‘Protect the vote’: Bobi Wine, opposition brace for tense Uganda election

Kampala, Uganda – When Bobi Wine, a singer-turned-politician whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, launched his campaign to become Uganda’s next president in October, he appeared in tailored suits, greeting crowds with a familiar smile.

The mood, at least at first, felt cautiously hopeful.

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But by December, that image had disappeared.

As campaigning comes to an end on Tuesday, Bobi Wine, who is the main opposition candidate looking to unseat long-serving President Yoweri Museveni, now only appears in public wearing a bulletproof vest and helmet.

For many Ugandans, his change in attire – and the state violence that led to it – are symbols of a foregone political outcome: An incumbent victory likely to be rejected by his competitors.

Since he was cleared to run in the election in September, Bobi Wine’s campaign convoy has frequently been met with tear gas, roadblocks and arrests of supporters. Campaign events are regularly disrupted, with people abruptly dispersing and roads sealed off.

While the violence has not reached the deadly levels of the 2021 election, when more than 50 people were killed and hundreds of Bobi Wine supporters were detained following spontaneous protests in the capital, Kampala, the campaign environment has become increasingly militarised – defined by calculated repression, intimidation and a steadily shrinking space for Bobi Wine to sell his manifesto, analysts have observed.

Bobi Wine, 43, is contesting for a second time in Thursday’s election after he finished as the runner-up in the 2021 polls.

Museveni won that last disputed vote during which Bobi Wine alleged fraud and urged citizens to reject the result. The 81-year-old incumbent has ruled the country for nearly four decades after capturing power following a rebel war, and is seeking a seventh term in office.

Five other candidates are also in this year’s race, in which 21.6 million registered voters are expected to cast their votes.

Bobi Wine waves to supporters at an election campaign rally in Mukono, Uganda [Hajarah Nalwadda/AP]

A climate of fear

Even before campaigning officially began, Bobi Wine’s team expected violence.

Museveni’s son, Muhoozi Kainerugaba – who serves as Uganda’s army chief – had publicly threatened Bobi Wine in the months leading to the campaign season, including remarks about beheading him.

Kainerugaba also claimed responsibility for the abduction and torture of Bobi Wine’s bodyguard, Edward Ssebuufu, who remains in detention.

Opposition officials say that while the worst of Kainerugaba’s threats have not materialised, the state, fearing the big audience Bobi Wine was attracting, decided to unleash violence on him during the election campaign.

“In terms of violence, we saw that the first month [October] was a bit not so violent, but after that it became violent and chaotic,” David Lewis Rubonyoya, secretary-general of National Unity Platform (NUP), the party Bobi Wine leads, told Al Jazeera.

During a campaign stop in Gulu, northern Uganda, in December, Bobi Wine was attacked by security forces and plainclothes individuals armed with sticks. He and several of his aides were beaten, and campaign equipment was vandalised. One person later died following the incident. In a separate incident in Mbarara, western Uganda, in November, police arrested 43 Bobi Wine supporters after a confrontation over campaign routes. They remain in detention.

During the 2021 election period, the protests and deadly police crackdown were prompted by Bobi Wine’s arrest for allegedly flaunting COVID-19 guidelines. This year, although the violence has so far been muted, opposition figures and analysts insist the repression is no less severe – only more controlled.

Michael Mutyaba, a Ugandan political analyst and a doctoral researcher at SOAS University of London, says the difference lies in strategy.

“In 2021 and before, security agencies were in panic mode. There was state violence that was less calculated. The violence now looks more calculated and expanded,” he told Al Jazeera. He pointed to arrests of random people, like a Catholic priest charged with money laundering, as examples. The government also arrested Sarah Birete, a prominent human rights activist and critic, who will only be released after the election.

Uganda
Opposition supporters gesture from a minivan at a campaign rally at Aga Khan Grounds in Kampala [Samson Otieno/AP]

Voter and candidate ‘bribery’

Bobi Wine, too, has faced increased onslaught from the state, with candidates sponsored by his party to stand in parliamentary elections coming under particular strain. Many of the targeted candidates standing in the parliamentary polls, also being held on Thursday, have withdrawn their candidacies, publicly denounced Bobi Wine, and joined the governing party.

