Saturday, March 29, 2025

ANOTHER WAR ON DRUGS

Australian black market tobacco sparks firebombings, budget hole


By AFP
March 29, 2025


A packet of 25 cigarettes can cost Aus$50 or more -- including Aus$1.40 in tax on each stick - Copyright AFP DAVID GRAY

David WILLIAMS

Sky-high tobacco prices in Australia have created a lucrative black market, analysts say, sparking a violent “tobacco war” and syphoning away billions in potential tax revenue.

Faced with a pack of 25 cigarettes costing up to Aus$50 (US$32) or more — including Aus$1.40 in tax on each stick — many smokers have instead turned to readily available illicit tobacco.

At the same time, authorities have cracked down on vapes, restricting legal sales to pharmacies and opening up another illegal market for people in search of affordable nicotine.

In March, the government cut its budget forecast for tobacco tax revenue in the period to 2029 by Aus$6.9 billion.

“We’ve got a challenge here and too many people are avoiding the excise,” Treasurer Jim Chalmers conceded after revealing the figures.

He announced an extra Aus$157 million for a multi-agency force battling organised crime groups involved in the market and a string of “tobacco war” fire-bombings.

The situation was a “total disaster”, said James Martin, criminology course director at Deakin University in Melbourne.

“We have taken a public health issue, smoking, and our tobacco control policies have transformed it into a multi-fronted crisis,” he told AFP.

“It is a fiscal crisis, so we are losing billions and billions of dollars in tobacco tax excise but also, more concerning for me as a criminologist, it has turned into a major crime problem.”

Since the start of 2023, there had been more than 220 arson attacks targeting either black-market retailers or store owners who refuse to stock illicit tobacco products, Martin said.



– Extortion and intimidation –



“This is really serious organised crime, extortion and intimidation of otherwise law-abiding citizens.”

Alleged crime figures named in local media as big players include convicted heroin trafficker Kazem Hamad, who was deported to Iraq in 2023, and an infamous Melbourne crime family.

Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission chief Heather Cook said criminals fighting over the “lucrative” illegal market were associated with “violence and dangerous behaviour”.

“This is impacting communities,” she told Melbourne’s Herald Sun in February.

Law enforcement alone could not solve the problem, Martin said.

“If we just keep making nicotine harder to get to, people are going to turn to the black market.”

Australia had made two mistakes, he said: pricing legal cigarettes so high that a pack-a-day habit cost about Aus$15,000 a year and at the same time heavily restricting sales of vapes, which were predominantly sold on the black market.

“The government needs to lower the tobacco tax excise to stop the bleed to the black market, and they need to legalise consumer vaping products.”

New Zealand was the only country that had successfully introduced a similar tobacco taxation policy to Australia’s, Martin said.

“But they did it by legalising vaping back in 2020,” he added.

“So, New Zealand used to have a higher smoking rate than we did back just four years ago. It’s now substantially lower than Australia’s.”

Illicit cigarettes are flowing into Australia from China and the Middle East, with vapes predominantly being sourced from Shenzhen in China, the criminologist said.



– ‘War on nicotine’ –



And the black market still thrives despite the Australian Border Force saying it detected huge volumes of illicit tobacco in the year to June 30, 2024 — 1.8 billion cigarettes and more than 436 tonnes of loose leaf tobacco.

Daily tobacco smoking in Australia has fallen sharply over the past decades: from 24 percent of those aged over 14 in 1991 to 8.3 percent by 2023, according to a national household survey.

But monitoring of nicotine in Australian wastewater — whether from cigarettes, vapes, or nicotine replacement products — showed consumption per person had remained “relatively stable” since 2016, according to the government’s health and welfare institute.

Edward Jegasothy, senior lecturer in public health at the University of Sydney, said smoking rates in Australia fell just as fast during periods of sharp price increases as they did when prices were stable.

The black market had undermined government policy by providing a cheaper alternative, he told AFP.

To address the problem, authorities would probably need to lower taxes on tobacco and strengthen law enforcement, he said.

Broader nicotine restrictions in Australia had left people with fewer less harmful alternatives to tobacco, Jegasothy said.

People switching to vapes were going to the unregulated market where concentrations of nicotine and other adulterants were unknown, he said.

“So that’s another risk that’s unnecessarily there because of the black market.”

The high tobacco tax policy also hit people in the lowest socioeconomic groups the hardest, Jegasothy said, both because they were spending a higher proportion of their incomes on it, and because they had higher rates of smoking.

Australia’s “disproportionate” focus on cutting nicotine supply rather than reducing demand and harm echoed the “War on Drugs”, Jegasothy argued in a joint paper with Deakin University’s Martin.

“As with Australia’s broader War on Drugs, there is little evidence to suggest that our de facto War on Nicotine is an optimal strategy for reducing nicotine-related harms,” it warns.
CAPPLETALI$M

‘Something is rotten’: Apple’s AI strategy faces doubts


By AFP
March 29, 2025


Apple CEO Tim Cook in June 2024 announces plans to incorporate AI into Apple software and hardware - Copyright GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File JUSTIN SULLIVAN


Thomas URBAIN with Alex PIGMAN in Washington

Has Apple, the biggest company in the world, bungled its generative artificial intelligence strategy?

Doubts blew out into the open when one of the company’s closest observers, tech analyst John Gruber, earlier this month gave a blistering critique in a blog post titled “Something Is Rotten in the State of Cupertino,” which is home to Apple’s headquarters.

The respected analyst and Apple enthusiast said he was furious for not being more skeptical when the company announced last June that its Siri chatbot would be getting a major generative AI (genAI) upgrade.

The technology, to be released as part of the Apple Intelligence suite of iPhone software, was to catapult the much-derided voice assistant’s capabilities beyond just giving the weather or setting a timer.

Investors hoped the upgrade would launch the iPhone on a much-needed super-cycle, in which a new feature on the smartphone proves so tantalizing that users rush to snap up the latest and most expensive models.

Apple Intelligence and its promised Siri upgrade was very much supposed to fuel that demand, starting as soon as the release of the iPhone 16, which came out in September.

Instead Apple quietly announced on March 7 that the highly personalized Siri would not be coming as early as hoped.

Adding to the pressure, Amazon in February announced a new version of its Alexa voice assistant that is powered by genAI.

“It’s going to take us longer than we thought to deliver on these features and we anticipate rolling them out in the coming year,” Apple said.



– Data privacy vs AI –



Theories vary on why Apple is having trouble seizing the AI moment.

For Marcus Collins, marketing professor at the University of Michigan, Apple’s struggles with genAI and Siri in particular may be more due to the importance the company gives to data privacy than any problem with innovating.

For AI to be personalized, it needs to consume massive amounts of personal data.

And “Apple hasn’t let up on the gas when it comes to privacy,” Collins told AFP.

But at some point, “people’s information, creations, language… are all being exploited to help grow better AI,” and squaring that circle might be harder than bargained for by Apple.

For tech analyst Avi Greengart, “The fact that Apple has advertised Apple Intelligence so heavily with the iPhone 16 is a bit of a black eye, because most of what was promised in Apple Intelligence is not in the iPhone 16.”

But he cautions that even if Google’s Gemini AI features in its Android line of phones are way ahead of anything Apple has delivered, customers may not have noticed much.

“Even the best implementation of AI on phones today doesn’t fundamentally change the way you use your phone yet,” he said.

“No one has delivered on the full vision and that gives Apple time to catch up — but it certainly needs to catch up.”

Still, Apple’s harshest critics complain that Apple rests too much on its laurels and the uber-popularity of its iPhone.

Moreover, the stumbles on AI came swiftly after lackluster reception of Vision Pro, Apple’s expensive virtual reality headset that has failed to gain traction since its release in 2024.

