Saturday, March 14, 2026

Thousands of Chinese boats mass at sea, raising questions


By AFP
March 13, 2026


Copyright CN-STR/AFP -


Allison JACKSON

Thousands of Chinese fishing boats have been massing in geometric formations in the East China Sea, in coordinated actions that experts believe are part of Beijing’s preparations for a potential regional crisis or conflict.

Monitoring ship-tracking data on Christmas Day, Jason Wang could tell something “unusual” was underway as fishing boats swarmed into two parallel inverted Ls, each about 400 kilometres (about 250 miles) long.

Wang could see the roughly 2,000 fishing boats among the many thousands of vessels that ply the busy waterway through their automatic identification systems (AIS) — a GPS-type signal that commercial ships use to avoid collisions.

The vessels, which were as close as 500 metres (1,640 feet) to each other, held their positions for about 30 hours in near gale-force winds and then suddenly scattered.

“Something didn’t look right to me because in nature very rarely do you see straight lines,” said Wang, chief operating officer of ingeniSPACE, which analyses satellite imagery and ship signals data.

“We’ve seen like two, 300, up to a thousand (Chinese fishing boats congregate), but anything exceeding a thousand I thought was unusual.”

Maritime and military experts told AFP the massing of Chinese fishing boats on December 25, about 300 kilometres northeast of Taiwan, was on a scale they had never seen before.

Another incident detected in early January involved around 1,000 Chinese fishing vessels clustered in an uneven rectangle, about 400 kilometres long, for more than a day in the same area of the East China Sea.

Hundreds of those vessels were also detected in the December 25 event, Wang told AFP in an interview in Taipei.

Last week, around 1,200 boats massed in two parallel lines further east of the January and December events and held their positions for about 30 hours, Wang said.

China’s massive fishing fleet operates in the Yellow Sea, East China Sea and the South China Sea, competing with fishers from Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam and the Philippines.

While there is debate about why so many Chinese fishing vessels would gather in geometric formations in the open sea, experts widely agree that they were not there to fish.

Some experts said the only plausible explanation was that China was testing its ability to marshal a large number of fishing vessels that could potentially be deployed in a military operation, such as a blockade or invasion of Taiwan, or a crisis with Japan.

“I’ve never seen a massing of Chinese fishing boats in these numbers anywhere outside of port ever,” Gregory Poling, director of the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), said of the December 25 event.

The manoeuvres were a “demonstration with a military lens” to show those watching that the boats had the ability to coordinate their movements, said Jennifer Parker, a former Australian naval warfare officer.

“I’ve sailed around the entire world and I’ve not seen fishermen operating in that proximity to each other, in that degree of concentration,” said Parker, now an Expert Associate at the National Security College of the Australian National University.

“They’re definitely not fishing.”

Global Fishing Watch chief scientist David Kroodsma said the Chinese fishing fleet was “highly coordinated” and it was possible that the vessels were ordered not to fish in a certain area.

“Most of the time when you see lines of boats, it’s because they’re right up against some boundary where they’re not allowed to be. In this region that’s what you see most of the time,” Kroodsma said.

“If you look across the year, you see many, many examples of when there’s clearly a line that they’re not supposed to fish across at different time periods. We don’t know why.”



– ‘State operation’ –



AFP’s reporting for this story involved the analysis of AIS data and nighttime satellite imagery, and interviews with experts from ingeniSPACE, Starboard Maritime Intelligence, CSIS and Global Fishing Watch, who also observed the December and January formations.

Unseenlabs, a French company specialising in maritime surveillance, verified the December 25 data for AFP, describing the concentration of vessels as “surprising and unusual”.

The experts were confident that the majority of the vessels were real and not spoofed, which is when AIS data is manipulated to give misleading information about a vessel’s location or identity.

“We’ve had enough other corroborating data… to confirm that those vessels were clearly out there,” Poling said.

As part of his efforts to verify the data, Mark Douglas, a former New Zealand naval officer and now a maritime domain analyst at Starboard, said he examined fishing patterns in the same area over the previous two years.

“At no time has the behaviour been the same as this,” Douglas said. “During other periods of adverse weather the vessels returned to port, rather than massing offshore in these kinds of formations.”

“I can’t speak to the why… but the how certainly seems to be that there was direction provided to these vessels that this is what they needed to do,” Douglas said.

The number of vessels involved indicated a “state operation”, said Thomas Shugart, a former US Navy submarine warfare officer and now an Adjunct Senior Fellow with the Defense Program at the Center for a New American Security.

“There’s no commercial entity that controls that many fishing boats that I know of,” Shugart said.



– ‘Maritime militia’ –



China’s navy ranks number one in the world in terms of the number of warships and submarines on the Global Firepower list.

Beijing is also tapping its huge civilian fleet, including fishing boats, ferries and cargo ships, as part of its preparations for a regional crisis or conflict, including over Taiwan, experts say.

