Here is how things stand on Tuesday, October 14, 2025:
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said he will travel to Washington, DC, to meet his US counterpart, Donald Trump, on Friday. The main topics to be discussed will be air defence and long-range capabilities, Zelenskyy said in a message on his Telegram channel. Trump has said he is considering providing Ukraine with long-range Tomahawk missiles (with a range of 2,500km or 1,550 miles), which would give Kyiv the capability to strike deep inside Russia.
Zelenskyy said he held talks in Kyiv with the European Union’s foreign affairs chief, Kaja Kallas. The two discussed how to increase pressure on Moscow via new sanctions, the use of Russian frozen assets to fund a reparation loan to Ukraine and the country’s path to EU membership.
Kallas announced the allocation of 10 million euros ($11.5m) to set up a special tribunal to try Russia’s leadership for the crime of aggression. Often called the “mother of all crimes” in international criminal law, aggression is committed when military force is used against another state illegally.
The EU’s top diplomat also said she would present a roadmap for European defence, including strengthening anti-drone systems, this week. The announcement comes following a surge of Russian hybrid attacks against European countries. “It is clear that we need to toughen our defence against Russia. Not to provoke war, but the opposite, to prevent war,” Kallas said.
The mayor of Kharkiv in eastern Ukraine, Ihor Terekhov, has said Russian forces struck the city with guided aerial bombs on Monday night, knocking out power in at least three districts and hitting a hospital.
Russia’s Ministry of Defence said its forces destroyed 40 Ukrainian drones, the majority over the Belgorod and Voronezh regions. It also reported that Russian troops captured the village of Borivska Andriyivka in the Kharkiv region and Moskovske in Donetsk. Russian forces also advanced deeper into the residential areas of the eastern districts of Myrnohrad.
Various locations, Lithuania – Along the banks of the Nemunas River, flags appear to be a fundamental feature.
On one side, in the sleepy Lithuanian town of Panemune, Lithuanian, Ukrainian, and European Union flags flutter in the wind.
On the other, a Russian flag towers over the Russian city of Sovetsk. On a nearby building is an illuminated decorative Z, a symbol used to show support for the Russian military’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which began in February 2022.
A solitary fisherman carefully sails under the Queen Louise Bridge, which connects Lithuania with the Kaliningrad region, a sliver of Russian territory sandwiched between two NATO member states. A Lithuanian flag flaps at the rear of his boat.
Vehicles have been banned from crossing the checkpoint on the Lithuanian side since 2022, and dragon’s teeth – concrete pyramidal anti-tank obstacles – have been installed.
The message is clear: tensions are high, and travel across the bridge is not encouraged.
But this was not always the case.
Titas Paulkstelis, a 28-year-old wind turbine technician and resident of Panemune, remembers when people lined up on either side.
“Life here was booming, with people going back and forth,” he said.
It used to be normal to take a day trip to buy products that were cheaper on each respective side, he added.
The flags of Lithuania and Ukraine fly on the Queen Louise Bridge [Nils Adler/Al Jazeera]
Paulkstelis said traffic across the bridge slowed after Russian-backed separatists invaded eastern Ukraine and Crimea in 2014.
Following Russia’s full-scale onslaught in 2022, the rural town was thrust into the forefront of geopolitical sabre-rattling.
Walking through his lush garden bursting with autumnal colours, Paulkstelis told Al Jazeera about unusual activity over the past year, including a weeks-long jamming of telephone signals, which he suspects may have been a Russian attempt to test Lithuania’s ability to respond.
He appeared amused by most of the activity, calling it “childish”.
An open-air cinema on the Russian side, clearly visible to the residents of Panemune, has been airing a near-constant stream of old Soviet war films since 2022, he said.
However, at times, he feels unsettled.
Titas Paulkstelis (left) shares a joke with his neighbours, in Panemune, Lithuania [Nils Adler/Al Jazeera]
On several occasions, he has heard rapid gunfire, which he thinks emerges from military exercises in Kaliningrad. One explosion was so powerful that the ground beneath him shook.
In recent weeks, NATO-Russia tensions have exploded, with a number of NATO countries reporting unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) entering their airspace.
On October 2 and 3, Germany’s Munich Airport closed its runways for several hours after drones were sighted.
