Poland to close last Russian consulate over ‘unprecedented act of sabotage’

Israeli air strike on Lebanon refugee camp kills 13 people

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At least 13 people were killed when Israel launched an airstrike on the Ein el-Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp in southern Lebanon. Hamas claims that Israel targeted a Hamas training facility, but the organization denies that it has any military presence. The most deadly attack since a ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah in November 2024.

Epstein files: Who is Clay Higgins, US congressman who voted no on release?

A straightforward, unanimous vote on Tuesday would have prevented the release of Jeffrey Epstein’s case files, both from Democrats and Republicans. However, Louisiana’s Republican Representative Clay Higgins did not agree with the consensus.

His lone dissent demonstrated his past propensity to take positions at the Republican Party’s extreme.

The measure received a 427-plus vote, including 216 Republicans, in the US House. The Senate then approved the bill, allowing for President Donald Trump’s signature to be sent there.

What we know is as follows:

Clay Higgins, who is he?

Since 2017, Higgins has represented the third congressional district of Louisiana. He frequently occupies positions that are not traditionally held by Republicans and is regarded as one of the House’s most extreme members. He is a vocal supporter of Trump.

Higgins has a history of controversy-generating media attention. He worked in law enforcement before joining the Congressional delegation, where he was the subject of numerous misconduct complaints. He later gained notoriety online for his obscene, tough-talking Crime Stoppers videos, which helped him launch his political career.

In Washington, he has continued to speak out loudly. He threatened the use of force against armed protesters in a message posted on Facebook in 2020, along with a picture of Black demonstrators carrying lengthy guns. You won’t leave if we recognize threat, he wrote. The post was later removed from Facebook.

Higgins claimed that the Chinese Communist Party had developed and manipulated the virus during the COVID-19 pandemic and was openly skeptical of it.

Higgins claimed that the US Capitol’s “ghost buses” on January 6th, 2021, were intended to elicit the violence. He claimed they carried “prosecutors” and other covert agents. A mob of Trump supporters seized the Capitol on January 6 to halt the 2020 election’s certification. The Higgins claim has never been supported by any evidence.

[File: Edmund D. Fountain/Reuters] US Representative Clay Higgins speaking at a conference in 2018.

In response to Trump’s remarks about the Haitian community in Springfield, Ohio, including the president’s unsubstantiated claim that Haitian immigrants were eating pets, Higgins once more drew backlash in 2024.

According to Higgins, Haiti is “the Western Hemisphere’s nastiest nation.” He was confronted by members of the Congressional Black Caucus, who later deleted a post about Haitians eating pets and claimed he was speaking about gang members, not all of Haitians.

Before joining Congress&nbsp, Higgins was well-versed in the criticism of the media. After receiving criticism for one of his hardline anticrime videos, he left the St. Landry Parish Sheriff’s Office in 2016.

The seventh of eight children, Higgins. When he was six, his family moved to Covington, Louisiana, where he was born.

He claimed in 2017 that his workdays ranged from 16 to 18 hours and that he occasionally slept on an air mattress in his Washington, DC, office.

Higgins has four wives. With his fourth wife, Becca, he currently resides in Port Barre, Louisiana.

What made Higgins opposed?

As the committee’s lead investigator, Higgins had previously indicated his support for the investigation.

However, Higgins stated in a post on X that he had been against making the documents public and that he had been against making the documents public. He claimed that he had been opposed to making the documents public.

“I have always voted NO” on this bill. What the bill’s shortcomings three months ago are still present today. It ends 250 years of American criminal justice system. According to Higgins, this bill exposes and injures thousands of innocent people, including those who provided alibis, relatives, and others. This type of broad release of criminal investigative files, which was made available to a rabid media, will absolutely cause harm to innocent people, if passed in its current form. Not by my vote.

His concerns echoed those of House Speaker Mike Johnson and other legislators. Supporters of the bill rebuffed their claims, saying that safeguards had already been put in place to stop the release of any sensitive information.

The Oversight Committee is conducting a thorough investigation, which has already resulted in the release of more than 60 000 pages of Epstein case documents. That effort will continue in a way that guarantees innocent Americans all the due protections. When the bill returns to the House, he said, “I will vote for it if the Senate amends it to properly address] the] privacy of victims and other Americans, who are named but not criminally implicated.”

In reality, the release of the files does, however, include redactions of portions that would otherwise reveal witnesses, victims, their families, and whistleblowers.

Just before the vote ended, Higgins made an appearance by raising his phone and taking a picture of the House voting board, which contained his dissention.

Bangladesh’s test: After Hasina conviction, will it repeat her mistakes?

Sheikh Hasina is a convicted fugitive.