Despite the recent negative headlines for Apple and the fact that its share price is down 8 percent since the start of the year, it remains the world’s most valuable company and its stock is still up almost 30 percent from a year ago.

And Apple reported a whopping $124.3 billion in revenue in the year-end holiday quarter, even if sales growth fell shy of market expectations.
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South Korean man cleaning gravesite suspected of starting wildfires: police

LIKE CLIMATE CHANGE, WILDFIRES ARE MAN MADE

By AFP
March 29, 2025


More than a dozen fires have been fanned by high winds and dry conditions, killing 30 people, the worst of its kind recorded in South Korea
 - Copyright AFP ANTHONY WALLACE


South Korean police have launched a probe into a man suspected of accidentally igniting the country’s worst wildfires in history while cleaning his relatives’ gravesites, an investigator said Sunday.

More than a dozen fires have been fanned by high winds and dry conditions, killing 30 people and burning more than 48,000 hectares (118,610 acres) of forest, the worst of its kind recorded in South Korea, according to the interior ministry.

In North Gyeongsang province’s Uiseong — the hardest-hit region with 12,800 hectares of its woodland affected — a 56-year-old man was suspected of mistakenly starting a fire while tending to his grandparents’s gravesites on March 22, an official from the provincial police said.

“We booked him without detention for investigation on Saturday on suspicions of inadvertently starting the wildfires,” the official, who declined to be named, told AFP.

Investigators will summon him for questioning once the on-site inspection is complete, which could take more than a month, the official said.

The suspect’s daughter reportedly told investigators that her father tried to burn tree branches that were hanging over the graves with a cigarette lighter.

The flames were “carried by the wind and ended up sparking a wildfire,” the daughter was quoted as saying to the authorities, Yonhap news agency reported.

The police, who have withheld the identities of both, declined to confirm the account to AFP.

The fires have been fuelled by strong winds and ultra-dry conditions, with the area experiencing below-average rainfall for months, following South Korea’s hottest year on record in 2024.

Among the 30 dead is a helicopter pilot, who died when his aircraft crashed in a mountain mountainous area.

The blaze also destroyed several historic sites, including the Gounsa temple complex in Uiseong, which is believed to have been originally built in the 7th century.

The inferno has also laid bare South Korea’s demographic crisis and regional disparities, as rural areas are both underpopulated and disproportionately elderly.
Hamas says agrees to new Gaza truce proposal received from mediators

By AFP
March 29, 2025


A top Hamas official has said the Palestinian militant group has approved a new Gaza ceasefire proposal, as Israel continues intensive operations in the territory
 - Copyright AFP/File 

Omar AL-QATTAA


A top Hamas official said on Saturday the group approved a new Gaza ceasefire proposal put forth by mediators, urging Israel to back it but warning the Iran-backed group’s weapons were a “red line”.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office confirmed it had also received a proposal from the mediators and had submitted a counter-proposal in response.

“Two days ago, we received a proposal from the mediating brothers in Egypt and Qatar. We dealt with it positively and approved it. We hope that the occupation (Israel) will not obstruct it,” Khalil al-Haya said in a televised address for the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr.

“The weapons of the resistance are a red line,” he added.

Netanyahu’s office confirmed it had received a proposal from mediators.

“Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, yesterday, held a series of consultations pursuant to the proposal that was received from the mediators,” his office said in a statement.

“A few hours ago, Israel conveyed to the mediators a counter-proposal in full coordination with the US,” it said without elaborating.

A day earlier, senior Hamas official Bassem Naim had said talks between the Palestinian Islamist movement and mediators over a ceasefire deal were gaining momentum as Israel continues intensive operations in Gaza.

Palestinian sources close to Hamas had told AFP that talks began Thursday evening between the militant group and mediators from Egypt and Qatar to revive a ceasefire and hostage release deal.

The fragile truce that had brought weeks of relative calm to the Gaza Strip ended on March 18 when Israel resumed its bombing campaign across the territory.

The talks in Doha started a day after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatened to seize parts of Gaza if Hamas did not release hostages, and Hamas warned the captives would return “in coffins” if Israel did not stop bombing the Palestinian territory.
'Lives are in danger' after second 'reckless' leak from Trump admin this week: report

David McAfee
March 29, 2025
RAW STORY


Donald Trump (ALLISON ROBBERT/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo)

While all eyes are on Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's attack plans posted on Signal, there was another dangerous leak from the Trump administration, according to a new report.

The media is largely focused on the Signal chat scandal, but according to Rolling Stone, there is another leak that should be spoken about.

"Reports that Donald Trump’s top national security officials accidentally shared their Yemen attack plans withThe Atlantic in real-time drove the news in official Washington in recent days," the report states. "But it wasn’t the only damaging leak of information held by the administration this week."

The report continues, "Two Trump administration spreadsheets — which each include what numerous advocates and government officials say is highly sensitive information on programs funded by the U.S. State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) — were sent to Congress and also leaked online."

The outlet further reports that, "The leak, which sent a variety of international groups and nonprofits scrambling to assess the damage and protect workers operating under repressive regimes, came after the organizations had pressed the Trump administration to keep the sensitive information private and received some assurances it would remain secret."

The report continues:

"The nonprofit leaders and others reminded State Department personnel — some of whom are career officials aghast at what Team Trump and Musk are doing, and wished to contain unnecessary damage — that various programs that the department had on file had long been marked 'sensitive,' and that their information was not meant for public consumption."

Rolling Stone reports one person saying, “Lives are in danger that did not have to be.”

Another individual, an international non-profit executive, also weighed in:

"In all our years of receiving grants from a range of governments, we have never seen the safety of government partners treated with such reckless abandon. People will lose their liberty, and possibly even more, because of this.”

Read the full post here.
Protesters denounce Musk at Tesla dealerships in US, Europe

 "Send Musk to Mars now."

Agence France-Presse
March 29, 2025 

FILE PHOTO: People protest against Tesla and Elon Musk outside of a Tesla dealership in Palo Alto, California, U.S., March 8, 2025. REUTERS/Laure Andrillon/File Photo

by Shahzad ABDUL

Demonstrators descended on Tesla dealerships across the United States and Europe on Saturday to protest company chief Elon Musk, who has amassed extraordinary power as a top advisor to US President Donald Trump
.
Waving signs with messages like "Musk is stealing our money" and "Reclaim our country," the protests took place peacefully following fiery episodes of vandalism on Teslas in recent weeks that US officials have denounced as "terrorism."

Hundreds rallied Saturday outside the Tesla dealership in New York's Manhattan.

Some blasted Musk, the world's richest man, while others demanded the shuttering of his so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which is dramatically slashing the federal government.

Amy Neifeld, a 70-year-old psychologist who had not joined a protest since marching against the Vietnam War in the 1970s, said Musk is leading the country toward "fascism."


"I'm Jewish, so I grew up with a great awareness of fascism," she told AFP. "And it has just gotten uglier and uglier" since Trump returned to the White House.

"He acts like he's the vice president," said New York protester Eva Mueller. "He's dismantling, actively, our government, he's dismantling our democracy."

The protest was organized by the environmental activist group Planet Over Profit, which argues "stopping Musk will help save lives and protect our democracy."


In Washington's posh Georgetown neighborhood, some 150 people gathered in a festive mood on an unseasonably warm day, dancing and cheering as passing cars honked.

Protests also took place in Florida, Massachusetts and California, and in European cities such as London, Berlin and Paris.

A small group of Americans held signs outside a Tesla dealership in the French capital, including one that read "Send Musk to Mars now."

