Archive September 9, 2025

Indonesian President Prabowo replaces five ministers after deadly protests

Indonesia’s President Prabowo Subianto has replaced five ministers in a lightning cabinet reshuffle after deadly protests rocked the Southeast Asian nation of 285 million people in recent weeks.

The cabinet shake-up on Monday follows rising public dissatisfaction with Prabowo’s administration and parliament’s perceived insensitivity over economic hardships affecting everyday people, which led to mass protests breaking out at the end of August.

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Five ministers lost their jobs, including Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati, who previously served as the executive director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and managing director of the World Bank, and Budi Gunawan, the coordinating minister for politics and security.

Prabowo chose economist Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa, chairman of the Deposit Insurance Corporation, to replace Indrawati, who was one of Indonesia’s longest-serving finance ministers.

Indrawati’s replacement, Sadewa, 61, highlighted his experience at a news conference, noting he had provided fiscal expertise to the last two administrations.

The new finance minister said his focus is to speed economic growth by mapping out fiscal measures and ensuring that government spending is efficient without overhauling systems.

Prabowo also removed the ministers of cooperatives, youth and sport, and the minister for migrant workers protection.

A protester throws a stone at riot police officers during a protest against lavish housing allowances to parliament members, in Jakarta, Indonesia, on August 28, 2025 [Achmad Ibrahim/AP Photo]

Violent protests gripped the country last month after reports emerged that all 580 members of the House of Representatives received a monthly housing allowance of 50 million rupiah ($3,075), in addition to their salaries.

The housing allowance, introduced last year, was equal to nearly 10 times the minimum wage in Jakarta and even more for lower wages in rural areas.

The independent National Commission on Human Rights reported that 10 people died during the five-day protests and described an inhumane approach by security forces in handling the demonstrations.

Police have reported the protest death toll at seven.

Demonstrations also expanded following the death of 21-year-old motorcycle delivery driver Affan Kurniawan. He was reportedly completing a food delivery order when an armoured police car sped through a crowd of demonstrators and killed him.

With high rates of youth unemployment forcing many Indonesians to turn to precarious, low-paying work such as motorcycle taxi gig work, Kurniawan’s death prompted people to take to the streets.

The protests were swiftly met with police in riot gear, and water cannon and tear gas directed at activists, including on university campuses.

Prabowo told security forces to get tough on protests that showed signs of “treason and terrorism”.

But activists did not back down, targeting government buildings as well as the homes of several politicians during demonstrations, including ousted Finance Minister Indrawati’s home on August 31.

Calm has largely returned to the country after Prabowo revoked lawmakers’ perks and privileges last week, including the housing allowance, and suspended most of their overseas trips.

Michael Palin terrified as he’s held at gunpoint by armed cops

Michael Palin was filming his new Channel 5 travelogue in Venezuela when he was detained by armed guards and held for hours before being let go for a hilarious reason

Michael Palin In Venezuela airs on Tuesday, 16th September at 9pm on 5

When he was held at gunpoint by armed guards in Venezuela, Michael Palin used an unlikely trump card to get out of jail – an old Monty Python clip. The comedy legend, 82, was filming a new three-part Channel 5 travelogue in the totalitarian country when he was stopped by gun-toting officers from SEBIN, the country’s sinister intelligence service. But once he’d shown them a video of his famous fish slapping skit, they decided to release him.

Michael recalled: “Things got quite heavy. It wasn’t just the fact that they stopped us from filming, it was the force with which we were stopped. It started with a couple of policemen, then a couple of the National Guard, and then along came men with rifles, bulletproof vests and helmets.

“It was the kind of thing you’d expect to encounter if an embassy was being bombed, it was quite alarming.”

Michael Palin slaps John Cleese with a fish in their iconic Monty Python sketch
Michael Palin and John Cleese in Monty Python’s fish slapping dance

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In the end, Michael and his team were released and he credits his Monty Python Fish Slapping Dance with securing his freedom. He said: “The outcome was rather bizarre, because while we were waiting to hear our fate from the headquarters in Caracas, the guards had found my name on Google.

“Eventually they got on to Monty Python clips and they watched the fish slapping dance, which is always a good thing to show people. Nearly everyone in the world, from North Korea to Venezuela, cracks up when they see that. Once we’d shown them the fish slapping dance, I felt we were OK, and by the end of the day they finally released us. But I did feel we could well be watched from thereon in, given the detention we endured at gunpoint.”

As well as being held at gunpoint, Michael and his team had their bags searched and the contents photographed before their passports were taken and they were detained for several hours.

