India’s Bihar elections start with 74 million voters: What’s at stake?

Millions of voters in India’s third most populous state, Bihar, are voting on Thursday in the first phase of elections that could not only shape the state’s future but also serve as a bellwether for the broader mood of the nation, 17 months after Prime Minister Narendra Modi returned to power in New Delhi with a diminished mandate.

The elections for the Bihar Legislative Assembly will determine who governs Bihar for the next five years. The state is India’s poorest. But its 130 million people – more than any European nation – give Bihar hefty political clout.

Roughly half of Bihar’s constituencies vote on Thursday. The second phase of the elections will be held next week.

Here is what’s at stake.

Which constituencies are voting in phase one in Bihar?

Bihar has 243 assembly constituencies, 121 of which are up for voting on Thursday. Some of these constituencies are reserved for members of the Scheduled Castes (SC), communities that have been historically marginalised.

The Legislative Assembly, or the Vidhan Sabha, is the lower house of the bicameral Bihar Legislature. The last elections were in November 2020.

The 121 constituencies are: Alamnagar, Bihariganj, Singheshwar (SC), Madhepura, Sonbarsha (SC), Saharsa, Simri Bakhtiarpur, Mahishi, Kusheshwar Asthan (SC), Gaura Bauram, Benipur, Alinagar, Darbhanga Rural, Darbhanga, Hayaghat, Bahadurpur, Keoti, Jale, Gaighat, Aurai, Minapur, Bochaha (SC), Sakra (SC), Kurhani, Muzaffarpur, Kanti, Baruraj, Paroo, Sahebganj, Baikunthpur, Barauli, Gopalganj, Kuchaikote, Bhorey (SC), Hathua, Siwan, Ziradei, Darauli (SC), Raghunathpur, Daraundha, Barharia, Goriakothi, Maharajganj, Ekma, Manjhi, Baniapur, Taraiya, Marhaura, Chapra, Garkha (SC), Amnour, Parsa, Sonepur, Hajipur, Lalganj, Vaishali, Mahua, Raja Pakar (SC), Raghopur, Mahnar, Patepur (SC), Kalyanpur (SC), Warisnagar, Samastipur, Ujiarpur, Morwa, Sarairanjan, Mohiuddinnagar, Bibhutipur, Rosera (SC), Hasanpur, Cheria Bariarpur, Bachhwara, Teghra, Matihani, Sahebpur Kamal, Begusarai, Bakhri (SC), Alauli (SC), Khagaria, Beldaur, Parbatta, Tarapur, Munger, Jamalpur, Suryagarha, Lakhisarai, Sheikhpura, Barbigha, Asthawan, Biharsharif, Rajgir (SC), Islampur, Hilsa, Nalanda, Harnaut, Mokama, Barh, Bakhtiarpur, Digha, Bankipur, Kumhrar, Patna Sahib, Fatuha, Danapur, Maner, Phulwari (SC), Masaurhi (SC), Paliganj, Bikram, Sandesh, Barhara, Arrah, Agiaon (SC), Tarari, Jagdishpur, Shahpur, Brahampur, Buxar, Dumraon and Rajpur (SC).

What is the turnout?

According to local media reports, the voter turnout in Bihar had reached 42.3 percent by 1pm (07:30 GMT). In 2020, the final turnout was 57 percent.

How many eligible voters does Bihar have?

There are more than 74 million eligible voters in Bihar, more than the entire population of the United Kingdom or France.

Who are the main contenders?

The incumbent government in Bihar is an alliance led by Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the regional Janata Dal (United) or JD(U). These two are allied with smaller parties.

The JD(U) is led by Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, who has ruled Bihar for most of the past 20 years.

On the other side of the divide is the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD), also a regional political party, led by former Indian Railways Minister Lalu Prasad Yadav, who is currently released on bail after being convicted in corruption cases. In effect, the party is now led by his son Tejashwi Yadav. The RJD is part of another alliance, including the country’s main opposition party, the Indian National Congress, and smaller parties.

Jan Suraaj, a new party founded last year by political strategist-turned-politician Prashant Kishor, is also in the fray. In the past, Kishor has worked with both the BJP and Congress.

In the first phase of the elections, Tejashwi, the RJD leader, is contesting the Raghopur seat, which he won in 2015 and 2020. Running against him are the BJP’s Satish Kumar and the Jan Suraaj Party’s Chanchal Singh. Tejashwi’s father has also won the Raghopur seat twice in the past while his mother, Rabri Devi, has won it three times.

BJP candidate and Deputy Chief Minister Samrat Chaudhary is contesting the Tarapur seat. Also running on a  BJP ticket is folk singer Maithili Thakur, who is running for the seat in Alinagar.

