Rumen Radev, the president of Bulgaria, has announced that he will step down, sparking rumors that he will form his own political party in the run-up to snap elections scheduled for the coming months.
Radev promised to resign the day after he told the nation’s Constitutional Court on Monday. If the court approves, Vice President Iliana Iotova will take his place.
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In a televised speech, the 62-year-old Radev stated that he was eager to take part in the “battle for the future” of the nation and that he was “today addressing you for the last time as president of Bulgaria.”
Bulgaria, which is a member of the European Union and NATO, is the first nation to submit a resignation under the auspices of a head of state in post-communist history.
In December, a sizable number of anticorruption protests, for which the left-leaning Radev was a vocal supporter, led to the expulsion of Bulgaria’s previous government. Bulgaria’s eighth consecutive election round will take place in the upcoming snap election.
The centre-right GERB party’s leadership coalition resigned following significant anticorruption protests last month. The current parliament’s attempts to form a new one have failed, and the nation is set for its eighth parliamentary election since 2021.
Radev has repeatedly stated that he may participate in new elections, even though his second term expires in 2026. Boyko Borissov, the leader of the GERB party, has been a vocal opponent of the former Air Force general.
Radev, whose MRF New Beginning party has repeatedly supported the GERB-led coalition, has also opposed politician and oligarch Delyan Peevski, who is facing sanctions from the United States and the United Kingdom for alleged bribery, corruption, and media manipulation.
The former president has criticized European leaders for not doing enough to support US President Donald Trump’s efforts to broker a negotiated peace and expressed doubt about Bulgaria’s decision to join the eurozone.
Radev’s plans were not disclosed on Monday. When he was recently asked about starting a new party, he responded that “all democrats, left and right, regardless of where they belong or whether they are politically active at all, are needed because we all need fair elections and democratic, free development.”
Radev’s approval rating, according to a recent Market Links poll, is 44 percent.
Omar Yaghi, a Nobel laureate, describes how pioneering science combating the climate crisis was fuelled by humble beginnings.
Omar Yaghi, a 2025 Nobel Laureate, is working with The Take to create metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), which are a form of carbon storage and storage. Yaghi, who was born into a Palestinian refugee family in Amman, describes how hardship affected his creative process, from having fresh water only once per week to developing irrigation systems that draw water from the desert air.
In this episode:   .
Dr. Omar Yaghi, founder of Atoco, professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and Nobel Laureate in Chemistry.
Credits for each episode:
Phillip Lanos, Spencer Cline, Tamara Khandaker, Kylene Kiang, Sar el-Khalili, and our host, Malika Bilal, were the producers of this episode. Noor Wazwaz and Sar el-Khalili edited it.  ,
Marcos Bartolomé, Sonia Bhagat, Spencer Cline, Sar el-Khalili, Tamara Khandaker, Kylene Kiang, Phillip Lanos, Chloe K. Li, Melanie Marich, and Noor Wazwaz make up the Take production team. Malika Bilal is our host.  ,
Adam Abou-Gad and Vienna Maglio are the wedding planners. The audience engagement lead is Andrew Greiner.
Alex Roldan is our sound designer. Hisham Abu Salah and Mohannad al-Melhem are our video editors. Executive producer of The Take is Alexandra Locke. The head of audio for Al Jazeera is Ney Alvarez.  ,
According to the state news agency SANA, the Syrian army has declared a curfew in the city of al-Shaddadi in the northeast of the country following the release of ISIL (ISIS) fighters from its prison after fighting with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).
As its troops searched al-Shaddadi and its surrounding areas for the escaped fighters, the Syrian army announced to Al Jazeera Arabic on Monday that it was now in complete control of the city and the prison where suspected ISIL prisoners were kept.
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The Ministry of Interior would take control of the al-Aqtan prison and security facilities in the city northeast of Raqqa, according to the Syrian Operations Authority, who also claimed that the SDF had purposefully released ISIL members.
How many prisoners had been released from the prison, according to the army.
The SDF claimed in a statement that it had lost control of the prison as a result of an army attack, which the military has refuted.
In addition, the Kurdish-led organization reported that al-Aqtan fighting resulted in the deaths of nine of its members and the injuring of 20 others.
The statement further stated that despite numerous calls to a nearby coalition base, the US-led coalition against ISIL had not yet taken action.
The Syrian government announced the SDF’s intention to leave parts of Syria on the day after Bashar al-Assad was ousted in 2024, making the most significant change to President Ahmed al-Sharaa.
