Sunday, February 08, 2026

Panama hits back after China warns of ‘heavy price’ in ports row

By AFP
February 4, 2026


The Panama Canal is at the center of a hot dispute between the United States and China, with the latter accusing Washington of pressuring Panama into evicting a Hong Kong company from two canal port concessions - Copyright AFP/File MARTIN BERNETTI

Panama’s President Jose Raul Mulino on Wednesday rejected China’s threat to make the Central American country pay a “heavy price” after a Hong Kong company was evicted from two ports on the Panama Canal.

Writing on X, Mulino “strongly” rejected the threat from the Beijing office overseeing affairs in semi-autonomous Hong Kong, which came after Panama’s Supreme Court invalidated CK Hutchison’s port concession.

US President Donald Trump has piled pressure on Panama to cancel Hutchison’s contract by threatening to reclaim the US-built waterway over what he claimed was China’s outsize influence on the canal.

Last week, Panama’s Supreme Court ruled that the concession was “unconstitutional” and found it had “a disproportionate bias in favor of the company” without “any justification” and to the “detriment of the State’s treasury.”

The United States hailed the ruling but China reacted angrily.

On its WeChat account, China’s Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office accused Panama of buckling to outside pressure, Bloomberg reported.

“Panamanian authorities must recognize the situation and correct their course,” the office was quoted as saying.

“Persisting in this misguided path will result in a heavy price, both politically and economically,” it added.

Mulino condemned the threat, insisting that Panama was a country that upholds the rule of law “and respects the decisions of the judiciary, which is independent of the central government.”

He added that the foreign ministry would issue a statement on the matter “and adopt the corresponding decisions.”

The Panama Canal, which connects the Atlantic and Pacific oceans through Central America, handles about 40 percent of US container traffic.



– ‘Cold War mentality’ –



Since 1997, Hutchison has managed the ports of Cristobal on the interoceanic canal’s Atlantic side and Balboa on the Pacific side.

The concession, which reflected the growing inroads of Chinese companies into Panama’s economy, was extended for 25 years in 2021.

After Trump threatened last year to seize the canal, Panama’s independent comptroller general reviewed Hutchison’s contract and subsequently recommended it be annulled.

The Supreme Court backed the comptroller’s view that the terms of the concession ran counter to Panama’s interests.

Following the ruling, the Panamanian government tapped Danish company Maersk to temporarily take over management of the port terminals until a new concession is awarded.

Hutchison’s port concession has come to symbolize the battle for influence and trade between the United States and China in Latin America.

Beijing’s foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian on Wednesday reiterated that China would “firmly defend the legitimate and lawful rights and interests” of Chinese companies.

Accusing the United States of a “Cold War mentality and ideological bias,” he said: “It is quite clear to the world who exactly is seeking to forcibly own the Panama Canal and eroding international law in the name of the rule of law.”

The Supreme Court ruling came amid Hutchison’s stalled effort to sell the ports.

In March, it announced plans to transfer its stake in the Panamanian terminals to a group of companies led by the US firm BlackRock, as part of a package valued at $22.8 billion.

That deal was initially seen as favorable in Washington, but interests cooled after China warned the agreement could harm its global interests and urged parties to proceed with “caution” or face legal consequences.
AI to track icebergs adrift at sea in boon for science


By AFP
February 4, 2026


Copyright AFP Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV

British scientists said Thursday that a world-first AI tool to catalogue and track icebergs as they break apart into smaller chunks could fill a “major blind spot” in predicting climate change.

Icebergs release enormous volumes of freshwater when they melt on the open water, affecting global climate patterns and altering ocean currents and ecosystems.

But scientists have long struggled to keep track of these floating behemoths once they break into thousands of smaller chunks, their fate and impact on the climate largely lost to the seas.

To fill in the gap, the British Antarctic Survey has developed an AI system that automatically identifies and names individual icebergs at birth and tracks their sometimes decades-long journey to a watery grave.

Using satellite images, the tool captures the distinct shape of icebergs as they break off — or calve — from glaciers and ice sheets on land.

As they disintegrate over time, the machine performs a giant puzzle problem, linking the smaller “child” fragments back to the “parent” and creating detailed family trees never before possible at this scale.

It represents a huge improvement on existing methods, where scientists pore over satellite images to visually identify and track only the largest icebergs one by one.

The AI system, which was tested using satellite observations over Greenland, provides “vital new information” for scientists and improves predictions about the future climate, said the British Antarctic Survey.

Knowing where these giant slabs of freshwater were melting into the ocean was especially crucial with ice loss expected to increase in a warming world, it added.

“What’s exciting is that this finally gives us the observations we’ve been missing,” Ben Evans, a machine learning expert at the British Antarctic Survey, said in a statement.

“We’ve gone from tracking a few famous icebergs to building full family trees. For the first time, we can see where each fragment came from, where it goes and why that matters for the climate.”

This use of AI could also be adapted to aid safe passage for navigators through treacherous polar regions littered by icebergs.

Iceberg calving is a natural process. But scientists say the rate at which they were being lost from Antarctica is increasing, probably because of human-induced climate change.
THE GRIFT
Serbian minister on trial over Trump-linked hotel plan


By AFP
February 4, 2026


Culture Minister Nikola Selakovic, centre, arrives at the Belgrade courthouse greeted by dozens of protesters - Copyright AFP Oliver BUNIC

Serbia’s culture minister and other senior officials appeared in a Belgrade court Wednesday to face corruption charges over a scrapped hotel project linked to the son-in-law of US President Donald Trump.

Nikola Selakovic and the three other defendants were jeered as “thieves” by dozens of protesters as they arrived at the Belgrade court.

Prosecutors say officials forged key documents that would have cleared the way for a Trump-branded luxury hotel to be built on the site of the bombed-out former Yugoslav army headquarters in the capital.

Selakovic had waived his right to ministerial immunity, allowing the trial to proceed, and all the defendants pleaded not guilty to the charges.

“It is not clear to me what wrongdoing I am accused of,” Selakovic told the Special Court for Organised Crime.

The plan to demolish the army headquarters faced fierce opposition in Serbia, as the site was regarded as both a memorial for the victims of a NATO-led bombing campaign in 1999 and a rare example of modernist architecture.

Despite the outcry and an ongoing investigation into the project’s approval, the government moved to fast-track the work by issuing a document allowing the removal of the site’s “cultural-heritage status”.