China has threatened to use force, if necessary, to seize Taiwan, which it claims is part of its territory, and US officials have flagged 2027 as a possible timeline for an attack.

In its 2025 report to Congress on China’s military power, the US Department of Defense said: “The PLA continues to make steady progress toward its 2027 goals” and “China expects to be able to fight and win a war on Taiwan” by the end of that year.

Beijing has stepped up military pressure on Taiwan in recent years, deploying fighter jets and warships around the island on an almost daily basis.

China has also held multiple large-scale exercises around Taiwan that are often described as rehearsals for a blockade and seizure of the territory.

Civilian vessels were “absolutely central” to Chinese military planning for an operation against Taiwan, said Shugart.

China’s navy does not have enough landing vessels to deliver the troops and equipment it would need to make an invasion of Taiwan feasible.

“In the absence of that dual-purpose, civil-military maritime mass, I don’t think they can invade Taiwan,” Shugart said. “With that, (it) turns into a ‘maybe they can’.”

Many of the fishing boats involved in the December and January massing events were likely part of China’s maritime militia, some experts said.

The maritime militia is made up of fishing boats trained to support the military and the fleet has been used to assert China’s territorial claims, including in the South China Sea where they have swarmed contested reefs.

AIS data showed the “vast majority” of vessels congregating in the East China Sea appeared to be from the eastern province of Zhejiang, where several maritime militia ports are located, said Poling.

“Like militia on land in China, they get called up from time to time for reserve service,” Poling said.

“My guess is that this was an effort to just see if the militia could muster. These are civilians, these are not the professional militia in the South China Sea, they’re fishermen,” he said.

Maritime militia would have a “range of roles” in a military operation, said Parker, such as harassing warships or acting as decoys for missiles fired by opposing forces, though she noted their presence could also interfere with China’s own ability to hit targets.

“It’s clear that China’s operations planning in the South China Sea and around Taiwan include the maritime militia as a force multiplier,” she said.

“It’s reasonable to assume that this would also be the case in the event of a military crisis with Japan.”



– Threats of retaliation –



The maritime militia’s role in the South China Sea has expanded beyond swarming reefs to helping the Chinese coastguard in “blocking and harassing” Philippine fishing boats and even using water cannon against Filipino fishermen, Philippine Coast Guard spokesman Jay Tarriela said.

“They don’t have covert roles anymore,” Tarriela said.

“They’re actually part of the (Chinese) government, a flotilla, advancing their illegal interests in the South China Sea.”

Beijing has not publicly commented on the fishing boat formations in the East China Sea.

Japan’s coast guard declined to comment when contacted by AFP. Tokyo is involved in a deepening spat with Beijing after Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi suggested that Japan would intervene militarily if China sought to take Taiwan by force.

Responding to China’s grey zone activities — coercive actions that fall short of an act of war — or military operations in the region is “really hard”, a diplomat told AFP on the condition of anonymity.

“China often threatens or implies retaliation — what is often unclear,” the diplomat said.

Experts said the fishing boat manoeuvres were consistent with Chinese President Xi Jinping’s overall aim of preparing the military so it could potentially seize Taiwan.

“I can’t tell you if Xi Jinping’s going to decide to pull the trigger or not,” said Shugart.

“But as an analyst, it sure looks like the PLA is, as directed, developing the capabilities required to credibly threaten an invasion in 2027.”

burs-amj/hmn/jm
#METOO REDUX

Noma’s star chef quits after claims that he hit and bullied staff


By AFP
March 12, 2026


Protesters at Danish chef Rene Redzepi's Noma restaurant pop-up in Los Angeles - Copyright AFP Apu GOMES


Camille BAS-WOHLERT

Danish superchef Rene Redzepi — whose Noma restaurant was long regarded as the world’s best — said he was stepping down Thursday after allegations that he abused and bullied staff for years.

Cooks were punched, publicly shamed or humiliated, several former staff who said they suffered or witnessed abuse told the New York Times, which said it talked to 35 former employees.

“I’ve decided to step away,” Redzepi said in an Instagram post that acknowledged past problems.

“Noma has taken big steps to transform the culture over many years,” Redzepi said in the video that showed him apologising to staff, some of whom were holding back tears.

“I recognise these changes do not repair the past,” the 48-year-old added.

“An apology is not enough. I take responsibility for my own actions.”

His resignation comes as a new pop-up Noma restaurant opened in Los Angeles.

The world of haute cuisine is currently confronting mounting accusations about the treatment of staff at top restaurants.



– ‘Bully’ confession –



The chef — who trained at the Spanish restaurant El Bulli, also once considered the world’s best, and at French Laundry in California — has previously admitted to losing his cool.

In 2015, he said in an essay: “I’ve been a bully for a large part of my career”.

In February, the former head of Noma’s fermentation lab, Jason Ignacio White, started posting about abuse he had witnessed while working at the legendary restaurant.