Michael Palin stands behind a waterfall in Venezuela
Michael Palin stands behind a waterfall in Venezuela

Michael – who copes with stress abroad by eating British crackers – added: “I understood why they were taking pictures of the equipment, but who wants a photo of my old underpants. But they faithfully did this and it took hours. We were very tired and we hadn’t had anything to eat, so by mid-afternoon they agreed that they would let us go to a restaurant, provided the guards were there with their rifles.”

Guns weren’t his only trial – he also found himself eating worms and ants bottoms on the trip. He said: “We were near the Angel Falls with a family and the meal they gave us consisted of worms that live in palm trees, which they grill.

“They also gave us ants’ bottoms, which I think is quite wonderful – I didn’t really know ants had bottoms, but of course they do! These are quite big ants after all. So I ate ants’ bottoms for the first and probably last time in my life, I don’t think you can get them at Sainsbury’s.”

Michael relaxes in a deck chair with a drink
Michael isn’t ready to retire despite being 82

The worms might not sound great, but Michael enjoyed them. He added: “Overall, I’m very positive in my attitude towards trying foods and there are very few things that have a really nasty taste. They may look odd – like when I ate spiders in Mexico – but you’ve just got to get over that initial disgust at eating something that would be swept into the bin at home, and you’ll often find it’s quite nice.”

Despite the rigours of his trip, Michael, who has also filmed in Iraq and North Korea, has no plans to stop his dangerous missions – or to retire. He said: “I’ve got no plans to retire at all.”

Michael Palin In Venezuela airs on Tuesday, 16th September at 9pm on 5

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Rylan Clark spends huge sum shipping fake tan to India after trip disaster

Rylan Clark has admitted he spent hundreds shipping fake tan to India after a travel disaster meant he was without it for his trip, something he wasn’t willing to sacrifice.

Rylan Clark has admitted he spent hundreds shipping fake tan to India after a travel disaster(Image: Dave Benett/Getty Images)

After winning a TV Bafta earlier this year for Rob And Rylan’s Grand Tour , it seemed like a no-brainer for pals Robert Rinder and Rylan Clark to head to India to take on a second series of travel adventures.

However, while Rob was thrilled to be following in the footsteps of his literary hero, A Passage To India author EM Forster, Rylan admits that he was concerned about the possible pitfalls of a journey outside his comfort zone – and he was right to be.

The friends kick off their journey in Delhi, India’s capital and home to 34 million people, almost four times the population of London. “I was worried about everything,” he says. “Everyone said, ‘You’re going to get ill, you’re going to get Delhi belly, it’s going to be hot.’ And I thought, ‘This is my worst nightmare.’ And lo and behold, I get off the plane, it must have been about midnight, and I walk into Delhi airport and get bit in the face by some mosquito thing and I’ve got a golf ball on the side of my cheek.

Rob and Rylan Passage to India
Rylan sets off to India with pal Rob Rinder for their next TV venture, Passage to India(Image: CREDIT LINE:BBC/Rex TV, Zinc Media/Jakob Borges)

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“I thought, ‘Here we go.’ Not a great start. I then have about four hours’ sleep, and am chucked into a tuk tuk in the middle of what I can only describe as a Wacky Races replay. I really dived into India head first.”

An insect bite and a frenetic journey in the Delhi traffic weren’t the only traumas Rylan had to contend with. When he and Rob arrived in Jaipur to meet the royal family, Rylan discovered that his bottle of fake tan had exploded in his luggage. “I was going to fly home,” he jokes. “There is no fake tan in India, you can’t find it anywhere. It was a nightmare. I ended up having to do some FedEx type thing from London, and it cost me 400 quid, just to get a bottle of St Tropez Bronzing Mousse.”

Rob admits that such dilemmas meant he occasionally lost patience with his image-conscious travelling companion while they were filming. “I say in the show that I feel like I’m the benevolent headmistress of a school for excluded children, and that went on for quite some time. You do run out of patience,” he says.

“We’ve both got annoying habits,” adds Rylan. “There are things I do that wind Rob up and there are things he’ll do that wind everyone up! But that’s why we’re best mates. We went into the Grand Tour as acquaintances and left as friends. And we’ve gone into Passage To India as friends and left as best friends. I know you were hoping I would say ‘boyfriends’ then, weren’t you?”

Rylan and Rob Rinder in india
The former X Factor star admits that he wasn’t convinced on the holiday destination as he followed seasoned traveller Rob’s lead(Image: CREDIT LINE:BBC/Rex TV, Zinc Media/Jakob Borges)

While fans of the first series did hope Rylan, 36, and Rob, 47, had become more than just friends, the pair make it clear during their Indian travels that their relationship is strictly platonic, but that doesn’t mean the two don’t tease each other with great affection, especially during a detour Rylan that wanted to make to see an astrologer.