Most of these defections, managed by parliament’s deputy speaker, Thomas Tayebwa, have occurred daily but mainly outside the central region, which is considered Bobi Wine’s stronghold. Bobi Wine has claimed that these candidates were bribed, while the state maintains that they joined the governing party freely and without conditions.

Yusuf Serunkuma, a political analyst based at Kampala’s Makerere University, said he is not surprised by the “regime’s” tactics.

“This is part of transactional politics,” he told Al Jazeera. But he added that if the opposition had the capacity to buy candidates from the governing party, they too would be doing it daily.

Another method the state has used to eliminate candidates sponsored by Bobi Wine’s party has been through disqualification by the Electoral Commission, which has argued that some candidates failed to meet nomination requirements. Jude Byamukama, a Ugandan constitutional lawyer, says the cancellations have been “ridiculous”, as critics say they are tactics deployed to halt the opposition.

“They [Electoral Commission] were trying to create unopposed candidates in several constituencies without a lawful basis,” Byamukama told Al Jazeera. He added that after disqualification, the commission then made it difficult for candidates to appeal to the courts by failing to serve them the decisions on time.

Months before the election season, Museveni also launched a softer offensive, particularly targeting informal sector players in Bobi Wine’s strongholds in central Uganda. There, the president has distributed millions of dollars in cash to groups such as motorcycle riders, taxi drivers, salon operators and street vendors. Mwambutsya Ndebesa, a retired historian from Makerere University, describes this as “electoral corruption” meant to influence voters, while Serunkuma said “vote buying” is normal in Ugandan politics, but this time, it’s been more organised.

Uganda
Ugandan security forces patrol a street during a campaign rally for opposition presidential candidate Bobi Wine, in Mukono, Uganda [Hajarah Nalwadda/AP]

Fears the worst is yet to come

As election day approaches on Thursday, Bobi Wine has warned that the state plans to arrest him and abduct key organisers who would play a role in monitoring polling stations.

He has issued advice to supporters: Disable phone location services, avoid predictable routes, limit time spent in one place, and flee if followed by unfamiliar vehicles or motorcycles – like the Toyota Hiace commonly associated with state abductions.

“I am aware of a plot by the desperate regime to have me arrested before polling day,” he recently said on social media.

Another flashpoint looms over election day itself: Whether voters should remain near polling stations after voting to “protect the vote”, as Bobi Wine has urged.

Ugandan law allows voters to remain at least 20 metres (66ft) away from polling stations, but the Electoral Commission and security agencies have advised people to leave immediately after voting.

The Electoral Commission has framed the issue as one of discipline rather than legality, warning that crowds could provoke disorder.

Ugandans want peace

Despite the tense atmosphere among political players, Ugandans say they want peace – regardless of political affiliation.

Wanyama Isaac, a casual construction worker in Kampala and a Bobi Wine supporter, says elections should not descend into violence.

“Violence helps no one. It is the responsibility of both sides to remain calm,” he said.

Mashabe Alex, a boda boda rider who supports Museveni, agrees.

“Violence destroys businesses and lives, as we saw in 2021.”

He says the opposition should not threaten Museveni supporters like himself.

Museveni
A campaign billboard for President Yoweri Museveni is displayed in Kampala, Uganda, Wednesday, January 7, 2026 [Hajarah Nalwadda/AP]

An uncertain endgame

Bobi Wine’s camp has not disclosed its post-election strategy. But Museveni has been warning his competitor’s supporters not to dare confront security agencies.

“I have heard Bobi Wine say that soldiers and police are few while rioters are many. I advise you not to believe him. Every soldier and police officer has a gun with 120 bullets,” Museveni warned in December.

The military already has soldiers in infantry mobility vehicles in Kampala, an opposition stronghold.

Rubongoya of the NUP argues that the Electoral Commission cannot declare an opposition candidate a winner in Uganda without pressure from the public.

“If Ugandans vote in large numbers and peacefully demand their victory, the Electoral Commission will be pushed to announce the right candidate,” he said.

“Our ideology is people power. If people are determined, intimidation and money will not stop them,” he added.

However, Rubongoya acknowledged that memories of the 2020–2021 election violence still haunt many Ugandans. He warned that any attempt to protest could be met with lethal force.

Serunkuma argues that the opposition signed up for an electoral process that was rigged from the start, and that they know they can never win, suggesting that their target may not be unseating Museveni himself.