Until August 2024, she was the most powerful leader in Bangladesh’s history, after 15 years of iron-fisted rule. On Monday, the 78-year-old former prime minister was handed a death sentence in absentia over the brutal crackdown by her security forces on last year’s student-led protests. More than 1,400 people were killed, many of them execution-style.

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Hasina, who had fled to neighbouring India after she was forced out of power, has over the past year remained combative and unrepentant. On Monday, she responded to the verdict by the Bangladeshi International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) by acknowledging the deaths of hundreds of innocent people, but refused to take responsibility.

“I mourn all of the deaths that occurred in July and August of last year, on both sides of the political divide,” she said in a statement. “But neither I nor other political leaders ordered the killing of protesters.”

Hasina also called the verdict by the ICT “biased and politically motivated”.

For millions of Bangladeshis, the death sentence awarded to Hasina represents justice, even though India’s likely refusal to extradite the former prime minister means that grieving families that lost loved ones to excesses under her rule will have to wait for closure.

Targeting of political opponents

But for Bangladesh as a country, the verdict could serve as a moment for an even deeper shift if it chooses to now close the loop on the abuse of security forces, courts and other institutions of the state to target opponents and critics – practices that Hasina perpetuated and came to represent.

Hasina’s claims that she is the victim of political persecution mirror the allegations that her government faced during the decade-and-a-half of its rule.

The ICT was established by Hasina herself in 2010 to prosecute Bangladeshis accused of collaborating with Pakistan in carrying out atrocities during the 1971 liberation war.

Now the same tribunal has convicted her.

For years, human rights groups have accused her of using the tribunal together with government institutions, including courts and the security establishment, to punish her political opponents.

Her main political rival – Khaleda Zia, who was Bangladesh’s first female head of government – was jailed under corruption charges while the country’s largest Islamist party, the Jamaat-e-Islami, was barred from contesting elections and subsequently banned under an “anti-terror” law.

Zia was released only after the interim government of Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus came to power last year, following Hasina’s ouster.

Yunus himself was convicted in January 2024 on charges of labour law violations that many say were politically motivated. He was sentenced to six years in prison, but got bail. The economist had been in Hasina’s crosshairs after he floated the idea of launching a political party in 2007. Grameen Bank, established by Yunus, pioneered the concept of microloans, which helped empower millions of rural women.

Hasina and her Awami League party have long worn the badge of secularism. But during her rule between 2009 and 2024, they were accused of weaponising secularism to justify targeting Islamist parties and dissenters. An entire generation of Jamaat leaders was executed based on convictions issued by the ICT.

Writing in the Bangladeshi newspaper The Daily Star on Monday, analyst Arman Ahmed said that the Awami League “transformed secularism from an ideal of freedom into a rhetoric of control”.

“It came to be associated with censorship, patronage, and the systematic weakening of any political opposition. When power became synonymous with a single party, the moral authority of its secular project collapsed,” he wrote.

Hasina’s autocratic rule was particularly marked by grave human rights violations. Between 2009 and 2022, at least 2,597 people were killed by the security forces extrajudicially, according to human rights groups.

In 2021, the United States imposed sanctions against the police counterterrorism unit, Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), accused of involvement in hundreds of enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings.

Odhikar, a prominent rights group, was also targeted after it criticised the government for granting impunity to security forces for human rights violations. In 2023, two of its founders were jailed.

Famed Bangladeshi photographer and activist Shahidul Alam was jailed in 2018 after he criticised Hasina’s government for widespread “extrajudicial killings”, in an interview with Al Jazeera.

When the protests against government job quotas erupted last July, Hasina deployed riot police instead of engaging in talks with the stakeholders.

She ordered the security forces to use drones, helicopters and lethal weapons to suppress the protests, according to Bangladeshi media.

But the brutal crackdown, including the arrest of thousands, galvanised a mass movement against her government, triggering her downfall.

Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus (C) is sworn in as the chief adviser of the new interim government of Bangladesh in Dhaka on August 8, 2024 [Munir Uz Zaman/AFP]

Hasina’s legacy – and why Bangladesh must break with it

Now, Hasina’s political future in Bangladesh is over.

What remains is her legacy.

To be sure, she led a decade-long struggle to revive democracy in the 1980s, teaming up with rival Zia to force the country’s then-military ruler, President Hussain Muhammad Ershad, to relinquish power. Zia’s BNP won the 1991 election. Hasina then defeated Zia in the 1996 elections to become prime minister for the first time, as their political rivalry turned increasingly bitter.

After Hasina returned to power in 2009, she addressed the country’s security challenges, cracking down on armed groups and providing stability.

She also led an economic resurgence. In a country that former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger once described as a “basket case”, millions were lifted out of poverty under Hasina. Bangladesh’s per capita income surpassed neighbouring India, while its gross domestic product (GDP) of $430bn is bigger than Pakistan’s – the country it broke away from 54 years ago. Today, Bangladesh is the world’s second-largest garment exporter, after China.

