Ƶ

Car bomb outside Pakistani security force headquarters kills 8

Car bomb outside Pakistani security force headquarters kills 8
Rescue workers and security officials examine damaged vehicles at the site of a powerful car bombing, in Quetta, Pakistan, Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025. (AP)
Updated 7 min 23 sec ago

Car bomb outside Pakistani security force headquarters kills 8

Car bomb outside Pakistani security force headquarters kills 8

QUETTA: Militants set off a powerful car bomb outside the headquarters of Pakistan’s paramilitary security forces in the southwestern city of Quetta on Tuesday, killing at least eight people and wounding several others, authorities said.
Before detonating their vehicle, four attackers who were inside the car stepped outside and engaged the troops in an intense shootout, according to the police.
Residents said the blast was so powerful it was heard from miles away. Ambulances rushed to the site in front of the Frontier Constabulary and rescuers transported the wounded to nearby hospitals.
No group immediately claimed responsibility, though suspicion is likely to fall on separatist groups that often target civilians and security forces in insurgency-plagued Balochistan, where Quetta is the provincial capital.
According to provincial health minister Bakhat Kakar there were concerns the death toll could rise further.
Local television channels and CCTV footage from the site of the explosion shows a car stopping in front of the gate of the paramilitary compound. An explosion follows and gunfire is heard after the blast. Windows of surrounding buildings were shattered and nearby cars were also damaged, according to the footage.
Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti condemned the attack, saying security forces returned fire and killed all four assailants.
“Terrorists cannot break the nation’s resolve through cowardly acts, and the sacrifices of our people and security forces will not go in vain,” Bugti said in a statement. He said that his government remains committed to making the province a peaceful and secure place.
The latest attack came weeks after a suicide bomber blew himself up outside a stadium near Quetta as supporters of a nationalist party were leaving a rally, killing at least 13 people and wounding 30 others.
Balochistan has long been the scene of insurgency, with groups such as the outlawed Baloch Liberation Army demanding independence from the central government. The separatists have largely targeted security forces and civilians in the region and elsewhere.


FBI boss Kash Patel gave New Zealand officials 3D-printed guns illegal to possess under local laws

FBI boss Kash Patel gave New Zealand officials 3D-printed guns illegal to possess under local laws
Updated 30 September 2025

FBI boss Kash Patel gave New Zealand officials 3D-printed guns illegal to possess under local laws

FBI boss Kash Patel gave New Zealand officials 3D-printed guns illegal to possess under local laws
  • The plastic 3D-printed replica pistols formed part of display stands Patel presented to at least three senior New Zealand security officials in July
  • Pistols are tightly restricted weapons under New Zealand law and possessing one requires an additional permit beyond a regular gun license

