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Famed ‘sponge cities’ Chinese architect dead in Brazil plane crash

Famed ‘sponge cities’ Chinese architect dead in Brazil plane crash
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A view shows the site of a plane crash site where Chinese landscape architect and urban planner Kongjian Yu died, in the vast wetlands of Mato Grosso do Sul state, Brazil, Sept. 23, 2025. (Reuters)
Famed ‘sponge cities’ Chinese architect dead in Brazil plane crash
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Chinese architect Kongjian Yu, known for his so-called nature-mimicking "sponge cities," has died in a small plane crash in Brazil with two filmmakers documenting his work, police said Wednesday. (X/@Arquitretas2)
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Famed ‘sponge cities’ Chinese architect dead in Brazil plane crash

Famed ‘sponge cities’ Chinese architect dead in Brazil plane crash
  • The 62-year-old was considered a leading figure in sustainable urban planning
  • The award-winning Yu was in Brazil for the recording of a documentary about his work

SAO PAULO: Chinese architect Kongjian Yu, known for his so-called nature-mimicking “sponge cities,” has died in a small plane crash in Brazil with two filmmakers documenting his work, police said Wednesday.
The 62-year-old was considered a leading figure in sustainable urban planning; his “sponge cities” replacing concrete surfaces with natural features that better absorb water in flood situations.
The award-winning Yu was in Brazil for the recording of a documentary about his work when he perished with two filmmakers and the pilot in a plane crash late Tuesday in Brazil’s Mato Grosso do Sul state.
Police said the cause of the accident was not known.
The other three deceased were documentary makers Luiz Fernando Feres da Cunha Ferraz and Rubens Crispim Jr, as well as the pilot, who owned the aircraft.
Brazil’s Council of Architecture and Urbanism, which recently hosted Yu as a speaker at an international conference, said his “sponge cities” concept has been applied in more than a thousand projects in 250 cities.
“His contribution has influenced environmental public policies in China and other countries,” it said in a statement expressing condolences to the architect’s family, friends and colleagues.


How cocaine trafficking contributes to the Sahel’s seemingly intractable instability

How cocaine trafficking contributes to the Sahel’s seemingly intractable instability
Updated 5 sec ago

How cocaine trafficking contributes to the Sahel’s seemingly intractable instability

How cocaine trafficking contributes to the Sahel’s seemingly intractable instability
  • Global cocaine production has surged in recent years, catering to demand and reshaping trafficking routes across multiple continents
  • The Sahel has long served as a pivotal transit corridor, where porous borders and weak states enable traffickers to operate freely

LONDON: If you walked through Agadez, Niger, a decade ago, and asked for directions to the home of former Prime Minister Brigi Rafini, you would get blank stares. If you asked for Cherif Ould Abidine’s house, everyone could point the way.

Abidine — better known as “Cherif Cocaine” — was far more than a businessman. Until his death due to illness in February 2016, he dominated Agadez as both a political powerhouse and allegedly the region’s most notorious drug lord.

Transport mogul, campaign financier, and alleged kingpin of the Sahel’s illicit trade, his web of influence included ties to tobacco giant Philip Morris. His bus company, 3STV, still runs routes that reportedly once served as cover for trafficking cocaine and other drugs through the region.

Linked to figures like Goumour Bidika — a key intermediary between terrorism and trafficking in Agadez — and Cherif Kaffa of the Al-Qaeda offshoot Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa, Abidine’s sphere blurred the lines between business, politics, and organized crime.

After his death, heirs and former partners carried on the smuggling networks, but growing law enforcement pressure and shifting regional power have fractured the local drug market, making it harder to track and more contested.

“Worldwide cocaine production has dramatically increased,” Luca Raineri, security studies professor at Sant’Anna School in Pisa, told Arab News.

“There is this new trend, but whether it has particularly impacted the Sahara and Sahel is hard to gauge, because the only way we have to find out is by relying on seizure data, which is deeply flawed.”

Cocaine seizures have surged sharply in recent years, rising 48 percent compared to 2022. Concentrated chiefly in Niger, Burkina Faso, and Mali, seizures soared from an average of 13 kg annually between 2015 and 2020 to 1,466 kg in 2022.

Before full data for 2023 was available, the UN reported that Mauritania alone seized 2.3 tonnes of cocaine in the first half of the year.