But critics point out that growth under Hasina was not equitable, with the country’s wealthy class benefitting from her economic policies. She was also accused of favouring an Indian businessman over the interests of Bangladesh.

And the economic strides that Bangladesh took were accompanied by human rights violations, arbitrary arrests, muzzling of the press, silencing of the opposition and the hollowing out of the country’s democratic institutions.

The BNP, the main opposition party, boycotted the 2014 elections after Hasina refused to appoint a neutral caretaker government to conduct the vote.

Hasina won the next election held in 2018, garnering 96 percent of the votes. Ahead of the elections, Zia was barred from contesting over her convictions, while dozens of BNP candidates were arrested, drawing serious questions about the credibility of the vote.

An analyst at the time described Hasina’s rule as “development minus democracy”.

Hasina’s government repeated that pattern ahead of the 2024 election: opposition parties were attacked, and leaders were arrested ahead of the polls. The BNP boycotted as a result, turning the election into a no-contest.

After the victory, Hasina hardened her position, calling the BNP a ‘terrorist’ organisation.

But the tables turned – in October 2024, two months after she fled to India, the interim government banned Chhatra League, the student wing of the Awami League, describing it as a “terrorist organisation”.

Now, as Bangladesh prepares for its first post-Hasina election on February 2026, it faces a test. In May, the Yunus government banned the Awami League from all political activity, and as things stand, Hasina’s party will not be able to compete in the upcoming election.

That is a major setback for the democratic rights of millions of Bangladeshis, who still support the Awami League.

The step emulates the mistakes of previous governments, which chose retribution over reconciliation.

Meanwhile, extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances – a feature of Hasina’s rule – continue under the new government.

China to suspend imports of Japanese seafood amid diplomatic row: Reports

As a diplomatic row between the two nations grows, China will once more forbid the importation of Japanese seafood, according to Japanese media reports.

Following Beijing’s lifting of import restrictions on Japanese marine products earlier this month, which were lifted by Japan’s public broadcaster NHK and Kyodo News Agency, were the seafood ban, according to NHK and Kyodo News Agency on Wednesday.

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According to sources with knowledge of the situation, Kyodo News claimed that China had informed Japan that the ban had been lifted because there had to be more closely monitoring of the water entering the Pacific Ocean from Fukushima.

However, the ban comes as Beijing and Tokyo’s relations between Sanae Takaichi’s remarks grow deeper. One of the few instances in which Japan could retaliate militarily against Taiwan, the premier claimed in a statement released on November 7 that a Chinese attack on Taiwan was one of the few that could lead to a military response from Tokyo.

The comments made by Takaichi were met with widespread criticism from Chinese authorities and state media, which prompted Japan to enjoin its citizens in China to take precautions and avoid crowded locations.

The Chinese consular general in Osaka, Xue Jian, threatened to “cut off that dirty neck,” according to an article on X that Takaichi made after Takaichi made the comments. Over the now-deleted social media post, Tokyo claimed to have called in the Chinese ambassador.

Tokyo said her remarks were in line with the government’s position, but Beijing also advised Chinese citizens to avoid visiting Japan.

Masaaki Kanai, Japan’s top official in charge of the Asia-Pacific region, and Liu Jinsong, his Chinese counterpart, held talks in Beijing on Tuesday to resolve the conflict.

According to Mao Ning, a spokeswoman for the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, “China once again lodged a strong protest against Japan” over “Takaichi’s erroneous remarks.”

Mao said that Takaichi’s fallacies “seriously violate international law and the fundamental standards governing international relations,” adding that the comments “fundamentally damage” China-Japan relations’ political foundation.

Very unhappy, I guess.

Despite Takaichi’s remarks, Al Jazeera’s Katrina Yu, a reporter from Beijing, claimed that Tokyo intended to de-escalate tensions and show to China that Japan’s position on independent-ruled Taiwan, which Beijing claims is its own territory, has not changed.

“It seems like there were no specific outcomes, but what we saw is some footage that shows these two diplomats interacting briefly, and I think it really speaks for itself. Both of these diplomats speak very cold English, Yu said.

According to Yu, Liu Jinsong “had his hands in his pockets and refused to shake hands with the senior Japanese diplomat,” adding that the Chinese official later admitted to being “very unhappy” with the meeting.

Prior to the most recent seafood ban, China, according to official data, made up more than one-fifth of Japan’s seafood exports.

Other China-Japan relations have been suffocated by the conflict, with China Film News, whose state-backed China Film Administration oversees the country’s film industry, announcing that the release of two imported Japanese films would be delayed as a result.

Myanmar military raids online scam hub, arrests nearly 350 on Thai border