The SDF, which have control of Syria’s main oil fields and two Arab-majority provinces, agreed on Sunday to step down from both Raqqa and Deir Az Zor, which the group had previously agreed to control.
Mazloum Abdi, the SDF’s chief commander, was scheduled to visit Damascus on Monday to discuss the ceasefire agreement.
Hasakah, where al-Shaddadi is located, is still largely under the control of the SDF, with its central prisons housing detainees suspected of having links to ISIL, and a camp housing tens of thousands of prisoners suspected of being ISIL-linked.
President Donald Trump has strewn a number of policies over the past year that have impacted businesses, supply chains, and employment.
Despite this, the US economy appears to be expanding at a healthy rate and there is no safe harbor for unemployment.
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According to experts, the reality is that the stock market boom has helped to conceal deeper economic issues.
Trump has imposed a number of tariffs on various nations, including key trading partners, which has sparked fears of rising inflation, manufacturing sluggishness, and rising unemployment.
None of those scenarios actually happened.
Although inflation was above the target of the Federal Reserve, December’s inflation rate was only 2.7%.
Last month, the unemployment rate was comparatively low, at 4.4 percent. The third quarter of 2025 saw the fastest growth in two years in terms of GDP.
The “surprising and awe we anticipated just didn’t materialize,” said Oxford Economics’ lead US economist Bernard Yaros.
Yaros claimed that the limited fallout was caused by Trump’s “liberation day” dialing back of the most expensive tariffs and the relative absence of other countries’ retaliation.
The stock market, which is heavily favored by the “magnificent seven” tech companies, has increased by nearly 30% since Trump’s announcement on April 2 and has helped Americans increase their paper wealth and ease their purse strings.
In a research briefing in October, Oxford Economics reported that net wealth gains account for almost one-third of the increase in consumer spending since the COVID-19 pandemic.
The gains have also been distributed differently.
According to Moody’s Analytics, the top 10% of earners now account for roughly half of all spending, which is the highest proportion since data collection began in 1989.
According to Marcus Noland, executive vice president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, “the gains are going a lot to people in higher income brackets – they are the ones who have the stock portfolios” and to people in fields and occupations related to AI.
However, these figures conceal the economy’s growth unevenness.
Employees’ net decline
This unevenness is revealed by careful analysis of the data. For instance, despite the impressive GDP figures, there isn’t a rise in hiring that comes with that growth.
While last year, the industries that rely heavily on immigrants added workers, such as hospitality and healthcare, have all lost jobs.
According to a Brookings Institution analysis, the US experienced negative , net migration for the first time in at least half a century as a result of the Trump administration’s widespread deportation of undocumented immigrants and tightening of legal immigration pathways.
Noland noted that the US workforce is projected to experience a net decline of two million workers this year due to their “very public and brutal way of going about deportations.”
Smaller businesses lack the resources to hold stockpile inventories or negotiate with suppliers in the face of higher tariffs, which is a “bifurcation” in the US economy that is felt everywhere.
In a report from November, Oxford Economics stated that “the increase in policy uncertainty this year has had an outsized impact on smaller firms.”
Due to the capital-intensive chip manufacturing and cloud services industry’s boom, these companies also have little to gain from the boom in the artificial intelligence (AI) sector.
There are concerns about a large number of people being laid off of work, despite AI supporters’ belief that the world is about to experience significant productivity gains that could significantly raise living standards.
“This might represent the new trend of jobless growth,” the author speculates. One of the reasons why people don’t feel so good about themselves is because of this, Yaros said.
While there is still much hype surrounding AI and the potential productivity gains, we believe that if it persists, hiring will suffer as a result.
India’s most well-known composer, Allah Rakha Rahman, is unquestionably the most well-known in India. He has won some of the world’s most coveted musical awards – including Oscars, Grammys and a Golden Globe. His song, Jai Ho (May You Win), became a well-known anthem after earning him an Oscar. For his contributions to music, the 59-year-old “Mozart of Madras” received Padma Vibhushan, India’s third highest civilian award, in addition to his honor.
But last week, when Rahman, a man of few words, shared in a TV interview that he potentially has lost work due to “communal” bias in Bollywood, India’s Hindi film industry, he was subjected to a massive online backlash from Hindu right-wing voices.
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“People who are not creative have the power now to decide things, and this might have been a communal thing also but not in my face”, Rahman told the BBC Asian Network in the interview aired on Friday.