WELLINGTON: On a visit to New Zealand, FBI Director Kash Patel gave the country’s police and spy bosses gifts of inoperable pistols that were illegal to possess under local gun laws and had to be destroyed, New Zealand law enforcement agencies told The Associated Press.
The plastic 3D-printed replica pistols formed part of display stands Patel presented to at least three senior New Zealand security officials in July. Patel, the most senior Trump administration official to visit the country so far, was in Wellington to open the FBI’s first standalone office in New Zealand.
Pistols are tightly restricted weapons under New Zealand law and possessing one requires an additional permit beyond a regular gun license. Law enforcement agencies didn’t specify whether the officials who met with Patel held such permits, but they couldn’t have legally kept the gifts if they didn’t.
It wasn’t clear what permissions Patel had sought to bring the weapons into the country. A spokesperson for Patel told the AP Tuesday that the FBI would not comment.
The pistols were surrendered and destroyed
Inoperable weapons are treated as though they’re operable in New Zealand if modifications could make them workable again. The pistols were judged by gun regulators to be potentially operable and were destroyed, New Zealand’s Police Commissioner Richard Chambers told AP in a statement Tuesday.
Chambers didn’t specify how the weapons had been rendered inoperable before Patel gifted them. Usually this means the temporary disabling of the gun’s firing mechanism.
Three of New Zealand’s most powerful law enforcement figures said they received the gifts at meetings July 31. Chambers was one recipient, and the other two were Andrew Hampton, Director-General of the country’s human intelligence agency NZSIS, and Andrew Clark, Director-General of the technical intelligence agency GCSB, according to a joint statement from their departments.
A spokesperson for the spy agencies described the gift as “a challenge coin display stand” that included the 3D-printed inoperable weapon “as part of the design.” The officials sought advice on the gifts the next day from the regulator that enforces New Zealand’s gun laws, Chambers said.
When the weapons were examined, it was discovered they were potentially operable.
“To ensure compliance with firearms laws, I instructed Police to retain and destroy them,” Chambers said.
James Davidson, a former FBI agent who is now president of the FBI Integrity Project, a nonprofit that seeks to safeguard the bureau from undue partisan influence, has criticized Patel’s appointment.
But Davidson said the gift of the replica pistols appeared “a genuine gesture” from Patel and their destruction was “quite frankly, an overreaction by the NZSIS, which could have simply rendered the replica inoperable,” he said.
New Zealand has strong gun controls
3D-printed weapons are treated the same as other guns in New Zealand. The country bolstered its gun restrictions following a 2019 white supremacist attack on two mosques in the city of Christchurch, when 51 Muslim worshipers were shot dead by an Australian man who had amassed a cache of semiautomatic weapons legally.
The guns Patel gifted to the law enforcement chiefs were not semiautomatic models now prohibited after the Christchurch massacre. But there are a suite of other reasons New Zealanders might not legally be able to possess certain weapons, including the specific permits required for pistols.
New Zealand doesn’t have a passionate culture of gun ownership and the weapons have been viewed more dimly since the mass shooting. Gun ownership is enshrined in New Zealand law as a privilege, not a right.
The country isn’t short on guns; they’re common in rural areas for pest control. But violent gun crime is rare and many urban residents might never have even seen a firearm in person.
It’s uncommon even to see police officers carrying weapons. Front-line officers aren’t usually armed on patrol and leave their weapons locked in their vehicles.
Patel caused discomfort with China remarks
News of Patel’s visit caused ripples in New Zealand at the time because the opening of the new FBI field office in Wellington wasn’t divulged to news outlets or the public until it had already happened. An FBI statement in July said the move aligned New Zealand with FBI missions in other Five Eyes intelligence-sharing nations, which also include the United States, Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom.
The office would provide a local mission for FBI staff who have operated with oversight from Canberra, Australia, since 2017, the statement said.
Public records disclosed to local news outlets this month revealed that Patel met with and dined with a more than a dozen senior public servants and elected officials, including Cabinet ministers, during his visit. It wasn’t immediately clear Tuesday how many officials received the pistols as gifts.
Patel had already provoked mild diplomatic discomfort in Wellington by suggesting in remarks supplied to reporters that the new FBI office aimed to counter China’s influence in the South Pacific Ocean, where New Zealand is located. The comments prompted polite dismissal from officials in Wellington, who said the bolstered FBI presence was primarily to collaborate on child exploitation and drug smuggling crimes. Beijing decried Patel’s remarks.


EU’s von der Leyen says she welcomes Trump’s Gaza peace proposal

EU’s von der Leyen says she welcomes Trump’s Gaza peace proposal
Updated 30 September 2025

EU’s von der Leyen says she welcomes Trump’s Gaza peace proposal

EU’s von der Leyen says she welcomes Trump’s Gaza peace proposal
  • Encourage all parties to now seize this opportunity. The EU stands ready to contribute,” she wrote on X

BRUSSELS: European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Tuesday that she welcomed US President Donald Trump’s peace proposal to end the nearly two-year-old war in Gaza.
“Welcome President @realDonaldTrump’s commitment to end the war in Gaza. Encourage all parties to now seize this opportunity. The EU stands ready to contribute,” she wrote on X.
“Hostilities should end with provision of immediate humanitarian relief to the population in Gaza and with all hostages released immediately,” she added.


Trial opens over Bangkok murder of French-Cambodian ex-MP

Trial opens over Bangkok murder of French-Cambodian ex-MP
Updated 30 September 2025

Trial opens over Bangkok murder of French-Cambodian ex-MP

Trial opens over Bangkok murder of French-Cambodian ex-MP
  • French national 73-year-old Lim Kimya, a former opposition lawmaker in Cambodia, was shot dead on January 7