But the plan, backed by Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, was ditched in December after organised crime prosecutors indicted Selakovic and three others for alleged abuse of office and forgery.

“Because meaningful projects should unite rather than divide, and out of respect for the people of Serbia and the City of Belgrade, we are withdrawing our application and stepping aside at this time,” Kushner’s Affinity Partners said at the time.

The trial is the first of a sitting minister in decades in Serbia and has drawn strong reactions from both supporters and critics of President Aleksandar Vucic.

Vucic and government ministers have criticised prosecutors over the hotel case and over a trial linked to a deadly train station roof collapse in November 2024.

The disaster sparked a widespread, student-led anti-corruption movement and calls for early elections, which Vucic has rejected.
WHITE SUPREMACISTS OF A FEATHER

German far-right MP detained over alleged Belarus sanctions breach


By AFP
February 4, 2026


Dornau, picture here last October, has been stripped of his parliamentary immunity - Copyright AFP JENS SCHLUETER

German police detained a regional lawmaker of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) in a state parliament Wednesday for questioning about a suspected breach of EU export sanctions on Belarus.

A photo in the Bild newspaper showed Joerg Dornau, 56, a businessman and MP for the Moscow-friendly party in the eastern state of Saxony, being led out of the state parliament’s debating chamber.

A little earlier, deputies had voted to strip him of his parliamentary immunity.

Dornau is accused of having exported a vehicular crane to Russia ally Belarus in 2022 and falsely declaring the destination as Kazakhstan, say Leipzig prosecutors.

Customs officers searched his home and vehicles, prosecutors said.

“The searches serve to secure items that may be considered as evidence in the investigation,” prosecutors said.

“There will be no search of the premises of the state parliament or the parliamentary groups,” they added.

The Saxony parliamentary AfD group told AFP it saw no reason why Dornau had to be detained immediately before a parliamentary session, saying that it appeared to have been “staged for media consumption”.

“The allegations against Mr Dornau have been known for a long time,” it added. “These allegations must be clarified as quickly as possible in a fair trial in accordance with the rule of law.”

Under European Union sanctions put into place after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, exports of industrial equipment to Belarus, Russia’s close ally, are heavily restricted.

Dornau was fined over 20,000 euros ($23,617) last August by parliamentary authorities for having failed to disclose his financial interest in a Belarusian onion farm.

In December, German prosecutors said they would not pursue allegations that Dornau had employed political prisoners on the Belarusian farm because was not clear that a crime had been committed.

The AfD is accused of being overly friendly to Moscow, while many inside the party say it is in Germany’s interest to have a good relationship with Russia.

Though no AfD politician has been convicted of spying for Russia, some have been accused of inappropriate links.

Prosecutors in Dresden last year opened an investigation into AfD national MP Maximilian Krah following reports he had taken money from Russia and China during his time as an MEP in the European Parliament.

Krah denies the allegations.
MSF says its hospital in South Sudan hit by government air strike


By AFP
February 4, 2026


MSF says it has been present in the territory that makes up present-day South Sudan for more than four decades - Copyright Medecins Sans Frontieres/AFP KAREL PRINSLOO

Doctors Without Borders said Wednesday its hospital in Lankien, South Sudan was hit by a government air strike overnight, after another of its health facilities was looted.

The medical charity, which goes by its French acronym MSF, said the hospital in Jonglei State “was hit in an air strike by the government of South Sudan forces during the night of Tuesday”.

The hospital was “evacuated and patients were discharged hours before the attack” after it received information about a possible strike against the city, it said in a statement.

But “one MSF staff member suffered minor injuries”, it added.

“The hospital’s main warehouse was destroyed during the attack, and we lost most of our critical supplies for providing medical care,” said the statement.

In a separate incident, MSF said its health facility in Pieri, also in Jonglei, had been looted on Tuesday by unknown assailants, making it “unusable for the local community”.

“Our colleagues from Lankien and Pieri had to flee with the community, and their fate and whereabouts are still unknown, as we are trying to establish communication with them,” the organisation said.

Gul Badshah, MSF’s operations manager in South Sudan, stressed that the charity had “shared the GPS coordinates of all our facilities with the government and other parties to the conflict before, and we received the confirmation that they are aware of our locations”.

“The government of South Sudan armed forces are the only armed party with the capacity to perform aerial attacks in the country,” he added.



– ‘Unacceptable’ –



MSF highlighted that it was the only health provider serving around 250,000 people in Lankien and Pieri, cautioning that attacks on its facilities there “mean that local communities will be left without any healthcare”.

Badshah said MSF would “make the necessary decisions to protect the safety of our staff and healthcare facilities” there.

“While we are aware of the enormous needs in the country, we find it unacceptable to be a target for attacks,” he said.

MSF has been present in the territory that makes up present-day South Sudan for more than four decades, he noted.

South Sudan is the world’s newest sovereign state, which has been beset by civil war, poverty and massive corruption since it was formed in 2011.

MSF said it had experienced eight targeted attacks in South Sudan last year, forcing the closure of two hospitals in Greater Upper Nile and the suspension of general healthcare activities in Jonglei, Upper Nile and Central Equatoria.

The bombing of MSF’s hospital this week came after the South Sudanese government in December imposed restrictions on humanitarian access in opposition-held areas of Jonglei, restricting its ability to deliver essential medical assistance there.
Who is behind the killing of late ruler Gaddafi’s son, and why now?


By AFP
 February 4, 2026


Seif al-Islam Gaddafi was seen by some as a reformer and moderniser until the Libyan revolt in 2011, when he became one of the most hardline supporters of his father's regime - Copyright AFP Charly TRIBALLEAU

Seif al-Islam, the son of Libya’s slain longtime ruler Muammar Gaddafi and once seen by some as his likely heir, has been killed.

Targeted by a warrant from the International Criminal Court for alleged crimes against humanity, and still a player in Libya’s turbulent political scene, the 53-year-old was no stranger to violence.

But his sudden assassination has raised many questions:



– Who is behind it? –



Very little has emerged about the identity or motives of the assailants.

Seif’s lawyer, Marcel Ceccaldi, told AFP he was killed by an unidentified “four-man commando” who stormed his house on Tuesday afternoon in the city of Zintan, western Libya.

His adviser, Abdullah Othman Abdurrahim, told Libyan media the four unidentified men had stormed the home before “disabling surveillance cameras, then executed him”.