Rather, he says parties like that of Bobi Wine want to “consolidate themselves under Museveni” by, for instance, retaining positions they hold in parliament.

Mutyaba predicts that after the election results are announced, Bobi Wine will likely be placed under house arrest – a tactic the state has used repeatedly since 2011. His party will issue statements dismissing the election results, and that will likely be the end.

Eight die in Gaza as storm brings extreme cold, collapses buildings

Eight Palestinians have died in war-ravaged Gaza as a new storm has brought freezing temperatures and piled on further misery to displaced tens of thousands surviving in flimsy shelters and strong winds have toppled buildings damaged by Israeli attacks in its genocidal war on the enclave.

Israel continues to block desperately needed humanitarian aid and critical supplies for shelter into besieged Gaza in violation of the October 10 ceasefire deal.

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A spokesperson for Gaza’s Civil Defence told Al Jazeera on Tuesday that four deaths had been recorded due to cold temperatures caused by a severe depression that has brought torrential rain and freezing winds to the coastal enclave.

A source at al-Aqsa Hospital in central Gaza’s Deir al-Balah said one of the victims was a one-year-old, who had passed away in their family’s tent before being brought to the facility.

Four other Palestinians were killed when they were struck by war-damaged buildings that toppled during the storm, civil defence and officials at al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City’s Remal neighbourhood said.

Three people, including a 15-year-old girl, were killed when one building collapsed in Gaza City, while a fourth was killed in a separate building collapse in the city.

Gaza Civil Defence spokesperson Mahmoud Basal warned of catastrophic repercussions from the storm for Gaza’s population, the majority of whom have been left without adequate shelter as a result of Israel’s war on the enclave and its ongoing restrictions on goods entering the territory.

In a statement, Hamas said that it was regrettable that the international community was failing to provide relief to Gaza, saying the rising death toll and spread of illness showed the territory was “experiencing the most horrific form of genocide”.

Surge of hospital patients

A Civil Defence spokesperson said hospitals across the territory were observing an influx of patients, particularly children, with cold-related illnesses, and that the organisation had received hundreds of calls for support due to extreme cold in recent hours.

He said entire shelters had been damaged by the storm and were no longer fit for use, while tents were being blown away completely by strong winds in the west of Gaza City.

Amjad Shawa, director of the Palestinian NGO Network in Gaza, told Al Jazeera that the situation was the worst it had been since the winter storms began.

He said about 10,000 families on Gaza’s coast were exposed to danger and further displacement as a result of the storm.

Shawa said Israel’s restrictions on goods entering the Strip were preventing access to much-needed shelter and medical supplies, and hampering the work of aid organisations, endangering Gaza’s hard-hit population.

Gaza City mayor Yahya al-Sarraj told Al Jazeera that Palestinians in the Strip were trapped in “tragic” circumstances, sheltering in inadequate tents and shelters, many of which were at risk of collapse, with insufficient supplies of medicine to treat those who would succumb to illness.

He called on the international community to pressure Israel to allow aid into the territory, to allow Palestinians to rebuild their homes.

The low-pressure system is expected to bring extremely cold  temperatures to Gaza until at least Tuesday evening, forecasters say.

‘Man-made humanitarian catastrophe’

At a briefing on Tuesday, a spokesperson for the Qatari Foreign Ministry condemned the “man-made humanitarian catastrophe” in Gaza and said Israel should allow aid into the enclave.

The spokesperson said was working with mediators to advance the second phase of the Gaza agreement.

As the death toll from the storm rose in Gaza, UNICEF said at least 100 children have been killed since the start of the ceasefire three months ago.

“More than 100 children have been killed in Gaza since the ceasefire of early October. That’s roughly a girl or a boy killed here every day during a ceasefire,” James Elder, spokesman for the UN children’s agency, told reporters.

‘We do not want to be Americans’: Greenlanders fear US threat to annex

Copenhagen, Denmark – An international camera crew is being ushered out of Aaja Chemnitz’s office in the Danish parliament to make room for the next interview. Politely but firmly, the journalists are asked to leave – quickly. The busy Greenlandic politician – one of the two MPs with seats in the Danish parliament – is juggling back-to-back media requests as international attention intensifies.

Last week, she took part in a crisis meeting with the Danish foreign relations committee – a meeting with only one item on the agenda: the rapidly worsening relations between the Kingdom of Denmark and its NATO ally, the United States – driven by President Donald Trump’s push to acquire Greenland.

