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South Korea bans travel to parts of Cambodia after student killing

South Korea bans travel to parts of Cambodia after student killing
Cambodian police officials stand next to the closed gate at Poipet International border checkpoint between Cambodia-Thailand, at Poipet town in Banteay Meanchey province on June 24, 2025. (AFP)
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South Korea bans travel to parts of Cambodia after student killing

South Korea bans travel to parts of Cambodia after student killing
  • Foreign ministry advisory: ‘The Bokor Mountain area in Kampot Province, Bavet City and Poipet City are designated as travel ban zones’

SEOUL: Seoul on Wednesday banned travel to parts of Cambodia with South Korea shaken by the torture and killing of a college student there.
The move comes as South Korea prepares to send a special team to the Southeast Asian country later Wednesday to discuss cases of fake jobs and scam centers involved in kidnapping dozens of its nationals.
“The Bokor Mountain area in Kampot Province, Bavet City and Poipet City are designated as travel ban zones,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.
“South Korean nationals visiting or staying in those areas may be subject to penalties. Citizens planning to travel to such areas are therefore strongly advised to cancel their trips,” it said.
The ban follows an official announcement earlier in the day that about 1,000 South Koreans are believed to be working in Cambodian scam operations, targeting potential victims in South Korea.
“It is believed that around 200,000 people of various nationalities are working in Cambodia’s scam industry, which targets victims worldwide, including in South Korea,” National Security Adviser Wi Sung-lac told reporters.
“A considerable number of South Koreans are also thought to be employed there. While the exact figure is difficult to verify, domestic authorities generally estimate the number at around 1,000.”
Seoul said 63 South Koreans were believed to have been detained by Cambodian authorities, and officials have vowed to bring them home.
“We are arranging a flight to bring them home... We aim to complete this by the end of the week,” Wi said.
Of the 63 detained, there were both “voluntary and involuntary participants” in the scam operations, he said.
“Most of them should be regarded as having committed criminal acts” for taking part in the schemes, he said, regardless of their initial intentions, adding they would be subject to investigation upon returning home.
The South Korean team, headed by the vice foreign minister, will depart on Wednesday evening, said a government official who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
Tortured to death
Some 330 South Koreans had been reported missing or detained against their will in Cambodia between January and August this year, according to Seoul’s foreign ministry, before the number was whittled down to 80 whose safety could not be confirmed.
Seoul plans to “make every diplomatic effort to secure Cambodia’s cooperation,” the presidential office said.
The response team heading to Cambodia includes officials from the police and South Korea’s spy agency, it said.
As well as repatriation discussions, police would also conduct a joint investigation into the recent death of a South Korean college student.
The death of the student, who was reportedly kidnapped and tortured by a crime ring, has shocked South Korea.
Police investigations and an autopsy showed the student, whose body was found in a pickup truck on August 8, “died as a result of severe torture, with multiple bruises and injuries across his body,” according to a Cambodian court statement.
Three Chinese nationals were charged with murder and online fraud on August 11 and remain in pre-trial detention, it said.
Many Korean victims of such crimes in Cambodia are said to have been lured by fraudulent job offers promising high pay, Seoul has said.
Rights group Amnesty International says abuses in Cambodia’s scam centers are happening on a “mass scale.”
There are at least 53 scam compounds in Cambodia where organized criminal groups carry out human trafficking, forced labor, torture, deprivation of liberty and slavery, according to Amnesty.


Hungary questions EU plans to phase out Russian energy

Hungary questions EU plans to phase out Russian energy
Updated 15 October 2025

Hungary questions EU plans to phase out Russian energy

Hungary questions EU plans to phase out Russian energy
  • Hungary has pushed back against plans by the European Commission to phase out the EU’s imports of all Russian gas and liquefied natural gas

MOSCOW: Hungary’s foreign minister warned on Wednesday that Budapest would suffer if it was cut off from Russian gas and said the country would not accept outside pressure when it came to decisions on its own energy supplies.
Hungary has pushed back against plans by the European Commission to phase out the EU’s imports of all Russian gas and liquefied natural gas by the end of 2027.
Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto, who is in Moscow to attend the Russian Energy Week forum, told reporters that national interest was paramount for Budapest when it came to securing its own energy supplies.


Sweden ready to make new contributions to PURL arms initiative, defense minister says

Sweden ready to make new contributions to PURL arms initiative, defense minister says
Updated 15 October 2025

Sweden ready to make new contributions to PURL arms initiative, defense minister says

Sweden ready to make new contributions to PURL arms initiative, defense minister says

BRUSSELS: Swedish Defense Minister Pal Jonson said on Wednesday that his country stands ready to make fresh contributions to the Prioritized Ukraine Requirements List (PURL) arms initiative and called on other countries to continue to step up their assistance to Ukraine.
“We’ve been seeing the wrong trajectory when it comes to support to Ukraine. That has been going down. We want to see more stepping up to enhance and increase the financial support and military donations to Ukraine,” Jonson said ahead of a meeting of NATO defense ministers held in Brussels.


Russia will be a major threat to NATO after Ukraine war, Finland’s Defense Minister says

Russia will be a major threat to NATO after Ukraine war, Finland’s Defense Minister says
Updated 15 October 2025

Russia will be a major threat to NATO after Ukraine war, Finland’s Defense Minister says

Russia will be a major threat to NATO after Ukraine war, Finland’s Defense Minister says

BRUSSELS: Russia will continue to be a major threat to NATO after the war in Ukraine ends, Finland’s Defense Minister Antti Hakkanen told reporters on Wednesday, adding that they had seen a new build-up of Russian forces.
Hakkanen, speaking before a meeting of NATO defense ministers, also said Russia is consuming military resources at a rapid pace and is becoming increasingly reliant on China.


Over 12 civilians killed in Pakistani attack, Afghan Taliban say

Over 12 civilians killed in Pakistani attack, Afghan Taliban say
Updated 15 October 2025

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 15 October 2025

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.