Australia closes dozens of east coast beaches after shark attacks

Following four confirmed shark attacks over the weekend, beaches along Australia’s eastern New South Wales (NSW) coastline have been closed.

A 39-year-old surfer was bitten by a shark at Point Plomer on Tuesday near Port Macquarie, which is 400 kilometers (248 miles) north of Sydney, according to ABC News, an Australian news agency.

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According to authorities, the victim suffered serious injuries, but beaches in Port Macquarie were closed on Tuesday following the attack, which was prompted by the government-run Shark Smart App, which listed numerous recent shark sightings near NSW beaches.

A 27-year-old man was taken to a hospital on Monday night after being attacked by a shark at a beach in the Sydney suburb of Manly, prompting Sydney’s Northern Beaches Council to shut down its beaches for at least 48 hours.

The shark bit a chunk out of his surfboard, but a young surfer from northern Sydney’s Dee Why beach, according to ABC, managed to escape an attack the same day.

A 12-year-old was seriously injured by a shark while swimming on a beach in eastern Sydney on Sunday, according to ABC.

Following the beach closures, Surf Life Saving New South Wales’ CEO Steven Pearce remarked to reporters, “Think of going for a local pool because at this point we’re advising that beaches are unsafe.”

Australians are enjoying their summer vacations, so Australian beaches have been particularly busy, but experts claim that recent heavy rains in Sydney have made for ideal conditions for shark attacks.

According to Chris Pepin-Neff, an expert on shark behavior and an academic, sewage run-off from rainwater has drawn in baitfish and sharks to coastal areas, while cracky water makes it difficult to see.

Vietnam’s To Lam vows to fight corruption, pledges 10% economic growth

As he addressed a gathering of Vietnam’s ruling Communist Party, To Lam made the promise to combat corruption and increase annual economic growth to more than 10% for the remainder of the decade.

The secretary-general urged the party to pursue administrative reform and address “wastefulness and negativity” in government in a speech to a twice-a-decade party congress on Tuesday.

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Lam, 68, said Vietnam needed to ease bureaucracy and boost international trade to safeguard its sovereignty and interests.

The weeklong congress will establish economic objectives for 2030, begin on Monday in the capital city of Hanoi, select a party leader, and select the country’s most powerful position.

According to reports, Lam is likely to keep his post of party chief and seek the presidency of the state, creating a dual position similar to Xi Jinping’s in China.

Nguyen Khac Giang of Singapore’s ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute told the AFP news agency that if he took both of his top positions, he will have “the strongest mandate for the Vietnamese leadership since the end of the Vietnam War.”

With the pace of his reforms, which have also resulted in the removal of rivals and centralizing his authority, Lam has already shocked the nation. Since taking office 17 months ago, he has propelled ambitious rail and power projects, absolving eight ministries or agencies, and cutting nearly 150, 000 jobs from the state payroll.

Lam stated in a speech to almost 1,600 party delegates on Tuesday that the gathering was occurring amid “many overlapping difficulties and challenges, from natural disasters to storms and floods to epidemics, security risks, fierce strategic competition, and significant disruptions in energy and food supply chains.”

The party is “determined to combat corruption,” he added, “considering that the private sector is a crucial component of the economy.”

He continued, “Infrastructure must be developed to adapt to climate change and ensure robust regional, interregional, and global connectivity.”

The Communist Party submitted to the congress setting the annual economic growth goal of at least 10% until 2030, according to a document that the Reuters news agency reviewed.

According to the state-run Viet Nam News, party documents presented at the congress demanded strict enforcement of legal discipline in order to “overcome chronic problems where the “law is sound but implementation is difficult” and where there is “much talk, little action,” which had eroded public trust and wasted national resources.

