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Over 12 civilians killed in Pakistani attack, Afghan Taliban say

Over 12 civilians killed in Pakistani attack, Afghan Taliban say
A Taliban security personnel stands guard near the closed gate of the zero point border crossing between Afghanistan and Pakistan at Spin Boldak district in Kandahar province on Oct. 12, 2025. (AFP)
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Over 12 civilians killed in Pakistani attack, Afghan Taliban say

Over 12 civilians killed in Pakistani attack, Afghan Taliban say
  • Pakistani officials blamed the Taliban for the clashes and said four civilians were wounded on their side of the border
  • Clashes regularly break out between the countries’ security forces along their contested 2,600km frontier

ISLAMABAD: More than 12 civilians were killed in Afghanistan as fresh fighting broke out between Afghan and Pakistani forces on Wednesday, the Taliban said, rupturing a fragile peace that had briefly taken hold after weekend clashes between the countries killed dozens.

Once allies, the recent friction between the South Asian nations erupted after Islamabad demanded that the Afghan Taliban administration act against militants who have stepped up attacks in Pakistan, saying they operate from havens in Afghanistan.

The Taliban denies the presence of Pakistani militants in Afghanistan.

“Early this morning, Pakistani forces launched attacks … more than 12 civilians were martyred and over 100 others were wounded,” Afghan Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said on X.

The Taliban also said it had killed “a large number of Pakistani soldiers,” captured their posts and centers, seized their weapons and tanks, and “destroyed” most of their military facilities.

Pakistani officials blamed the Taliban for the clashes and said four civilians were wounded on their side of the border.

“Taliban forces attacked Pakistani post near Chaman (district),” Habib Ullah Bangulzai, the regional administrator in Pakistan’s Chaman district, said.

The fighting continued for about five hours in the early hours of the day, he said, adding that Pakistani forces had “repulsed” the attack.

Although clashes regularly break out between the countries’ security forces along their contested 2,600km frontier, last week’s fighting was their worst since the Taliban seized power in Kabul in 2021.

The neighbors have closed several crossings along their border in its aftermath, bringing trade to a halt and leaving scores of loaded goods vehicles stranded on both sides.

Pakistan is the main source of goods and food supplies for landlocked, impoverished Afghanistan.

Last week’s clashes drew international concern, with China asking both countries to protect its citizens and investments, Russia urging restraint, and US President Donald Trump saying he could help end the conflict.

The tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan this month have coincided with Afghan Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi’s visit to India, Pakistan’s arch rival.

India and Afghanistan, during Muttaqi’s visit, decided to upgrade ties, with New Delhi saying it would reopen its embassy in Kabul, and the Afghan Taliban also announcing it would send its diplomats to India.


US Supreme Court to hear pivotal minority voting rights case

US Supreme Court to hear pivotal minority voting rights case
Updated 25 min 51 sec ago

US Supreme Court to hear pivotal minority voting rights case

US Supreme Court to hear pivotal minority voting rights case
  • The case touching on the thorny issues of race and politics is a challenge to a congressional map adopted by the Louisiana state legislature creating a second Black majority district

WASHINGTON: The US Supreme Court hears a case involving Black voters on Wednesday that could have lasting repercussions on whether Democrats or Republicans control the House of Representatives.
The case touching on the thorny issues of race and politics is a challenge to a congressional map adopted by the Louisiana state legislature creating a second Black majority district.
The conservative-dominated top court actually heard the case last term, but in an unusual move it decided not to issue a ruling and scheduled it for re-argument during the current session.
African-Americans tend to overwhelmingly vote Democratic and they make up one-third of the population of Louisiana, which has six congressional districts.
Following the 2020 census, Louisiana created a new congressional map that included only one Black majority district instead of the previous two.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and others filed suit claiming the new map diluted Black voting power and violated the Voting Rights Act, which was passed during the civil rights movement in 1965 to remedy historic racial discrimination.
The Louisiana legislature released a new map last year with two Black majority districts that was met with the legal challenge from a group of “non-African American” voters. It has now reached the Supreme Court, where conservatives hold a 6-3 majority.
The opponents of the redrawn map argue that using race to design congressional districts is racial gerrymandering prohibited by the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution.
“The stakes are incredibly high,” said ACLU attorney Sophia Lin Lakin. “The outcome will not only determine the next steps for Louisiana’s congressional map, but may also shape the future of redistricting cases nationwide.”
Republicans currently hold a slim majority in the House and an increase or decrease in the number of Black majority districts could help tip the balance in the November 2026 midterm elections, when all 435 seats in the chamber will be up for grabs.
‘One-party control’
According to a report by two voting advocacy groups, Fair Fight Action and Black Voters Matter, a Supreme Court ruling striking down Voting Rights Act protections for minorities could lead to Republicans picking up an additional 19 seats in the House.
“It’s enough to cement one-party control of the US House for at least a generation,” they said.
The Louisiana voting case is being heard against a backdrop of redistricting moves in both Republican- and Democratic-ruled states.
Republican-led Texas is drawing new congressional district maps that are expected to flip up to five House seats from Democrats to Republicans.
Several mainly Latino or Black districts which Republican Donald Trump lost in the 2024 election in Texas were broken up to dilute support for Democrats.
Democratic leaders in California responded with a redistricting push to offset potential Republican gains in Texas, though it will first be put to a state-wide referendum.