Estonia has said Russian MiG-31 fighter jets entered its airspace for 12 minutes.
The implications feel scary for some in Panemune, Paulkstelis said, but there is a sense that there is little they can do given their precarious location.
The town is nestled by Kaliningrad, which is home to nuclear-capable Iskander missile systems and is also close to the Suwalki Gap, a narrow 65-kilometre (40-mile) land corridor between Poland and Lithuania that separates Kaliningrad from Belarus and is seen as NATO’s most vulnerable chokepoint.
“If they’re coming, they will come for here”, he said, referring to the Russian military.
The United States soya bean harvest is under way, and in rural Maryland, farmer Travis Hutchison cracks open a pod to show that the field is nearly dry enough for reaping.
But a decent yield is not enough to secure his income this year, with China – once the biggest buyer of US soya bean exports – halting orders amid a trade dispute triggered by President Donald Trump’s aggressive tariffs.
Soya bean prices “are really depressed because of the trade war”, Hutchison told the AFP news agency.
“I wasn’t against the president trying it, because I think we needed better trade deals,” added the 54-year-old of Trump’s policies. “I was hoping it would get resolved sooner.”
The world’s second-biggest economy bought more than half of the $24.5bn US soya bean exports in 2024. But exports to China have fallen by more than 50 percent in value this year, as Chinese buyers have held off on new orders.
Due to lower demand, soya bean prices are down about 40 percent from three years ago.
After Trump slapped tariffs on Chinese products in his second presidency, Beijing’s counter-duties on US soya beans have risen to 20 percent.
This makes them “prohibitively more expensive” than exports from South America, where US farmers face growing competition, said the American Soybean Association (ASA).
Last month, Argentina suspended its export tax on key crops like soya beans, making them more attractive to Chinese buyers.
Trump pledged to tap tariff revenues to help US farmers but has not provided details.
On Friday, the US president threatened additional 100 percent tariffs on China and to scrap talks with Chinese leader Xi Jinping over Beijing’s rare earth industry export curbs.
“These latest developments are deeply disappointing at a moment when soya bean farmers are facing an ever-growing financial crisis,” said ASA President Caleb Ragland.
ASA chief economist Scott Gerlt warned the situation is especially harsh in Midwestern states like North and South Dakota.
“This year’s going to be a very, very tough year,” farmer David Burrier, based in Union Bridge, Maryland, told AFP. “Forty percent of our acres are probably going to be breakeven or under breakeven.”
Burrier said it would be a “four-alarm fire” if China stopped soya bean purchases for good.
From 2018 to 2019, retaliatory tariffs caused more than $27bn in US agriculture export losses. The government provided $23bn to help farmers hit by trade disputes.
But they enter this trade war under greater financial stress, Gerlt said.
Crop revenues are lower, yet costs for everything from fertilisers to equipment have ballooned as Trump’s new tariffs bite.
“Getting parts to fix your combines and your planters and everything is costing more because of the tariffs,” Hutchison said. “It’s going to affect our bottom line.”
US farm bankruptcies this year have surged about 50 percent from 2024, said Professor Chad Hart of Iowa State University.
New Delhi, India – As the Taliban returned to power in August 2021 following the chaotic withdrawal of US forces, which triggered the collapse of the Western-backed government in Kabul, India was forced to shut its embassy and hurriedly pull out its diplomats and citizens.
More than four years later, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist government has rolled out a red carpet for an Afghan delegation led by the Taliban administration’s Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi in the capital, New Delhi.
The Afghan foreign minister’s weeklong trip – the first official visit by a Taliban leader – is being billed as groundbreaking. Muttaqi, who remains on the United Nations sanctions list, arrived in India after receiving a temporary travel exemption from the world body.
India’s reset with the Taliban, experts say, is part of a policy of pragmatism, as New Delhi aims to counter Pakistani influence in Afghanistan, whose relationship with Pakistan, India’s arch foe, has been strained over cross-border attacks.
Some analysts, however, say India’s hosting of the Taliban leaders gives legitimacy and a de facto recognition to the Taliban administration, which has been struggling to boost its diplomatic legitimacy.
So, why is India embracing the Taliban now? What happened at their meeting – and what is New Delhi expecting from the Taliban? What is in it for the Taliban?