BANGKOK: An alleged gunman went on trial Tuesday in Bangkok over the murder of a Cambodian opposition politician whose widow called for a full accounting of who was behind the killing.
French national 73-year-old Lim Kimya, a former opposition lawmaker in Cambodia, was shot dead on January 7 by a motorcyclist as the ex-MP arrived in the Thai capital.
A Thai citizen, Ekkalak Paenoi, was arrested in neighboring Cambodia a day later and handed over to Thai authorities. He now faces a premeditated murder charge.
Ekkalak confessed to the killing in a livestream video, but Lim Kimya’s widow, Anne-Marie Lim, called on Tuesday for a full accounting of why her husband was murdered.
“I want to know the reason for this crime and who ordered it. That’s what I want to know most of all,” she told AFP outside the court in Bangkok, carrying a portrait of her slain husband.
Cambodian opposition figures have accused the country’s powerful former leader Hun Sen of ordering the shooting.
Cambodia’s current prime minister, Hun Manet, has denied his government or his father Hun Sen’s involvement.
The former premier led Cambodia for nearly four decades until 2023, and Western nations and rights groups have long accused his government of using the legal system to crush the opposition.
Flanked by her legal team on Tuesday, Anne-Marie Lim said she wanted justice for her husband, who she called a “hero.”
“He defended the Cambodian people, and he only thought about doing good and improving life in Cambodia,” she said. “That’s why he was in opposition to the government.”
Also on trial is Thai national Chakrit Buakhil, who is believed to be the man who drove Ekkalak to the Cambodian border after the shooting, and was charged for assisting others in their escape, Lim’s lawyer told AFP.
Some Thai media reports said the alleged shooter was paid 60,000 baht ($1,800) for the killing but police say he has claimed he did not receive payment and took the job “to pay a debt of gratitude.”
- Cambodian suspects -

Lim Kimya was an MP in Cambodia from 2013 to 2017, when his party, the main opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), was dissolved by the country’s Supreme Court.
He then withdrew from politics and returned to France, according to a statement from his wife’s lawyers.
Thai police said in January that they were seeking to arrest a Cambodian national believed to be the mastermind behind Lim Kimya’s killing.
They identified two Cambodian suspects: Ly Ratanakrasksmey, accused of having recruited the gunman, and Pich Kimsrin, the alleged lookout who local media has reported was on the bus alongside the victim and his wife.
“We have learned that there are two (Cambodians), one of whom organized this crime,” Anne-Marie Lim said before entering the court on Tuesday.
She added she feared the alleged mastermind may never be held accountable accountable — even though his name is known and he is believed to be in Cambodia.
Nadthasiri Bergman, one of her lawyers in Thailand, told AFP that since the gunman had confessed, she believed he would be convicted.
“But our concern is that we might not get to the bottom of why the assassination happened, and we hope to find that answer today during the witness examination,” Bergman said.
The trial is expected to conclude in March.


Trump visa curbs push US firms to consider shifting more work to India

Trump visa curbs push US firms to consider shifting more work to India
Updated 30 September 2025

Trump visa curbs push US firms to consider shifting more work to India

Trump visa curbs push US firms to consider shifting more work to India
  • Visa curbs force US firms to rethink labor strategies
  • Work tied to AI, cybersecurity could shift to India

BENGALURU/HYDERABAD: Donald Trump’s H-1B visa crackdown will hasten US firms’ shift of critical work to India, turbocharging the growth of global capability centers (GCCs) that handle operations from finance to research and development, economists and industry insiders say.
The world’s fifth-largest economy is home to 1,700 GCCs, or more than half the global tally, having outgrown its tech support origins to become a hub of high-value innovation in areas from design of luxury car dashboards to drug discovery.
Trends such as growing adoption of artificial intelligence and increasing curbs on visas are pushing US firms to redraw labor strategies, with GCCs in India emerging as resilient hubs blending global skills with strong domestic leadership.
“GCCs are uniquely positioned for this moment. They serve as a ready in-house engine,” said Rohan Lobo, partner and GCC industry leader at Deloitte India, who said he knew of several US firms reassessing their workforce needs.
“Plans are already underway” for such a shift, he added, pointing to greater activity in areas such as financial services and tech, and particularly among firms with exposure to US federal contracts.
Lobo said he expected GCCs to “take on more strategic, innovation-led mandates” in time.
US President Trump raised the cost of new H-1B visa applications this month to $100,000, from an existing range of $2,000 to $5,000, adding pressure on US firms that relied on skilled foreign workers to bridge critical talent gaps.
On Monday, US senators reintroduced a bill to tighten rules on the H-1B and L-1 worker visa programs, targeting what they called loopholes and abuse by major employers.
If Trump’s visa curbs go unchallenged, industry experts expect US firms to shift high-end work tied to AI, product development, cybersecurity, and analytics to their India GCCs, choosing to keep strategic functions in-house over outsourcing.
Growing uncertainty fueled by the recent changes has given fresh impetus to discussions about shifting high-value work to GCCs that many firms were already engaged in.
“There is a sense of urgency,” said Lalit Ahuja, founder and CEO of ANSR, which helped FedEx, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Target and Lowe’s set up their GCCs.
Reassessing India strategies
Such a rush could lead to “extreme offshoring” in some cases, said Ramkumar Ramamoorthy, a former managing director of Cognizant India, adding that the COVID-19 pandemic had shown key tech tasks could be done from anywhere.
Big Tech, including Amazon, Microsoft, Apple and Google parent Alphabet, along with Wall Street bank JPMorgan Chase and retailer Walmart, were among the top sponsors of H-1B visas, US government data showed.
All have major operations in India but did not want to comment as the issue is a politically sensitive one.
“Either more roles will move to India, or corporations will near-shore them to Mexico or Colombia. Canada could also take advantage,” said the India head of a retail GCC.
Even before Trump’s hefty fee on new H1-B visa applications and plan for a new selection process to favor the better-paid, India was projected to host the GCCs of more than 2,200 companies by 2030, with a market size nearing $100 billion.
“This whole ‘gold rush’ will only get accelerated,” Ahuja said.
Implications for India
Others were more skeptical, preferring a “wait and watch” approach, especially as US firms could face a 25 percent tax for outsourcing work overseas if the proposed HIRE Act is passed, bringing significant disruption in India’s exports of services.
“For now, we are observing and studying, and being ready for outcomes,” said the India head of a US drugmaker’s GCC.
India-US trade tension has spilled into services from goods, with visa curbs and the proposed HIRE Act threatening to reduce India’s lower-cost edge and choke cross-border flows of services.
While the $283-billion IT industry that contributes nearly 8 percent of India’s GDP may feel the strain, surging demand for GCC services could cushion such a blow, however.
“Lost revenues from H-1B visa reliant businesses could be somewhat supplanted by higher services exports through GCCs, as US-based firms look to bypass immigration restrictions to outsource talent,” Nomura analysts said in a research note last week.