What are the key issues in these elections?

Primarily an agrarian state, Bihar is suffering from a struggling economy and has the highest poverty rate in India, according to a report published by the Indian government think tank NITI Aayog last year.

Both major blocs – the BJP-JD(U) alliance and the RJD-Congress coalition – have pledged to create jobs to help the state’s economy.

The two alliances are also making appeals to women, who constitute nearly half of the eligible voters in Bihar. The state has seen a steady rise in women’s political participation with female voter turnout often exceeding that of men.

The Congress-led bloc has pledged welfare schemes such as a monthly allowance for women. The BJP has also implemented the Chief Minister’s Women Employment Scheme. Under this scheme, about $880m was distributed among 7.5 million women in September to help them start businesses.

Why are these elections significant?

The elections are a key test for the popularity of Modi, who won a third term in the June 2024 elections. His party failed to win a majority and is reliant on regional allies, including the JD(U), to form the government.

The BJP has won most major state elections since the national vote and will be looking to continue that streak in Bihar. The state sends 40 members to the Lok Sabha, or lower house of the Indian Parliament. In the Lok Sabha elections in June 2024, the BJP won 12 of these seats while the JD(U) won another 12. Another BJP alliance partner, the Lok Janshakti Party (LJP), won another five seats.

But the RJD has a strong presence in the state too. In the last two state elections, in 2015 and 2020, the RJD emerged as the single largest party. In 2020, the two coalitions ended up almost neck-and-neck in vote share with 37 percent each, but the BJP-JD(U) alliance won enough seats to come to power.

These elections are also significant because they could mark the final political contest between Nitish Kumar, 74, and Lalu Prasad Yadav, 77. The two men have dominated politics in Bihar for nearly 40 years. They’ve often been allies and at other times have been bitter rivals.

But the elections are also vital because they come at a time when the credibility of India’s electoral politics is under rare question. The opposition, led by Rahul Gandhi of the Congress party, has accused the Election Commission of India (ECI) of revising the official voter list, or electoral rolls, in a way designed to benefit the BJP in the state.

The so-called Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of the electoral rolls was carried out in recent months, and all voters were required to furnish a set of documents to prove they were Indian nationals and legal residents of the constituency where they vote.

As Al Jazeera reported in July, many of the poorest people in Bihar, like those across India, do not hold any of the several documents that the ECI listed as proof of identity. With Bihar having the country’s lowest literacy rate, for instance, many people in the state do not have education certificates, one of the documents that work as proof of identity. Bihar also has one of India’s lowest rates of birth registration, so millions do not have birth certificates, another valid document, per the ECI.

The poorest, people from vulnerable communities, like traditionally disadvantaged castes or Muslims, have historically voted more for the RJD-Congress alliance.

In September, the ECI released a list of 74.2 million voters after removing the names of 4.7 million people. In Seemanchal, where the Muslim population is especially high, the removal of voters from the list was higher than the state average.

This exercise also played out against the backdrop of a campaign led by Modi himself to portray Seemanchal as a bastion of undocumented Bangladeshi immigrants even though facts do not back up those assertions, as Al Jazeera reported in October.

In recent days, the ECI has announced it will implement the Bihar-style SIR exercise nationally.

When is the second phase of Bihar’s assembly elections?

The second phase of voting will take place on Tuesday when the remaining 122 constituencies will be at stake.

When will the election results be out?

Tigray fighters enter Ethiopia’s Afar region, stoking fears of new conflict

Ethiopia’s Afar region has accused forces from neighbouring Tigray of crossing into its territory, seizing several villages and attacking civilians, in what it called a breach of the 2022 peace deal that ended the war in northern Ethiopia.

Between 2020 and 2022, Tigray was the centre of a devastating two-year war that pitted the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) against Ethiopia’s federal army and left at least 600,000 people dead, according to the African Union.

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In a statement released late on Wednesday, Afar authorities said TPLF fighters “entered Afar territory by force today”.

The group, which governs the Tigray region, was accused of “controlling six villages and bombing civilians with mortars”. Officials did not provide details on casualties.

“The TPLF learns nothing from its mistakes,” the Afar administration said, condemning what it described as “acts of terror”.

The conflict earlier this decade also spread into neighbouring Ethiopian regions, including Afar, whose forces fought alongside federal troops.

According to Afar’s latest statement, Tigrayan forces attacked the Megale district in the northwest of the region “with heavy weapons fire on civilian herders”.

The authorities warned that if the TPLF “does not immediately cease its actions, the Afar Regional Administration will assume its defensive duty to protect itself against any external attack”.

