Why has Trump blasted US Democrats for ‘seditious’ comments?

United States President Donald Trump has accused several Democratic members of Congress of “seditious behaviour” over their call for the military not to obey “illegal” commands.

On Tuesday, six Democrats – all veterans of the US military or its intelligence services – published a video on social media advising military and intelligence officials to “refuse illegal orders” that they might receive.

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In a furious string of posts on his Truth Social platform, Trump responded to the video, saying the US lawmakers should be arrested and even suggested that their behaviour could be “punishable by death”.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, however, clarified to reporters in Washington, DC, on Thursday that Trump does not intend for members of Congress to be executed.

What is behind the Democrats’ warning video and Trump’s latest threats?

Here’s what we know:

What did Democrats say?

On November 18, Michigan Senator Elissa Slotkin, Arizona Senator Mark Kelly, Pennsylvania Representative Chris Deluzio, New Hampshire Representative Maggie Goodlander, Pennsylvania Representative Chrissy Houlahan and Colorado Representative Jason Crow posted a video on social media, directly addressing the country’s current military and intelligence officers.

In the video, the six Congress members said: “We know you are under enormous stress and pressure right now. Americans trust their military, but that trust is at risk.”

“This administration is pitting our uniformed military and intelligence community professionals against American citizens. Like us, you all swore an oath to protect and defend this Constitution. Right now, the threats coming to our Constitution aren’t just coming from abroad but from right here at home. Our laws are clear. You can refuse illegal orders. You must refuse illegal orders,” they added.

“No one has to carry out orders that violate the law or our Constitution.”

The Democratic congresspeople, however, did not specify which orders or policies from Trump’s administration might violate the US Constitution.

How has Trump responded?

In a post on Truth Social on Thursday, Trump lambasted the lawmakers and said their behaviour was “seditious”, seeking to incite people to rebel against his authority.

“SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR AT THE HIGHEST LEVEL,” he wrote.

“Each one of these traitors to our Country should be ARRESTED AND PUT ON TRIAL. Their words cannot be allowed to stand – We won’t have a Country anymore!!! An example MUST BE SET,” he added.

In another post the same day, Trump shared a report by the Washington Examiner on the Democrats’ video and suggested arresting them.

“This is really bad, and Dangerous to our Country. Their words cannot be allowed to stand. SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR FROM TRAITORS!!! LOCK THEM UP???”

An hour later, Trump appeared to suggest sentencing the Democrat lawmakers to death because of their behaviour and wrote on Truth Social: SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH!”

Asked by White House reporters if the president would actually sentence the congresspeople to death, press secretary Leavitt said, “No.”

However, she insisted that none of the President’s orders or policies so far had been against the law.

“Every single order that is given to this United States military by this commander-in-chief and through this chain of command – through the secretary of war – is lawful,” she told a news briefing on Thursday.

“We do things by the books. And to suggest and encourage that active-duty service members defy the chain of command is a very dangerous thing for sitting members of Congress to do,” she said, adding that the Democrats “should be held accountable” for “their dangerous rhetoric”.

What do Democrats mean by ‘illegal orders’?

The six Democrats did not specify which orders they were referring to as being “illegal” or against the Constitution.

Before Trump responded to the video, Republican Representative of Arizona Eli Crane told Fox News that if the Democrats could not “name the unlawful orders”, it would be cowardly.

“If you can’t name the unlawful orders that these guys are bringing up in their video, you know, that just shows me that you don’t have the courage to even call out what you’re talking about,” he said.

In a separate segment of Fox News, also on Thursday, anchor Martha MacCallum grilled Colorado Democratic Representative Crow about what orders they considered illegal.

Referring to the unrest which took place after the killing of Black man George Floyd by a police officer in 2020 during Trump’s first term as president, Crow responded, “The protests at Lafayette Square, where he said, ‘Can’t you just shoot them in the legs or something’, that’s his direct quote.”

MacCallum said it was not an order, but “a comment”.

Crow replied: “That’s coming from the president of the US to your generals … he’s also threatened to send the military into Chicago and other cities and go to war with those cities. That is a very disturbing thing.”

Crow added that Trump had also alluded to sending troops to polling stations during elections and said that would be a violation of US law.

“US criminal law prohibits troops from going to polling stations,” he added.

In a separate post on X on Wednesday, Crow pointed out that the recent US bombing campaign of alleged Venezuelan drug trafficking boats in the Caribbean Sea also violates US law.

“The President is trampling on the Constitution,” Crow wrote. “Stop politicizing our troops. Stop illegal military strikes. Stop pitting our servicemembers against the American people.”

More than 60 people have been killed in US strikes on boats in the Caribbean and the Pacific. Last month, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk said: “These attacks – and their mounting human cost – are unacceptable.”