Despite these increases, state capacity across the Sahel — including Niger — remains limited and is often undermined by widespread corruption.

Transparency International ranks Sahelian countries among the world’s most corrupt, exposing systemic weaknesses that permeate political and community leadership and erode governance and development.

Meanwhile, armed groups finance themselves through drug trafficking, while rising local cocaine consumption — though still limited by affordability and overshadowed by cannabis, kush, and pharmaceutical opioids — further strains fragile health systems and the social fabric.

As a result, local communities bear the harshest burden of the growing and increasingly complex drug trade.

“Cocaine trafficking more broadly in West Africa, of which the Sahel is only an extension, relies on a well-established infrastructure involving economic actors operating in various sectors, activity offering a legal facade and corrupt political, administrative, and security force actors,” William Assanvo, senior researcher at the Institute for Security Studies, told Arab News.

He said recent investigations into cocaine trafficking networks, particularly in Cote d’Ivoire, highlighted the involvement of foreign nationals, often from Europe and Latin America, who operate in the region as intermediaries between the countries of origin and destination.

Despite these findings, understanding the full scope of the Sahel’s cocaine trade remains a significant challenge. Raineri says this is because figures are often actively concealed due to potential state involvement.

“We don’t know what passes through and what doesn’t,” Raineri said. “Figures aren’t always made public. Sometimes they are concealed because, on some occasions, some state officials may be involved.”

Yet for Raineri, today’s scene is perhaps less “interesting” than a few years ago.

June’s World Drug Report by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, or UNODC, soberly declared a “new era of global instability” in the drug trade, with production, seizures, and cocaine use all climbing to record highs.

In 2023, cocaine became the world’s fastest-growing illicit drug market, with output up nearly 34 percent in just a year.

After a lull, West and Central Africa — especially the Sahel — appeared to be reclaiming their place as major global drug conduits, again becoming a frontier in a cocaine arena once limited to Latin America.

This echoed the first major cocaine surge through the Sahel in the 2000s, as Latin American cartels, squeezed by US and European law enforcement, turned to West Africa.

Rising supply, booming European demand, and pressure on direct maritime routes all fed this shift, made easier by reduced violence, porous borders, and, at times, collusion with local officials.

Now, with maritime alternatives growing cheaper and less controlled, and instability making parts of the Sahel riskier, the region appears to be slipping from the traffickers’ top choices.

Shipments typically arrive first at West African ports, where cocaine is repackaged. From these hubs, cargo either continues by sea to North African ports, often ending up in Tobruk, Libya, or travels overland through the vast, sparsely populated Sahel to reach Europe and wealthy Middle Eastern countries, though data is scarce to confirm such claims.

“At this moment, it doesn’t seem the Sahel is the preferred region for smugglers,” said Raineri, who has investigated the transnational phenomena of security relevance across trafficking, crime and terrorism in the region for over 10 years.

“There is significant instability in the Sahel, which makes entrusting valuable cocaine shipments to local traffickers risky. Meanwhile, alternative routes, especially maritime ones, have become more attractive. They are cheaper and less tightly controlled.”

In a May bulletin, the Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime, or GI-TOC, reported that between 2019 and 2023, northbound cocaine trafficking across the Sahel had resurged, with rising consumption of cocaine and crack in parts of the region.

While regional conditions enabled this uptick, dramatic political change since 2023 in the Sahel and Libya “appear to have disrupted cocaine trafficking through northern Niger and to a lesser extent northern Mali.”

The July 2023 coup in Niger suspended the constitution, ousted President Mohamed Bazoum, and disrupted a system that had long protected traffickers and allowed impunity, often through collusion with state actors.

In August that same year, renewed conflict in northern Mali between rebel groups, Jama’at Nusrat Al-Islam wa Al-Muslimin extremists, Russian-supported Malian forces and Wagner mercenaries further destabilized the region, forcing traffickers to seek new routes.

GI-TOC stressed that increased trafficking through southern Mali and Senegal does not necessarily signal more northbound flows but rather the adaptiveness of traffickers, redirecting cargo to coastal routes.

Before these changes, surging cocaine flows stoked fears of deeper involvement by extremist groups like the JNIM and Islamic State in the Greater Sahara. These groups, expanding and competing for territory, are well-positioned to benefit financially from the drug trade.