This handout photo taken on January 20, 2026 and released by the 14th National Congress via the Vietnam News Agency shows delegates taking part in the opening session of the 14th National Congress of the Communist Party of Vietnam at the National Convention Centre in Hanoi. (Photo by Handout / Vietnam News Agency (VNA) / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT
The Communist Party of Vietnam’s twice-yearly national congress is expected to choose its leader, hold the country’s most powerful position, and set economic objectives by 2030. [Handout/Vietnam News Agency via AFP]

Gaza’s ‘phase two’ from a distance: Why hope still feels out of reach

Gaza: When Steve Witkoff announced “phase two” of the ceasefire, it seemed like the update everyone in Gaza was looking for. Phase Two really made it seem like things might be turning around in his words, with the exception of phase two.

Another announcement arrived less than 24 hours later. A new “Board of Peace” was created by the White House and is tasked with establishing a technocratic body that would oversee post-war Gaza. Dr. Ali Shaath, a former Palestinian official, will serve as the committee’s chairperson as part of a forward-looking reconstruction and stability strategy.

It appears to be a movement on the surface. similar to a structure like imagining a world without war.

There isn’t a sense of confidence in Gaza, though. There is a lot of doubt.

When the destruction is still visible everywhere, and no one has been held accountable, many Palestinians here struggle to comprehend how a board intended to rebuild Gaza can include those who have publicly supported Israel.

Buildings are still standing in ruins. Families are still grieving. The entire neighborhood has vanished. Talk of governance and reconstruction seems to be aback in light of this.

The contradiction is difficult to ignore for families who have lost their homes, loved ones, and sense of security. It’s difficult to assume any future will be built by those who appear unaffected by the present suffering and unaffected by responsibility for it.

Nothing has really changed for those whose daily routine is characterized by the constant buzz of Israeli air strikes and sudden Israeli air attacks.

Parents are still pondering where their kids will sleep tonight. Aid workers still determine their routes based on where they are most in need rather than which roads will actually keep them alive. Families continue to hush up at night, trying to discern whether the silence will last or if fighting will reappear.

These official statements, exactly? They distance themselves from what is actually happening. Although a second phase might be included in a news release, the majority of people still feel stuck in their original state.

Speeches and headlines don’t seem to have a ceasefire in your opinion. You sense it in the sudden silence, the easing in your chest, and the nights that don’t end in a jolt when you hear something missing. That is what people are anticipating. Not the milestone, but the label. simply the change itself.

It’s common to feel relieved and depressed after months of loss and exhaustion to think things are improving. The concept of progress is cherished by diplomats. Governments must declare that the momentum is growing. However, who actually leads this? They simply desire a steady object. They want to know that tomorrow will not be as bad as it was today and that they can rise up and not sneeze.

That feeling is not present, though. Promises are inconsistent, deadlines are slipping, and too many commitments fade into the background. This doesn’t seem like peace on the move for those who are affected; instead, it feels like everything is hanging by a thread and ready to snap at any moment. It doesn’t feel any safer just by calling it “phase two.”

Then there is the quieter pain of hope being inflated too thin. People learn to lower their expectations when official expressions don’t match reality. Hope turns into something you hold dear but don’t trust a lot because it hurts once more when you’re let down. Lacks trust when announcing progress before anyone can feel it. It is eroded by it.

This is not about removing diplomacy. Just be honest, really. People need to experience “phase two” in their daily lives: Fewer funerals, hospitals that operate, roads that don’t feel like traps, days when there isn’t always a fear.

Walking down the street without bracing yourself, sleeping through the night without making plans for a run in the event of an emergency creates real peace in those small, everyday moments.

“Phase two” is largely just a symbol up until those times appear. And no matter how optimistic they may seem, symbols can’t protect anyone. That is only possible with real change.

Bangladeshi Gen Z toppled Hasina. Now they could decide next prime minister

For most of his adult life, Rafiul Alam did not believe that voting was worth the walk to the polling station. He is 27, grew up in a middle-class neighbourhood of Dhaka, and became eligible to vote nearly a decade ago. He never did – not in Bangladesh’s national elections in 2018, nor in the 2024 vote.