Musk and Trump "are destroying our democracy, not obeying the basic rules of our country, and firing people at agencies that do very important work," said Raf, 59, a Paris protester who did not wish to give his last name.

Asked for reaction to the protests, Tesla did not immediately respond.

Acts of vandalism against Tesla vehicles, dealerships and other facilities have spread for weeks, in protest both against Musk's ruthless job-cutting work, and what has been seen as his unwelcome interference in politics.
US Attorney General Pam Bondi has denounced the attacks on Tesla as "domestic terrorism."

sha/bbk/acb/st

© Agence France-Presse



'Big risks': How the rushed Social Security overhaul is threatening benefits for millions

Alex Henderson, AlterNet
March 29, 2025 

A woman holds a sign during a protest against cuts made by U.S. President Donald Trump's administration to the Social Security Administration, in White Plains, New York, U.S., March 22, 2025. REUTERS/Nathan Layne

The Trump Administration, with the help of the Elon Musk-led Department of Government Assistance (DOGE), is targeting a wide range of federal government agencies for mass layoffs — including the U.S. Social Security Administration (SSA)

The SSA was established 90 years ago when Congress passed the Social Security Act of 1935 and President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed it into law as part of his New Deal. Social Security was one of FDR's most important accomplishments, and the programs defenders — including former SSA Commissioner/ex-Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley — are warning that SSA layoffs could lead to delayed Social Security benefits for millions of seniors.

The Trump Administration and DOGE, O'Malley warns, are laying off so many knowledgeable SSA employees that it will be difficult for the agency to function in the months ahead.

READ MORE: 'Chaos': Social Security agency 'engulfed in crisis' as Musk cuts leave retirees in 'turmoil'

While O'Malley is warning about the SSA not having enough workers to function properly, Wired reporter Makena Kelly is sounding the alarm about another DOGE-related SSA problem: a tech problem.

In an article published on March 28, Kelly reports, "The so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) is starting to put together a team to migrate the Social Security Administration's (SSA) computer systems entirely off one of its oldest programming languages in a matter of months, potentially putting the integrity of the system — and the benefits on which tens of millions of Americans rely — at risk. The project is being organized by Elon Musk lieutenant Steve Davis, multiple sources who were not given permission to talk to the media tell Wired, and aims to migrate all SSA systems off COBOL — one of the first common business-oriented programming languages — and onto a more modern replacement like Java within a scheduled tight timeframe of a few months."

Moving from COBOL to Java or another modern program isn't necessarily problematic in and of itself, according to techies interviewed by Wired. But it needs to be done gradually and cautiously.

For SSA, Kelly stresses, the problem is trying to make the change too quickly.

"Under any circumstances," Kelly explains, "a migration of this size and scale would be a massive undertaking, experts tell Wired, but the expedited deadline runs the risk of obstructing payments to the more than 65 million people in the U.S. currently receiving Social Security benefits…. As recently as 2016, SSA's infrastructure contained more than 60 million lines of code written in COBOL, with millions more written in other legacy coding languages, the agency's Office of the Inspector General found."

An SSA tech specialist, interviewed on condition of anonymity, told Wired, "Of course, one of the big risks is not underpayment or overpayment per se; (it's also) not paying someone at all and not knowing about it. The invisible errors and omissions."



Musk’s DOGE team emerges from the shadows

By AFP
March 28, 2025


Elon Musk's DOGE team gave their first joint interview 
- Copyright POOL/AFP Jim WATSON


Danny KEMP

It has worked in the shadows for months, but Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has now offered the first peek behind the curtain of the government cost-cutting drive it launched on behalf of US President Donald Trump.

Musk, the Space X and Tesla tycoon, was accompanied by seven top aides in a joint interview to Fox News Channel’s Bret Baier late Thursday. They rejected criticism of their disruptive foray through the administration.

Despite mass layoffs in the US federal government, which have sparked an outcry, they said they wanted to offer an “Apple Store-like” consumer experience to Americans.

“This is a revolution,” declared Musk, the world’s richest man.

DOGE has so far kept a low public profile, amid reports of teenage computer wizards sleeping in a huge building adjoining the White House, and demanding access to government departments.

What emerged on television was a slightly different picture — a group comprised almost entirely of middle aged tech CEOs and Musk aides defending methods that have drawn widespread opposition.

They perched on chairs in two rows, with Musk flanked by two DOGE members in the front, and five on a raised platform behind.

The scene was a room in the White House complex designed for remote meetings — one that a senior Trump aide had recently dismissed as former President Biden’s “fake Oval Office” because he used it in a number of events.

Musk opened the interview, saying that DOGE aimed to finish its work by the end of May and that its goal was to be able to reduce federal spending by 15 percent, or from $7 trillion to $6 trillion.

– ‘Great user experience’ –

Then the others got their turn in the spotlight.

First up was Steve Davis, one of Musk’s top lieutenants who is effectively the chief operating officer at DOGE.

A former aeronautics engineer who has followed Musk through several companies including Space X and the social media platform X, he has long kept a low profile.

“Some people say this shouldn’t take a rocket scientist — but you are a rocket scientist,” Baier asked him.

“Used to be,” replied Davis.

The next was Joe Gebbia, co-founder of flat-sharing app Airbnb.

Gebbia who said he had been tasked to overhaul a system in which government retirement documents were kept on paper in abandoned mine in Pennsylvania.

“We really believe that the government can have an Apple store-like experience,” he said, referring to the sleek shops where the tech giant sells iPhones and other tech.

“Beautifully designed, great user experience, modern systems.”

The DOGE experience has been very different for many federal workers.

At least 113,000 federal workers have been fired so far under DOGE’s drive, according to a CNN tracker.

Musk’s team has also been tasked with slashing federal spending — and has effectively shut down the US Agency for International Development (USAID).

There have also been widespread criticisms about the process, including demands from DOGE that federal employees account for the work they have been doing in a bullet pointed memo or face the sack.

And DOGE has faced claims of causing disruption to the US social security system, and of overstating its savings.

Several recent polls indicate that most Americans disapprove of the disruption to the nationwide federal workforce.

Musk however was unrepentant, saying that the biggest complaints were coming from “fraudsters”, without giving evidence.

The tycoon also used the interview to say that Trump’s administration would crack down on people spreading “propaganda” about Tesla, after a number of incidents in which the electric vehicles have been vandalized in protest against Musk.

“Those are the real villains here, and we’re going to go after them,” said Musk, making a two-fingered shooting gesture with his hand.

‘We need aid’: rescuers in quake-hit Myanmar city plead for help


ByAFP
March 29, 2025


More than 90 people are feared to be trapped in Mandalay's Sky Villa Condominium development - Copyright AFP Sai Aung MAIN

Joe Stenson and Sebastien Berger

Exhausted, overwhelmed rescuers in Myanmar’s second-biggest city pleaded for help Saturday as they struggled to free hundreds of people trapped in buildings destroyed by a devastating earthquake.

Friday’s shallow 7.7-magnitude quake destroyed dozens of buildings in Mandalay, the country’s cultural capital and home to more than 1.7 million people.

In one street, a monastery’s clock tower lay collapsed on its side, its hands pointing to 12:55 pm — just minutes after the time the quake struck.

Among the worst-hit buildings in the city is the Sky Villa Condominium development, where more than 90 people are feared to be trapped.

The building’s 12 storeys were reduced to six by the quake, the cracked pastel green walls of the upper floors perched on the crushed remains of the lower levels.

A woman’s body stuck out of the wreckage, her arm and hair hanging down.

Rescuers clambered over the ruins painstakingly removing pieces of rubble and wreckage by hand as they sought to open up passageways to those trapped inside.