He also relayed stories sent to him by other former employees.

“Noma is not a story of innovation. It is a story of a maniac that would breed a culture of fear, abuse & exploitation,” White said on social media.

He was among a group of former staff members who protested at the Noma pop-up restaurant in Los Angeles where Redzepi had been due to take charge.

They carried signs reading “Noma broke me” and “No Michelin stars for violence”, along with calls for the Redzepi’s resignation.

Noma, which specialises in modern Nordic cuisine with fermented ingredients, has three Michelin stars.

The Copenhagen establishment was named the world’s best restaurant in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014 and 2021 by Restaurant magazine.

An acronym formed from the Danish words “nordisk” (Nordic) and “mad” (food), Noma first opened in a converted warehouse on a quay in central Copenhagen in 2003.

It closed in 2016 and reopened two years later in a more remote neighbourhood of the Danish capital.

Redzepi insisted in his message that Noma would remain open and that its current team was the “strongest” that it had ever been.

He also said the Los Angeles project would be maintained but without him at the helm.

Outside a Noma shop in Copenhagen, Estonian tourist Kaisa Erm said Redzepi had made “the right decision” to go.

If he had stayed it would have given the impression that “the culture wouldn’t change and that we’re condoning it”, said Annie Nguyen, a 31-year-old American.

But she doesn’t think Redzepi’s actions “should discredit the works and culinary experimentation they’ve been doing.”

However, Danish food critic Jesper Uhrup Jensen, said Noma cannot be separated from its emblematic chef.

“Noma is an extremely famous brand so they will try, but everything was built around him,” he told AFP.
Kinetic activity rises: The cybersecurity threat of the Iranian conflict


By Dr. Tim Sandle
SCIENCE EDITOR
DIGITAL JOURNAL
March 10, 2026


How safe are your computer systems? Image by Tim Sandle

Previous reports (including by Digital Journal) have indicated there is a process of intense cyberespionage targeting U.S. critical infrastructure underway, triggered by Iranian intelligence crowdsourcing espionage and other potential attacks via messaging apps. This is based on analysis by Flashpoint, a private provider of threat data and intelligence, who have provided a detailed assessment to Digital Journal. From this, we have captured some of the emerging trends.

Between March 8 and 9, 2026, when the conflict evolved into a highly decentralized phase of hybrid warfare, reports of intense cyberespionage targeting U.S. critical infrastructure, sustained drone and missile barrages against Gulf infrastructure, and the formal consolidation of Iranian leadership were received by news media.

Timeline of Key Events (March 8-9, 2026)March 8: According to The Times of Israel reporting, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) killed Abolghasem Babaeian, the newly appointed military secretary to the Supreme Leader, in a Tehran airstrike executed within 50 minutes of receiving real-time intelligence.

March 8: According to The Guardian reporting, Mojtaba Khamenei is officially chosen as Iran’s new Supreme Leader.

March 8, 22:46 UTC: Hacktivist group “Cyber Islamic Resistance” claims the defacement of the official website for Kurdish Peshmerga special forces. Note: This claim has not been verified.

March 8, 23:23 UTC: Cyber Islamic Resistance claims defacement and control over a Saudi medical care application website. Note: This claim has not been verified.
March 9: According to Al Arabiya reporting, Bahraini water desalination and oil facilities are struck, injuring three and leading to a declaration of force majeure.
March 9: According to X reporting by Arta Moeini PhD, Grand Ayatollah Sistani issues a fatwa declaring a “collective religious obligation” for communal defense.
March 9: According to X reporting by Richard Holmes, UK officials express concern over Iranian intelligence using Telegram to recruit “gig-economy” spies across Europe.
March 9, 11:12 UTC: Pro-Russian group “NoName057(16)” claims distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks against Israeli political parties and defense firm Elbit Systems. Note: This claim has not been verified.
March 9, 12:38 UTC: Hacktivist group “Handala” claims to have wiped Israeli military weather servers and intercepted Jerusalem urban security feeds. Note: This claim has not been verified.
March 9, 15:26 UTC: Reports confirm the MOIS-linked group “MuddyWater” has intruded into US aerospace and defense networks. Note: This claim has been verified based on Infosecurity Magazine reporting.
March 9, 16:06 UTC: The domestic internet blackout in Iran officially enters its sixth day. Note: This claim has been verified based on reporting.

U.S. infiltration

The report finds that state-sponsored actors linked to Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS) have successfully infiltrated US aerospace, defence, and aviation networks using a new backdoor. This campaign started in early February and has continued after the US and Israeli military strikes on Iran.

An example is MuddyWater (Seedworm / MOIS): This Iranian state-sponsored group reportedly hacked the networks of several organizations in the United States, including an aerospace and defense contractor, airports, banks, and an NGO. They deployed a new backdoor dubbed “Dindoor,” signed with a certificate issued to “Amy Cherne.” Note: This claim has been verified as TRUE based on Infosecurity Magazine reporting.

