate international headlines, and partly because narratives framing Sudan’s conflict as a war between two generals obscure the human cost.

Many in the diaspora are also now consumed with sustaining extended families displaced by the conflict. Gibril says this shift has affected their capacity to mobilize politically. 

A general view shows large plume of smoke and fire rising from fuel depot after what military sources told Reuters is a Rapid Support Forces (RSF) drone attack in Port Sudan targeting fuel storage facilities in Port Sudan, Sudan May 5, 2025. (Reuters)

“This is why I think many of us ask, where are the people? Where are the people who used to care in thousands in Sudan, in millions in the streets? Most people are consumed by just living — day by day living to provide for these displaced families.”

As international aid has evaporated, diaspora communities have stepped in to provide relief. Soup kitchens in cities like Khartoum and El-Fasher, for instance, are largely funded by Sudanese abroad.

“The Sudanese diaspora continued throughout to try to fill the gap,” said Gibril.

“These soup kitchens are mostly supported by initiatives from the UK, from the US, from the Gulf … Where they will say ‘today the food of the soup kitchen is being funded by the Sudanese diaspora in London.’ And then the next day it’ll be the Sudanese group in Brighton.”

Beyond the hunger crisis in Sudan, the war has also shaken the country’s fragile health system. Many professionals have fled, and attacks on health workers have intensified the shortage of skilled staff. Gibril says these gaps were what motivated her return. 

Displaced Sudanese sit at a shelter after they were evacuated by the Sudanese army to a safer area in Omdurman, on May 13, 2025, amid the ongoing war in Sudan. (AFP)

“This gap led me to think that it is an opportunity for me to come back, since I am someone who gained skills and had the opportunity to train in very prestigious medical institutions, and learn and have skills to come back and put them where they’re most needed.”

She now applies her expertise in family medicine and public health to Sudan’s cholera outbreak and broader humanitarian efforts. Her experience abroad, she says, equips her to advise authorities on the unique challenges of Sudan’s health landscape.

Gaps in the humanitarian response are also being filled by grassroots, community-led volunteer networks known as the Emergency Response Rooms (ERR), which emerged from the resistance committees that led the uprising against Bashir.

Sudan’s roughly 700 ERRs organize rapid, hyperlocal humanitarian aid — including evacuations, medical support, water delivery, community kitchens, and protection — especially where formal state systems have collapsed or are inaccessible. 

“The cuts in aid from the US, UK, and other governments have been a blow just at a time when innocent civilians including children face grave threats from violence, disease, and hunger,” Dr. Majdi Osman, a University of Cambridge scientist originally from Nubia, told Arab News.

“The youth-founded ERRs are a lifeline for millions of people in Sudan. They provide community-led assistance with food, healthcare, and basic supplies.

“They are there in the neighborhoods most impacted by the war. What they have built is so important and provides a way for those in the diaspora to give directly to assist those in the country.”

Osman has himself established a program called Nubia Health to support communities long neglected by the state and to meet the needs of displaced families heading north toward Egypt.

“Nubia Health is a community health program based in Wadi Halfa, near the Sudan-Egypt border, that was founded just before the war,” said Osman. “Since the war started we have built a community health center and community health worker program. 

Mud covers the ground around tents at the Abu Al-Naja camp for displaced Sudanese in the eastern Gedaref State on July 16, 2025. (AFP)

“Our aim is to be a center of excellence for community health in Sudan. Wadi Halfa has become a busy, populated city after the war started and displaced people seek refuge there. It is led by a group of inspiring doctors and healthcare workers.”

For many Sudanese abroad, the pain of separation runs deep. The ability to help, even in a small way, is a welcome salve. “Every Sudanese person is dealing with their own displacement, fearing for those still in Sudan, or grieving loss of loved ones and a way of life,” said Osman.

Yet, despite their own burdens, countless others “are doing the difficult work of engaging with politicians to keep Sudan on the agenda. The war in Sudan has been ignored by the international community and those in the diaspora speaking up and organizing are playing a critical role.”

Despite immense challenges, Gibril retains hope in Sudan’s youth and their capacity to rebuild a unified nation. She believes meaningful change will require youth leadership, diaspora engagement, and an inclusive vision with human rights and social justice at its heart. 

Cholera infected patients receive treatment in the cholera isolation center at the refugee camps of western Sudan, in Tawila city in Darfur, on August 14, 2025. (AFP)

“The hope is that we have this spark in many of the people that I see in Sudan,” she said. “Many are supporting the SAF, but they are not supporting a country run by the military.

“They think the SAF and this state is essential as an institution to fight back against the RSF so they can go to their homes and start to rebuild.