Scattered around were the remains of people’s lives — a child’s plastic bunny toy, pieces of furniture and a picture of the New York skyline.

Some residents sheltered under the shade of nearby trees, where they had spent the night, a few possessions they had managed to salvage — blankets, motorbike helmets — alongside them.

Elsewhere, rescuers in flip-flops and minimal protective equipment picked by hand over the remains of buildings, shouting into the rubble in the hope of hearing the answering cry of a survivor.

“There are many victims in condo apartments. More than 100 were pulled out last night,” one rescue worker who requested anonymity told AFP.



– Carrying bodies by truck –



Widespread power cuts have hampered rescue efforts, with emergency personnel relying on portable generators for power.

After more than 24 hours of desperate searching, many are exhausted and desperate for relief.

“We have been here since last night. We haven’t got any sleep. More help is needed here,” the rescue worker told AFP.

“We have enough manpower but we don’t have enough cars. We are transporting dead bodies using light trucks. About 10-20 bodies in one light truck.”

Myanmar is accustomed to regular earthquakes, bisected north to south by the active Sagaing Fault, but the violent fury of Friday’s quake was exceptional.

More than 1,000 deaths have been confirmed already, with nearly 2,400 injured, and with the scale of the disaster only beginning to emerge, the toll is likely to rise significantly.

“Yesterday, when the earthquake happened, I was in my home. It was quite scary,” Mandalay resident Ba Chit, 55, told AFP.

“My family members are safe, but other people were affected. I feel so sorry for them. I feel very sad to see this kind of situation.”

Myanmar’s ability to cope with the aftermath of the quake will be hampered by the effects of four years of civil war, which have ravaged the country’s healthcare and emergency systems.

In an indication of the potential enormity of the crisis, the junta has issued an exceptionally rare call for international aid.

Previous military rulers have spurned all foreign assistance even after major natural disasters.

“We need aid. We don’t have enough of anything,” resident Thar Aye, 68, told AFP.

“I feel so sad to see this tragic situation. I’ve never experienced anything like this before.”


Aftershocks rattle Mandalay as rescuers search for survivors in Myanmar quake

By AFP
March 29, 2025


Residents scrambled desperately through collapsed buildings Sunday searching for survivors as aftershocks rattled the devastated city of Mandalay 
- Copyright AFP Sai Aung MAIN

Hla-Hla Htay, with Montira Rungjirajittranon in Bangkok

Residents scrambled desperately through collapsed buildings Sunday searching for survivors as aftershocks rattled the devastated city of Mandalay, two days after a massive earthquake killed more than 1,600 people in Myanmar and at least 11 in neighbouring Thailand.

The initial 7.7-magnitude quake struck near the central Myanmar city of Mandalay early Friday afternoon, followed minutes later by a 6.7-magnitude aftershock.

The tremors collapsed buildings, downed bridges and buckled roads, with mass destruction seen in the city of more than 1.7 million people.

As dawn broke Sunday, tea shop owner Win Lwin picked his way through the remains of a collapsed restaurant on a main road in his neighbourhood, tossing bricks aside one by one.

“About seven people died here” when the quake struck Friday, he told AFP. “I’m looking for more bodies but I know there cannot be any survivors.

“We don’t know how many bodies there could be but we are looking.”

About an hour later, a small aftershock struck, sending people scurrying out of a hotel for safety, following a similar tremor felt late Saturday evening.

Truckloads of firemen gathered at one of Mandalay’s main fire stations to be dispatched to sites around the city.

The night before, rescuers had pulled a woman out alive from the wreckage of a collapsed apartment building, with applause ringing out as she was carried by stretcher to an ambulance.

Myanmar’s ruling junta said in a statement Saturday that at least 1,644 people were killed and more than 3,400 injured in the country, with at least 139 more missing.

But with unreliable communications, the true scale of the disaster remains unclear in the isolated military-ruled state, and the toll is expected to rise significantly.

Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing issued an exceptionally rare appeal for international aid on Friday, indicating the severity of the calamity.

Previous military governments have shunned foreign assistance, even after major natural disasters.

Myanmar has already been ravaged by four years of civil war sparked by a military coup in 2021.

Anti-junta fighters in the country have declared a two-week partial ceasefire in quake-affected regions starting Sunday, the shadow “National Unity Government” said in a statement.

The government in exile said it would “collaborate with the UN and NGOs to ensure security, transportation, and the establishment of temporary rescue and medical camps” in areas that it controls, according to the statement, which was released on social media.

Aid agencies have warned that Myanmar is unprepared to deal with a disaster of this magnitude.

Some 3.5 million people were displaced by the raging civil war, many at risk of hunger, even before the quake struck.



– Bangkok building collapse –



Across the border in Thailand, rescuers in Bangkok worked Sunday to pluck out survivors trapped when a 30-storey skyscraper under construction collapsed after the Friday earthquake.

At least 11 people have been killed in the Thai capital, with dozens more still trapped under the immense pile of debris where the skyscraper once stood.

Bangkok authorities were expected to release another statement at 9 am (0200 GMT), with fears of a further toll increase.

Workers at the site used large mechanical diggers in an attempt to find victims still trapped on Sunday morning.

Sniffer dogs and thermal imaging drones have also been deployed to seek signs of life in the collapsed building, close to the Chatuchak weekend market popular among tourists.

Authorities said they would be deploying engineers to assess and repair 165 damaged buildings in the city on Sunday.

burs-pfc/dhc

Scientists explain why Myanmar quake was so deadly


By AFP
March 29, 2025

Experts say Friday's devastating earthquake in Myanmar was likely the strongest to hit the country in decades - Copyright AFP Sai Aung MAIN

Experts say that the devastating earthquake in Myanmar on Friday was likely the strongest to hit the country in decades, with disaster modelling suggesting thousands could be dead.

Automatic assessments from the United States Geological Survey (USGS) said the shallow 7.7-magnitude quake northwest of the central Myanmar city of Sagaing triggered a red alert for shaking-related fatalities and economic losses.

“High casualties and extensive damage are probable and the disaster is likely widespread,” it said, locating the epicentre near the central Myanmar city of Mandalay, home to more than a million people.

Myanmar’s ruling junta said on Saturday morning that the number killed had passed 1,000, with more than 2,000 injured.

However, the USGS analysis said there was a 35 percent chance that possible fatalities could be in the range of 10,000-100,000 people.

The USGS offered a similar likelihood that the financial damage could total tens of thousands of millions of dollars, warning that it might exceed the GDP of Myanmar.

Weak infrastructure will complicate relief efforts in the isolated, military-ruled state, where rescue services and the healthcare system have already been ravaged by four years of civil war sparked by a military coup in 2021.

– Dangerous fault –

Bill McGuire, emeritus professor of geophysical and climate hazards at University College London (UCL), said it was “probably the biggest earthquake on the Myanmar mainland in three-quarters of a century”.

A 6.7-magnitude aftershock struck minutes after the first and McGuire warned that “more can be expected”.

Rebecca Bell, a tectonics expert at Imperial College London (ICL), suggested it was a side-to-side “strike-slip” of the Sagaing Fault.

This is where the Indian tectonic plate, to the west, meets the Sunda plate that forms much of Southeast Asia — a fault similar in scale and movement to the San Andreas Fault in California.

“The Sagaing fault is very long, 1,200 kilometres (745 miles), and very straight,” Bell said. “The straight nature means earthquakes can rupture over large areas — and the larger the area of the fault that slips, the larger the earthquake.”

Earthquakes in such cases can be “particularly destructive”, Bell added, explaining that since the quake takes place at a shallow depth, its seismic energy has dissipated little by the time it reaches populated areas above.

That causes “a lot of shaking at the surface”, Bell said.