European targets

Furthermore, the conflict’s geographic scope has widened; a historic fatwa from Iraq-based Grand Ayatollah Sistani has called for collective defence, while Iranian intelligence is reportedly crowdsourcing espionage and potential attacks across Europe via messaging apps.

According to X reporting by Richard Holmes, Iranian intelligence is using Telegram to recruit a network of proxy spies and criminals across Europe for surveillance and potentially violent attacks, raising significant concerns among UK officials.

In the physical domain, Gulf states have sustained material damage to critical water and oil facilities, driving global oil prices upward. Within Iran, Mojtaba Khamenei has been officially appointed to succeed his father, signalling continuity in the regime’s strategic direction amid a continued nationwide internet blackout.

Mojtaba Khamenei, the second son of the late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was officially chosen as Iran’s new Supreme Leader, centralizing command following the initial decapitation strikes.

Israeli targets

Handala has claimed responsibility for breaching critical infrastructure in Israel. The group alleges they wiped military weather servers to disrupt aviation operations and intercepted urban security camera feeds in Jerusalem intended for the Israeli intelligence service, Shabak.

Note: This claim has not been verified.

In addition, Cyber Islamic Resistance (Team 313) has claimed multiple successful cyberattacks and site defacements against regional targets. This includes the official website of the Kurdish Peshmerga special forces in an attempt to warn against supporting anti-regime Kurdish groups. The group also claimed defacements of a Saudi medical care application (smcc[.]sa) and the Saudi University of Business and Technology (staging[.]ubt[.]edu[.]sa).

Note: These claims have not been verified.

Meanwhile, NoName057(16) is said to be continuing operations under the “#OpIsrael” banner, this pro-Russian group claimed DDoS attacks against Israeli political parties (SHAS, Noam); telecommunication companies (Sting TV, Hot Mobile, Expon 018); the municipality of Ariel; and defense contractor Elbit Systems.

Note: These claims have not been verified.
Singapore turns tide in evolving fight against scams


By AFP
March 13, 2026


Singapore's high incomes, hyperconnectivity and public trust in institutions have long made it a prime target for scammers - Copyright AFP/File Roslan RAHMAN


Martin Abbugao

Building his cryptocurrency holdings over eight years and helping out defrauded traders, Singaporean investor Mark Koh had thought he was savvy enough to spot a scam. Until he fell prey to one.

Fraudsters wiped out his entire portfolio last year — a total loss of around US$120,000 or US$130,000, Koh estimates — leaving him with a sense of “profound shame”.

Singapore’s high incomes, hyperconnectivity and public trust in institutions have long made it a prime target for scammers.

But the city-state is fighting back, including through tough laws that can compel tech giants to clamp down on fraud — with scam cases and losses down last year for the first time since 2021.

Koh had years ago co-founded a non-profit supporting the victims of crypto scams.

But when he downloaded a beta test version of a game called “MetaToy” that turned out to be fake, it installed malware on his browser.

“I watched my wallets drain in real time,” the 44-year-old told AFP.

“There’s profound shame in being a victim — especially when you’ve positioned yourself as someone who helps others avoid exactly this situation.”

He posted online about his ordeal to raise the alarm about increasingly sophisticated online hoaxes.

It’s a mission shared by Singapore’s government, which has led its own scam education drive, including roadshows and talks with residents including migrant workers.



– Cane strokes –



Consumers worldwide lost US$442 billion to online fraud last year, the Global Anti-Scam Alliance estimates.

In Singapore, authorities say scams cost the population of six million people approximately US$1.6 billion for 2024 and 2025.

Even former prime minister Lee Hsien Loong has admitted to being duped into making an order on a fake e-commerce website.

But it appears the tide is turning.

Singapore’s scam cases were down 28 percent to 37,308 last year from a record 51,501 in 2024, and losses also fell.

“The decrease… suggests cautiously that the anti-scam strategies and public education measures introduced by the government and industry partners have made it more challenging for scammers to succeed,” police said.

Singapore has toughened punishments for convicted scammers — including up to 24 strokes with a cane — and created a 24-hour helpline that receives up to 700 calls daily.

Banks or police can now freeze accounts if they determine that a person is giving money to scammers, including falling for a fake job offer or a phishing attack.

And the city-state’s 2023 Online Criminal Harms Act has strengthened the police’s hand in ordering social media platforms to remove scam-related content or face penalties.

“Telegram, which had previously not responded to requests to disrupt criminal activity, has now acted on all directions issued to them,” police said.

Yet criminals are finding new ways to exploit digital vulnerabilities, such as by using artificial intelligence to convincingly impersonate an individual.



– ‘Playing catch-up’ –



Scams have become a “mainstay” of modern crime and are “increasingly difficult to investigate because of their transnational nature”, said Jeffery Chin, deputy director at the police Scam Public Education Office.