Taliban administration’s Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi with his team in New Delhi, India, October 12, 2025 [Anushree Fadnavis/Reuters]
What happened during the India-Taliban meet?
Muttaqi, accompanied by Afghan trade and foreign ministry officials, is meeting Indian officials to discuss diplomatic, trade, and economic ties during his visit.
After he met Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar on Friday, New Delhi said it will reopen its embassy in Kabul.
“Closer cooperation between us contributes to your national development as well as regional stability and resilience,” Jaishankar said. He also affirmed India’s “full commitment to the sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence of Afghanistan”.
Muttaqi has called India a “close friend”. In a joint statement, New Delhi and the Taliban committed to maintaining “close communication and continue regular engagement”.
The Afghan leaders also invited Indian companies to invest in its mining sector, which the statement said “would help strengthen the bilateral trade and commercial relations”.
New Delhi also stated that it is committed to furthering its humanitarian assistance and other development projects in Afghanistan, one of the world’s poorest countries.
Modi’s government also facilitated Muttaqi’s visit to Deoband, in Uttar Pradesh, which hosts the Darul Uloom Deoband, one of the most influential Islamic seminaries in South Asia.
On Monday, Muttaqi announced that direct flights would soon start between Kabul and Indian cities, including Amritsar in Punjab.
Why is India embracing the Taliban now?
Historically, India has viewed the Taliban as a proxy for Pakistan’s intelligence agencies. Many Taliban members had studied in conservative religious schools in Pakistan, which also provided crucial support to the mujahideen movement against the Soviet Union in the 1980s. It was from the mujahideen that the Taliban emerged.
India shuttered its Kabul embassy in 1996 when the Taliban first took control of Afghanistan. Instead, India backed the Northern Alliance – Afghan groups fighting the Taliban – providing diplomatic support, aid, and training to counter Pakistani influence and protect its regional interests. The Northern Alliance also had backing from other countries, primarily Iran and Russia.
Pakistan was one of only three countries that recognised the Taliban administration until it was dislodged from power in a US-led invasion in 2001.
When the US and NATO forces invaded the country and the Taliban lost power, India reopened its embassy but continued to treat the Taliban as a Pakistani ally. India blamed the Taliban and its allies for a series of bombings at its diplomatic missions across Afghanistan.
Islamabad, meanwhile, was accused by US leaders of giving safe haven to Taliban leaders and fighters as the group waged a deadly armed rebellion against the US-led NATO forces for 20 years.
After Kabul’s fall in 2021, when the US-led forces withdrew and the Taliban captured power, India once again shut its embassy and consulates in Afghanistan, stopped issuing visas to all Afghans, including students, traders, and even former government officials.
India started making diplomatic overtures to the Taliban a year after the group’s return to power, re-establishing diplomatic presence in the country, tasked with overseeing the distribution of humanitarian aid. In the past two years, India has allowed the Taliban to quietly take over the Afghan consulates in Mumbai and Hyderabad.
Indian officials and diplomats have also held several high-level engagements abroad. In January this year, Muttaqi also met India’s Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates.
At the same time, Pakistan’s ties with the Taliban have plummeted. Islamabad has accused Afghanistan’s rulers of sheltering armed groups, including the Pakistan Taliban, or TTP, which have carried out dozens of deadly attacks on Pakistani soil in recent years. The Taliban deny those charges.
It is in that changed regional geopolitical landscape that India is welcoming Muttaqi, said analysts.
“The costs of avoiding engagement with the Taliban [by ceding a regional ally to Pakistan] in the past compelled the Indian government to strengthen relations with Kabul this time,” said Praveen Donthi, a senior analyst at the International Crisis Group in New Delhi.
“It’s a strategically vital relationship that can’t be ignored on ideological grounds,” Donthi said, referring to the lack of common ground between the conservative Taliban and the Hindu nationalist government in India. “Or left to India’s primary strategic rivals to exploit,” he added, speaking on the Chinese exchanges and investment with Kabul.
“The visit demonstrates India’s willingness to rise above ideological concerns and optics and to engage pragmatically with the Taliban,” Donthi told Al Jazeera.
Gautam Mukhopadhaya, a retired Indian diplomat and former ambassador to Afghanistan, told Al Jazeera that, unlike the Taliban of the 1990s, when Pakistan wielded complete control over it, regional dynamics have changed.