“My vote had no real value,” he said.

Like many Bangladeshis in his age group, Alam’s political consciousness formed under former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s long period of government, when opposition parties and election watchdogs repeatedly questioned the credibility of polls.

Over time, he said, disengagement with politics became normal, even rational, for a generation. “You grow up knowing elections exist, but believing they actually don’t have the power to decide anything. So you put your energy elsewhere… studies, work, even trying to leave the country,” he said.

This calculation began to shift for him in July 2024, when student protests over a government job reservation system favouring certain groups spiralled into a nationwide uprising. Alam joined marches in Dhaka’s Mirpur area and helped coordinate logistics for protests, as Hasina’s security forces launched a brutal crackdown.

The United Nations Human Rights Office later estimated that up to 1,400 people – most of them young – may have been killed before Hasina fled to India on August 5, 2024, ending nearly 15 years in power.

When Hasina left, Alam said the moment felt like something that had appeared permanent had broken. “For the first time, it felt like ordinary people could push for a change,” he said. “Once you experience that, you feel responsible for what comes next.”

Bangladesh is now heading for a national election on February 12, the first since the uprising. European Union observers have described the upcoming vote as the “biggest democratic process in 2026, anywhere”. And Alam plans to vote for the first time.

“I’m thrilled to exercise my lost right as a citizen,” he said.

He is not alone. Bangladesh has about 127 million registered voters, nearly 56 million of them between the ages of 18 and 37, according to the Election Commission. They constitute about 44 percent of the electorate, and are a demographic widely seen as the driving force behind Hasina’s downfall.

“Practically speaking, anyone who turned 18 after the 2008 parliamentary election has never had the chance to vote in a competitive poll,” said Humayun Kabir, director general of the Election Commission’s national identity registration wing.

“That means people who have been unable to vote for the last 17 years are now in their mid-30s… and especially eager to cast their ballots.”

This eagerness comes after three post-2008 elections that “were not considered credible”, Ivars Ijabs, the EU’s chief observer, said.

The 2014 polls saw a mass opposition boycott, and dozens of seats where Hasina’s Awami League party faced no contest. The 2018 vote, though contested, became widely known as the “night’s vote”, after allegations that ballot boxes had been filled before polling day.

The 2024 election, meanwhile, again went ahead amid a major boycott by opposition parties, with critics arguing that conditions for a “fair contest did not exist”.

Protesters shout slogans as they celebrate Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s resignation, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Monday, August 5, 2024 [Rajib Dhar/AP]

A pivotal electorate

Fragmented by class, geography, religion and experience, Bangladesh’s young voters are united less by ideology than by a shared suspicion of institutions, which, for most of their adult lives, have failed to represent them, say analysts.

“There is a significant age gap between pre–Hasina regime voters and new voters,” said Fahmidul Haq, a writer and faculty member at Bard College in New York and a former professor at the University of Dhaka. “Because of the nature of elections under the Hasina administration, we do not know the actual level of public acceptance of the political parties.”

As a result, he said, the current cohort of first-time voters will play a decisive role in shaping the future direction of politics in Bangladesh. Haq described the upcoming election as a psychological release valve after years of repression, during which young people “could not hold their representatives accountable; rather, those representatives appeared to them as oppressors”.

Many young people still do not trust the existing system, Haq argued, and some remain sceptical of the democratic transition itself.

Umama Fatema, a Dhaka University student who emerged as a prominent leader during the 2024 protests, said the uprising generated powerful expectations among young people: promises of “no corruption, no manipulation, equality of opportunity and political reform”.

But translating these aspirations into institutions has proven far more difficult. As the transition unfolded, Fatema said the reform process, led by the interim administration of Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, alongside manoeuvring by political parties – including those born out of 2024’s protests – became increasingly complex.

“Very few people and their aspirations have been meaningfully involved and incorporated,” she said.