“We want to be ahead of the game, but because technology changes so fast, we sometimes find ourselves playing catch-up,” he told AFP, adding that most perpetrators operate outside Singapore.

Impersonation scams soared 1,400 percent year-on-year in 2025 globally, according to Chainalysis, which also found that AI-enabled fraud was 4.5 times more profitable than its lower-tech equivalents.

Scammers usually reach targets in Singapore on social media — 52 percent through Facebook, 26 percent through TikTok, and 14 percent through Instagram, authorities say.

Meta was last year ordered to step up safeguards on Facebook after scammers used images of top officials in impersonation schemes. A second directive in January required the company to extend monitoring to other high-profile users and implement enhanced facial recognition.

Meta said that in 2025 it had removed “more than 134 million scam ads” and helped arrests.

Apple and Google have been instructed to block spoofing of the “gov.sg” domain and other official names on their messaging platforms.

For Koh, who has found renewed purpose speaking at international conferences to warn users and investors, one thing is clear.

“The shame belongs to them (scammers), not you,” he said.
US jury to begin deliberations in social media addiction trial


By AFP
March 12, 2026


Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg was a star witness at the trial 
- Copyright GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP 

Wally SKALIJ

Jury deliberations are set to begin Friday in a landmark social media addiction trial accusing Meta and YouTube of intentionally trying to hook young internet users.

Closing arguments wrapped here Thursday with rival attorneys trying to convince jurors the evidence backed their side of the clash.

The verdict could turn on the question of whether family and other real world troubles, or YouTube and Meta apps such as Instagram, were to blame for mental woes of the woman who filed the suit.

An attorney for the woman, a 20-year-old California woman identified as Kaley G.M., used a cupcake metaphor, arguing that while only a small bit of baking soda might be in a recipe it was essential for making the pastry.

“It comes down to highly technical legal standards,” the plaintiff’s attorney Laura Marquez-Garrett said of the job ahead for jurors.

“They could find all kinds of terrible stuff, but then determine that technically speaking, the percentage of contribution wasn’t met.”

An attorney for Meta, Paul Schmidt, noted that none of the therapists who testified had identified social media as the cause of Kaley’s troubles.

Instead, he said, Kaley’s records show emotional and physical abuse along with academic struggles and psychiatric conditions separate from her use of social media.

“Kaley has faced profound challenges, and we continue to recognize all she has endured,” Schmidt said.

“The jury’s only task, however, is to decide if those struggles would have existed without Instagram.”

YouTube, meanwhile, has likened itself to television during the trial, rebuffing the idea of equating it with online social media platforms.



– Taking aim at tactics –



Kaley testified at trial that YouTube and Instagram fueled her depression and suicidal thoughts as a child, telling jurors that she became hooked on social media, starting with YouTube videos, at the age of six.

Under cross examination, however, Kaley talked about feeling neglected, berated and picked on by family members, causing depression and anxiety that apparently had nothing to do with social media.

She said her mother pushed her into therapy at around age 12, and that during the first session she said she could not engage with her family at home because of “excessive worrying because of social media.”

In a surprising twist, Kaley also said she would like to become a social media manager and capitalize on the skills she has built.

Meta’s chief executive Mark Zuckerberg took the stand during the trial, pushing back against accusations that his company had done too little to keep underage users off his platform and had profited from their presence.

Zuckerberg told jurors that he regretted Meta’s slow progress in identifying underage users on Instagram, but that “we’re in the right place now.”

YouTube vice president of engineering Cristos Goodrow said while testifying that the Google-owned company’s aim was to give people value, not hook them on harmful binge-viewing, despite aggressive growth goals at the platform.

“We don’t want anybody to be addicted to anything,” he said.

The lawsuit is one of hundreds accusing social media firms of leading young users to become addicted to their content and suffer from depression, eating disorders, psychiatric hospitalization and even suicide.

Internet titans have long shielded themselves with Section 230 of the US Communications Decency Act, which frees them of responsibility for what social media users post.

However, this case argues that the firms are responsible for defective products with business models designed to hold people’s attention and to promote content that can harm their mental health.

The outcome of the Los Angeles trial is expected to establish a standard for resolving thousands of lawsuits that blame social media for fueling an epidemic of depression, anxiety, eating disorders and suicide among young people.
CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M 

Italian prosecutors seek trial for Amazon over tax evasion


By AFP
March 12, 2026


Amazon said it would contest the case, calling it unfounded and stressing it is among the top 50 taxpayers in Italy - Copyright AFP INA FASSBENDER

Milan prosecutors have requested a criminal trial for Amazon and four of its executives over alleged tax fraud worth more than one billion euros, Italian media reported Thursday.

The e-commerce giant in December said it had reached an agreement with Italy’s tax agency over VAT it should have paid on behalf of third-party sellers.