“But also they see an important element for Sudan actually to come out of this is to transition to a civil-led government, to transition to democracy, where the SAF and all other security apparatus is reformed as part of this transition.”

Gibril believes the diaspora is uniquely positioned to support this process, with its members drawing on their experience of democracy, civic engagement, and organized advocacy.

“Without that hope,” she said, “I would not have come back.”

 


The oldest mummies in the world may hail from southeastern Asia and date back 12,000 years

The oldest mummies in the world may hail from southeastern Asia and date back 12,000 years
Updated 15 September 2025

The oldest mummies in the world may hail from southeastern Asia and date back 12,000 years

The oldest mummies in the world may hail from southeastern Asia and date back 12,000 years
  • Researchers found human remains that were buried in crouched or squatted positions with some cuts and burn marks in various archaeological sites across China and Vietnam and to a lesser extent, from the Philippines, Laos, Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia

NEW YORK: Scientists have discovered what’s thought to be the oldest known mummies in the world in southeastern Asia dating back up to 12,000 years.
Mummification prevents decay by preserving dead bodies. The process can happen naturally in places like the sands of Chile’s Atacama Desert or the bogs of Ireland where conditions can fend off decomposition. Humans across various cultures also mummified their ancestors through embalming to honor them or send their souls to the afterlife.
Egypt’s mummies may be the most well-known, but until now some of the oldest mummies were prepared by a fishing people called the Chinchorro about 7,000 years ago in what’s now Peru and Chile.
A new study published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences pushes that timeline back.
Researchers found human remains that were buried in crouched or squatted positions with some cuts and burn marks in various archaeological sites across China and Vietnam and to a lesser extent, from the Philippines, Laos, Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia.
Studying the bones further, scientists discovered the bodies were likely exposed to heat. That suggested the bodies had been smoke-dried over a fire and mummified by hunter-gatherer communities in the area.
The practice “allowed people to sustain physical and spiritual connections with their ancestors, bridging time and memory,” study author Hirofumi Matsumura with Sapporo Medical University in Japan said in an email.
Dating methods used on the mummies could have been more robust and it’s not yet clear that mummies were consistently smoke-dried across all these locations in southeastern Asia, said human evolution expert Rita Peyroteo Stjerna with Uppsala University in Sweden, who was not involved with the research.
The findings offer “an important contribution to the study of prehistoric funerary practices,” she said in an email.
Mummies are far from a thing of the past. Even today, Indigenous communities in Australia and Papua New Guinea smoke-dry and mummify their dead, scientists said.

 

 


Mahrez wins it for Al-Ahli after Al-Ittihad stumble in Asia

Mahrez wins it for Al-Ahli after Al-Ittihad stumble in Asia
Updated 16 September 2025

Mahrez wins it for Al-Ahli after Al-Ittihad stumble in Asia

Mahrez wins it for Al-Ahli after Al-Ittihad stumble in Asia
  • Al-Ahli started their defence of the AFC Champions League Elite with a win over Central Asian opponents

JEDDAH: Al-Ahli started their defense of the AFC Champions League Elite Monday with a dramatic 4-2 win over Nasaf Qarshi while Jeddah rivals Al-Ittihad slumped to a 2-1 loss at Al-Wahda of the United Arab Emirates.

The holders found themselves 2-0 down at the break thanks to two goals from Khusayin Norchaev. 

Merih Demiral gave the ball away just after the half-hour and the striker made no mistake. Then, four minutes before the break, the 23-year-old ran on to a through ball and slotted past Edouard Mendy from the right side of the area.

Al-Ahli threw everything at the Central Asian visitors in the second half and were given a lifeline after 65 minutes.  Abduvohid Nematov came out of his area to clear a pass over the top, missed and there was Millot to shoot into the empty net.

Four minutes later and the French midfielder was on hand to score from much closer range, slotting home a loose ball after the away team had failed to clear a number of dangerous attacks.

Then, four minutes into added time, Riyad Mahrez cut it from the right to fire a low shot into the opposite corner and there was still time for Mohammed Sulaiman to add a fourth and seal a dramatic victory.

It was the opposite feeling for Saudi Pro League champions Al-Ittihad. The Tigers went ahead in Abu Dhabi when Steven Bergwijn smashed home a fierce drive from well outside the area in the 21st minute.

The goal came against the run of play, with Al-Ittihad struggling to find their rhythm. It didn’t improve as the Jeddah giants were reduced to ten men eight minutes before the break as Muhannad Al-Shanqiti saw red for a foul on Facundo Kruspzky. 

The hosts finally got the goal they deserved just after the hour. Omar Khribin scored plenty of goals for Al-Hilal and the Syrian turned provider, passing for Caio Canedo to slot home from close range.