Libyan prosecutors said Wednesday they were probing the killing after establishing that “the victim died from wounds by gunfire”.



– Why now? –



Claudia Gazzini, a senior Libya analyst at International Crisis Group, described the timing of Seif’s death as “odd”.

“He had been living a relatively quiet life away from the public eye for many years now,” she told AFP.

Seif had announced his bid to run for president in 2021. Those elections were indefinitely postponed, and he had barely made any major public appearances since.

His whereabouts had been largely unknown. Aside from a small inner circle — and probably the Libyan authorities — few people knew he lived in Zintan.

Ceccaldi said “he often moved around” but “had been in Zintan for quite some time”.

Anas El Gomati, head of the Tripoli-based Sadeq Institute think tank, said the timing was “stark”.

His death came just “48 hours after a US-brokered Paris meeting between Saddam Haftar and Ibrahim Dbeibah”, respectively the son of eastern Libya’s military strongman Khalifa Hafter and the nephew of the Tripoli-based Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah.

Libya has remained divided between the UN-backed Tripoli government and its rival administration in the east.



– What Seif al-Islam represented –



Experts differ over the extent of Seif’s political influence. But there is broad agreement on his symbolic weight as the most prominent remaining figure associated with pre-2011 Libya.

“Seif had become a cumbersome actor” in Libyan politics after announcing his bid for office in 2021, said Hasni Abidi, director of the Geneva-based Centre for Studies and Research on the Arab and Mediterranean World.

His killing “benefits all political actors” currently competing for power in the North African country, Abidi said.

For Gomati, his death “eliminates Libya’s last viable spoiler to the current power structure”.

“He wasn’t a democrat or reformer, but he represented an alternative that threatened both Haftar and Dbeibah,” Gomati added. “His removal consolidates their duopoly … The pro-Gaddafi nostalgia bloc now has no credible leader.”

Libya expert Jalel Harchaoui offered a more cautious assessment, saying Seif’s death was “no major upheaval”.

“He was not at the head of a unified, cohesive bloc exerting real weight in the competition for power, rivalries, or the allocation of territory or wealth,” Harchaoui explained.

Still, “he could have played a decisive role under specific circumstances”, Harchaoui said, arguing that his mere name on a presidential ballot would have had a substantial impact.



– How has the public reacted? –



Among the public, speculation is rife.

Some have suggested the involvement of a local Zintan-based armed group that may no longer have wanted Seif on its territory.

Others suspect foreign forces may have been involved.

“The operation’s sophistication — four operatives, inside access, cameras disabled — suggests foreign intelligence involvement, not militia action,” said Gomati.

burs-iba-bou/dc
China calls EU ‘discriminatory’ over probe into energy giant Goldwind


By AFP
February 4, 2026


Goldwind is one of the world's biggest wind turbine suppliers, and is looking to boost growth overseas - Copyright AFP/File Hector RETAMAL

Beijing accused the European Union on Wednesday of taking “discriminatory” measures after the bloc opened an investigation into Chinese clean energy giant Goldwind over concerns the firm unfairly benefitted from state subsidies.

Goldwind is one of the world’s biggest wind turbine suppliers, and is looking to boost growth overseas, bringing it into competition with Western companies.

The European Commission, the EU’s competition regulator, announced the probe on Tuesday, saying a preliminary investigation had found the Chinese firm “may have been granted foreign subsidies that distort the internal market” of the 27-nation bloc.

China’s foreign ministry said Wednesday the probe amounted to protectionism and threatened future Chinese investments in Europe.

“The EU’s frequent use of unilateral trade tools and its discriminatory and restrictive measures against Chinese companies send protectionist signals,” foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian told a regular press conference.

The probe would also “affect the confidence of Chinese companies in investing in Europe”, he added.

Beijing’s commerce ministry said the probe “seriously disrupts mutually beneficial China-EU industrial cooperation”.

Beijing will “resolutely” protect Chinese companies, it added in a statement urging Brussels to “immediately correct its wrong practices”.

Brussels has said the opening of an in-depth investigation does not prejudge its outcome.

But if its competition concerns were to be sustained, the commission could accept remedies proposed by the company or impose redressive measures.

China now dominates the global wind sector in terms of total installed capacity, aided over the years by generous subsidies from Beijing and rapid growth in the vast domestic power market.


Sad horses and Draco Malfoy: China’s unexpected Lunar New Year trends


By AFP
February 5, 2026


Draco Malfoy, one of the schoolboy villains in the Harry Potter series, has become an unlikely Lunar New Year mascot - Copyright AFP STR
Sam DAVIES

A morose horse, rice cakes, and a Harry Potter villain have become surprise hits in China ahead of the country’s Lunar New Year holiday.

These viral trends play on Chinese traditions and young workers’ anxieties as millions head to their hometowns to welcome in the Year of the Horse, which begins on February 17.

Here they are explained:

– Lucky Draco –

Draco Malfoy, one of the schoolboy villains in the Harry Potter series, has become an unlikely New Year mascot.

The face of British actor Tom Felton, who played Malfoy in the film series that ended 15 years ago, has appeared on posters, fridge magnets, and even emblazoned on a banner in a Chinese shopping mall.

The film franchise is wildly popular in China, and capital Beijing has a large-scale Harry Potter-themed attraction at a Universal Studios resort.

But the current Draco obsession stems from the transliteration of his surname, “Ma Er Fu”, which contains the Chinese characters for “horse” and “good fortune” — an auspicious omen for the year ahead.

Felton, now 38, has embraced the trend, reposting videos of New Year decorations featuring his image on Instagram.



– Why the long face? –

A manufacturing blunder recently turned a smiling horse plushie into an icon of China’s young employees.

Making “Year of the Horse” stuffed toys in a workshop, an employee accidentally stitched the festive foal’s mouth on upside-down — turning its cheerful expression into a gloomy frown.

That hit a chord with stressed-out youth struggling in China’s highly competitive job market and sluggish economy.

Dubbed the “crying horse” online, the depressed animal has become an internet sensation, with a related hashtag gaining more than 100 million views on social media platform Weibo.

Almost 20,000 were being shipped per day at the height of its fame and orders are backed up to March, according to state broadcaster CCTV.

“With a face full of resentment and helplessness, it really looks like an employee coaxing themselves to go to work,” wrote one Weibo user.