Amazon did not disclose the amount, but Italian media said it paid more than 500 million euros ($575 million) to settle the dispute.

The deal did not stop prosecutors from seeking criminal proceedings against the company, the Ansa news agency said Thursday.

The investigation into Amazon covers a three-year period, from 2019 to 2021, when the EU adopted reforms simplifying e-commerce tax regulations across the bloc.

Prosecutors say that between 2019 and 2021, Amazon failed to provide — or only partially provided — required data on non-EU sellers and imported goods through its Marketplace platform.

This allegedly misled tax authorities and allowed the company to avoid the VAT payments.

Since 2019, Italian law has made e-commerce platforms responsible for VAT owed on all sales from outside the European Union ahead of an EU reform that took effect in 2021.

Amazon said Thursday it would contest any case brought against it, stressing it is among the top 50 taxpayers in Italy.

The company warned that unpredictable rules and lengthy legal procedures would hurt Italy’s business climate, but said it would comply with its tax obligations.

The request for a trial still needs a judge’s approval.
The Chinese cable that could trip up Chile’s new leader


By AFP
March 12, 2026


Chile's new President Jose Antonio Kast faces a delicate balancing act in trying to maintain close ties both with China, Chile's biggest trading partner, and the United States, which is asserting its dominance in the region - Copyright AFP Javier TORRES


Paulina ABRAMOVICH

Chile’s new president Jose Antonio Kast faces a tough choice in his first weeks in office.

Will he bow to US pressure to nix a project to link China and Chile across the Pacific via an undersea fiber optic cable?

Or will Kast, who took office Wednesday, revive an initiative cherished by Chile’s biggest trading partner, at the risk of incurring Washington’s wrath?

The Chile-China Express would carry data nearly 20,000 kilometers (over 12,000 miles) under the sea from Hong Kong to the port of Valparaiso, allowing Beijing to reduce its dependence on internet routes that pass through North America.

But it has become entangled in the intense rivalry between Washington and Beijing for influence in Latin America.

The US State Department has called it a threat to regional security in what it calls “our hemisphere.”

Chile’s then-transport minister in January approved the project, which was proposed by state-owned China Mobile.

But two days later the government abruptly rescinded its approval, amid pressure from Washington.

The United States sanctioned three Chilean officials, including the transport minister, over the project — a rare rebuke of one of the United States’ closest Latin American allies.

A Chinese cable “basically leaves the United States unable to see what is happening” in regional data traffic, telecommunications expert Jonathan Frez, a professor at Diego Portales University in Santiago, told AFP.

It would allow China to connect directly with Latin America, including fellow BRICS member Brazil, Frez added, referring to a grouping of major emerging economies.

Kast faces a delicate balancing act in trying to reconcile Chile’s trade ties with China with his desire to deepen links with Trump, who hosted the Chilean at his “Shield of the Americas” summit in Florida last week.

The cable project created friction between Kast and his left-wing predecessor Gabriel Boric in the final days of Boric’s presidency.

Kast accused his predecessor of withholding information about the cable and suspended cooperation with Boric on the handover of power for several days.



– ‘A warning’ –



Kast is Chile’s most right-wing president since the 1973-1990 dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet, elected on a promise to crack down on organized crime and irregular migration.

Washington is interested in supporting Kast on those issues, which are central to the Trump presidency, but also in “denying China access to resources and markets,” Gilberto Aranda, an international relations expert at the University of Chile, told AFP.

He saw the sanctioning of Chilean officials as “a warning” to the incoming Kast administration.

To avoid confrontation with either superpower, Chile should develop new markets, Aranda advised.

China is the main destination for Chilean exports.

In 2025, Chile sold more than $38 billion worth of products to China, primarily copper, cherries, and lithium.



– Tech hub –



Chile is hooked up to at least three international undersea cables, all connected to North America.

Successive governments of the right and left have positioned the country, which has the world’s sixth-fastest internet speeds, according to Speedtest Global Index, as a tech hub.

The 14,800-kilometer Humboldt cable, currently being built between Valparaiso and Sydney, will be the first between South America and the Asia-Pacific.

It is being developed in partnership with Google.

Experts cited by Chile’s Diario Financiero financial daily predicted that if the Chile-China Express cable was jettisoned by Santiago, Beijing would likely take it to Peru, the second-largest recipient of Chinese investment in Latin America.
FIRST RULING OF ITS KIND
US federal judge quashes subpoenas in Fed chair investigation


By AFP
March 13, 2026


US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has said the investigation into building cost overruns was meant to intimidate the independent central bank - Copyright AFP SAUL LOEB


Asad HASHIM

A US federal judge has quashed subpoenas issued to the Federal Reserve as part of an investigation that Fed chair Jerome Powell has called an attempt by the Trump administration to intimidate the independent central bank.

“A mountain of evidence suggests that the Government served these subpoenas on the Board to pressure its Chair into voting for lower interest rates or resigning,” wrote Judge James Boasberg in a filing dated March 11.