“Greenland is not for sale, and Greenland will never be for sale,” Chemnitz, from the Inuit Ataqatigiit (IA) party, tells Al Jazeera while her assistant helps a Finnish newspaper to settle into the office. “People seem to think they can buy the Greenlandic soul. It is our identity, our language, our culture – and it would look completely different if you became an American citizen, and that is not something a majority in Greenland want.”

The other Greenlandic MP, Aki-Matilda Hoegh-Dam of the Naleraq party, says it is a difficult time for Greenland’s 56,000 people.

“It has been a very turbulent time for many Greenlanders,” she tells Al Jazeera. “We have, in many ways, been isolated from the rest of the world for almost 300 years, with limited contact with major powers, especially when it comes to foreign relations. But now we feel cornered, and that is making a lot of people anxious.”

As Greenland is thrust into an uneasy global spotlight, both politicians are splitting their time between Copenhagen and Nuuk.

“All Greenlandic parties have stated that we do not want to be Americans – and that we also do not want to be Danish. We want to be Greenlanders. We already have one coloniser; we do not need a new one,” Aki-Matilda Hoegh-Dam says.

‘We already have one coloniser; we do not need a new one,’ Aki-Matilda Hoegh-Dam, one of the two Greenlandic MPs, says [Peter Keldorff/Al Jazeera]

A foreign relations crisis

Since December, the US president has been reiterating his desire to acquire the icy island – a proposal he first mooted during his first term in the White House from 2017. This time, the Trump administration has signalled that military force remains an option, sending jitters through Nuuk and Copenhagen.

While Greenland is self-governing within the Danish kingdom, Copenhagen still controls defence and foreign policy.

“This is the worst foreign relations crisis for the Danish kingdom since World War II,” political commentator Hans Engell, a former Danish defence minister, tells Al Jazeera on a cold and snowy January day in Copenhagen. “Even during the height of the Cold War, I can’t think of anything worse than the current situation with America and Greenland. The problem is that there might not be a good solution to it all.”

Trump says the US needs Greenland for its own national security. Geographically, it is part of North America, but historically it has been tied to Europe, particularly Denmark, which colonised Greenland about 300 years ago.

Since 2009, Greenland has had home rule, but it remains heavily dependent on Denmark for defence and finance. That could change, however. Greenland has rare minerals and oil beneath its ice.

Some observers believe these resources are what are really driving the US president’s interest in the island. Others argue Trump is chasing a legacy: if the US were to acquire Greenland on his watch, the former real estate mogul would go down in history as the president who expanded US territory the most.

Indeed, in a recent interview with The New York Times, he said it is “ownership” that matters, not just control.

Greenland parliament
Greenland’s parliament, Inatsisartut, in Nuuk, on March 28, 2025 [Leonhard Foeger/Reuters]

Losing sleep

As for the threat of potential US military action, “some refuse to take the threat seriously. But others are worried and can’t sleep at night,” says Hoegh-Dam. “The situation is made worse because the American president is not playing by the normal rules. This new world order represents a break with the rules-based order we were used to. We Greenlanders have to learn to live with that too.”

To be sure, Trump has indicated that he would prefer to make a “real-estate deal” to acquire Greenland without military action. It would not be the first time the US has tried to buy the island.

In 1868, following the purchase of Alaska, Secretary of State William Seward was reportedly prepared to offer $5.5m in gold to acquire Greenland and Iceland.

A more formal attempt was made in 1946, immediately after World War II. Seeing Greenland’s critical role in monitoring Soviet movements, President Harry Truman’s administration offered Denmark $100m in gold – about $1.66bn in today’s money – for the island.

But Denmark flatly rejected the idea both times.

In fact, talk of “buying” Greenland – a proposal that is reportedly under consideration in Washington – is far more complicated than it sounds: any such move would require lengthy negotiations and Greenlandic consent. Denmark cannot simply sell the territory.

“I would like to make a deal, you know, the easy way. But if we don’t do it the easy way, we’re going to do it the hard way,” Trump said on Friday.

This statement has led to fears in Greenland, according to Masaana Egede, editor-in-chief of the Greenlandic news outlet Sermitsiaq.

“It is deeply unsettling to be on the receiving end of this pressure – whether you are an ordinary citizen or an elected politician. And it is especially unsettling when it comes from Trump himself,” Egede told Danish TV 2.