“Usually when something is funny in real life, it can’t possibly be as funny when you watch it back, but that really was the funniest moment for me,” Rob says. “For me, astrology is absurd, woo woo, a bucket load of horse s**t, and I was really worried because I wanted to explore those ideas about going to India for enlightenment, but he wanted to go to an astrologer.”

After Rylan phones his beloved mum Linda to get his time and place of birth for the reading, it all descends into chaos when astrologer Professor Vinod Shastri tells Rylan he should expect to have teeth, lung and leg problems in the future, reveals that in Rylan’s past life he had many relationships and also tells the TV presenter that he has a “slightly psychotic problem”, much to Rob’s amusement.

“I was so excited. And the s**t he came out with,” Rylan says, laughing. “And to make matters worse, when I got back, my mum told me she got my time of birth wrong, she had mixed it up with my brother’s. So it was all b******s anyway!”

Rob wasn’t spared from having his own embarrassing moments in India, most notably when he ended up rapping in a marketplace in central Delhi after meeting a rapper called Naveen Koomar. It was an experience he describes as “horrific”.

“I like grime artists and I got so excited, but I was like David Brent on steroids,” he says. “There are no protrusive parts of my body left to cringe with when I watch it back. But I am glad I took part.”

Rob Rinder and Rylan Clark win BAFT
The duo previously won a BAFTA for Rob And Rylan’s Grand Tour(Image: Getty Images for BAFTA)
Rylan Clark at Smurfs Premiere
Rylan says the most recent trip has changed his perspective on India(Image: Getty Images)

There are also some emotional moments during the trip, especially when Rob and Rylan see the religious traditions associated with death along the River Ganges that lead them to talk about their own mortality.

“I can’t emphasise enough that either of us would never have taken part in anything that, even in the thinnest way, felt like constructed reality. It really mattered to us that we could have safe and deep conversations,” Rob explains. “It’s part of Rylan’s power. He creates a space where I just forget they [the camera crew] are there, so we can share those challenging conversations. It’s sometimes difficult, but it is a real privilege to make.”

The pair are hoping that Passage To India is as well-received as the acclaimed Grand Tour , and that it could lead to a third trip together. However, while the first two series were inspired by Rob’s literary heroes, it’s unlikely that a third would focus on a literary choice of Rylan’s.

“I’ve only ever written and read my own book!” Rylan says. “Where would we go? Maybe Marbella – someone must have written a novel about Marbella. Then we could spend a few nights outside the Sinatra bar, days sitting round the pool…”

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Rob and Rylan admit they never quite saw their careers leading them here. “If I think back 20 years ago, I was going out in G-A-Y underage and wearing the Ted Baker sale, so I definitely didn’t see myself doing what I do now. I thought I’d probably be doing time!” laughs Rylan.

Similarly, Rob never foresaw his career in showbiz. He adds, “20 years ago I was defending murder trials – I didn’t see this in my future. But it comes back to that full life cycle and that you never know what’s around the corner.”

South Korea to send plane for workers detained in US immigration raid

South Korea plans to dispatch a chartered plane on Wednesday to return hundreds of citizens detained in last week’s immigration raid in the US state of Georgia, Korean Air has said.

Korean Air, South Korea’s flagship carrier, said on Tuesday that it would operate a flight to Atlanta, Georgia, to repatriate the workers following their arrest at the construction site of a South Korean-operated electric-vehicle battery plant.

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“Korean Air is planning to operate a charter flight to Atlanta tomorrow using a Boeing 747-8i,” a company spokesperson said.

US immigration authorities on Thursday detained about 475 people at the site of the $4.3bn Hyundai Motor Group-LG Energy Solution joint venture in Bryan County, Georgia.

About 300 of those swept up in the raid were South Korean nationals.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which has launched a sweeping crackdown on unauthorised migration under the direction of US President Donald Trump, said the arrested individuals were found to be working illegally in violation of the terms of their visas.

The raid has provoked outrage in South Korea, which has poured billions of dollars in investment into the US in recent years, and ranks among Washington’s closest allies in Asia.

South Korean Minister of Foreign Affairs Cho Hyun, who called the detention of his countrymen a “grave situation”, departed for Washington, DC, on Monday for talks on the issue.

Cho is expected to seek assurances from US officials that the workers will not face a multi-year ban from re-entry to the US, as is typical for those subject to deportation.

On Sunday, Trump issued a warning to foreign companies to “please respect” US immigration law, while insisting that foreign investment was welcome.