The UNODC noted “limited” direct evidence of their involvement, but emphasized their indirect benefit through taxing traffickers operating in their zones.

“There has been a lot of commentary about the possible involvement of extremist groups — what is labeled narcoterrorism,” said Raineri. “In reality, this hypothesis is less credible today than years ago.”

While members of various extremist groups were previously involved in the cocaine trade, Raineri says they now mainly play a “protectionist role.”

“There was an internal doctrinal debate within Al-Qaeda,” he said. “Leaders in the Maghreb asked their Central Asian superiors how to handle these trafficking networks.

“Ultimately, the prevailing opinion was that such trafficking could be leveraged to fund jihad, but fighters and the populations under their control must not consume these drugs.”

Raineri described a patchwork drug market where armed groups act as either traffickers or protectors.

“These territorial protectors extort and collect rackets from any economic activity, from livestock to ‘trading activities’ such as fuel, timber, and of course, drug trafficking whenever they gain access. All armed groups controlling territory — including extremists — do this.”

While there are concerns about extremist groups exploiting the drug market, Raineri says most territorial protectors work with state authorities, who often shift blame onto extremist groups to undermine their legitimacy.

“The main protectors are on the side of the state, and local governments do everything possible to shift blame onto their enemies — the terrorists,” Raineri said. “It’s a way to delegitimize extremist groups that present themselves as fighting a corrupt state.”

Assanvo offered a similar perspective, arguing that extremist groups are not the prime movers in regional trafficking.

“The automatic link between drug trafficking and terrorism in the Sahel, which has been made for several years, is very often exaggerated and should be put into perspective or at least questioned,” he said.

“For the moment, there is little concrete evidence of the involvement of terrorist groups in drug trafficking, beyond the role that some of them play in facilitating transport or securing convoys crossing areas under their control.”

Assanvo added that contrary to many assumptions, traffickers require stability and security in order to profit.

“The political instability caused by the coups d’etat that have occurred in recent years in the Sahel and the situation in Libya is not necessarily a good thing for them. On the other hand, the withdrawal of French and American forces from the Sahel (Mali and Niger) has left the field open to trafficking in this part of the region.”

Raineri explained that much of the analysis around narcoterrorism is, therefore, an outdated narrative, fitting a pattern favored by the US, France, and the wider international community.

“For the past 10 to 15 years, the absolute priority for the French and Americans in the Sahel has been fighting terrorism. In the name of counterterrorism, deals were struck with known traffickers — overlooked as long as they could be leveraged against terrorists.

“This narco-extremist narrative is an old story with media appeal. It plays well politically for governments seeking to paint their rivals as mere bandits.”

Raineri noted only one case of decisive state action against a heavily state-protected figure: Cherif Ould Abidine — Niger’s “Cherif Cocaine.”

“Everyone knew he was the ‘don’ of the city (Agadez), shielded by the state and untouchable,” said Raineri.

“He was arrested only once, likely after a tip-off from the Americans, because he ended up with a shipment of drugs reportedly linked to Hezbollah and Lebanese interests.

“This particularly alarmed the Americans, who insisted that such a load could not be allowed to pass through.”


Japanese Prime Minister looking for further upgrade of ties with Kuwait

Japanese Prime Minister looking for further upgrade of ties with Kuwait
Updated 24 September 2025

Japanese Prime Minister looking for further upgrade of ties with Kuwait

Japanese Prime Minister looking for further upgrade of ties with Kuwait
  • Ishiba met with the Crown Prince in New York
  • He expressed gratitude for Kuwait’s long-standing stable supply of crude oil

TOKYO: Japanese Prime Minister Ishiba Shigeru told Sheikh Sabah Khalid Al-Hamad Al-Sabah, the Crown Prince of Kuwait, on Tuesday that he plans to further upgrade bilateral relations between the two countries based on their Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, Japan’s Foreign Ministry reported.
Ishiba met with the Crown Prince in New York and said Kuwait, with its strong commitment to multilateralism, including at the United Nations, is a “reliable partner” in international forums and that he wished for the two countries to work closely together.
Ishiba also expressed gratitude for Kuwait’s long-standing stable supply of crude oil, and both sides agreed to promote energy cooperation, including clean energy. They also welcomed the lifting of a ban on imports of Japanese beef into Kuwait, scheduled for September 25.
The pair exchanged views on recent developments in the Middle East and confirmed their close coordination toward achieving a “two-state solution” for the Israeli Palestinian conflict, as well as agreeing to strengthen cooperation in various fields in Asia and Africa.