The prospect of US military intervention became startlingly clear with the recent abduction of Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro by US special forces. Maduro now faces trial in New York on drug trafficking and other charges, but many believe Trump’s real aim is to regain US control over Venezuelan oil.

Aaja Chemnitz
‘Greenlanders are a very proud and rock-steady people – we will hold on to that belief,’ says Greenlandic MP Aaja Chemnitz [Peter Keldorff/Al Jazeera]

‘Greenlanders are rock-steady’

Last week’s crisis meeting by the Danish foreign relations committee was held in a high-security room, with members leaving their phones outside, due to worries about foreign powers listening in.

The Danish foreign minister announced afterwards that Denmark and Greenland, including Greenland’s foreign affairs minister, have requested a meeting with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio. The meeting, coming on Wednesday, could prove to be a game-changer in the dispute.

“The meeting could have major consequences for Greenland,” Hoegh-Dam tells Al Jazeera.

“I hope that our foreign minister, beyond rejecting any idea of being ‘bought’, can also get a clearer picture of what the US actually wants.”

“Greenlanders are a very proud and rock-steady people. We have a great belief in our nation and people. We will hold on to that belief no matter who is trying to colonise us.”

Greenland finds itself at a pivotal moment in history, and Chemnitz believes the threat from the US should be taken seriously.

Which countries made the biggest deals with Israel in 2025?

Israel signed a record number of multibillion-dollar gas, technology and military deals in 2025.

One of its most prominent deals came in December when Prime Minister Netanyahu approved the largest energy deal in Israel’s history. The contract will supply Egypt with up to $35bn worth of gas through 2040 from the Leviathan field, further deepening the North African country’s energy dependence on Israel amid its ongoing energy crisis.

Egypt, which established diplomatic ties with Israel in 1979, stated that the deal was a “purely commercial” arrangement and that there are no “political dimensions”, especially amid mounting public anger over Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza.

An aerial view shows the foundation platform of the Leviathan gasfield, in the Mediterranean Sea, off the coast of Haifa, Israel, on January 31, 2019 [Marc Israel Sellem/Reuters]

Israel has also signed several record multibillion-dollar deals in the technology and military sectors in 2025, profiting largely from selling military and surveillance equipment that has been “battle-tested” in Palestine and across the region.

US tech giant Google (Alphabet) is finalising its $32bn acquisition of cybersecurity company Wiz, while Nvidia has committed $1.5bn to establish Israel’s largest artificial intelligence (AI) data centre, located about 30km (19 miles) from Haifa.

In Europe, Israel’s $6.5bn Arrow 3 deal with Germany features an advanced defence system for intercepting long-range ballistic missiles, making it the largest military export in Israel’s history.

In this story, Al Jazeera unpacks some of the largest publicly disclosed deals signed with Israel in 2025.

INTERACTIVE Israel big international deals in 2025-1768299162
(Al Jazeera)

Some of the biggest public deals signed with Israel in 2025 include:

  • $35bn deal with Egyptian energy companies: A long-term agreement for the export of 130 billion cubic metres of natural gas linked to the Leviathan field is set to run from 2026 to 2040. This was the largest public deal Israel signed in 2025.
  • $32bn deal with Alphabet: Google’s parent company, Alphabet, acquired the Israeli cybersecurity firm Wiz, marking one of the largest technology deals in Israel’s history. The acquisition is currently awaiting a final antitrust decision from the European Commission, which is due by February 10, 2026.
  • $25bn deal with Palo Alto Networks: Palo Alto Networks announced the acquisition of CyberArk, an Israeli cybersecurity company. The deal is likely to be finalised in the second half of 2026, pending regulatory and shareholder approvals.
  • $3.1bn deal with Germany: In December, Germany approved a substantial $3.1bn expansion to an existing Arrow 3 missile defence contract, bringing the total deal to $6.5bn and making it Israel’s largest military export agreement.
  • $3bn deal with Xero: In late 2025, Xero, a New Zealand-based technology company that specialises in cloud-based accounting software, acquired the Israeli fintech company Melio, making it the largest outbound acquisition in New Zealand.
  • $2.6bn deal with Munich Re: In March, Munich Re, a German multinational insurance company, acquired the Israeli-founded Next Insurance.
  • $1.5bn deal with Nvidia: In December 2025, Nvidia confirmed an investment of $1.5bn to establish a massive AI server farm in the Mevo Carmel industrial zone south of Haifa. This facility is designed to house Nvidia’s next-generation Blackwell AI processors and will be Nvidia’s largest research and development hub outside the United States.