Many consumers have bought both the smiling and frowning versions, to represent both the highs and lows expected in the coming year.



– Edible ‘pets’ –

Another trend has people “adopting” sticky rice cakes.

Sticky rice cakes are a popular New Year’s dish in much of eastern and southern China, but to be prepared they must be soaked in water which is regularly changed.

Social media posts show users “raising” their rice cakes, complaining about being at home to babysit, and dubbing them their new pets.

One user on the Instagram-like RedNote gained more than 23,000 likes on their post of a photo of a bag of rice cakes left unattended on a train, along with the caption: “Who’s lost their pet?”

Rice cakes join a long list of inanimate objects that time-poor young Chinese have jokingly adopted for low-maintenance companionship in recent years, ranging from mango pits, to rocks, to cardboard dogs.



– Clean hair day –

In a twist of tradition, netizens have called for a national day of hair washing on Lunar New Year’s Eve.

A common Chinese tradition warns that people should refrain from cleaning their hair on Lunar New Year’s Day — and even for a few days after — to avoid washing away good luck and incoming wealth.

The recent hashtag “collective hair washing on the 16th” calls for nationwide mass hair washing on the last day of the lunar year, with social media users joking about salons being booked up.
GREEN CAPITALI$M

Wind turbine maker Vestas sees record revenue in 2025

DESPITE TRUMP


By AFP
February 5, 2026


The Danish group also said it had a record order backlog worth 71.9 billion euros at the end of 2025 - Copyright Ritzau Scanpix/AFP/File Henning Bagger

Denmark’s Vestas, Europe’s leading wind turbine manufacturer, on Thursday posted an all-time high revenue, but noted that regulatory changes in the United states had made wind power investments less attractive.

Vestas recorded revenue 18.8 billion euros ($22.2 billion) in 2025, up nine percent compared to the year before.

It also posted a net profit of 778 million euros, a 55 percent increase.

The group also said it had a record order backlog worth 71.9 billion euros at the end of 2025.

That corresponds to orders representing 23 gigawatts for onshore wind, its core business, and eight gigawatts for offshore wind. Service orders represented more than half of the total at 38.7 billion euros.

For 2026, Vestas is forecasting revenue between 20 and 22 billion euros, while noting that “ongoing geopolitical and tariff risks are likely to cause uncertainty”.

In the United States, Vestas’s largest market, “regulatory changes made future clean energy investments less attractive compared to previously,” the company noted, and expressed concern that “tariff uncertainty remains”.






Davos forum opens probe into CEO Brende’s Epstein links


By AFP
February 5, 2026


World Economic Forum president and chief executive Borge Brende at the annual summit in Davos, eastern Switzerland - Copyright AFP Fabrice COFFRINI

The World Economic Forum, which organises the Davos summit, said Thursday that it would conduct an independent review into its chief executive’s interactions with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Former Norwegian foreign minister Borge Brende, 60, has since 2017 been president of the WEF, which organises the annual gathering of the super-rich and powerful in the Swiss ski resort of Davos.

“The WEF seeks to clarify recent disclosures regarding its president and CEO, Borge Brende, and his participating in three business dinners with Jeffrey Epstein, along with subsequent email and SMS communications,” the forum said.

“In light of these interactions, the governing board requested the audit and risk committee to look into the matter, which subsequently decided to initiate an independent review.”

The forum said it was committed to transparency and aimed to handle the matter thoughtfully and efficiently.

The Geneva-based organisation said Brende would continue to fulfil his roles at the WEF, without involvement in the review process.

Brende was mentioned more than 60 times in the millions of new Epstein documents released last week by the US Justice Department.

Appearing in the released Epstein files does not in itself imply wrongdoing.

Epstein pleaded guilty in 2008 to procuring a child for prostitution and served 13 months of an 18-month sentence.

Epstein was facing charges of alleged sex trafficking when he killed himself in detention in 2019.

Brende said in a statement that during a visit to New York in 2018, he received an invitation for former Norwegian deputy prime minister Terje Rod-Larsen to join him for dinner with several other leaders, plus “someone who was presented to me as an American investor, Jeffrey Epstein”.

“The following year, I attended two similar dinners with Epstein, alongside other diplomats and business leaders. These dinners, and a few emails and SMS messages, were the extent of my interactions with him,” he said.

“I was completely unaware of Epstein’s past and criminal activities.”

He said that had he known about Epstein’s background, he would have declined the initial invitation for dinner and any other subsequent invitations or communications.

Brende said he recognised that he could have conducted a more thorough investigation into Epstein’s history, and regretted not doing so.

He welcomed the independent review, “which I indeed requested”.


France detects Russia-linked Epstein smear attempt against Macron: govt source


By AFP
February 6, 2026


Much of the Jeffrey Epstein document trove released by the US Justice Department has been blacked out - Copyright AFP Mandel NGAN


Pierre MOUTOT, Tiphaine LE LIBOUX

France has detected a Russia-linked disinformation effort alleging President Emmanuel Macron’s involvement with convicted US sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, a government source told AFP on Friday.

Politicians, celebrities and royals have been caught up in the turmoil after the US Justice Department last week published a new cache of nearly three million documents related to the investigation of Epstein, who died in 2019 while awaiting trial for sex trafficking.

France’s Viginum agency, which counters foreign disinformation campaigns, detected Wednesday the operation involving a fabricated video report “accusing President Emmanuel Macron of being involved in the ‘Epstein affair'”, the source said.

The fake report was posted on a site fraudulently using the identity of a French media organisation, France-Soir, said the source, adding that the Storm-1516 project spreading fabricated content was behind the operation.

The fake report, allegedly by Le Parisien journalist Victor Cousin, claims to reveal “documents” incriminating Macron.

The Department of Justice’s files about Epstein do not contain the alleged documents.

Writing for Le Parisien, Cousin, 26, said he went to a police station to file a complaint.

“I had to explain how pro-Russian individuals had stolen my identity to attack the French president,” he wrote.

“The police officer in front of me stared at me with wide eyes, unable to comprehend what I was saying.”

– ‘Brand theft’ –

On Wednesday, France-Soir sought to distance itself from the fabricated report.

“Warning: brand and content theft,” it said. “The website http://france-soir.net has no connection with France-Soir.”