– Building boom –

Myanmar has been hit by powerful quakes in the past.

There have been more than 14 earthquakes with a magnitude of 6 or above in the past century, including a magnitude 6.8 earthquake near Mandalay in 1956, said Brian Baptie, a seismologist with the British Geological Survey.

Ian Watkinson, from the department of earth sciences at Royal Holloway University of London, said what had changed in recent decades was the “boom in high-rise buildings constructed from reinforced concrete”.

Myanmar has been riven by years of conflict and there is a low level of building design enforcement.

“Critically, during all previous magnitude 7 or larger earthquakes along the Sagaing Fault, Myanmar was relatively undeveloped, with mostly low-rise timber-framed buildings and brick-built religious monuments,” Watkinson said.

“Today’s earthquake is the first test of modern Myanmar’s infrastructure against a large, shallow-focus earthquake close to its major cities.”

Baptie said that at least 2.8 million people in Myanmar were in hard-hit areas where most lived in buildings “constructed from timber and unreinforced brick masonry” that are vulnerable to earthquake shaking.

“The usual mantra is that ‘earthquakes don’t kill people; collapsing infrastructure does’,” said Ilan Kelman, an expert in disaster reduction at UCL.

“Governments are responsible for planning regulations and building codes. This disaster exposes what governments of Burma/Myanmar failed to do long before the earthquake, which would have saved lives during the shaking.”

– Skyscraper checks –

Strong tremors also rocked neighbouring Thailand, where a 30-storey skyscraper under construction was reduced to a pile of dusty concrete, trapping workers in the debris.

Christian Malaga-Chuquitaype, from ICL’s civil and environmental engineering department, said the nature of the ground in Bangkok contributed to the impact on the city, despite being some 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) from the epicentre in Myanmar.

“Even though Bangkok is far from active faults, its soft soil amplifies the shaking,” he said. “This affects especially tall buildings during distant earthquakes.”

Malaga-Chuquitaype said the construction techniques in Bangkok favouring “flat slabs” — where floors are held only by columns without using strengthening beams, like a table supported only by legs — were a “problematic design”.

He said that initial video analysis of the collapsed tower block in Bangkok suggested this type of construction technique had been used.

“It performs poorly during earthquakes, often failing in a brittle and sudden (almost explosive) manner,” he said.

Roberto Gentile, a catastrophe risk modelling expert from UCL, said the “dramatic collapse” of the Bangkok tower block meant that “other tall buildings in the city may require a thorough assessment”.

Bangkok city authorities said they will deploy more than 100 engineers to inspect buildings for safety after receiving more than 2,000 reports of damage.


Myanmar quake: what we know


By AFP
March 28, 2025


Powerful quake hits Myanmar - Copyright AFP Valentina BRESCHI, Cléa PÉCULIER
Sara HUSSEIN

A powerful earthquake centred in Myanmar has killed more than 150 people in the war-torn country and neighbouring Thailand and caused widespread damage.

Here is what we know:



– Powerful, and shallow –

The 7.7-magnitude quake hit northwest of Myanmar’s Sagaing at 12:50 pm (0650 GMT) on Friday at a shallow depth of 10 kilometres (six miles).

It was followed minutes later by a powerful 6.7-magnitude aftershock and a dozen smaller tremors.

The quake was felt across the region, with shaking reported from India to the west and China to the east, as well as Cambodia and Laos.

The quake hit along the Sagaing Fault that runs from the coast to Myanmar’s northern border, according to earthquake scientists Judith Hubbard and Kyle Bradley.

It “has long been considered one of the most dangerous strike-slip faults on Earth” because of its proximity to major cities Yangon and Mandalay, as well as capital Naypyidaw, they wrote in an analysis.

The fault is comparatively simple and straight, which geologists believe can lead to especially large quakes, they added.



– Over 150 killed –



At least 144 people have been confirmed dead in the quake in Myanmar, according to the country’s junta chief.

However, Min Aung Hlaing warned the toll was likely to rise given the widespread destruction across the country.

Myanmar’s four years of civil war, sparked by the military seizing power, have also weakened the country’s emergency and health services, leaving them ill-equipped to respond to such a disaster.

In Thailand, 10 people were killed in Bangkok, most in the collapse of an under-construction skyscraper.

But up to 100 more construction workers were believed trapped in the rubble of the building, near the sprawling Chatuchak market.

Rescue operations continued throughout the night, though it was proving complicated to pick through the unstable rubble.



– Widespread damage –

The quake caused extensive damage in Myanmar.

There was massive destruction in Mandalay, where multiple buildings collapsed into piles of rubble and twisted metal coated in dust, dotted with people attempting rescues.

The Ava bridge running across the Irawaddy river from Sagaing, built nearly 100 years ago, collapsed into the swirling waters below.

There were reports of damage to Mandalay airport, potentially complicating relief efforts, as well as to the city’s university and palace, according to the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

In Naypyidaw, AFP reporters saw buildings toppled and roads ruptured.

At a hospital in the capital, patients were being treated outdoors after the quake damaged the building, bringing down the emergency department’s entrance.

Electricity outages were reported in several places, with power limited to four hours in Yangon due to quake damage.

Communications across affected areas were also patchy, with phone networks largely down.

In Bangkok, a crane collapsed at a second building site and the city shut down metro and light rail services overnight to inspect for damage.

Several hundred people slept in parks overnight, city authorities said, either unable to get home or worried about the structural integrity of their buildings.

The quake prompted thousands of people to flee shaking buildings in Thailand, where quakes are rare.

Even hospitals were evacuated, with one woman delivering a baby in the street in Bangkok, and a surgeon continuing to operate on a patient after being forced to leave the theatre mid-operation.



– Aid pleas, offers –



The scale of the devastation prompted Myanmar’s isolated military regime to make a rare plea for international assistance.

Myanmar’s junta chief invited “any country, any organisation” to help with relief and said he he “opened all ways for foreign aid”.

Offers of assistance flooded in, with neighbour India among the first to say it was ready to help.

The European Union offered support, and US President Donald Trump said Washington had “already spoken” with Myanmar about aid.

“It’s a real bad one, and we will be helping,” he told reporters.

The World Health Organization said it was preparing to surge support in response to “a very, very big threat to life and health.”

burs-sah/pdw/fox


Rescuers dig for survivors after huge quake hits Myanmar, Thailand



ByAFP
March 28, 2025


Rescue workers walk past debris at a construction site after a building collapsed in Bangkok following the earthquake - Copyright AFP Lillian SUWANRUMPHA


Hla-Hla Htay with Montira Rungjirajittranon in Bangkok

Rescuers dug through the rubble of collapsed buildings on Saturday in a desperate search for survivors after a huge earthquake hit Myanmar and Thailand, killing more than 150 people.

The shallow 7.7-magnitude quake struck northwest of the city of Sagaing in central Myanmar in the early afternoon, followed minutes later by a 6.7-magnitude aftershock.

The quake destroyed buildings, downed bridges, and buckled roads across swathes of Myanmar, with severe damage reported in the second biggest city, Mandalay.

At least 144 people were killed and over 700 injured in Myanmar, according to junta chief Min Aung Hlaing, but with communications disrupted, the true scale of the disaster has yet to emerge from the isolated military-ruled state.

It was the biggest quake to hit Myanmar in over a century, according to US geologists, and the tremors were powerful enough to severely damage buildings across Bangkok, hundreds of kilometres (miles) away from the epicentre.

Rescuers in the Thai capital worked through the night searching for workers trapped when a 30-storey skyscraper under construction collapsed, reduced in seconds to a pile of rubble and twisted metal by the force of the shaking.