Japan urges Iran to resume talks with IAEA over nuclear issue

Japan urges Iran to resume talks with IAEA over nuclear issue
Updated 24 September 2025

Japan urges Iran to resume talks with IAEA over nuclear issue

Japan urges Iran to resume talks with IAEA over nuclear issue
  • Iwaya said Japan is hoping for a resolution of the nuclear issue through dialogue
  • He also urged Iran to take swift and positive action toward an agreement with the E3

TOKYO: In a meeting with Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in New York on Tuesday, Japanese Foreign Minister Iwaya Takeshi urged Iran to resume cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency, Japan’s Foreign Ministry said.
Iwaya said Japan is hoping for a resolution of the nuclear issue through dialogue and urged Iran to immediately resume full cooperation with the IAEA, as well as talks with the United States, as early as possible.
He also urged Iran to take swift and positive action toward an agreement with the E3 (the United Kingdom, France, and Germany) and said Japan will continue to make maximum diplomatic efforts for a peaceful resolution of the issue.
In response, Foreign Minister Araghchi explained the position and efforts of Iran, and the two ministers agreed to continue close communication to work toward peace and stability in the Middle East.


Kosovo calls for international pressure on Serbia over deadly 2023 gunfight

Kosovo calls for international pressure on Serbia over deadly 2023 gunfight
Updated 24 September 2025

Kosovo calls for international pressure on Serbia over deadly 2023 gunfight

Kosovo calls for international pressure on Serbia over deadly 2023 gunfight
  • Kosovo has accused Serbia of involvement, a claim that Belgrade has denied
  • Prosecutors have charged 45 people, alleging they were trying to break away the Serb-majority municipalities in the northern part of Kosovo and join Serbia proper

PRISTINA: Kosovo’s acting prime minister on Wednesday called on the international community not to consider Serbia a normal state until it hands over those responsible for a deadly incursion by heavily armed Serb gunmen in 2023.
Albin Kurti visited the grave of Afrim Bunjaku, a police officer shot dead in the gunfight in Banjska. The attack also left three Serb gunmen dead.
Kosovo has accused Serbia of involvement, a claim that Belgrade has denied.
Kurti said the incursion was an “aggressive and terrorist attack” funded and supported by Belgrade officials and President Aleksandar Vucic.
“We call on the international actors not to consider Serbia a normal state as long as it doesn’t hand over its criminals,” he said.
Prosecutors have charged 45 people, alleging they were trying to break away the Serb-majority municipalities in the northern part of Kosovo and join Serbia proper.
Only three Serb defendants were arrested and were present at the trial that started last year. They pleaded not guilty to charges of violating constitutional and legal order, terror activities, funding terrorism and money laundering.
If convicted, they face a maximum sentence of life in prison.
Among those charged in absentia was Milan Radoicic, a politician and wealthy businessman with ties to Serbia’s ruling populist party and Vucic.
Serbia briefly detained Radoicic, who had fled back there after the shooting. Radoicic denied charges of criminal conspiracy, unlawful possession of weapons and explosives and grave acts against public safety, but admitted he was part of the paramilitary group involved in the gunfight. He was released.
Radoicic is under US and British sanctions for his alleged criminal activity. Serbia said that Radoicic and his group acted on their own.
Serbia’s independent media have reported that Radoicic’s men were deployed to intimidate anti-government protesters at almost daily rallies challenging Vucic’s firm rule in the country.
In Belgrade, right-wing supporters displayed nationalist banners and torches at a vigil on Tuesday evening honoring the three Serb paramilitaries who were killed in the clash in Banjska, and calling them “heroes.” Similar vigils were held in other towns.
European Union and US officials have demanded that Serbia bring the perpetrators to justice.
On Wednesday the British and German embassies urged Serbian authorities to act on the matter as soon as possible.
Relations between Serbia and its former breakaway province remain tense. Talks facilitated by Brussels seem to have stalled while Belgrade is confronted with continuous anti-government protests. In Kosovo, the Parliament’s political deadlock has hampered the creation of a new Cabinet.
Kosovo was a Serbian province until NATO’s 78-day bombing campaign in 1999 ended a war between Serbian government forces and ethnic Albanian separatists in Kosovo, which left about 13,000 dead, mainly ethnic Albanians, and pushed Serbian forces out. Kosovo proclaimed independence in 2008. It is recognized by most countries but not by Serbia and its close allies, Russia and China.