The renewed fighting, they said, “openly destroys the Pretoria peace agreement”, referring to the deal signed in November 2022 between Ethiopia’s federal government and Tigrayan leaders, which ended two years of bloodshed.

While the fragile peace had largely held, tensions between Addis Ababa and the TPLF have deepened in recent months. The party, which dominated Ethiopian politics from 1991 to 2018, was officially removed from the country’s list of political parties in May amid internal divisions and growing mistrust from the federal government.

Federal officials have also accused the TPLF of re-establishing ties with neighbouring Eritrea, a country with a long and uneasy history with Ethiopia. Eritrea, once an Italian colony and later an Ethiopian province, fought a bloody independence war before gaining statehood in 1993.

Afghanistan’s opium crop falls 20 percent as synthetic drugs surge

Afghanistan’s once-booming opium industry has shrunk dramatically with cultivation falling by 20 percent in 2025, according to a United Nations report warning of a sharp rise in synthetic drug production.

The UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said on Thursday that the area devoted to the cultivation of opium poppies dropped from 12,800 to 10,200 hectares (31,630 to 25,200 acres) this year, barely a fraction of the 232,000 hectares (573,000 acres) cultivated before the Taliban’s narcotics ban took effect in 2022.

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The Taliban, which returned to power in 2021, outlawed poppy cultivation across the country a year later, ending decades of reliance on the illicit crop, which once made Afghanistan the world’s largest producer. In 2013, it supplied about 74 percent of the opium worldwide.

“After the ban, many farmers turned to growing cereals and other crops. However, deteriorating weather conditions due to drought and low rainfall have led to more than 40 percent of agricultural land being left fallow,” the UNODC said.

The agency estimated Afghanistan’s total opium output at 296 tonnes in 2024, placing it behind Myanmar for the first time in decades. Revenues for farmers have plunged by nearly half, falling 48 percent to about $134m this year.

While production has dropped, prices remain high, nearly five times the pre-ban average, as limited supply continues to meet persistent demand.

Before the ban, Afghan farmers harvested more than 4,600 tonnes of opium each year despite facing detention, injury or death at the hands of security forces. Since the ban, most of the processing equipment has been destroyed, and the geography of cultivation has shifted.

Rise of synthetic drugs

The UN report noted that poppy fields have moved to northeastern Afghanistan, particularly Badakhshan province, where some farmers have resisted the crackdown. In May 2024, clashes between farmers and Taliban forces enforcing the ban killed several people.

The UN has urged the international community to help Afghan farmers develop alternative livelihoods, a call echoed by the Taliban government, which has nevertheless struggled to provide economic substitutes for those who once depended on the opium trade.

At the same time, the UNODC warned that organised criminal networks are increasingly turning to synthetic drugs, particularly methamphetamine, which are easier to produce and harder to detect. Seizures in Afghanistan and neighbouring countries rose by 50 percent in late 2024 compared with the previous year.

“Synthetic drugs appear to have become a new economic model for organised criminal groups due to their relatively easy production, greater difficulty in detection, and relative resilience to climate change,” the report said.

Britain calls it safety. It is censorship

The United Kingdom’s Online Safety Act was meant to keep children safe. Instead, it is keeping the public uninformed. Within days of the law taking effect in late July 2025, X (formerly Twitter) started hiding videos of Israel’s atrocities in Gaza from UK timelines behind content warnings and age barriers. A law sold as safeguarding has become one of the most effective censorship tools Britain has ever built. What is unfolding is no accident. It is the result of legislation that weaponises child-protection rhetoric to normalise censorship, identity verification and online surveillance.

The roots of Britain’s online censorship crisis go back almost a decade, to MindGeek, now rebranded as Aylo, the scandal-ridden company behind Pornhub. This tax-dodging, exploitative porn empire worked closely with the UK government to develop an age-verification system called AgeID, a plan that would have effectively handed Aylo a monopoly over legal adult content by making smaller competitors pay or perish. Public backlash killed AgeID in 2019, but the idea survived. Once one democracy entertained the notion that access to online content should be gated by identity checks, the precedent was set. The Digital Economy Act 2017 laid the groundwork, and the Online Safety Act 2023 made it law. Today, several European Union states, including France and Germany, are exploring similar legislation, each cloaked in the same rhetoric of “protecting children”. This is not conspiracy; it is the natural convergence of corporate capture and state control, wrapped in the moral language of child safety.