French President Emmanuel Macron has warned the public over Russian disinformation campaigns in Europe – Copyright POOL/AFP Ludovic MARIN

According to the government source, the site was linked “with a high degree of confidence to the CopyCop information operation.”

CopyCop is linked to John Mark Dougan, an American fugitive living in Russia. The latter “maintains part of the digital infrastructure of the Storm-1516 information operation,” the source added.

On X, the first account to share the fake video report was “@LoetitiaH, a frequent relay for Storm-1516 information operations,” the source added.

The video content was then “picked up and amplified by numerous other accounts monitored by Viginum,” said the source.

The source said that “this operation is very similar” to other Storm-1516 campaigns targeting political figures.

The posts targeting Macron began appearing online on Wednesday, shared simultaneously by several social media accounts identified as regular sources of pro-Russian disinformation. The accounts have a following of several thousand internet users.

The posts cite an alleged email exchange between Epstein and the controversial French modelling agent Jean-Luc Brunel, who was found dead in his cell in a Paris prison in 2022 after being charged with raping minors. The alleged email does not exist in the files.

According to the false narrative, Brunel allegedly told Epstein in May 2017 that he would take “a few boys” to a party that Macron was organising.

Like previous disinformation operations on social media, they rely on a video with audio dubbed by artificial intelligence, screenshots of altered documents, and links to a website impersonating another media outlet to lend credibility to their narrative.

The posts share a link to the clone of the France-Soir media site, launched on Sunday, whose domain name is registered as .net instead of the .fr of the authentic site.

The French government has repeatedly warned the public over Russian disinformation campaigns in Europe that have grown in intensity since Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine in 2022.

– Missing link –

According to Antibot4Navalny, a collective that monitors pro-Kremlin bot networks, Storm-1516 and Matryoshka launched simultaneous campaigns targeting Macron in early February.

However, the group said there was no proven “direct link beyond the timing and topics” between the two operations.

“No strong connections between sites or distribution accounts can give us grounds to make that claim,” Antibot4Navalny told AFP.

According to Viginum, Storm-1516 was behind at least 77 disinformation operations targeting Western countries between late 2023 and March 2025.

After the publication of the Epstein files, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was also targeted by false posts.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said this week the Epstein files demonstrate “how the Western elite treats children” and such officials “stand behind the Kyiv regime”.

tll-nl-am-pim-as/ah/st

‘Burned inside their houses’: Nigerians recount horror of massacre


By AFP
February 5, 2026


Nigerian chief Umar Bio Salihu says attackers killed scores of people and torched homes and businesses in his village, Woro - Copyright AFP Light Oriye Tamunotonye


John Okunyomih in Kaiama with Leslie Fauvel in Lagos

First, the jihadists sent a letter saying they were coming to the village to preach, said Nigerian chief Umar Bio Salihu.

When no one attended, they went on a rampage, killing people and torching houses, he said.

Salihu is the traditional chief of Woro, a small, Muslim-majority village in west-central Nigeria where alleged jihadist gunmen perpetrated a massacre late Tuesday.

Details are still emerging from the attack in Kwara State, but it is one of the country’s deadliest in recent months. According to the Red Cross, the death toll stands at 162 people, and the search for bodies is ongoing.

Badly shaken, Salihu recounted the night of terror he survived as the attackers killed two of his sons and kidnapped his wife and three daughters.

Around 5:00 pm, the gunmen “just came in and started shooting”, the 53-year-old chief told AFP Thursday, clutching his Muslim prayer beads in his hand.

“All those shops that are within the road, they burnt them… Some people have been burned inside their houses,” he said.

“They killed two of (my sons) standing at the front of my house. They took away my second wife with some three (daughters). They are with them presently in the bush.”

Salihu survived by hiding in a house, then fled to the neighbouring town of Kaiama, where he has a home, after the attackers left.

The attack lasted until 3:00 am, he said.

“When the day breaks, the corpses we see, it’s too much,” he said.



– ‘Don’t want their ideology’ –



Woro, a village of several thousand people, sits near a forest region known as a hideout for jihadist fighters and armed gangs, groups that have fuelled nearly two decades of violence in Africa’s most populous country.

It is a Muslim community, but its residents want nothing to do with radicalised jihadist groups, said Salihu.

“People don’t want to follow their ideology,” he said.

When a radical group sent a letter saying they planned to come to Woro to preach, no one attended, he said.

Salihu alerted the local security services.

“I think that is what brought the anger to come and just kill people like that in the community,” he said.

The governor of Kwara gave the death toll from the attack as 75.

Sa’idu Baba Ahmed, a member of the local assembly, said 78 bodies had been buried Wednesday afternoon.

“More dead bodies are being recovered and brought from the bush,” he said.

The attackers kidnapped another 38 people, mostly women and children, he said.



– ‘Beastly attack’ –



Nigerian President Bola Tinubu condemned the “beastly attack”, deploying an army battalion to the troubled region and blaming Islamist movement Boko Haram — though the name is often used generically for jihadist groups in Nigeria.

Kwara is racked by violence by armed “bandit” gangs and jihadist groups that have been extending their range from northwestern Nigeria farther south.

In October, the Al-Qaeda-linked Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM) claimed its first attack on Nigerian soil in the state, near Woro.

Nigeria’s northeast is meanwhile the scene of long-running violence by Boko Haram and a rival offshoot, Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP).

Nigeria is broadly split between a Christian-majority south and Muslim-majority north.

US President Donald Trump has alleged there is a “genocide” of Christians in Nigeria — a claim rejected by the Nigerian government and many independent experts, who say the country’s security crises claim the lives of both Christians and Muslims, often without distinction.

Washington has alternately pressured and aided the Nigerian government in its fight against jihadist violence.

On Christmas Day, the United States launched strikes targeting jihadist militants in northwestern Nigeria, and Washington has deployed a small military team to the country, according to the head of the US Africa Command.
GREY LADY D0WN




Washington Post CEO out after sweeping job cuts

By AFP
February 8, 2026


The sweeping job cuts at The Washington Post left hundreds of journalists without work - Copyright AFP/File Oliver Contreras


Nicholas ROLL

The Washington Post said Saturday its CEO and publisher Will Lewis was leaving effective immediately, just days after the storied newspaper owned by billionaire Amazon founder Jeff Bezos made drastic job cuts that angered readers.

Though newspapers across the United States have been facing brutal industry headwinds, Lewis’s management of the outlet was sharply criticized by subscribers and employees alike during his two-year tenure as he tried to reverse financial losses at the daily.