Bangkok governor Chadchart Sittipunt told AFP that around 10 people had been confirmed killed across the city, most in the skyscraper collapse.

But up to 100 workers were still unaccounted for at the building, close to the Chatuchak weekend market that is a magnet for tourists.

“We are doing our best with the resources we have because every life matters,” Chadchart told reporters at the scene.

“Our priority is acting as quickly as possible to save them all.”

Bangkok city authorities said they will deploy more than 100 engineers to inspect buildings for safety after receiving over 2,000 reports of damage.

Up to 400 people were forced to spend the night in the open air in city parks as their homes were not safe to return to, Chadchart said.

Significant quakes are extremely rare in Bangkok, and Friday’s tremors sent shoppers and workers rushing into the street in alarm across the city.

While there was no widespread destruction, the shaking brought some dramatic images of rooftop swimming pools sloshing their contents down the side of many of the city’s towering apartment blocks and hotels.

Even hospitals were evacuated, with one woman delivering her baby outdoors after being moved from a hospital building. A surgeon also continued to operate on a patient after evacuating, completing the operation outside, a spokesman told AFP.



– Rare junta plea for help –



But the worst of the damage was in Myanmar, where four years of civil war sparked by a military coup have ravaged the healthcare and emergency response systems.

Junta chief Min Aung Hlaing issued an exceptionally rare appeal for international aid, indicating the severity of the calamity. Previous military regimes have shunned foreign assistance even after major natural disasters.

The country declared a state of emergency across the six worst-affected regions after the quake, and at one major hospital in the capital, Naypyidaw, medics were forced to treat the wounded in the open air.

One official described it as a “mass casualty area”.

“I haven’t seen (something) like this before. We are trying to handle the situation. I’m so exhausted now,” a doctor told AFP.

Mandalay, a city of more than 1.7 million people, appeared to have been badly hit. AFP photos showed dozens of buildings reduced to rubble.

A resident reached by phone told AFP that a hospital and a hotel had been destroyed, and said the city was badly lacking in rescue personnel.

A huge queue of buses and lorries lined up at a checkpoint to enter the capital early on Saturday.

Offers of foreign assistance began coming in, with President Donald Trump on Friday pledging US help.

“It’s terrible,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office about the quake when asked if he would respond to the appeal by Myanmar’s military rulers.

“It’s a real bad one, and we will be helping. We’ve already spoken with the country.”

India, France and the European Union offered to provide assistance, while the WHO said it was mobilising to prepare trauma injury supplies.

burs-pdw/sah/fox

‘Everyone was screaming’: quake shocks Thailand tourists

By AFP
March 29, 2025


For many tourists who flock to Thailand, the quake was a disconcerting experience - Copyright AFP MANAN VATSYAYANA

Sally Jensen and Montira Rungjirajittranon

French tourist Augustin Gus was shopping for a t-shirt in one of Bangkok’s many malls when a massive quake began shaking the building in the Thai capital.

“Just when I left the elevator, the earth starts moving. I thought it was me… it was not me,” the 23-year-old told AFP.

“Everyone was screaming and running, so I started screaming as well.”

The powerful 7.7-magnitude quake struck Friday afternoon in neighbouring Myanmar, where over 1,000 people have been killed and several cities face large-scale destruction.

The damage and toll was far smaller in Bangkok, with 10 people confirmed dead so far, most in the collapse of an under-construction skyscraper.

For many tourists who flocked to the popular destination, the quake was a disconcerting experience.

Some were lazing in rooftop pools when the powerful shaking began to slop the water off the edge of high-rise buildings.

Others were left stranded in the streets with their luggage when the city’s metro and light-rail system shut down for safety checks after the quake.

The city’s residents, unused to earthquakes, were not able to offer much guidance, said one business traveller from the Solomon Islands, who asked not to be named.

“Unfortunately there were no procedures in place” during his evacuation from the 21st floor of a Bangkok skyscraper on Friday.

“So everyone was getting confused,” he said. “I just wanted to get out.”

Cristina Mangion, 31, from Malta, was in her hotel bed when the shaking began.

“I thought I was feeling dizzy from the heat,” she told AFP.

Hotel staff came to knock at the doors of each room to offer help, and Mangion’s father quickly messaged to check she was okay.



– Soldiering on –



Despite the experience Mangion and Gus were among the tourists out on Saturday at the sprawling Chatuchak market.

The popular tourist draw is not far from the scene of the deadly building collapse, and market security guard Yim Songtakob said crowds were thinner than usual.

“That’s normal… people are scared,” said the 55-year-old, who has worked at the market for a decade.

Still, Mangion said she would not be deterred by the tremors.

“I feel bad for what happened,” she said.

“I think the best thing is to actually come here and still continue as if nothing happened.

“This weekend will probably be harder than usual for business,” she added.

Gus also said he was not worried about enjoying the rest of his three-week trip.

“I’ll still have great memories, it’s just an experience and that’s why I’m travelling,” he said.

Frenchman Gilles Franke, a regular visitor to Thailand who hopes to one day retire in the country, was equally sanguine about the risk of aftershocks.

“When it’s your time, it’s your time,” the 59-year-old told AFP.

“You can die when you cross the road, you can die at any time in your life.”


Deadly earthquake forces Thai patients into sports hall


By AFP
March 29, 2025


Patients were taken to the canteen of a hospital in Bangkok after fears that strong tremors had damaged the main building - Copyright AFP Montira RUNGJIRAJITTRANON

Beneath basketball hoops and beside football goals, hospital beds line a sports hall — patients evacuated from a hospital in the Thai capital for fear of damage by a devastating earthquake.

The shallow 7.7-magnitude quake struck central Myanmar on Friday afternoon, followed minutes later by a 6.7-magnitude aftershock — with powerful tremors shaking Bangkok, more than 1,000 kilometres (600 miles) to the south.

When the earthquake struck, patients at Rajavithi Hospital were rushed out of the building, some helped down stairs to nearby makeshift shelters, including to the hospital’s canteen and sports hall.

The worst impact was in Myanmar, where the junta said at least 1,002 people were killed and nearly 2,400 injured.

Around 10 more deaths have been confirmed in Bangkok, where the Friday lunchtime tremors shook buildings and created panic on the streets.

The construction site of a new 30-storey government building quickly turned into a disaster scene, with people jumping into cars to escape or shrieking as they fled on foot.

Dramatic video footage showed the tremor rocking a high-rise hotel, with water from its rooftop pool whipping over the building’s edge.



– Fear –



At the hospital, staff rushed to take the patients outside.

One patient, being treated for leukaemia, told AFP that she was moved from her private room to a hall in Rajavithi Hospital, walking down multiple flights of stairs aided by nurses.

“I need to receive my blood platelets soon, and the hospital is currently checking which other hospital can provide the treatment,” she said, asking not to be named.

Some were later moved back inside, while others were transferred to different hospitals this morning, a hospital staff member said.

On Saturday, around 30 patients were in the hall, where hospital staff provided basic medical care including blood transfusions.

Many Bangkok residents were terrified, remaining fearful about aftershocks.

Some chose to sleep outside under trees in open spaces in Bangkok, or popped up tents in the park for the night.

Others came out to help.

Panadda Wongphudee, an actor and a former Miss Thailand who often takes part in volunteer activities, handed out refreshments to rescue workers.

‘Blink of an eye’: survivor tells of Bangkok skyscraper collapse horror


By AFP
March 28, 2025


Friends and relatives wait for news about possible survivors at the site of an under-construction building collapse in Bangkok
 - Copyright GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP CARL COURT


Lapyae KO

A construction worker told Saturday how he cheated death when a Bangkok skyscraper collapsed “in the blink of an eye” after a massive earthquake hit Myanmar and Thailand.