Military seizes power in Madagascar as president impeached

Military seizes power in Madagascar as president impeached
Updated 15 October 2025

Military seizes power in Madagascar as president impeached

Military seizes power in Madagascar as president impeached
  • President Andry Rajoelina late Monday refused growing demands to step down from the protest movement that started on September 25
  • Parliamentarians pushed ahead with the vote to impeach Rajoelina for desertion of duty despite a bid by the presidency to block the motion

ANTANANARIVO: An elite Madagascar military unit said Tuesday it had taken power in the Indian Ocean nation after parliamentarians voted to impeach President Andry Rajoelina following weeks of anti-government protests.
There were celebrations in the streets of the capital after the commander of the CAPSAT military unit, which joined the demonstrators at the weekend, announced that it was in charge.
The presidency denounced “a clear act of attempted coup” and insisted that Rajoelina, in hiding reportedly out of the country, “remains fully in office.”
Rajoelina, 51, had late Monday refused growing demands to step down from the protest movement that started on September 25 over power and water shortages, and developed into a campaign against the president and ruling elite.
Outside the presidential palace, CAPSAT commander Col. Michael Randrianirina read out a statement announcing the suspension of the constitution.
A governing committee composed of officers from the army, gendarmerie and national police would be established, he said. “Perhaps in time it will include senior civilian advisers.”
“It is this committee that will carry out the work of the presidency,” Randrianirina said. “At the same time, after a few days, we will set up a civilian government.”
“We have taken power,” he confirmed to AFP.
Afterwards, officers from the unit rolled through the capital in armored Humvees and pick-up trucks en route to their base, where hundreds of soldiers stood in formation to receive them.
Crowds lined the pavements, cheering and waving as they passed, while some followed the convoy in their own cars, honking their horns in a victory lap through a city still on edge.
“It’s a huge joy,” said businesswoman Baovola Zanarison Rakotomanga, 41, among the crowds celebrating at city hall.
“We have suffered for so long... we hope to now be able to move forward, united,” she said.
‘Safe place’
Parliamentarians pushed ahead with the vote to impeach Rajoelina for desertion of duty despite a bid by the presidency to block the motion by ordering the dissolution of the national assembly.
The vote passed with 130 votes in favor – well above the two-thirds constitutional threshold required.
The presidency said the session was “devoid of any legal basis.”
But the constitutional court later validated the impeachment and confirmed Randrianirina’s authority.
After reports that he had left the country with the assistance of France, Rajoelina – who has French nationality – said in a national address late Monday that he was in a “safe place to protect my life.”
He did not reveal his location but some reports said he may have gone to Dubai.
Making clear he would not step down, Rajoelina said he was “on a mission to find solutions” to the political crisis and would not let the impoverished nation “destroy itself.”
The relatively low-key youth-led protest movement took a turn at the weekend when CAPSAT – which played a major role in the 2009 coup that first brought Rajoelina to power – joined the protesters.
They were followed by the gendarmerie which admitted to “faults and excesses” against the demonstrations in which at least 22 people were killed, according to the UN, an early toll dismissed by the government.
At a fresh rally outside city hall Tuesday, demonstrators expressed anger at France, the colonial ruler until independence in 1960, accusing it of meddling in the island’s affairs.
“It’s like they’re colonizing us again,” said civil engineer Koloina Rakotomavonirina, 26. “We want them to leave our island for good.”
Adding to statements of concern from the African Union and SADC regional bloc, a United Nations spokesman said Tuesday “if there is a coup underway, we would stand against that.”
“We’re trying to see exactly what happens, once the dust is settled,” said Farhan Haq, a spokesman for the UN chief, Antonio Guterres.