“The new Taliban is slightly more worldwide [in its overview] and more savvy. And they have to see the larger interests of Afghanistan,” said Mukhopadhaya.
India has shared deep-rooted cultural and trade ties with Afghanistan for centuries, dating back to the Mughal era. “That sense of kinship with India has always been there,” Mukhopadhaya said. “And India has goodwill on the ground due to its humanitarian assistance. Hindustan, as a concept, is a big thing in the Afghan mind.”
And India’s non-engaging phase with the Taliban’s first rule was an “aberration” in bilateral ties, added the former diplomat, who reopened the Indian embassy in Afghanistan after the Taliban’s removal from power in 2001.
People hold banners welcoming Amir Khan Muttaqi at Darul Uloom Deoband in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, India, October 11, 2025 [Anushree Fadnavis/Reuters]
What is India expecting from the Taliban?
To India, it is clear that the Taliban regime is not going to go away soon, said Ajai Sahni, executive director of South Asia Terrorism Portal, a platform that tracks and analyses armed attacks in South Asia. “You can’t simply walk away because the regime is not to our liking.”
“You have to deal with the reality of the political dynamics in the region,” he added. “And this situation demands greater outreach [to the Taliban] on India’s part and establish relations with regimes that are willing to go along with the Indian position in the subcontinent.”
Kabul’s growing conflict with Islamabad is an important factor in India’s calculations.
The tensions spilled over the weekend as Pakistan and Afghanistan traded heavy fire in the border areas. Dozens are believed to have been killed on both sides. The fighting coincided with Muttaqi’s ongoing visit to India.
The deportation of tens of thousands of Afghan refugees by Pakistan has further strained the ties between the two neighbours.
In terms of regional relationships, Afghanistan was also among the few countries that strongly condemned the Pahalgam attack in Indian-administered Kashmir in April earlier this year. The attack that New Delhi blamed on Pakistan – a charge it denies – brought the South Asian rivals to the brink of an all-out war in May as they traded missile and drone attacks.
Mukhopadhaya, the former envoy, says the Taliban and India have a common enemy. “We both have grievances and problems with Pakistan,” he added. “That also makes us natural allies.”
In their joint statement, the Indian Ministry of External Affairs expressed “deep appreciation” to the Taliban for its “strong condemnation of the terrorist attack in Pahalgam … as well as for the sincere condolences”.
“Both sides unequivocally condemned all acts of terrorism emanating from regional countries,” the statement noted, without naming Pakistan.
Addressing India’s security concerns, the Taliban foreign minister also “reiterated the commitment that the Afghan government will not allow any group or individual to use the territory of Afghanistan against India”.
Members of the media attend a news conference of Amir Khan Muttaqi in New Delhi, October 12, 2025 [Anushree Fadnavis/Reuters]
What does the diplomatic engagement mean for the Taliban?
The meeting in New Delhi means a world for the Taliban and its standing both at home and abroad, said Sahni, as the group has been making efforts for diplomatic recognition. The Taliban administration is only recognised by Russia, and several senior leaders remain under UN sanctions.
While rolling out the carpets for the Taliban leader, the Modi government is facing uncomfortable questions at home, including on women’s rights, broader human rights violations, and the killing of Reuters photojournalist Danish Siddiqui in July 2021.
The exclusion of female journalists from Muttaqi’s first news conference at the Afghan embassy in New Delhi last week caused an uproar, with opposition leaders and journalists slamming the government for its silence on the issue.
The next day, the Afghan officials conducted another news conference that included women, seated in the front row of seats.
Visiting Taliban officials have used the Afghan embassy in New Delhi, which still flies the flag of the previous Western-backed government, for these events, but do not have control over its premises since India has not formally recognised the Taliban government as yet.
Gaining that recognition and control of the embassy would be a major diplomatic victory for the Taliban.
For Afghanistan, deeper engagement with India could open doors to trade, education, and healthcare partnerships, analysts noted, as reflected in the joint statement put out by the two ministries. Last year, the annual bilateral trade was nearly $900m.
Muttaqi on Monday also met a delegation of Afghan Sikhs and Hindus, who had left Afghanistan over the past few decades and are currently living in Delhi. Muttaqi told them they were welcome to return and restart their businesses.