Israel’s top trading partners

Trade data over a longer period provides important context for why these countries appear repeatedly in Israel’s biggest deals. Between 2019 and 2023, the country’s trade relationships were heavily concentrated among a small group of partners, with the top 10 accounting for more than half of total trade.

Between 2019 and 2023, Israel’s top trading partners were:

  • United States – 18.9 percent of total trade worth $140.9bn
  • China – 11.6 percent worth $86.5bn
  • Germany – 5.5 percent worth $40.9bn
  • Turkiye – 4.8 percent worth $35.7bn
  • Switzerland and the Netherlands – 3.1 percent each worth $23.1bn

INTERACTIVE-Israel's biggest trading partners-1768296758

What are Israel’s primary imports and exports?

Its global trade in 2024 consisted of $91.5bn in imports and $61.7bn in exports.

Some of Israel’s top imports include:

  • Electrical machinery, electronics and mechanical appliances, worth approximately $19bn
  • Vehicles, including cars, trucks, buses and planes, worth about $10bn
  • Chemical products, including pharmaceuticals, worth $8bn
  • Mineral products, including petroleum, coal and cement, worth $7bn
  • Gems and jewellery, including diamonds, worth $4bn

Some of Israel’s top exports include:

  • Electrical machinery, electronics and mechanical appliances worth some $18bn
  • Chemical products, including pharmaceuticals, worth $10bn
  • Gems and jewellery, including polished diamonds, worth $9bn
  • Optical, technical and medical apparatus worth $7bn
  • Mineral products worth $5bn

INTERACTIVE - Israel biggest imports and exports trade products economy

Israel’s electronics sector is a key engine of its export economy, led by significant players like Intel, which runs large-scale chip fabrication facilities, as well as companies such as Elbit Systems and Orbotech, known for their expertise in military electronics and advanced manufacturing.

Israel is a leading exporter of pharmaceuticals, driven by companies such as Teva Pharmaceuticals, one of the world’s largest generic drug manufacturers.

Tensions flare in Minnesota as protesters, federal agents square off

Days of demonstrations against United States immigration agents have left Minnesota on edge.

Federal authorities have used tear gas to disperse whistle-blowing activists, and state and local leaders filed a lawsuit on Monday to challenge an enforcement crackdown that led to the fatal shooting of a Minneapolis woman last week.

Confrontations between federal agents and protesters lasted throughout Monday and spanned multiple cities. Agents fired tear gas in Minneapolis as a crowd gathered around immigration officers questioning a man while in St Cloud, a city to the northwest, hundreds of people protested outside a strip of Somali-run businesses after Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers arrived.

Later that night, clashes broke out between protesters and officers guarding the federal building being used as a base for the crackdown in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St Paul.

With the Department of Homeland Security pledging to send more than 2,000 immigration officers into Minnesota in what ICE has described as its largest enforcement operation ever, the state, joined by Minneapolis and St Paul, sued the Trump administration to try to halt or limit the surge.

The lawsuit says the Department of Homeland Security is violating the First Amendment and other constitutional protections. It accuses President Donald Trump’s Republican administration of violating free speech rights by targeting a progressive state that favours Democrats and welcomes immigrants.

Homeland Security says it has made more than 2,000 arrests in the state since December.

In the days since Renee Nicole Good was shot in the head on Wednesday by an ICE officer while behind the wheel of her SUV, there have been dozens of protests and vigils across the US to honour the 37-year-old mother of three and to fiercely criticise the Trump administration’s tactics.

In response to Monday’s lawsuit, Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin accused Minnesota officials of neglecting public safety.

World reacts to Iran protests, US military threats against Tehran

The sustained nationwide protests that have gripped Iran since late December have divided global opinion, with some governments raising concern about what they fear are foreign, instigated riots, while others have accused Iran’s leaders of responding violently to those protesting.

Several senior Iranian figures have acknowledged the grievances of the demonstrators but have attempted to distinguish between people motivated by economic duress and rising costs, and what they have described as rioters seeking to “sow discord”, as Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi stated.