“The Court therefore finds that the subpoenas were issued for an improper purpose and will quash them.”

The documents were made public Friday. The Justice Department’s investigation was linked to the cost of renovations at the Fed’s headquarters.

US prosecutor Jeanine Pirro swiftly responded, saying the Trump administration would appeal the order.

“This is the antithesis of American justice. Exonerating anyone without any records, without an investigation or question, is not how our criminal justice system works,” Pirro told reporters.

“No one, folks, is above the law, and this outrageous decision will be appealed by the United States Department of Justice,” she said.

US President Donald Trump has repeatedly insulted Powell over the central bank’s policies on setting the economy’s key interest rate.

In January, Powell revealed that the Justice Department had launched a probe linked to cost overruns in the Fed’s renovations.

The investigation was unprecedented, and Powell released a statement saying it was meant to intimidate him and the Fed.

“This is about whether the Fed will be able to continue to set interest rates based on evidence and economic conditions — or whether instead monetary policy will be directed by political pressure or intimidation,” he said at the time.

On Friday, Judge Boasberg’s order was scathing in its criticism of Pirro’s office.

“The Government has produced essentially zero evidence to suspect Chair Powell of a crime; indeed, its justifications are so thin and unsubstantiated that the Court can only conclude that they are pretextual.”

The Fed did not comment on the issue when queried by AFP.



– Repeated Trump attacks –



Trump has been vocal about his preferences for lower interest rates, criticizing Powell and attempting to unseat another Fed Governor, Lisa Cook, over mortgage fraud allegations.

In January, the US Supreme Court appeared skeptical of Trump’s attempts to fire Cook, with a majority of judges expressing doubts that the administration had shown sufficient cause to remove her.

Republican Thom Tillis of the Senate Banking Committee recently vowed to oppose the confirmation of Fed nominees — including the next chairman — until the Justice Department probe against Powell is resolved.

That would hold up Trump’s nomination for the next Fed chair when Powell’s term is up in May.

“This ruling confirms just how weak and frivolous the criminal investigation” of Powell is, Tillis wrote on social media Friday.

“Appealing the ruling will only delay the confirmation of Kevin Warsh as the next Fed Chair,” he said on X.

The Fed cut rates three times last year but held off on further reductions in January as policymakers walk a tightrope, balancing inflation risks alongside labor market worries.

Its rate-setting committee will hold a meeting next week, with analysts expecting it to keep rates unchanged amid economic turmoil from the US-Israeli war on Iran and recent economic data.
From Kyiv to UK, Ukrainian drone production spans Europe


By AFP
March 12, 2026


Ukrspecsystems Managing Director Rory Chamberlain poses for a photograph with one of the company's Shark reconnaissance drones at their UK factory near Cambridge, eastern England - Copyright AFP Chris Radburn


Marie HEUCLIN

In an inconspicuous building near the UK’s Mildenhall air base, drone manufacturer Ukrspecsystems is opening a new production line, like other Ukrainian arms companies looking to secure supply chain and boost capacity.

Ukrainian drone manufacturers have in recent months announced a slew of plans to open sites in Europe, including in Germany, Denmark and now Britain.

Ukrspecsystems, which specialises in reconnaissance drones, chose Mildenhall in Suffolk, eastern England, next to a British military base.

In the warehouse area where the company has set up shop, there is little indicating the presence of the weapons plant inaugurated on February 25 by Britain’s armed forces minister Luke Pollard and Ukrainian ambassador in London Valery Zaluzhny — Kyiv’s former military commander-in-chief.

In a few weeks, the site will be able to manufacture up to 200 surveillance drones (ISRs) every month, and up to 1,000 in the long-term, director Rory Chamberlain told AFP.

These include Ukrspecsystems’ “Shark” model, identifiable by the shark-head design on its nose, which cost tens of thousands of pounds (dollars) to make.

“The battlefield is large, so you’ve got to be able to get cheap but capable ISR at quantity on the front line,” said Chamberlain.

While Ukraine has ramped up drone production since Russia’s 2022 invasion — with more than four million units produced in 2025, according to President Volodymyr Zelensky — the demand remains huge.

But manufacturing conditions are difficult in Ukraine, with the constant threat of Russian strikes as well as a heavy reliance on parts imported from China, according to the Snake Island Institute, a Kyiv-based defence think tank.

Last year, Kyiv eased an embargo on arms exports, allowing technology transfers to allied countries, which can then host assembly lines and finished products are reimported to Ukraine.

“Manufacturing these systems outside Ukraine creates extra production capacity to support Kyiv’s war effort,” noted the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) in its Military Balance 2026 report.

According to the report, the partnerships support “the longer-term economic viability of (Ukraine’s) defence-industrial base,” which has the manufacturing know-how, but needs more contracts.