Tearful family members gathered at the remains of the 30-storey building, which crumbled to rubble in just seconds on Friday, clinging to shreds of hope that their loved ones who were working when it fell might be found alive.

The tower was being built to house government offices when the quake struck, and construction worker Khin Aung told AFP how the building collapsed just after his brother had entered to start his shift.

“When my shift ended around 1:00 pm I went outside to get water and I saw my younger brother before I went out,” he told AFP.

Tremors from the 7.7-magnitude quake centred in neighbouring Myanmar — where the ruling junta said at least 694 people had died — hit Bangkok around 1:20 pm (0620 GMT), shaking the building.

“When I went outside, I saw dust everywhere and I just ran to escape from the collapsing building,” Khin Aung said.

“I video-called my brother and friends but only one picked up the phone. But I can’t see his face and I heard he was running.

“At that point the whole building was shaking but while I was on a call with him, I lost the call and the building collapsed.”

Authorities say up to 100 workers may be trapped in the mass of rubble and twisted metal that is all that remains of the tower. At least five are confirmed dead but the toll is almost certain to rise.

“I can’t describe how I feel — it happened in the blink of an eye,” said Khin Aung.

“All my friends and my brother were in the building when it collapsed. I don’t have any words to say.”



– Desperate relatives –



Bangkok’s skyline is ever-changing, with buildings constantly torn down and shiny new skyscrapers thrown up.

The ceaseless reinvention is powered by an army of labourers, a huge proportion of whom are drawn from Myanmar by the prospect of regular work, a peaceful country and better wages than at home.

Many relatives of workers from Myanmar gathered at the site on Saturday hoping for news of the missing.

Khin Aung and his brother — married with two children — have been working in Bangkok for six months.

“I heard they sent 20 workers to hospital but I don’t know who are they and my friends and brother are among them,” he said.

“I hope my brother and friends are in hospital. If they are at the hospital, I have hope. If they are under this building, there is no hope for them to survive.”

Thai woman Chanpen Kaewnoi, 39, waited anxiously for news of her mother and sister, who were in the building when it went down.

“My colleague called and said she couldn’t find my mum or my sister. I thought mum might have slipped and maybe my sister stayed to help her,” she told AFP.

“I want to see them, I hope I can find them. I hope they will not be lost. I still have hope, 50 percent.”

As distraught families waited for news, rescue workers pressed on with the delicate task of searching the ruins without triggering further collapses.


US, China raise the stakes in Panama Canal ports row


By AFP
March 29, 2025


The CK Hutchison deal allowed US President Donald Trump to claim credit for "taking back" the Panama Canal (pictured) according to analysts - Copyright AFP ARNULFO FRANCO

Holmes Chan, with Luna Lin in Beijing

China’s fury at the sale of Panama Canal ports to a US-led consortium reflects how container hubs have become prized currency as Beijing and Washington vie for global influence, analysts say.

Hong Kong conglomerate CK Hutchison this month sold 43 ports in 23 countries — including operations in the vital Central American canal — to a group led by giant asset manager BlackRock for $19 billion in cash.

After two weeks of rhetoric, Beijing hardened its response on Friday and confirmed that antitrust regulators will review the deal, likely preventing the parties from signing an agreement on April 2 as planned.

Speaking before the review was announced, experts told AFP that the deal allowed US President Donald Trump to claim credit for “taking back” the canal as part of his “America First” agenda.

“The US (created) a political issue at China’s expense and then has been able to declare victory,” said Kurt Tong, managing partner at The Asia Group and a former top US diplomat to Hong Kong.

“That doesn’t feel good in Beijing.”

Some of the ports being sold are in nations that participate in Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) — a global development framework championed by Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Ports are crucial to that network and China “has been notably successful in this area”, said Henry Gao, a trade law expert at the Singapore Management University.

Last month, Panama formally exited the BRI following a visit from US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

“There is indeed a growing trend of ‘weaponising’ ports and trade infrastructure as tools of geopolitical leverage,” Gao said.



– ‘Nightmare’ scenario? –



On March 4, CK Hutchison sent shockwaves through China’s shipping industry by announcing a deal of “unprecedented scale”, according to Xie Wenqing, a port development researcher at the Shanghai International Shipping Institute.

Chinese shipping firms questioned whether they could ensure neutral passage once the ports changed hands, he told AFP.

“There are concerns about additional costs for Chinese ships or discriminatory treatment in terms of queuing orders,” he added, highlighting the long-arm jurisdiction of US authorities.

The deal — coupled with recent US tariff hikes — could undermine China’s manufacturing dominance, argued Wang Yiwei, director of the Institute of International Affairs at the Renmin University of China.

“Increased inspections and additional docking costs would erode China’s competitive edge and disrupt global supply chains,” he noted.

The United States has used various justifications to target key infrastructure projects under the Belt and Road Initiative “to strip away these assets and weaken China’s position as the world’s factory”, Wang added.

John Bradford, executive director of the Yokosuka Council on Asia-Pacific Studies, said the deal would not serve China’s interests but said some concerns were “overblown”.

Port operators such as CK Hutchison are commercial entities constrained by law and cannot decide matters of national sovereignty, for example whether a ship could visit a port or not.

“If (operators) were to blatantly favour one company over another, that would generally speaking… be illegal,” Bradford said.

“Most countries have laws which say you have to treat different customers similarly, so the nightmare scenarios are not particularly realistic.”



– Hong Kong’s role –



Beijing’s next steps in scrutinising CK Hutchison may also have far-reaching implications on Hong Kong and its role as China’s business gateway to the world, according to analysts.

“This whole Panama ports issue has refocused attention on the question (of) whether Hong Kong is a good place to put assets or to do business,” said Tong, the former diplomat.

“Certainly the foreign business community operating in Hong Kong is watching this issue very closely.”

CK Hutchison is registered in the Cayman Islands and the assets being sold are all outside China.

That did not stop the State Administration for Market Regulation from announcing the antitrust review on Friday.

Jet Deng, a senior partner at the Beijing office of law firm Dentons, said China’s antitrust laws can be applicable outside its borders, similar to those of the United States and the European Union.

Once a deal meets China’s reportability threshold, a declaration is required even if the transaction takes place abroad, as long as the parties involved had substantial operations in mainland China, he said.

Firms that fail to declare may be fined for up to 10 percent of their operating income from the preceding year, Deng added.

Hung Ho-fung, a political scientist at Johns Hopkins University, said Beijing risks spooking “cautious” foreign firms that have already lowered their business exposure in Hong Kong.

If the deal crumbles under Chinese pressure, people may believe that Hong Kong is converging with mainland China where “national security considerations are of utmost importance in any business deal”, Hung said.
China, South Korea and Japan agree to strengthen free trade

AGAIST TRUMPICA


By AFP
March 29, 2025


South Korea's Trade, Industry and Energy Minister Ahn Duk-geun (centre) poses for a photo with Japan's Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Yoji Muto (left) and China's Commerce Minister Wang Wentao in Seoul - Copyright AFP Jung Yeon-je

China, South Korea and Japan agreed Sunday to strengthen free trade, according to a joint statement from their top officials meeting in Seoul.

The meeting — the first at that level in five years — comes after US President Donald Trump has thrown global trade into turmoil with a raft of punitive tariffs on a huge range of imports, including cars, trucks, and auto parts.

South Korea and Japan are major auto exporters, while China has also been hit hard by new US tariffs.

The meeting was attended by South Korea’s industry minister Ahn Duk-geun, his Japanese counterpart Yoji Muto, and China’s Wang Wentao.