“The music company hired its five composers, but they whispered to me that they had booked you.” Oh, that’s great, take some rest, I said. I can chill out with my family, ‘” he said in the 90-minute interview.
Rahman’s patriotism and talent were questioned by right-wing activists and commentators, who claimed he had played the “victim card.”
Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), a far-right organization, demanded an apology from Rahman for “defaming” the nation.
“We are proud of him and whatever he has done for the country. However, he claimed that the way he is trying to defame India is highly objectionable for someone who has made his living from it.
Industry insiders have remained silent and distazoned themselves from the remarks, avoiding a few outspoken voices.
Within a day, the composer was forced to tender an explanation amid an unrelenting stream of social media trolling. Rahman stated in a video that was posted to his Instagram account that: “I realize that intentions can occasionally be misunderstood, but my goal has always been to uplift, honor, and serve through music.
He praised Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi for his support for India’s young creatives and the entertainment sector, and he said he was still giving thanks to the country. He also worked with Hans Zimmer to create the score for the upcoming film Ramayana, a film based on the Hindu epic.
Salman Khan, Shah Rukh Khan and Aamir Khan speak on stage during the ‘ EAST TO WEST: The Global Rise of Bollywood ‘ panel at the 2025 Joy Forum at SEF Arena on October 17, 2025 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The three Khans have been prominent figures in Bollywood for the past three decades [Getty Images for GEA]
Indian religious intolerance is growing.
But the backlash on social media continued for days, bringing into the spotlight the struggle of being a Muslim amid rising religious intolerance in India.
Indian journalist Fatima Khan wrote on X, “Incredible to see Rahman being shifted from the good Muslim category to the bad Muslim category overnight.
“Almost every Muslim public figure in India has experienced or will experience a penny drop.” No matter how many patriotic songs, movies or tweets. They will all endure the suffering it causes.
According to To Kill a Democracy: India’s Passage to Despotism coauthor Debasish Roy Chowdhury, online trolling aids in the production of majoritarian consent.
He argued that when enough noise is generated on social media, it seeps into mainstream coverage and starts to look like the dominant social mood.
According to Roy Chowdhury, who has written about Bollywood being used as a propaganda tool, “the loudest voices drown out tolerance and reason until hate is all that is heard and can be falsely claimed as representative of society.”
Under Prime Minister Modi’s leadership, anti-Muslim violence has increased in India.
Hindu right’s influence on art and cinema
Rahman is not well known for speaking out about his Muslim heritage or for politics. Roja, one of his many nationalist films, was released in 1992 and is renowned for its patriotic themes and depiction of the armed uprising in India-administered Kashmir in the 1990s.
Rahman’s 1997 song Maa Tujhe Salam (Salute to You, Mother) on his album Vande Mataram was seen as unifying the diverse nation of 1.4 billion people.
The composer’s career began in the Tamil film industry in southern India. He is based in Chennai, Tamil Nadu’s state capital.
The Oscar winner’s comments last week raised questions about the Hindu right’s influence on art and cinema in India, particularly in Bollywood.
The Hindi film industry has received criticism for producing movies that disparage Hindu leaders and secular leaders or even glorify Hindu extremists.
Some claim that this is the result of a persistent cultural conflict involving Bollywood, which has led to a shift away from its pluralist, liberal, and Hindu majoritarian narratives, which aligns film closely with the ruling party’s ideology.
The Kashmir Files (2022) triggered anti-Muslim hate across India while the Kerala Story (2023) was accused of spreading Islamophobia by portraying Muslims as potential “terrorists”.
Rahman’s music was recently used in Rahman’s music to the controversial Muslim-mongering movie Chhaava. Aurangzeb, the film depicted the brutal and violent ruler of the Mughal Empire. Rahman, in his BBC interview, admitted the film was “divisive”.
“Muslim vilification”
Screenwriter and critic Raja Sen said, “We’re seeing a kind of vilification of Muslims on our screens.”
“Earlier, it was just like an anti-Pakistan narrative. He told Al Jazeera, “There is now a different kind of narrative.”
Pakistan has traditionally been depicted as the enemy in Hindi films that deal with war, “terror,” and espionage, themes that have been the subject of decades of hostility. The two neighbouring countries have fought several wars over the disputed Kashmir region. After 26 tourists were killed by gunmen in India-administered Kashmir, they were briefly engaged in a four-day war in May.