Officials airlift evacuees to safety after the remnants of Typhoon Halong devastate Alaska villages

Officials airlift evacuees to safety after the remnants of Typhoon Halong devastate Alaska villages
Updated 15 October 2025

Officials airlift evacuees to safety after the remnants of Typhoon Halong devastate Alaska villages

Officials airlift evacuees to safety after the remnants of Typhoon Halong devastate Alaska villages
  • High winds and surging waters battered low-lying, isolated Alaska Native communities along the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta in southwest Alaska

JUNEAU, Alaska: Officials in Alaska rushed Tuesday to evacuate and find housing for people from tiny coastal villages devastated by the remnants of Typhoon Halong. But the remote location and severe damage are limiting their options as they race against other impending storms and the onset of winter.
High winds and surging waters battered low-lying, isolated Alaska Native communities along the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta in southwest Alaska, nearly 800km from Anchorage, over the weekend. The Coast Guard plucked two dozen people from their homes after the structures floated out to sea in high water, three people were missing or dead, and hundreds of people were staying in school shelters – including one with no working toilets, officials said.
The system followed a storm that struck parts of western Alaska days earlier.
Across the region, more than 1,500 people were displaced. Dozens had been flown to a shelter set up in the National Guard armory in the regional hub city of Bethel, a community of 6,000 people, and officials are considering flying evacuees to longer-term shelter or emergency housing in Fairbanks and Anchorage as they run out of room there.
Fuel storage depots intended to support communities in the region had apparently been damaged, threatening pollution that could harm the fish and game the Alaska Native residents rely on for subsistence. Some people in the area may have lost freezers full of food such as salmon and moose intended to get them through the winter.
The hardest-hit communities included Kipnuk, population 715, and Kwigillingok, population 380. They are off the state’s main road system and reachable this time of year only by water or by air.
“It’s catastrophic in Kipnuk. Let’s not paint any other picture,” Mark Roberts, incident commander with the state emergency management division, told a news conference Tuesday. “We are doing everything we can to continue to support that community, but it is as bad as you can think.”
Heartbreaking moment
Among those awaiting evacuation to Bethel on Tuesday was Brea Paul, of Kipnuk, who said in a text message that she had seen about 20 homes floating away through the moonlight on Saturday night.
“Some houses would blink their phone lights at us like they were asking for help but we couldn’t even do anything,” she wrote.
The following morning, she recorded video of a house submerged nearly to its roofline as it floated past her home.
Paul and her neighbors had a long meeting in the local schoolhouse gym on Monday night, singing songs of praises as they tried to figure out what to do next, she said. Neither she nor most everyone else knows where they will end up.
“It’s so heartbreaking saying goodbye to our community members not knowing when we’d get to see each other,” she said.
One woman was found dead in Kwigillingok, and authorities on Monday night called off the search for two men after their home floated away.
In Kwigillingok, the school was the only facility with full power, but it had no working toilet, and 400 people stayed there Monday night. Workers were trying to fix the bathrooms; a situation report from the state emergency operations center on Tuesday noted that “honey buckets are being used.”
A preliminary assessment showed every home in the village was damaged by the storm, with about three dozen having drifted from their foundations, the emergency management office said.
Power systems flooded in Napakiak, and severe erosion was reported in Toksook Bay. In Nightmute, officials said, fuel drums were reported floating in the community, and there was a scent of fuel in the air and a sheen on the water.
Officials activated members of the National Guard to help with the emergency response, and crews were trying to take advantage of any breaks in the weather to fly in food, water, generators and communication equipment.
Long road to recovery ahead, officials say
Officials warned of a long road to recovery and a need for continued support for the hardest-hit communities. Most rebuilding supplies would have to be transported in, and there is little time left with winter just around the corner.
“Indigenous communities in Alaska are resilient,” said Rick Thoman, an Alaska climate specialist at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. “But, you know, when you have an entire community where effectively every house is damaged and many of them will be uninhabitable with winter knocking at the door now, there’s only there’s only so much that any individual or any small community can do.”
Thoman said the storm was likely fueled by the warm surface waters of the Pacific Ocean, which has been heating up because of human-caused climate change and making storms more intense.
The remnants of another storm, Typhoon Merbok, caused damage across a massive swath of western Alaska three years ago.