Thousands of Afghan students study in Indian universities, traders depend on Indian markets, and Indian-backed projects — from hospitals and dams to humanitarian aid — have been lifelines for many Afghan communities.
Cameroon opposition leader Issa Tchiroma Bakary has unilaterally declared victory in the country’s presidential election.
Tchiroma made the statement in a nearly five-minute speech posted to social media early on Tuesday. Although official channels have not declared results, he urged long-term incumbent, 92-year-old President Paul Biya, to call him to concede.
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“The people have chosen, and this choice must be respected,” Tchiroma demanded in the video.
However, the government warned earlier this week that only results announced by the Constitutional Council can be considered official. The body has almost two weeks to make the announcement.
A former government spokesman and ally of Biya for 20 years, Tchiroma was considered the top contender to unseat Biya in Sunday’s elections.
After he resigned from the government in June, his campaign drew large crowds and key endorsements from a coalition of opposition parties and civic groups.
But Biya – in power for 43 years and the world’s oldest serving head of state – has been widely expected to secure another seven-year term in office, given his tight grip on state machinery and the fragmented nature of the opposition.
Cameroon’s government has not responded officially to Tchiroma’s declaration.
However, Minister of Territorial Administration Paul Atanga Nji warned recently that only the Constitutional Council has the authority to announce the winner, and that any unilateral publication of results would be considered “high treason”.
Cameroon’s electoral law allows results to be published and posted at individual polling stations, but final tallies must be validated by the Constitutional Council, which has until October 26 to announce the outcome, the Reuters news agency reported.
Issa Tchiroma Bakary casts his vote in Garoua, Cameroon, on Sunday [File: Desire Danga Essigue/Reuters]
‘Honour’ the ballot box
In the video, filmed in his northern hometown of Garoua in front of the national flag, Tchiroma urged Biya to “honour the truth of the ballot box”, and to concede and offer congratulations.
Doing so, he said, would be a mark of Cameroon’s political maturity and the strength of its democracy.
The election results, he said, represent “a clear sanction” of Biya’s administration and marked “the beginning of a new era”.
Tchiroma also thanked rival candidates “who have already congratulated me and recognised the will of the people”.
He called on government institutions and the military to recognise his victory and “stay on the side of the republic”.
A dominant India completed a 2-0 series sweep against West Indies following their seven-wicket victory in the final test at New Delhi’s Arun Jaitley Stadium on Tuesday.
Chasing 121 for victory against a modest West Indies attack, the home side achieved the target in the final day’s morning session with KL Rahul making 58 not out and B Sai Sudharsan contributing 39.
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“It’s a really big honour and I would say I’m getting used to it,” said home captain Shubman Gill, who registered his first series victory since taking over as test skipper earlier this year.
“Managing all the players and leading this team is a great honour.”
India won the series opener in Ahmedabad inside three days and put themselves in the box seat in the second match when they amassed 518-5 before declaring their first innings.
West Indies folded for 248 in the first innings and were made to follow on.
The visitors delivered a much-improved batting display in their second innings and rode hundreds by John Campbell and Shai Hope to post 390 all out to stretch the contest to its final day.
Resuming on 63-1, India needed just an hour to complete the chase, but West Indies managed to grab a couple of wickets courtesy of two superb catches.
Touring captain Roston Chase dismissed Sudharsan with Hope diving to take a low catch in the slip.
Gill (13) hit a six and a four before miscuing a ball from Rose. Justin Greaves locked on to the swirling ball and ran from midwicket to take a brilliant catch.
That was the last of the drama, and Rahul hit the winning boundary to seal India’s win.
India spinner Kuldeep Yadav, who claimed a match haul of eight wickets, was named player of the match and teammate Ravindra Jadeja player of the tournament.
West Indies captain Chase said his side would take some positives from the defeat.
“The positives for us in this match was that Campbell and Hope played well and scored hundreds,” he added.
“We batted 100 overs after a long time, that was another positive. Taking the game to the fifth day, that was great for us.”
India’s tour of Australia begins on October 19 with the first one-day international (ODI) in Perth.
Rahul celebrates after scoring 50 runs on the fifth day of the second cricket test match between India and West Indies [Manish Swarup/AP]