The Online Safety Act empowers Ofcom to police almost every corner of the internet, from social media and search engines to adult content platforms, under threat of fines of up to 18 million pounds ($24m) or 10 percent of global revenue. Platforms can be designated as “Category 1” services, triggering the harshest rules, including mandatory age verification, identity checks for contributors and the removal of vaguely defined “harmful” material. Wikipedia now faces this exact threat. In August 2025, the High Court dismissed the Wikimedia Foundation’s challenge to the categorisation rules, clearing the way for Ofcom to treat it as a high-risk platform. The foundation has warned that compliance would force it to censor vital information and endanger volunteer editors by linking their real identities to their writing. If it refuses, the UK could, in theory, be legally empowered to block access altogether, a breathtaking example of how “child protection” becomes a tool for information control. Already, Ofcom has opened multiple investigations into major porn sites and social networks over alleged non-compliance. The law’s chilling effect is no longer hypothetical; it is operational.

Age-verification systems are fundamentally incompatible with privacy and security, in fact, any id-verification system should immediately raise suspicion. The July 25 breach of the Tea dating app, with thousands of photos and over 13,000 sensitive ID documents leaked and circulated on 4chan, or the even more recent Discord data breach exposing over 70 thousand government ID documents after a third-part service was hacked, proved the point.

When systems store verification data that link real identities to online activity, they create a treasure trove for hackers, blackmailers and states. History already offers warnings, from the 2013 Brazzers leak of nearly 800,000 accounts to the FBI’s finding that pornography-related exposure scams remain one of the leading categories of online extortion. Now imagine this infrastructure applied not just to adult content, but to political speech, journalism and activism. The same tools being built for “child safety” enable unprecedented blackmail and political manipulation. A single breach could expose journalists, whistleblowers or public officials. And in a world where data often cross borders, there is no guarantee that verification databases in democracies will stay out of the hands of authoritarians. The more we digitise “trust”, the more we endanger it.

The most insidious feature of this legislative trend is how it absolves parents while empowering the state. Existing parental control tools are sophisticated: parents can already monitor and restrict children’s internet use through devices, routers and apps. The push for government-mandated age verification is not about those tools failing; it is about some parents choosing not to use them and governments seizing that negligence as a pretext for surveillance. Rather than investing in education and digital literacy, authorities are expanding their power to decide what everyone can see. The state should not be parenting the public. Yet under the Online Safety Act, every citizen becomes a suspect who must prove innocence before speaking or viewing online. What is framed as “protecting children” is, in practice, the construction of a population-wide compliance system.

Britain’s disastrous experiment is already spreading. France and Germany have advanced parallel drafts of age verification and online safety legislation, while the European Union’s age-verification blueprint would link adult content access and “high-risk” platforms to interoperable digital IDs. The EU insists the system will be privacy-preserving, but its architecture is identical to the UK model, comprehensive identity verification disguised as safeguarding. The logic repeats itself everywhere. Laws begin with the narrow goal of shielding minors from pornography, but their powers quickly expand, first to protests, then to politics. Today, it is Gaza videos and sexual content; tomorrow, it is journalism or dissent. The UK is not an outlier but a template for digital authoritarianism, exported under the banner of safety.

Supporters of these laws insist we face a binary: either adopt universal age verification or abandon children to the internet’s dangers. But this framing is dishonest. No technical system can replace engaged parenting or digital-literacy education. Determined teenagers will still find ways to access adult content, they will just be driven towards the darker corners of the web. Meanwhile, the laws do little to stop the real threat: child sexual abuse material that circulates on encrypted or hidden networks that will never comply with regulation. In reality, the only sites that follow the rules are those already capable of policing themselves, and those are precisely the ones the state is now undermining. By pushing young people towards VPNs and unregulated platforms, lawmakers risk exposing them to far greater harm. The result is not safety, but greater exposure to danger.

Strip away the child-protection rhetoric, and the Online Safety Act’s true function becomes clear: it builds the infrastructure for mass content control and population surveillance. Once these systems exist, expanding them is easy. We have seen this logic before. Anti-terror laws morphed into instruments for policing dissent; now “child safety” provides cover for the same authoritarian creep. The EU is already entertaining proposals that would mandate chat-scanning and weaken encryption, promising such measures will be used only against abusers, until, inevitably, they are not. The immediate consequences in the UK – restricted Gaza footage, threatened access to Wikipedia, censored protest videos- are not glitches. They are previews of a digital order built on control. What is at stake is not just privacy but democracy itself, the right to speak, to know and to dissent without being verified first.

Protecting children online does not require building a surveillance state. It requires education, accountability and support for parents, teachers and platforms alike. Governments should invest in digital literacy, prosecute genuine online exploitation and give parents better tools to manage access. Platforms should be held to clear standards of transparency and algorithmic responsibility, not forced into policing adults. Where self-regulation fails, targeted oversight can work, but universal verification cannot.