Indonesia’s Mount Lewotobi Laki-laki erupts, spewing ash 10km into the sky

Indonesia’s Mount Lewotobi Laki-laki erupts, spewing ash 10km into the sky
Updated 15 October 2025

Indonesia’s Mount Lewotobi Laki-laki erupts, spewing ash 10km into the sky

Indonesia’s Mount Lewotobi Laki-laki erupts, spewing ash 10km into the sky
  • The volcano erupted on Wednesday at 1:35 a.m. local time for around nine minutes
  • Dozens of people living in villages nearest to the volcano were evacuated after the eruptions

JAKARTA: Indonesia’s Mount Lewotobi Laki-laki erupted on Wednesday, shooting volcanic ash 10 kilometers (6.21 miles) into the sky, the country’s volcanology agency said, forcing authorities to raise the alert system to its highest level.
Located in East Nusa Tenggara province, the volcano erupted on Wednesday at 1:35 a.m. local time (Tuesday 1835 GMT) for around nine minutes, the country’s Geological Agency said in a statement. Lewotobi also erupted two hours before; the volcanic ash from that shot nine kilometers into the sky.
Late on Tuesday, the agency raised its alert level to the highest point after recording “significant rising of the volcano’s activities” since Monday, its head, Muhammad Wafid, said.
“People living near the volcano should be aware of the potential volcanic mudflow if heavy rain occurs,” Wafid said, adding that people should clear a six- to seven-kilometer area around the site.
The volcano last erupted in August. It also erupted in July, causing flight disruptions to and from the nearby resort island of Bali.
Dozens of people living in villages nearest to the volcano were evacuated after the eruptions, according to Avelina Manggota Hallan, an official at the local disaster mitigation agency.
Most of the residents left their villages after Lewotobi Laki-laki’s major eruption, which killed 10 people and damaged thousands of houses in November 2024, Hallan added.
The government has closed Fransiskus Xaverius Seda airport, located in Maumere, East Nusa Tenggara province, until Thursday, the airport operator said in a post on social media.
Indonesia, which has more than 120 active volcanoes, sits on the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” an area of high seismic activity that is atop multiple tectonic plates.


Greece to approve disputed 13-hour workday reform

Greece to approve disputed 13-hour workday reform
Updated 15 October 2025

Greece to approve disputed 13-hour workday reform

Greece to approve disputed 13-hour workday reform
  • The new law is expected to be passed by parliament, where the ruling conservatives have 156 MPs in the 300-seat chamber
  • Unions have staged two general strikes against the reform this month, the latest of them on Tuesday

ATHENS: Greece’s parliament on Wednesday was to approve a reform allowing workers to work 13-hour days under exceptional circumstances, drawing fire from unions and opposition parties.
The new law is expected to be passed by parliament, where the ruling conservatives have 156 MPs in the 300-seat chamber.
Unions have staged two general strikes against the reform this month, the latest of them on Tuesday.
The government insists that the 13-hour workday is optional, only affects the private sector, and can only be applied up to 37 days a year.
“It requires an employee’s consent,” Labor Minister Niki Kerameus told Skai TV on Tuesday.
The minister has said she has received, and rejected, collective agreement requests proposing even longer hours.
The reform is seen as targeted toward Greece’s services sector, especially during the busy summer tourism season, enabling employers to avoid hiring additional staff.
But opposition parties and unions argue that workers will risk layoffs if they refuse longer hours.
“Our health, both mental and physical, and the balance between personal and professional life are goods that cannot be replaced with money,” Stefanos Chatziliadis, a senior member of civil service union ADEDY, said during a Tuesday protest in Thessaloniki.
“Making it legal to work from morning till night is not normal and cannot be tolerated by our society. It is truly barbaric. It is inhuman,” he said.
The legal working day in Greece is eight hours, with the possibility of performing paid overtime.
According to Eurostat, Greeks work 39.8 hours a week on average compared to the EU average of 35.8 hours.
“This is a first step toward extending the working hours; in the private sector, you can’t really refuse, they always find ways to impose what they want,” said Maria, a 46-year-old construction company employee who declined to give a surname.
The current government has already legalized a six-day working week, especially during high demand in certain sectors including tourism.