Lewis, who is English, has been replaced by Jeff D’Onofrio, a former CEO of social media platform Tumblr who had joined the Post as chief financial officer last year, the paper announced.

In an email to staff shared on social media by one of the newspaper’s reporters, Lewis said it was “the right time for me to step aside.”

A statement from the Post said only that D’Onofrio was succeeding Lewis “effective immediately.”

Hundreds of Post journalists — including most of its overseas, local and sports staff — were let go in the sweeping cuts announced on Tuesday.

The Post did not disclose the number of jobs being eliminated, but The New York Times reported approximately 300 of its 800 journalists were laid off.

The paper’s entire Middle East roster was let go as was its Kyiv-based Ukraine correspondent as the war with Russia grinds on.

Sports, graphics and local news departments were sharply scaled back and the paper’s daily podcast, Post Reports, was suspended, local media reported.

Hundreds turned out Thursday at a protest in front of the paper’s headquarters in downtown Washington.

– Editorial interference –

Newspapers across the country have cratered under falling revenues and subscriptions as they compete for eyeballs with social media, and as internet revenue pales in comparison to what print advertising once commanded.

However, national papers like The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal have managed to weather the storm and come out financially solid — something the Post, even with a billionaire backer, has failed to do.

In Lewis’s note to staff, shared on X by White House bureau chief Matt Viser, Lewis said “difficult decisions have been taken” during his tenure “in order to ensure the sustainable future of The Post so it can for many years ahead publish high-quality nonpartisan news.”

Bezos, one of the world’s richest people, and Lewis have come under scrutiny for intervening directly in the paper’s editorial processes.

Bezos reined in the newspaper’s liberal-leaning editorial page and blocked an endorsement of Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris days before the 2024 election — breaking the so-called firewall of editorial independence.

He was widely seen as bowing to Trump.

The Wall Street Journal reported last month that 250,000 digital subscribers left the Post after it refrained from endorsing Harris, and the paper lost around $100 million in 2024 as advertising and subscription revenues fell.

Marty Baron, the Post’s executive editor until 2021, said that the job cuts ranked “among the darkest days in the history of one of the world’s greatest news organizations.”


‘Save the Post’: Hundreds protest cuts at famed US newspaper

By AFP
February 5, 2026


Copyright AFP Ina FASSBENDER

Several hundred people rallied outside The Washington Post headquarters Thursday to protest its decision to lay off hundreds of journalists, including most of its overseas staff.

“Democracy dies in darkness. And you, Jeff Bezos, have turned off the lights,” a sign at the demonstration read, referring to the newspaper’s front-page slogan and its billionaire owner, who has become close to President Donald Trump during the Republican’s second term.

The sweeping cuts at the Post announced Wednesday came as major traditional media outlets in the United States face intense pressure from Trump, who routinely denigrates journalists as “fake news” and has launched multiple lawsuits against media organizations.

“In a time where we’ve seen unprecedented attacks on the press, and anti- or negative sentiment toward journalists for just doing their jobs, it’s dangerous to cut staff this way,” said Michael Brice-Saddler, who covered the US capital for the Post and has now been laid off.

“These cuts are not the fault of our staff, yet they are the ones who bear the brunt of the cost. They lose resources, they lose the ability to tell stories that are meaningful to Washington,” Brice-Saddler said.

The Post did not disclose the number of jobs being eliminated but The New York Times reported approximately 300 of its 800 journalists were laid off.

Most of the paper’s journalists overseas were let go, including its entire Middle East roster and its Kyiv-based Ukraine correspondent as the war with Russia grinds on.

Sports, graphics and local news departments were sharply scaled back and the paper’s daily podcast, Post Reports, was suspended, local media reported.

Bezos reined in the newspaper’s liberal-leaning editorial page and blocked an endorsement of Democratic candidate Kamala Harris days before the 2024 election — breaking the so-called firewall of editorial independence. He was widely seen as bowing to Trump.

The Wall Street Journal reported last month that 250,000 digital subscribers left the Post after it refrained from endorsing Harris and the paper lost around $100 million in 2024 as advertising and subscription revenues fell.

Marissa J. Lang, an enterprise reporter who was fired by the Post, said the full effect of the layoffs remains to be seen.

“A lot of people have been asking me about the impact of these cuts, and I have very honestly been telling them, I don’t think we know yet,” Lang said.

“The impact of losing 300 journalists who hold power to account, who investigate corruption, who tell you about what’s happening in war zones overseas, and whether your kids’ schools will be open because it snowed, is immeasurable,” Lang said.
 WHITE SUPREMACY IS GOOD FOR YOU 

New Zealand deputy PM defends claims colonisation good for Maori


By AFP
February 5, 2026


New Zealand Deputy Prime Minister David Seymour at a ceremony to commemorate Waitangi Day in Waitangi on February 5, 2026 - Copyright AFP Ina FASSBENDER
Ben STRANG

New Zealand’s deputy prime minister brushed off criticism on Friday of his claims that colonisation had been positive for the country’s Indigenous population and labelled hecklers “muppets”.

David Seymour, who leads the right-wing ACT Party, made the comments on Thursday in a speech marking national Waitangi Day celebrations, an annual political gathering that gives Indigenous tribes a chance to air grievances.

Rising to offer a prayer during the dawn service Friday at the Waitangi Upper Treaty Grounds where New Zealand’s founding document was signed in 1840, dozens of people started booing and shouting for him to stop.

Another person blew into a conch shell in an attempt to drown out Seymour’s speech.

“The silent majority up and down this country are getting a little tired of some of these antics,” Seymour said.

The deputy prime minister’s administration has been accused of seeking to wind back the special rights given to the country’s 900,000-strong Maori population.

And he told journalists the hecklers were “a couple of muppets shouting in the dark”.

On Thursday, Seymour, who himself is Maori, told those assembled at Waitangi that colonisation had been a net positive for the Indigenous people of New Zealand.

“I’m always amazed by the myopic drone that colonisation and everything that’s happened in our country was all bad,” he said.

Maori today remain far more likely to die early, live in poverty or be imprisoned than New Zealand Europeans.

Following Seymour’s prayer Friday, left-wing Labour Party leader Chris Hipkins was also loudly jeered by those in attendance.