The Trump administration has argued that the strikes are necessary for anti-drug and counterterrorism operations, but Volker added that operations to counter illicit drug trafficking must adhere to international law.

“Under international human rights law, the intentional use of lethal force is only permissible as a last resort against individuals who pose an imminent threat to life,” he said and called on the US to stop what he said were “extrajudicial killing of people aboard these boats”.

In a joint statement late on Thursday, the Democrats in the video said: “No threat, intimidation, or call for violence will deter us from that sacred obligation.”

“What’s most telling is that the president considers it punishable by death for us to restate the law,” they said and added that Americans should unite and “condemn the President’s calls for our murder and political violence”.

“This is a time for moral clarity. In these moments, fear is contagious, but so is courage. We will continue to lead and will not be intimidated. Don’t Give Up the Ship!”

Referring to Trump’s threats against them, Pennsylvania Representative Deluzio told US broadcaster NBC News on Thursday: “It’s a dark day in the country for any president to say such a thing.”

“We have to end this scourge. And yet Donald Trump is the person with the most power who can bring the temperature down, and instead, he threatens to have us killed,” he said.

Meanwhile, Minority Leader Chuck Schumer told the Senate on Thursday that what the president wrote “is an outright threat, and it’s deadly serious”.

“When Donald Trump uses the language of execution and treason, some of his supporters may very well listen,” Schumer added. “He is lighting a match in a country soaked with political gasoline.”

Article 92 of the US Uniform Code of Military Justice states that any person who “violates or fails to obey any lawful general order or regulation” or has “knowledge of any other lawful order issued by a member of the armed forces” and fails to obey it, or “is derelict in the performance of his duties”, shall be punished.

The US Code of Military Justice is a federal law enacted in 1951 and applies to all active armed forces members, armed forces students, as well as active National Guard members.

According to the office of US Attorney Peter Kageleiry Jr, who specialises in military law, failure to obey lawful orders can lead to punishments like “dishonourable discharge (from duty) and forfeiture of all pay and allowances.”

However, an order is considered unlawful if it violates the US Constitution.

Has Trump given any illegal orders?

It is debatable. Some judges have said some of Trump’s policies or orders in the recent past do violate US law.

Earlier this month, federal Judge Karin Immergut ruled that Trump had unlawfully ordered National Guard troops to Portland, Oregon.

Immergut, a Trump appointee, rejected the administration’s claim that protesters at an immigration detention facility were waging a rebellion that legally justified sending troops.

On Friday this week, federal Judge Jia Cobb said Trump’s military takeover of Washington, DC, in August – to combat violent crime there, he said – violates the Constitution and ordered the president to end the deployment of troops there.

Cobb ruled that the president cannot deploy soldiers for “whatever reason” he wants, and gave his administration 21 days to appeal the order before it goes into effect.

In October, a federal judge in Chicago temporarily blocked Trump’s deployment of hundreds of National Guard soldiers in Illinois. That ruling was upheld by the Chicago-based US Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit later in the month.

In response, Trump threatened to use the Insurrection Act to send soldiers to US cities, as the states of Illinois and Oregon continue to fight federal military deployments in court.

“We have an Insurrection Act for a reason. If I had to enact it, I’d do that,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Monday.

Meanwhile, Human Rights Watch (HRW) has said the maritime strikes on Venezuelan boats by US forces amount to “extrajudicial killings”.

“US officials cannot summarily kill people they accuse of smuggling drugs,” said Sarah Yager, Washington director at HRW. “The problem of narcotics entering the United States is not an armed conflict, and US officials cannot circumvent their human rights obligations by pretending otherwise.”

Salvador Santino Regilme, a political scientist who leads the international relations programme at Leiden University, told Al Jazeera in October that under Article 2(4) of the United Nations Charter, the use of force by one state against another is prohibited except when authorised by the UN Security Council or exercised in legitimate self-defence under Article 51.

And the US claim that strikes against “drug traffickers” near Venezuela amount to self-defence “appears legally untenable”, Regilme said.

But Trump has often indicated that he considers himself above the law.

In February, he wrote on X: “He who saves his Country does not violate any Law.”

In April 2020, during his first term as president, when the US was under lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Trump told reporters that only he and no public health expert or local leader had the authority to lift lockdown orders.

Africa does not need to borrow democracy; it needs to reclaim it

African youth have been taught for far too long that democracy is something derived from abroad, something borrowed, or something entirely new. However, the truth is very different from what we can tell from history. The concept of democracy originated in the West, not in the West. It is a thought process by humans. And Africa used it before modern-day states ever became a reality.