Behind bullish comments, some see Trump walking away from Ukraine

Behind bullish comments, some see Trump walking away from Ukraine
Updated 24 September 2025

Behind bullish comments, some see Trump walking away from Ukraine

Behind bullish comments, some see Trump walking away from Ukraine
  • “I think people are taking heart because it does suggest... that his understanding of the conflict has shifted,” Neil Melvin, Director, International Security at RUSI, said
  • Germany’s Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul welcomed Trump’s comments but said it was time for Europe to step up

LONDON/BERLIN/BRUSSELS: Donald Trump’s comments backing Kyiv to regain all of its territory from Russia have sparked a mixture of relief and suspicion that the US president is ready to leave Europe more to its own devices in supporting Ukraine.
Trump’s remarks on Truth Social marked an abrupt and major rhetorical shift for the US leader who had previously nudged Ukraine to give up territory to end the war and rolled out the red carpet for Vladimir Putin in Alaska only last month.
But it was not immediately clear whether he would back up his words with a shift in US policy, an ambiguity that could keep the onus on Europe to meet more of Ukraine’s needs through weapons and financing as Washington’s role recedes.
“I think people are taking heart because it does suggest... that his understanding of the conflict has shifted,” Neil Melvin, Director, International Security at RUSI, told Reuters about Trump’s comments.
“He has acknowledged that the conflict is more complicated, and he’s clearly frustrated with Putin, so that I think it is perhaps a success for Ukrainian and European diplomacy that that explanation has got through.”
However, Trump is maintaining a strategic ambiguity around the conflict, encouraging Ukraine without committing US support, Melvin said.
“So, the narrative around what he is saying has shifted but he still seems to be making it about distancing the US from leading on the conflict. He’s putting it back onto Europe all the time.”
STEPPING UP WILL NOT BE EASY FOR EUROPE
Germany’s Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul welcomed Trump’s comments but said it was time for Europe to step up.
“We have to become more sovereign,” Wadephul told Germany’s Deutschlandfunk radio.
“We can achieve much more; not all European states have delivered what they promised Ukraine. We have to look at what other financial and military options we have,” he said, adding it would not be easy for Europe to beef up its security efforts.
Two officials, speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity, also cautioned that Trump may be signalling that it was up to Europe to help Ukraine now.
“He seems to be saying his goodbyes, no? But that can change tomorrow. In any case: the cards are clear for us. We know what we should be doing,” a Western European official said.
A senior Eastern European diplomat said Trump’s Ukraine comments aimed to show “that he is starting to disengage by sending a message that it is Europe’s question.”
European defense stocks rose in morning trade on Wednesday after Trump’s comments, but Ukraine’s international bonds fell.
“Donald Trump’s comments on the Ukraine war are contradictory,” said Josef Janning, senior associate fellow at the German Council on Foreign Relations.
“In my view, this is just talk. As I see it, ever since the meeting in Alaska, Trump is walking away from his engagement and ending this war,” Janning said.

EUROPE ALREADY TAKING ON A GREATER ROLE
Before his return to the White House in January, Trump had boasted of being able to end the Ukraine war in 24 hours if re-elected. Following a disastrous meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the Oval Office in February, European leaders have made concerted efforts to bring Trump onside.
They have also sought to convince him that Moscow bears sole responsibility for the war, which began with Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022.
The US has long been Ukraine’s biggest single backer and weapons supplier but since taking office Trump has insisted Europe take on a much greater share of its own defense burden. To some extent, that is already happened.
European members of the NATO alliance have raised their military spending and also supplied Ukraine with air defenses under a new system to give Kyiv weapons from US stocks using funds from NATO countries.
Despite European efforts, Melvin said, Trump’s rhetoric could shift again.
“I think we are always just one call to Putin away from a shift and that’s why I think fundamentally the first eight months have eroded trust in Europe in the Trump administration’s approach and this doesn’t restore trust.”