The previous day indigenous leader Eru Kapa-Kingi told parliamentarians “this government has stabbed us in the front,” and the previous Labour government had “stabbed us in the back”.

“Why do we continue to welcome the spider inside the house?”
CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M TOO

The banking fraud scandal rattling Brazil’s elite


By AFP
February 5, 2026


A passer-by walks past the Banco Master building after the Central Bank ordered its liquidation - Copyright AFP Ina FASSBENDER


Facundo Fernández Barrio

When Brazilian businessman Daniel Vorcaro was arrested last year over what may be the country’s biggest ever banking fraud scandal, he boasted to police that he had friends in high places.

The collapse of his Master Bank and a snowballing fraud investigation are becoming an ever-bigger headache for authorities, exposing a web of links between financiers, top judges and politicians across the spectrum in an election year.

The case has gripped local media in a country that is still sensitive to elite corruption scandals after the so-called Lava Jato fraud probe from 2014 to 2021 ensnared dozens of senior politicians and executives.

Vorcaro, 42, a banker with a flashy lifestyle, was the major shareholder in the small private Master Bank which operated in Faria Lima — Sao Paulo’s financial hub.

His bank offered investment products that were more profitable than those of his competitors and in 2024, the Central Bank realized Master did not have the resources to meet its obligations.

In November 2025, police arrested Vorcaro over an alleged fraudulent scheme between Master and BRB, a state-owned bank in Brasilia.

Authorities liquidated Master Bank, leaving more than $7 billion in debt due to some 800,000 investors who have received payouts from Brazil’s deposit guarantee fund.

Several other executives have since been arrested and Vorcaro is on supervised release pending the outcome of the investigation.

In a statement given to police, Vorcaro said he had “friends in all branches of government.”



– High-profile connections –



Not long after Vorcaro’s arrest, the names of several high-profile officials began cropping up in the media.

The businessman’s lawyers requested that the case be transferred directly to the Supreme Court.

One of the justices in the court, Jose Dias Toffoli, ordered that the proceedings be kept secret and that all investigative steps be conducted under his supervision.

Local media revealed that in the same month that Vorcaro was arrested, Dias Toffoli had shared a private jet with the lawyer of another Master executive arrested in the case, to travel to the 2025 Copa Libertadores final in Peru.

It then emerged that Vorcaro’s brother-in-law, who is also under investigation, had purchased part of a resort in 2021 from Dias Toffoli’s brothers, through a management company also under suspicion in the Master case.

Media outlets also reported that powerful Supreme Court justice Alexandre Moraes — who is involved in virtually every high-profile case in Brazil — had met with the director of the Central Bank to discuss the Master case in the months before it collapsed.

It later came to light that Moraes’ wife’s law firm had a multi-million dollar contract with Vorcaro’s bank.

The judge admitted to the meetings but denied that “any matter” concerning the case was discussed.



– ‘Largest financial scandal’ –



In 2024, at a time when the bank’s liquidity problems were already known, Vorcaro held a meeting with President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Lula said Vorcaro had complained there were “people trying to bring me down.”

“I told him (Vorcaro): there will be no political position for or against Master bank, but a technical investigation by the Central Bank,” Lula said Thursday in an interview with the UOL news portal.

“Anyone involved in this will have to pay the price for the irresponsibility of causing …perhaps the largest financial scandal in this country’s history,” Lula said.

Master also contracted a multi-million dollar consulting service in 2023 from the law firm of Ricardo Lewandowski, who served as Lula’s justice minister from 2024 until January 2025.

The government said that Lewandowski had terminated his contracts before taking office.

It then said that Vorcaro’s brother-in-law, an evangelical pastor, had been the largest donor to far-right former president Jair Bolsonaro’s failed re-election campaign in 2022.

“If we see the Bolsonaro movement, the center, and part of Lula’s PT (Workers’ Party) trying to downplay the case, it’s because they understand the potential impact,” said political scientist Marco Antonio Carvalho Teixeira of the Getulio Vargas Foundation.
CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M

Undercover probe finds Australian pubs short-pouring beer


By AFP
February 5, 2026


Inspectors say many Australian beer drinkers are getting less than they pay for at the bar - Copyright AFP Ina FASSBENDER

Australian undercover inspectors have found pubs fail to pour enough beer and other alcohol into customers’ glasses for nearly a third of the drinks they serve.

The government sent “secret shopper” officials to 436 licensed venues across the country in October to check if they were filling glasses high enough.

Preliminary findings showed 32 percent of the drinks they served failed to deliver the “correct amount”, said the National Measurement Institute’s audit report released this week.

The regulator issued 130 non-compliance notices, and said common issues included inaccurate measuring instruments, unapproved glasses, and “spillage during pouring, meaning customers got less than they paid for”.

Beer consumption in Australia has declined in the past five decades, but for many the drink remains an important part of the culture.

Official figures show drinkers in Australia downed an estimated 82 litres (173 pints) of beer per person in the 2019-20 financial year.

Hoteliers said they were working hard to ensure every pour of beer passed the pub test.

“Unfortunately, issues sometimes arise due to incorrect measuring devices and spillage — especially when things are busy at the bar,” the Australian Hotels Association said in a statement Friday.

“We are working with our membership to ensure we fix any shortcomings to ensure all patrons receive exactly what they have paid for.”
GUNRUNNER U$A

Taiwan’s political standoff stalls $40 bn defence plan



By AFP
February 5, 2026


Taiwan has spent billions upgrading its military in the past decade, but is under intense US pressure to do more to protect itself 
- Copyright AFP/File Anthony WALLACE



Allison Jackson and Joy Chiang

Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te’s ambitious $40 billion defence spending plan is caught in a political deadlock as opposition lawmakers refuse to consider the proposal without government concessions, sparking criticism in Washington.

Taiwan has spent many billions of dollars upgrading its military in the past decade, but is under intense US pressure to do more to protect itself against the growing threat from China, which claims the island is part of its territory and has not ruled out using force to annex it.

Lai, whose Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) lost its parliamentary majority in elections that swept him to power in 2024, has vowed to increase defence spending to more than three percent of GDP this year.

But bitter divisions between the DPP and opposition parties, which hold the most seats in parliament, have culminated in the government’s proposal being blocked 10 times since early December.

“We must continue to strengthen our national defence,” Lai insisted Thursday, repeating calls for the opposition to review the government’s $40 billion special defence budget and its 2026 general budget, which is also languishing in parliament.