The democratic past of Africa dates back more than the continent’s fracturing colonial boundaries. Every man could speak, debate, and cast a ballot in the open councils that decided collective affairs in the Somali shir. Before they became popular elsewhere, the Oromo Gadaa system developed rotating leadership and fixed term limits. Indigenous communities were governed by consensus-based village assemblies that opposed kings. When they hacked their trust, the Ashanti used elder councils to resign. The Tswana kgotla organized public debates where leaders listened rather than spoke. Although these systems did not resemble contemporary democracies in appearance, the guiding principle was clear: power must be used by the community and that the community must hold those in charge.

Democratic principles do not apply to any particular civilization. Ancient Athens developed its own system of citizen control. Shaura and consultation were stressed by Islamic governance. A meritocratic civil service was established by Confucian models in East Asia before it was established in Europe. America made a historic contribution by reviving it in the 18th century by creating institutions that would withstand war, crises, and political division. That legacy is real, and it deserves recognition. However, Western democracies are not their story. It is a human being. And it is undeniable that Africa contributed to it.

Young Africans are currently faced with a brand-new challenge. They are residing in an attention-focused society where misinformation travels quickly and anger spreads more quickly than just reason. Leaders are under enormous pressure to react rather than reflect in this environment. Instead of the traditional marathon, it rewards the strongman’s sprint. However, democracies do not win races. The ability to maintain accountability in the face of uncertain circumstances cannot compete with its short-term appeal. Africa is unable to exchange long-term freedom for short-term frustration.

Modern African societies don’t start from scratch. The democratic resilience of Botswana, Senegal’s peaceful transfer of power, Ghana’s strengthening institutions, and Kenya’s judicial independence demonstrate how adaptable and adaptable African democracies are. Other nations also face significant challenges, including contested elections, corruption, political exclusion, and identity-building. It is not a weakness to honestly name these issues. Democracies develop in this way.

Today, regaining democracy must also entail extending it. Women and underrepresented groups were frequently excluded from the past’s systems. Women, young people, minorities, and all those whose voices were historically silenced must all share the building blocks of a modern African democracy. Reclaiming an inheritance does not imply going back in time. It implies advancing it with more justice.

Africa’s new multiplier is technology. Young Africans can learn and compete globally without the need for gatekeepers’ permission thanks to artificial intelligence, digital platforms, and open learning resources. The level of connectivity is still unbalanced. Infrastructure is still expensive. Innovation is lagging behind politics. However, it is unmistakable that there is potential. The adopters were rewarded by every significant technological advancement: the internet, the internet, steam power, electricity, the printing press, and now AI. The population of Africa is young. The continent can make a leap that no other region has ever made if it embraces AI early, adopts strong civic values, and has clear safeguards.

Slogans do not safeguard democracy. Habits protect it. Young Africans can advance democracy through regular elections as well. Bringing back regional consultative forums. establishing student legislatures organizing discussion groups. provoking false information defending the right to journalism. promoting campaigns to promote digital literacy. These minor behaviors lead to widespread cultures. Africans must reject the notion that democracy belongs to someone else, perhaps most importantly. African Authoritarianism is not. Not African, silence. Debate, dialogue, consensus, accountability, and community decision-making are the continent’s hallmarks. What Africa has always known: that power must be held in trust rather than taken by force, in order to reclaim democracy.

The young are in charge of the future. If African youth stand up for their rights, freedom, diversity, truth, and dignity, they will create stronger institutions than any other person. They will create a continent where people can live together without division and are not oppressed. a continent where Africa emerges as itself rather than as a copy of another. Africa is not required to borrow a democracy. Africa is prepared to take the lead in this regard.

Bangladesh 5.5-magnitude earthquake – what we know so far

At least five people were killed and many others were hurt in Bangladesh’s immediate vicinity of Dhaka, the government said on Friday.

What we currently know is as follows.

What transpired?

Bangladesh was struck by a magnitude 5.5 earthquake at 10:38 a.m. (04:38 GMT), according to the US Geological Survey (USGS). 26 seconds of shaking was experienced.

Shadman Sakif Islam, a resident of Dhaka, claimed that as the earthquake started to spread, “a massive shake” started to appear as a result of “small ripples” he noticed in his coffee.

He continued, “My chair and the table started shaking wildly, and I was stuck there for ten to fifteen seconds without thinking about what was happening.”

He continued, “I’ve never felt this way in my entire life; I felt like going on a boat and going through massive waves one after another.”

Following an earthquake in Dhaka, Bangladesh on November 21, 2025, residents fled their homes and were standing near collapsed scaffolding.

Where did the earthquake strike in Bangladesh?

Near Narsingdi, which is 33 kilometers (16 miles) from Dhaka, the tremor was felt. The quake’s aftermath caused extensive damage to numerous buildings in Dhaka.

According to the Bangladesh Meteorological Department, the epicentre was in Madhabdi, in Narsingdi.

More than 325 kilometers (roughly 200 miles) away from the epicentre, the tremors could be felt in the nearby Indian city of Kolkata. There haven’t been any reports of injuries there.