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Araghchi has said Iran is not seeking war but told Al Jazeera that Tehran was “prepared for all options” after US President Donald Trump threatened military action over the response to the protests.

The semiofficial Tasnim news agency reported on Sunday that 109 security personnel had been killed in the protests. Authorities have not confirmed the number of demonstrators who have been killed, but opposition activists based outside the country said the death toll is higher and includes hundreds of protesters. Al Jazeera cannot independently verify either figure.

Here’s a look at how countries and key global organisations are reacting.

United States

President Donald Trump has warned Iran’s leaders against using lethal force against demonstrators and has repeatedly said the US is considering military action.

“The military is looking at it, and we’re looking at some very strong options. We’ll make a determination,” he told reporters on board Air Force One late on Sunday.

Last week, in a post on Truth Social, Trump’s social media site, he said: “Iran is looking at FREEDOM, perhaps like never before. The USA stands ready to help!!!”

Qatar

The Gulf nation is trying to mediate the rising tensions and threats of war between the US and Iran.

“There are expectations that the current tension will lead to an escalation in the region, and we are trying to de-escalate the situation,” Qatari Foreign Ministry spokesperson Majed al-Ansari said at a news conference in Doha.

“We know that any escalation … would have catastrophic results in the region and beyond and, therefore, we want to avoid that as much as possible.”

Al-Ansari added diplomacy is the most effective way to resolve regional crises, and “we are working on this with our neighbours and partners.”

“We are a party to the contacts aimed at calming the situation in the region and resolving the disputes between Washington and Tehran,” he said.

Israel

Iran’s most hostile regional foe, Israel, has strongly backed the demonstrators, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu commending the “tremendous heroism of the citizens of Iran” during a cabinet meeting.

The Israeli army has separately said the protests are internal but that the army is “equipped to respond with power if need be”.

United Kingdom

A minister also refused to rule out the possibility of backing military action, with Peter Kyle telling broadcaster Sky News, “There’s lots of ifs”.

The Conservative opposition leader, Kemi Badenoch, told the BBC: “Given the threat that we’re seeing to the people, I think that would be right.”

European Union

The EU has said it stands “ready to propose new sanctions”, adding to the range the 27-member bloc already has in place.

The UK, along with Germany and France, issued a joint statement last week saying they “strongly condemned” the killing of protesters.

Germany

Germany’s chancellor, Friedrich Merz, predicted the last days of Iran’s Islamic republic, telling reporters while on a trip in India that when “a regime can only hold on to power through violence, then it is effectively finished”.

Germany, which has close commercial and military ties with Israel, and has staunchly supported its genocidal war against Palestinians in Gaza, previously described what it called Iran’s violent response as a sign of “weakness” and not strength.

Spain

The Spanish government summoned Iran’s ambassador in Madrid to formally protest against a crackdown on nationwide demonstrations.

Speaking on Tuesday, Spain’s Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares said the government had conveyed its “condemnation” of the response to the protests, which have been met with mass arrests and the use of lethal force.

“The right of Iranian men and women to peaceful protest, their freedom of expression, must be respected,” Albares said in an interview with Catalunya Radio. He added that “arbitrary arrests must cease”. The Spanish foreign minister also urged Iran to re-engage diplomatically, calling on Tehran to “return to the dialogue tables and to the negotiating tables”.

Japan

Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi said the Japanese government “strongly calls for the immediate cessation of violence and strongly hopes for an early settlement of the situation”.

China

China’s government has taken a line closer to Iran’s, expressing its opposition to external “interference in other countries’ internal affairs”, with a Foreign Ministry spokesperson adding that “the sovereignty and security of all nations should be fully protected by international law.”

Russia

Sergei Shoigu, secretary of Russia’s Security Council and former defence minister, speaking about the protests following a call with Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran’s National Security Council, “condemned” what he said was “the latest attempt by foreign forces to interfere in Iran’s internal affairs”.

Turkiye

Turkiye’s foreign minister, Hakan Fidan, who was previously the country’s intelligence chief, said the protests were “manipulated by Iran’s rivals from abroad”, naming Israel’s intelligence service as having a hand.

“Mossad doesn’t hide it; they are calling on the Iranian people to revolt against the regime through their own internet and Twitter accounts,” he said.

United Nations

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres says he is “shocked” by reports of violence against protesters in Iran and called on the government to show restraint.