Leader of National Citizen Party (NCP), Nahid Islam, addresses supporters during a political rally in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Sunday, Aug. 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Mahmud Hossain Opu)
Leader of National Citizen Party (NCP), Nahid Islam, addresses supporters during a political rally in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Sunday, August 3, 2025 [Mahmud Hossain Opu/ AP Photo]

A fraught alliance

With the Awami League barred from political activity by the interim Yunus government, the election has turned into a battle between two rival coalitions: one led by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), and the other by Jamaat-e-Islami.

For many young protesters, this outcome cuts against the spirit of 2024.

Pantho Saha, a 22-year-old student from the Cumilla district in the country’s southeast, said many with whom he protested in 2024 had hoped the leaders who emerged from the uprising would break what he described as the “same old dynastic” patterns.

That expectation began to fracture, he said, when the National Citizen Party (NCP), a youth-led formation born out of the protest movement, moved towards an electoral alliance with Jamaat-e-Islami. A far-right Islamist party, the Jamaat’s opposition to Bangladesh’s independence during the 1971 war has long limited its mainstream appeal.

“Historically, those who rule us come to power with big promises,” Saha said. “But after a few years, power blinds them, and the same abuses repeat.”

The NCP, he said, initially felt different. “We thought of the NCP as a beacon of light. But seeing it align with a party that carries so much historical baggage made many of us lose hope.”

Fatema, who led the protests alongside several figures who later founded the NCP, said the party’s alignment with the Jamaat risks shrinking the significance of the July 2024 uprising. “Over time, it could seriously damage how this uprising is remembered in history,” she warned.

The NCP positioned itself at its launch as a generational alternative to Bangladesh’s traditional parties, promising what it called a “new political settlement” rooted in the 2024 July movement. But as talks advanced over the electoral alliance with Jamaat-e-Islami, the party saw a wave of resignations, including from several senior figures and women leaders who had been expected to contest parliamentary seats. Many of them have since announced independent bids, saying the party was “drifting from its founding commitments”.

Nahid Islam, the NCP’s chief, has defended the alliance with Jamaat-e-Islami, describing it as a “strategic electoral arrangement aimed at greater unity”, rather than an ideological alignment.

People watch Bangladesh's Chief Election Commissioner A.M.M. Nasir Uddin's address to the nation on a television, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Mahmud Hossain Opu)
People watch Bangladesh’s Chief Election Commissioner AMM Nasir Uddin’s address to the nation on a television, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Thursday, December 11, 2025 [Mahmud Hossain Opu/AP Photo]

Between hope and politics

Even so, the February 12 ballot carries particular weight for many younger Bangladeshis who helped drive last year’s uprising.

Moumita Akter, 24, a master’s student at Chittagong University who took part in the anti-Hasina protests, described the vote as “the first step to restore at least the most basic democratic practices”.

“I don’t expect miracles from a single vote. But I want to see whether the system can at least function properly. That alone would be a major change,” she said.

For others, like Sakibur Rahman, 23, a voter from the eastern Brahmanbaria district who studies philosophy at the University of Dhaka, the appeal of democracy remains conditional.

“You can talk about democracy all day, but if people don’t feel safe, can’t speak freely and can’t earn a living, democracy feels abstract, he told Al Jazeera.

Rahman said he would support whichever party could credibly guarantee public safety, freedom of expression, religious freedom, and minorities living without fear.

For many women voters, the calculation is sharper still. Women make up nearly half of Bangladesh’s electorate, but young women say questions of dignity and everyday security will shape their ballot.

“We hear promises of women’s rights, but the lived reality is far from ideal. That will shape how many of my female friends will vote,” Akter, the master’s student, said.

Yet the political field they are being asked to choose from remains overwhelmingly male. Election Commission data shows that only 109 of the 2,568 candidates contesting the election, or about 4.24 percent, are women.

Fatema said the political space for women has narrowed rather than expanded since the uprising. “After August 5, women who speak about their agency, their contributions, and their right to representation have been suppressed in many ways,” she said.