Narsingdi’s textile-related industry and craft are well-known.

Interactive_Bangaldesh_Earthquale_Nov21_2025-1763729110
(Al Jazeera)

What are the casualties’ details known to us?

At least five people have died and roughly 100 have been hurt, according to government figures.

Higher death toll figures have not been confirmed, but local media has reported them.

At least six people died in the capital on Friday, according to DBC Television, three of whom were killed when a building’s roof and wall collapsed, and three people who were struck by falling railings.

In Bangladesh, how common are earthquakes?

Bangladesh is seismically vulnerable because it is close to the Indian, Eurasian, and Burmese tectonic plates and is therefore seismically vulnerable. However, earthquakes do not occur frequently in Bangladesh.

According to the German Research Center for Geosciences (GFZ), an earthquake of magnitude 5.8 occurred near Sylhet in northeastern Bangladesh in 2023. No serious injuries or harm from the earthquake were reported.

A magnitude 6. 1 earthquake struck the Indian-Myanmar border in 2021. Chittagong and Cox, Bangladesh, both felt tremors. In Bangladesh, there haven’t been any confirmed deaths.

The scale’s magnitude is determined using a logarithmic scale, which means that for every whole-number increase on the scale, the magnitude increases by a factor of 10 for each digit increase.

India’s Tejas fighter jet crashes at Dubai Airshow, pilot dies

An Indian-made fighter jet has gone down in flames at the Dubai Airshow, killing the pilot in the second known crash of the aircraft.

The HAL Tejas, a combat aircraft, crashed just after 2pm local time (10: 00 GMT) on Friday during a demonstration for a crowd of spectators at Dubai World Central, where the last day of the airshow was under way.

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The Indian Air Force (IAF) confirmed on social media that the pilot sustained “fatal injuries” and said it was launching an inquiry to determine what caused the crash.

“IAF deeply regrets the loss of life and stands firmly with the bereaved family in this time of grief”, the statement added.

Photos published by Indian media outlets showed the plane engulfed in flames and a wall of black smoke. A witness told Reuters news agency that the plane was flying at low altitude before appearing to rapidly descend in a ball of fire.

The crash sent sirens reverberating across Al Maktoum International Airport, where the biennial aviation event was expected to draw about 150, 000 people this year. It was not immediately clear if anyone else was injured.

The Government of Dubai Media Office wrote on X that the pilot’s death was “tragic” and posted a photo of crews appearing to hose down debris at the site of the crash.

“Firefighting and emergency teams responded rapidly to the incident and are currently managing the situation on-site”, the office said.

Air demonstrations resumed less than two hours later as emergency workers finished clearing the scene.

The Tejas jet, built by India’s state-run Hindustan Aeronautics Limited, has been a key symbol of New Delhi’s attempt to modernise its air force fleet, especially as China helps neighbouring Pakistan shore up its own air capabilities.

The crash and death in Dubai are another blow to the Indian Air Force.

In May, India and Pakistan engaged in their heaviest fighting in decades – involving fighter jets and cruise missiles – after armed men killed more than two dozen tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir’s town of Pahalgam in April. New Delhi blamed Islamabad for the attack, which the latter vehemently denied.

Pakistan claimed to have downed at least five Indian jets during the conflict, which India initially brushed off as “disinformation”. But a top Indian general admitted in June that Indian forces had indeed lost an unspecified number of jets.

United States President Donald Trump also asserted in July that “five, four or five, but I think five jets” were shot down, without providing more detail.

By November, an annual report to US Congress by the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission said that the conflict “showcased Chinese weaponry”, though it referred to the loss of just three jets flown by the Indian military.

China provided more than 80 percent of Pakistan’s arms imports from 2019 to 2023, the report added.

Explosion at glue factory in eastern Pakistan kills at least 16

According to Pakistani media reports, an explosion at a glue-making factory in Pakistan caused at least 16 injuries and caused fires to rage nearby homes.

On Friday, at around 5 a.m. (GMT) in the Malikpur district of Faisalabad, west of Lahore, in Punjab province, the explosion took place in the west of Lahore.

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Local media reports that Faisalabad Commissioner Raja Jahangir Anwar was one of the people who first learned a gas leak inside the factory’s chemical warehouse was the cause of the explosion.

Authorities detained the factory manager, but they were still looking for the owner, who quickly fled the scene.

According to Pakistani channel Aaj TV, the blast flattened the factory’s roof and those of a few other nearby homes, sparking fires in at least three of them. Rescue teams crowding into the interior of a burning building from a central blast site in photos that the channel released.

According to authorities, six children were among the victims, the majority of whom were from nearby homes.

According to the TV station Geo News, rescue teams dug people out of piles of rubble and searched for them. A nearby hospital was treating the seven injured patients.

At least three killed as magnitude 5.5 earthquake hits Bangladesh