The UK’s Online Safety Act and similar legislation worldwide represent a fundamental choice about the kind of digital future we want. We can accept the false promise of safety through surveillance and control, or we can insist on solutions that protect children without sacrificing the privacy, freedom, and democratic values that make protection worthwhile in the first place. The early results from the UK should serve as a warning, not a model. Before this authoritarian creep becomes irreversible, citizens and lawmakers must recognise that when governments claim they’re protecting children by controlling information, they’re usually protecting something else entirely: their own power to determine what we can see, say, and know.

Sudanese prime minister calls for RSF to be labelled ‘terrorist’ group

Sudanese Prime Minister Kamil Idris has called for the international community to designate the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) as a “terrorist” organisation and warned that violence could spill over to the wider region as evidence of atrocities committed by the paramilitary group in the western region of Darfur piles up.

In an exclusive interview with Al Jazeera on Wednesday, Idris slammed the RSF as “mercenaries and rebel militias” whose crimes are “unprecedented in the history of mankind”.

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“They have been condemned worldwide, but these condemnations are not enough,” Idris said. “What is needed now more than ever is to designate this group as a terrorist militia because the danger now is not only threatening Sudan, but there is a danger that it will come and threaten the security stability of Africa and the whole world.”

Idris’s government is aligned with the Sudanese armed forces (SAF) in the civil war against the RSF.

His remarks come after the RSF last week seized control of el-Fasher, the last stronghold of the Sudanese army in Darfur. The city’s fall put an end to 18 months of an RSF siege that caused a humanitarian crisis in the capital of North Darfur State.

But according to survivors, it also unleashed mass killings, summary executions, rape and other abuses by the RSF against civilians. The Sudan Doctors Network put the death toll at 1,500 in the first few days of the takeover with analysts estimating the death toll to be higher.

Satellite images analysed on Wednesday appeared to show mass graves being dug in the city. According to the International Organization for Migration’s displacement tracker, more than 80,000 people have fled the city and surrounding areas. And the United Nations estimated that hundreds of thousands of civilians were still trapped in the city as of last week.

‘They took my husband and tortured him’

Civilians recounted escaping the fighting in terror, fearing for their lives, navigating armed checkpoints, and being confronted with extortion and abduction as they tried to reach safety in the town of Tawila, about 50km (31 miles) west of el-Fasher.

“We were leaving el-Fasher and it was tragic,” Najwa, a displaced woman in el-Dabbah refugee camp in Sudan’s Northern State, told Al Jazeera. “They took my husband and tortured him. They beat his face and his body. … We begged them to let us go. They took him covered in blood, unconscious. I don’t know if he is alive or dead.”

On Monday, the International Criminal Court (ICC) said it was taking “immediate steps … to preserve and collect relevant evidence for its use in future prosecutions”.

While acknowledging that some crimes have been committed by its forces, the RSF has largely denied some of the worst accusations against it and insists that it is “liberating” territory. The widespread circulation of videos documenting crimes against civilians prompted RSF authorities to jail one of its top commanders, known as Abu Lulu. On Wednesday, he was freed.

The RSF and SAF have been at war since April 2023 when a rivalry between Sudan’s army chief, Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, and the RSF’s commander, Mohamed Hamdan “Hemedti” Dagalo, exploded into open conflict.

The fighting quickly spread from the capital, Khartoum, and in the cities of the conflict-weary Darfur region, the violence quickly took on an intercommunal dimension, pitting armed Arab men against fighters from the Masalit ethnic group in confrontations that witnesses and survivors described as ferocious.

In the more than two years of conflict, the paramilitary group gradually seized control of Darfur’s main cities with the SAF remaining only in el-Fasher before last week. Idris described the army’s retreat from the state capital as a “tactical withdrawal”, rejecting the notion that it constituted a military defeat and expressed optimism over the army’s ability to retake the city.

He also rebuked claims that there is famine in Sudan. On Tuesday, three UN agencies said famine had spread in two areas of the country, including el-Fasher, where families are surviving on leaves, animal feed and grass.

Could soaring global debt trigger the next financial crisis?

The IMF says global public debt could exceed 100% of GDP by the end of the decade.

Governments around the world now owe nearly $100 trillion in public debt. That’s almost double what they owed just a decade ago.

The International Monetary Fund warns that by 2029, global debt will surpass 100 percent of the world’s gross domestic product, meaning the world’s borrowing could soon exceed the size of the entire global economy.

But there is a stark contrast: Richer nations can – for now – still borrow at lower costs and keep spending while many poorer nations are running out of room to take on more debt.