“Harassment, from online abuse to sexual threats, has become routine in political spaces.” These pressures are pushing women out of visible political roles, just as the country enters a critical political transition, she added.

Mubashar Hasan, a political observer and adjunct researcher at Western Sydney University’s Humanitarian and Development Research Initiative, said the disconnect between women’s prominence in protest movements and their marginalisation in formal politics raises doubts about the depth of reform.

“No structural change is possible without women’s political representation, and participation at the highest levels… both in parliament and in policymaking,” he said. “Without that, promises of any new political order remain incomplete.”

Fahmidul Haq of Bard College said political parties would have to approach young voters differently than in the past, by addressing “their traumas, desires, and demands sincerely”, and by campaigning with honesty and transparency.

“Young people are deeply sceptical of absurd promises,” he said, adding that those may in fact alienate them.

Still, something fundamental has changed. For Alam, the first-time voter from Dhaka’s Mirpur, July 2024 permanently altered how his generation relates to power.

“We now dare to question everyone,” he said. “Whoever comes to power, that habit won’t disappear.”

North Korea’s Kim Jong Un fires vice premier, publicly rebukes officials

In a rare public rebuke of officials in the secretive state, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un fired a senior official tasked with overseeing economic policy and condemned “incompetent” party members, according to state media.

At the start of the first stage of a modernization project at the Ryongsong Machine Complex, Kim fired Vice Premier Yang Sung-ho, according to the state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on Tuesday.

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Yang was fired “on the spot,” according to KCNA, adding that Kim viewed him as “unfit to be entrusted with heavy duties.”

Kim was quoted in the news as saying, “It was like hitching a cart to a goat… an unintentional mistake in our cadre appointment process.” He continued, “It’s an ox that pulls a cart, not a goat,” adding that.

Yang, a former minister of the machinery industry and current vice premier in charge of the machinery sector, serves on the party’s leadership council, according to South Korea’s state news agency Yonhap.

Yang’s replacement has not been made public.

The removal comes as the Workers’ Party, which is currently in power in North Korea, prepares for its upcoming Ninth Party Congress, which is scheduled to take place soon and sets out major policy objectives.

Kim also criticized officials he claimed lied about the delays in the modernization project during his Monday visit to the industrial machinery complex.

This picture taken on January 19, 2026 and released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on January 20, 2026 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (C) attending the completion ceremony for the first phase of renovation and modernisation of the Ryongsong Machine Complex in South Hamgyong Province, North Korea. (Photo by KCNA VIA KNS / AFP) / SOUTH KOREA OUT / ---EDITORS NOTE--- RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT
Kim Jong Un, the leader of North Korea, is seen completing the first phase of the Ryongsong Machine Complex’s first phase of renovation and modernization on Monday [KCNA via KNS/AFP].

The first-stage modernization project of the Ryongsong Machine Complex encountered difficulties, according to Kim, according to KCNA, “due to the irresponsible, rude, and incompetent economic guidance officials.”

He also attacked party members who had “been accustomed to defeatism, irresponsibility, and passiveness” for “too long.”

Kim rebuffed Kim’s claim that current economic policymakers “hardly ever” could steer the country’s industry’s efforts to modernize and upgrade it technologically.

In advance of the Party Congress, Yonhap’s public admonition of officials appeared to tighten discipline among officials, which Yonhap described as “rare.”

In response to what it called “assassination concerns,” Yonhap reported last week that North Korea had replaced its top military personnel in charge of keeping an eye on Kim.

The Guard Office of the ruling party, the Guard Department of the State Affairs Commission, and the Bodyguard Command, all of which were replaced, are said to be the report’s chiefs.

Although uncommon, the public’s denials resemble those of earlier cases like Jang Song Thaek’s uncle, who was hanged in 2013 for allegedly plotting to overthrow his nephew, according to Yang Moo-jin of the University of North Korean Studies.