Al-Ittihad looked like going back home with a point but that was snatched away in the 98th minute. Predrag Rajkovic saved a close range header from Alaeddine Zouhir and there was Lucas Pimenta to fire home the rebound. 


More African nations are receiving third-country immigrants deported by US. Here’s what to know

More African nations are receiving third-country immigrants deported by US. Here’s what to know
Updated 15 September 2025

More African nations are receiving third-country immigrants deported by US. Here’s what to know

More African nations are receiving third-country immigrants deported by US. Here’s what to know
  • Ghanaian authorities said on Monday that the 14 deportees received last week have been returned to their home countries

DAKAR, Senegal: The West African nation of Ghana is the latest in a growing list of African countries that have received third-country nationals deported by the US or agreed to receive them, a controversial approach whose legality lawyers for the deportees have questioned.
Other African nations that have received such deportees from the US include Eswatini, Rwanda and South Sudan. Uganda has agreed to a deal with the US to take certain deported immigrants, although it is yet to receive any.
Experts have said some African countries may seek to facilitate the deportation programs in order to earn goodwill in negotiations with the Trump administration on policies such as trade, migration and aid.
Ghanaian authorities said on Monday that the 14 deportees received last week have been returned to their home countries. They defended the decision on humanitarian grounds, although lawyers for the migrants say the deportation violated international human rights law and rights of the deportees.
Deportees were sent to Ghana at short notice
The immigrants the US government deported to Ghana included 13 Nigerians and one Gambian. None of them were originally from Ghana.
It was not immediately clear when they arrived in Ghana. Court documents show they were awoken in the middle of the night on Sept. 5 and not told where they were going until hours into the flight on a US military cargo plane.
Some of the deportees had no ties with the country, nor did they designate it as a potential country of removal, according to the lawsuit they filed in US through their lawyers.
Ghana says it can only receive fellow West Africans
Ghana’s Foreign Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa said his country accepted the deportees “purely on humanitarian principle” and because they were fellow West Africans.
“We just could not continue to take the suffering of our fellow West Africans,” Ablakwa said. “So we thought that since there was a vacuum in West Africa, we should step in as part of our Pan-African credentials to take care of West Africans,” he said, suggesting that Ghana agreed to the request because some other West African nations had rejected the request to receive third-country deportees.
The current status of the deportees
Ghana’s Minister for Government Communications Felix Kwakye Ofosu told the AP on Monday that the 14 migrants “have since left for their home countries,” without providing further details.
As of last week, the arrangement was for a bus to transport the Nigerians back home, a journey that typically takes seven to eight hours, Ghanaian President John Mahama, told reporters at the time.
Nigerian officials said they were not briefed by either Ghana or US about the deportations, and expressed shock that the Nigerians were sent to other countries when some citizens have been deported directly from US to Nigeria.
“What we have only rejected is deportation of other nationals into Nigeria,” Kimebi Imomotimi Ebienfa, a spokesperson for Nigeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told AP.
Latin American countries have also taken deported immigrants
Many of the countries that have agreed to such deportation deals are in Latin America and Africa.
The US has sent hundreds of Venezuelans to a notorious prison in El Salvador. Venezuelans and immigrants from Afghanistan, Russia, Iran, China and other countries have also been sent to Costa Rica and Panama.
Last month, Paraguay signed a third-country agreement with the Trump administration. Mexico has not signed such an agreement, but has accepted deportees from Central America and other Western Hemisphere countries, including Cuba, Haiti and Venezuela.
Human rights concerns
The Trump administration’s deportation program has faced widespread criticism from human rights experts who cite international protections for asylum-seekers and question whether immigrants will be appropriately screened before being deported.
A lawyer representing the Gambian sent to Ghana told the AP the deportee and several others had an order prohibiting their return for fear of torture in their countries.
Rights groups have also argued that most of the African countries that have received such deportees have one thing in common: A poor human rights record, with government critics often targeted.
The immigrants deported to Ghana were detained there in “abysmal and deplorable” conditions after being held in “straitjackets” for 16 hours on the flight, according to the US lawsuit filed by lawyers for some of them.
Ghanaian authorities denied the claim about detention conditions and said they had no knowledge of the situation of the deportees as they flew to Ghana.
Sending the deportees to their countries despite the legal orders prohibiting such over fear of their safety is “a clear violation of the duties both countries have” to protect the migrants amid such risks, said Maureen A. Sweeney, immigration lawyer and professor of law at the University of Maryland Carey School of Law.
“This is part of a pattern by the US government of extreme indifference (at least) to the government’s obligations and to the human consequences of its mass deportation campaign,” Sweeney said.