The three countries called for their negotiations for a comprehensive trilateral free-trade agreement to be speeded up, and agreed to create “a predictable trade and investment environment”, a statement said.

South Korea Ahn said the three countries must respond “jointly” to shared global challenges.

“Today’s economic and trade environment is marked by increasing fragmentation of the global economy,” he said.

Trump has promised tariffs tailored to each trading partner from April 2 to remedy practices he deems unfair.

But he also told reporters last week that there would be “flexibility”, and markets appeared to react with some relief at the end of last week.

Canada puts $8.3M on the table for Alberta’s clean energy future

SOMETHING PREMIER SMITH PREVIOUSLY CANCELED

By Jennifer Kervin
March 28, 2025


Photo by Brian Holdsworth on Unsplash

Alberta’s clean technology ecosystem just got an $8.3 million boost from Ottawa.

Anita Anand, minister of innovation, science and industry, announced on March 25 that the Government of Canada will fund 13 clean technology projects in Alberta.

The funding, administered by PrairiesCan, comes from multiple federal programs aimed at scaling startups, exploring regional hydrogen hubs, and strengthening capacity in Indigenous and rural communities.

“The Government of Canada is making strategic investments to advance the commercialization and adoption of Alberta-made clean technology solutions that offer environmental and economic benefits, including high quality jobs for Albertans,” Anand said in a release.

“These 13 projects will help Alberta businesses and communities capitalize on clean technology advancements while building a stronger and more sustainable economic future across the Prairies.”

The projects are through several federal programs including the Alberta Indigenous Clean Energy Initiative and the Business Scale-up and Productivity program. This funding supports an estimated 240 jobs and is part of Ottawa’s broader push to build a “Green Prairie Economy,” a framework introduced in late 2023.
Calgary’s Energy Transition Centre gets a lift

One of the largest allocations is $2 million for Calgary’s Energy Transition Centre. The funding will help the downtown-based hub support more clean tech businesses, expand its programming, and deepen collaboration with researchers and investors.

This follows PrairiesCan’s earlier $2.1 million investment to establish the centre, which brings together startups, major energy companies, and academic institutions under one roof.
Momentum grows around hydrogen hubs

Hydrogen continues to be a major focus in Alberta’s energy transition.

Two projects will receive a combined $1.55 million to build out the province’s hydrogen sector. That includes $1.5 million to establish the Calgary Region Hydrogen Hub, and $50,000 for a feasibility study exploring hydrogen opportunities in the Grande Prairie area.

The Calgary hub is expected to link with other efforts in Vancouver and Edmonton to create a stronger Western Canadian hydrogen corridor.

The goal is to capture a piece of the growing global hydrogen sector.
Indigenous-led energy projects move forward

Six projects focused on Indigenous communities will share over $1.6 million to study alternative and renewable energy sources.

Funding will support studies of large-scale battery storage, solar photovoltaic projects, and clean energy solutions tailored to the needs of Indigenous communities across the province.

These projects will empower local decision-making and advance energy security in communities that have historically faced energy access barriers.
Robotics and freshwater innovation among business recipients

Calgary-based FulcrumAir, which makes robotic systems for power line construction and maintenance, will receive $1.8 million in repayable funding to expand into international markets. The company is already active in the U.S., Australia, and Europe.

An additional $1.3 million is going toward three projects focused on training and ecosystem-building:AquaAction will get $157,000 to launch the Prairies AquaHacking Challenge, supporting young professionals and students developing freshwater technology solutions.
Pathways Alliance will receive $735,000 to run a mentorship program connecting small and medium-sized businesses with clean tech leaders.
ROA Gateways Corporation is getting $462,000 to launch a digital marketplace for selling clean tech products to natural resource sector companies.

“Clean technology solutions are good for the environment and the economy — making it faster, less expensive, and less invasive to do business,” said George Chahal, member of parliament for Calgary Skyview.

“I’m proud that our government is making investments that advance and adopt clean technology innovations that help Alberta businesses succeed in global markets and create sustainable jobs here at home.”
A bet on local strengths

The funding reflects PrairiesCan’s mandate to support economic diversification across Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. It also aligns with the federal government’s commitment to help Prairie provinces transition toward more sustainable economies without sidelining their strengths in natural resources.

For Alberta, that means more emphasis on scaling tech that supports — rather than replaces — traditional industries.

Whether it’s robotic tools for utility crews, mentorship networks for small clean tech firms, or feasibility studies on renewable power in Indigenous communities, the common thread is clear: support innovation that’s rooted in place.

And increasingly, place-based innovation is where economic policy is heading.



This article was created with the assistance of AI. Learn more about our AI ethics policy here.


Written ByJennifer Kervin
Jennifer Kervin is a Digital Journal staff writer and editor based in Toronto.

PUT ANIMALS ON THE BALLOT IN THE FEDERAL ELECTION

 


Canada is set to vote in the federal election on April 28—let’s elect lawmakers who will fight for animals and fix Canada’s outdated animal protection laws!

Join our special live workshop to learn how you can make a real difference for animals this election.

🗓️ Date: Thursday, April 3, 2025
⏰ Time: 12:00 - 1:00 pm ET
📍 Where: Zoom
👉 Register (free!): animaljustice.ca/election





When the federal election was called,  the bill to ban the cruel live horse export industry died. But our work is now even more urgent. With Canadians heading to the polls, we must ensure that horses remain an election priority, and that political leaders take swift action to end this brutal practice after the vote.

We just learned devastating news about a recent horse shipment. On February 2, horses were transported from Edmonton to Japan in temperatures as low as -30°C. Covered in frost, they endured a three-hour delay due to a hydraulic lift failure, where they continued to be exposed to the biting cold. When they finally arrived in Japan, a snowstorm caused further delays. For over 28 hours, these horses were confined in overcrowded crates without food, water, or rest—a clear violation of legal limits.

Take Action for Horses

These cruel and unlawful shipments persist. Despite the Liberal government’s promise over three years ago to ban this cruel industry, the law didn’t pass before the election. 

Keep Horses on the Election Agenda!

  • Sign our action alert: Urge federal parties to commit to banning live horse exports immediately after the election.
  • Engage with candidates: If a candidate knocks on your door, ask what they will do to end live horse exports. 
  • Contact candidates directly: Reach out to candidates in your riding and make it clear that your vote depends on their commitment to protecting animals.

In 2024, 3,265 Canadian horses were shipped from barren feedlots to Japan for slaughter—a 30 percent increase from 2023, and the highest number in nearly a decade.

Speak Up for Horses During the Election Period
Horses deserve better. With your support, we can end this abuse. Thank you for standing with us and speaking up for Canada’s horses! 
 
In gratitude,

Kaitlyn Mitchell
Director of Legal Advocacy
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Famine, Affluence, and Morality. Peter Singer. Philosophy and Public Affairs, vol. 1, no. 1 (Spring 1972), pp. 229-243 [revised edition]. As I write this, in ...


* In TOM REGAN & PETER SINGER (eds.), Animal Rights and Human Obligations. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1989, pp. 148-. 162. Page 2. men are; dogs, on the other ...

That's an important step forward, and a sign that over the next forty years we may see even bigger changes in the ways we treat animals. Peter Singer. February ...

In Practical Ethics, Peter Singer argues that ethics is not "an ideal system which is all very noble in theory but no good in practice." 1 Singer identifies ..

Beasts of. Burden. Capitalism · Animals. Communism as on ent ons. s a een ree. Page 2. Beasts of Burden: Capitalism - Animals -. Communism. Published October ...

Nov 18, 2005 ... Beasts of Burden forces to rethink the whole "primitivist" debate. ... Gilles Dauvé- Letter on animal liberation.pdf (316.85 KB). primitivism ..