Indian Muslims are now being increasingly portrayed as a threat by movies that once focused on foreign foes.
Sen claimed that a major filmmaker changed an upcoming film’s Muslim protagonist’s name to a Hindu name, fearing controversy.
“They must have thought, why make the Muslim protagonist a good, heroic figure. According to Sen, it’s “perhaps similar” to what used to happen in post-9/11 America in terms of how stereotyping was carried out,” Sen continued.
Bollywood’s once largely secular ethos presented Muslim characters as positive, even if stereotypical. In films like Amar Akbar Anthony (1977) and Coolie (1983), they were devoted friends, brothers, or benevolent poets and singers.
Muslims have appeared in recent years as violent (Kalank), regressive (Haq), or debauched (Animal), a “terrorist” (A Wednesday), a “terrorist,” or violent (Kalank), a development that echoes post-9/11 Hollywood movies, where Muslim identity has evolved as a synonym for danger or moral deficiency.
Dilip Kumar (real name Yusuf Khan – right) was India’s biggest star during the 1950s and 1960s]File: KK/FY/WS]
Muslim stars are targeted
From the beginning of Hindi cinema, Muslim actors, filmmakers, and other artists have had a significant influence.
The prominence of stars such as Shah Rukh Khan, Aamir Khan, Salman Khan and Saif Ali Khan has often been cited as evidence of Bollywood’s secular credentials and broad appeal.
The country’s biggest Muslim stars, however, have increasingly become targets in recent years. This is not just apparent in their movies, but also in the way that their views on religious intolerance have been publicly expressed.
Aamir Khan’s films have repeatedly faced boycott calls from right-wing Hindu groups, including his 2014 film PK for critiquing organised religion, including Hinduism and Islam, and 2022’s Laal Singh Chaddha for his past remarks on intolerance.
Aamir Khan had to reassure the public that he “really loved his country.” A televised interview with news anchor Rajat Sharma, who questioned him about marrying Hindu women, also raised the accusation of promoting love jihad, a conspiracy theory that claims Muslim men are engaged in union to convert Hindu women.
Shah Rukh Khan has been targeted on multiple occasions for remarks and professional choices. He was called “anti-national” in 2015 because of his mention of intolerance. When his son, Aryan Khan, was detained in a 2021 drug case despite the charges being later dropped, he also faced campaigns that questioned his patriotism.
More recently, he was labelled a traitor by a ruling party member after his Indian Premier League cricket team signed a Bangladeshi player. In response to the conflict between the two nations, the Kolkata Knight Riders, which is co-owned by Shah Rukh Khan, dropped the Bangladeshi player.
Rights organizations and independent observers have documented what they believe to be a systematic campaign of hate and discrimination against Muslims in India, which account for 1.4 billion people there, over the past few years.
According to the India Hate Lab Report 2025, there has been a sharp rise in antiminority hate speech – from 668 reported incidents in 2023 to more than 1, 300 in 2025 – much of it voiced at political rallies, processions and public events that is then amplified online into mainstream discourse.
In a number of states, human rights organizations like Amnesty International have documented demolitions of Muslim-owned businesses and homes.
Beyond studies, lived accounts and news coverage highlight a systematic exclusion from daily life, including difficulties finding rental housing, practicing religion, and being lynched over accusations of transporting cows, which some Hindus consider to be sacred.
‘ A chilling effect ‘
Such a chilling effect is produced by the backlash. In recent years, according to artists, the scope of creative freedom in Hindi films has slowed significantly, largely as a result of the anticipation of a backlash. Silence and self-censorship, some feel, have become critical for survival in the film industry today.
Avinash Das, a filmmaker, said, “There has been a group within the film industry that works within the influence of the government and benefits from it, that boldly and aggressively underlines and creates many of these controversies.”
After learning about Das’s criticism of the government, producers repeatedly turned down his services.
He pointed out that a 1983 satirical film, Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro, which depicted a Hindu religious performance, cannot be made now.
Filmmakers and producers are cautious of anything that might be perceived as controversial because, in his opinion, film is not just an art form but a business driven by risk. The same applies to those who declare their opinions.
Indian celebrities seem to be bound by the same code of silence, which explains why so few, regardless of whether they are Hindu or Muslim, speak publicly about the country’s current direction.
Bollywood contrasts sharply with Hollywood, where celebrities frequently express out against one another, or even make disparaging remarks about US President Donald Trump.