Trump to address rare mass meeting of US military leaders

Trump to address rare mass meeting of US military leaders
Updated 30 September 2025

Trump to address rare mass meeting of US military leaders

Trump to address rare mass meeting of US military leaders
  • No official reason has been given for the highly unusual meeting at Quantico
  • It will reportedly bring together officers in command positions with one star rank and above — pulling a large number of personnel in key roles from their duties around the world

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump will on Tuesday speak at a rare gathering of hundreds of senior US military officers summoned, without public explanation, from around the world to meet at a base near Washington.
No official reason has been given for the highly unusual meeting at Quantico.
It comes as the military has faced controversy both at home and abroad, with Trump deploying troops in two Democratic-run US cities and ordering lethal strikes on small, alleged drug boats in the Caribbean.
Trump, who oversaw a rare purge of senior officers after taking office, has also ordered strikes on Iranian nuclear sites and Tehran-backed Yemeni rebels.
The White House’s daily press guidance lists the 79-year-old Republican as delivering “remarks to the Department of War” at 9:00 am (1300 GMT).
The US president hailed the meeting when asked about it last week, saying in the Oval Office: “I love it. I mean, I think it’s great.”
“Let him be friendly with the generals and admirals from all over the world,” the president said, referring to Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth, who organized the event and will speak there.
Amid speculation over reasons for gathering all the top brass in one place, Vice President JD Vance insisted it was “actually not unusual at all,” and told reporters “it’s odd that you guys have made it into such a big story.”
The Pentagon has not given a public explanation for the session, with spokesman Sean Parnell only saying in a statement that Hegseth “will be addressing his senior military leaders early next week.”

- Shakeups at Pentagon -

It will reportedly bring together officers in command positions with one-star rank and above — pulling a large number of personnel in key roles from their duties around the world.
But the lack of clarity has fed speculation that a major announcement will be made.
In May, Hegseth ordered major cuts to the number of general and flag officers in the US military, including at least a 20 percent reduction in the number of active-duty four-star generals and admirals.
That came after the Pentagon announced in February that it aimed to reduce the number of its civilian employees by at least five percent.
Since beginning his second term in January, Trump has also purged top officers, including chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff general Charles “CQ” Brown, whom he fired without explanation in February.
Other senior officers dismissed this year include the heads of the Navy and Coast Guard, the leaders of the National Security Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency, the vice chief of staff of the Air Force, a Navy admiral assigned to NATO, and three top military lawyers.
US forces meanwhile carried out a nearly two month-long campaign of strikes targeting Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels earlier this year and also hit three nuclear sites that were a key part of Tehran’s nuclear program.
And US troops have been deployed in Los Angeles and Washington, DC — allegedly to combat civil unrest and crime — while similar moves are planned for Portland, Memphis and potentially other American cities.