The “controlled exports” of certain weapon types will allow Kyiv to “increase the production of drones for the front line” and boost funding, Zelensky said in September.

– ‘Battle-tested’ –

In mid-February, the Danish government announced it was in talks to host facilities for Ukrainian drone manufacturer Skyfall.

Ukrainian firm Fire Point, which develops military drones and missiles, was the first to set up in Denmark, where it began construction in Vojens of a plant to produce propellants in December.

Production is scheduled to start later this year.

“Bringing strong Ukrainian defence companies to Denmark to work together with Danish industry will strengthen the security of both Denmark and Ukraine,” said Denmark’s Defence Minister Troels Lund Poulsen.

The expansion is “bringing that understanding” of drone manufacturing into the UK and other European countries which are less experienced in the field, said Chamberlain — particularly when it comes to adaptability and advances in embedded technologies like AI and jamming.

“How quickly you can bring updates, and… get those in the frontline is how successful you are… In 24 hours, we can do that,” he added.

“We have the know how, and I think that’s what we can bring” to the UK.

“For European firms, partnering with Ukrainian companies and their battle-tested designs now may prove more advantageous than competing against them in the future,” noted the IISS report.

The partnerships have multiplied in a short span of time.

Since the end of 2024, Finnish group Summa Defence has set up several joint ventures with Ukrainian firms to produce drones in Finland.

Similarly, British firm Prevail Partners and Ukraine’s Skyeton joined forces in July 2025 aiming to produce the Raybird surveillance drone in the UK.

Zelensky and German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius last month received the first drone manufactured by QFI, a joint venture between German company Quantum Systems and Ukrainian firm Frontline Robotics.

It is set to produce an initial 10,000 drones per year, QFI said.

Friday, March 13, 2026

 

Why March Madness is a perfect storm for betting



UTA researchers say big sporting events and peer influence can push young adults to bet


University of Texas at Arlington





Sports betting continues to explode across the country. Online gambling platforms have become mainstream, are heavily marketed by celebrities and star athletes—and increasingly popular among young adults.

With online bracket tournaments, office pools and gambling websites accompanying wall-to-wall games, March Madness—the NCAA men’s and women’s national basketball championship tournaments that begin on March 17 and 20, respectively—creates a perfect storm for betting.

Unversity of Texas at Arlington social work professors Melissa Lewis and Dana Litt, who lead UTA’s Studying Alcohol and Related Risks Lab, offered insight into the surge in sports betting and strategies bettors can use to to avoid slipping into harmful patterns.

“When you look at how March Madness is advertised on social media and in groups, it creates the perception that everyone is doing it,” Dr. Lewis said. “That may not affect people who already plan to bet, but it can definitely influence those who haven’t done it before and are willing to try because it now seems so normative.”

The UT Arlington researchers contributed to a new study examining the drivers of sports gambling behavior. It found that people are far more likely to place bets during weeks with major sporting events when they believe their friends are doing the same.

The study, led by researchers from the University of Washington and published in the Journal of Gambling Studies, followed the betting patterns of 210 individuals ages 18 to 29 over a one-year period. Most of the participants, 77.1%, were male and completed surveys every two weeks about their sports betting activity.

Lewis and Dr. Litt helped apply the Prototype Willingness Model (PWM), a behavioral framework developed in the 1990s to assess health-risk behaviors. The model distinguishes between a tie to a “reasoned pathway”—I plan to bet—and a “social reaction pathway”—I might bet if the right situation arises.

“Some individuals plan their betting throughout the year, while others are open to gambling but haven’t had the right context,” Lewis said. “March Madness provides that context: It’s one of the biggest betting events of the year and heavily involves young adults and college students.”

Litt said the findings mirror research on alcohol use, where behaviors can stem from both deliberate planning or from social reactions.

“All of that matters because interventions for someone with strong intentions differ from interventions for someone who is simply willing if a friend suggests placing a bet,” Litt said. “Understanding why people choose to engage is what helps design effective interventions.”

Early intervention is key, the researchers added, as risky behaviors such as sports gambling can be associated with depression, anxiety, increased substance use and other harmful outcomes.

Expert tips for safer sports betting

  1. Set a budget: Use only entertainment funds, never money for essentials such as rent or groceries. It’s not always one big loss that creates financial concerns; often, it’s repeated small losses. When you add them up at the end of something like March Madness, it can have significant consequences.
  2. Bet with a clear mind: Avoid betting after drinking or when emotionally reacting to a loss—or a win. Take breaks between bets so each decision is independent rather than driven by emotions.
  3. Understand the odds: Placing more bets does not increase the chances of winning. Remember, the house always wins in the long run. People often go for bigger bets because the potential payout seems exciting, but they don’t realize the odds are much lower.
  4. Seek help: If betting feels uncontrollable or causes stress, consult professional support. Gamblers Anonymous offers 24/7 confidential help at 909-931-9056.