Unveiled in November, the plan for extra defence spending comes as the island seeks to deter a potential Chinese invasion.

Lai said the military wanted a “high level” of joint combat readiness against China by 2027 — which US officials have previously cited as a possible timeline for a Chinese attack on the island.

The funds would be spread over eight years and go towards paying for new arms from the United States — including some of the $11 billion worth of purchases announced in December — and enhancing Taiwan’s ability to wage asymmetrical warfare.

Taiwan has said it wants to develop a so-called “T-Dome” — a multi-layered air defence system — and buy long-range precision strike missiles, counter-drone systems and anti-ballistic missiles.

The opposition parties, Kuomintang (KMT) and Taiwan People’s Party (TPP), insist they support strengthening Taiwan’s defences but are frustrated over ongoing delays in US deliveries, including 66 F-16V fighter jets.

They are demanding, among other things, more details from the government about the planned purchases and also want Lai to appear in parliament to take questions from lawmakers, which he has refused.

“While multi-year defence budgets may support strategic continuity, they must be accompanied by detailed planning, clear allocations, and effective oversight to prevent waste and inefficiency,” said the KMT, which favours closer ties with Beijing.



– ‘Rising Chinese threats’ –



The TPP successfully submitted for review a stripped-down version of the defence bill on January 30 — the day before a weeks-long parliamentary recess began — allocating $12.6 billion for military purchases.

The KMT is drawing up its own plans to carve out up to $28.4 billion from the government’s proposal and allocate that portion for US arms procurement, KMT lawmaker Huang Jen told AFP.

Lai has warned that the continued blocking of the government’s plan and approval of the TPP’s version will “inevitably delay the improvement of defence capabilities and may lead the international community to misunderstand Taiwan’s determination to defend itself.”

China has ramped up military pressure on Taiwan in recent years, deploying warships and fighter jets around the island on an almost daily basis, and has launched six rounds of large-scale drills since 2022, most recently in December.

The political impasse is already causing frustration in Washington, which has given full-throated support to Lai’s defence plan and has been lobbying opposition parties to get on board.

“I’m disappointed to see Taiwan’s opposition parties in parliament slash President Lai’s defense budget so dramatically,” Republican Senator Roger Wicker posted on social media platform X.

“The original proposal funded urgently needed weapons systems. Taiwan’s parliament should reconsider — especially with rising Chinese threats.”



– ‘No one wants to compromise’ –



Some observers fear the budgetary standoff could continue for months, even extending beyond district elections in November, unless the KMT starts to feel domestic pressure.

“For the moment, there’s impunity for the KMT in the strategy that they have been implementing in the past 18 months,” a diplomat in Taipei told AFP on the condition of anonymity.

Taiwan is known for its raucous politics, but longtime watchers say they have never seen it so messy.

“It’s not that William Lai doesn’t want to compromise, it’s that no one really wants to compromise,” Lev Nachman, a political science professor at National Taiwan University, told reporters.

But Deputy Foreign Minister Chen Ming-chi said he was “cautiously optimistic” the opposition would eventually come round.

“We hope that in the new (parliamentary) session there will be more opportunity to cooperate,” Chen told AFP in an interview on Thursday.
Japan to restart world’s biggest nuclear plant


By AFP
February 5, 2026


The Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant in Kashiwazaki City has been offline since the 2011 Fukushima disaster - Copyright JIJI PRESS/AFP/File STR

Japan will switch the world’s largest nuclear power plant back on next week, after a glitch with an alarm forced the suspension of its first restart since the 2011 Fukushima disaster.

Takeyuki Inagaki, the head of the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant run by Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO), told a press conference Friday that they planned “to start up the reactor on February 9”.

The announcement came after TEPCO restarted the reactor on January 21 but shut it off the following day after an alarm from the monitoring system sounded.

Due to an error in its configuration, the alarm had picked up slight changes to the electrical current in one cable even though these were still within a range considered safe, Inagaki said.

The firm has now changed the alarm’s settings as the reactor is safe to operate, Inagaki said.

The commercial operation will commence on or after March 18 after another comprehensive inspection, he said.

Kashiwazaki-Kariwa is the world’s biggest nuclear power plant by potential capacity, although just one reactor of seven will restart.

The facility had been offline since Japan pulled the plug on nuclear power after a colossal earthquake and tsunami sent three reactors at the Fukushima atomic plant into meltdown in 2011.

Resource-poor Japan now wants to revive atomic energy to reduce its reliance on fossil fuels, achieve carbon neutrality by 2050 and meet growing energy needs from artificial intelligence.

Kashiwazaki-Kariwa is the first TEPCO-run unit to restart since 2011. The company also operates the stricken Fukushima Daiichi plant, now being decommissioned.

Public opinion in the area around the plant is deeply divided: Around 60 percent of residents oppose the restart, while 37 percent support it, according to a survey conducted by Niigata prefecture in September.

In January, seven groups opposing the restart submitted a petition signed by nearly 40,000 people to TEPCO and Japan’s Nuclear Regulation Authority, saying that the plant sits on an active seismic fault zone and noted it was struck by a strong quake in 2007.
Japan taps Meta to help search for abuse of Olympic athletes


By AFP
February 6, 2026


Kao Miura competes in Beijing ahead of the Olympics - Copyright AFP GREG BAKER

Japan’s Olympic committee said on Friday it was working with tech giant Meta to monitor social media around the clock to protect athletes from online abuse at the Milan-Cortina Games.

The Japanese Olympic Committee (JOC) has designated six staff members in Milan and a further 16 in Tokyo to scour social media 24 hours a day, using artificial intelligence tools to help detect malicious material.

The JOC said it was partnering with both Facebook parent Meta Platforms and Japanese tech company LINE Yahoo to combat online abuse.

“With the proliferation of social media, defamatory comments and malicious posts targeting athletes have become a serious social issue,” the JOC said in a statement.

“Such behaviour not only places significant mental and physical strain on athletes, but also risks impacting their ability to perform.”

The JOC’s monitoring operation began in mid-January and Japanese media said officials had identified roughly 2,000 potentially inappropriate posts before Friday’s opening ceremony.

Reports said the JOC had requested the removal of 380 social media posts. Kyodo News said “dozens” were deleted.

Japanese figure skater Kao Miura said online abuse was “unacceptable because it hurts and saddens people”.

The 20-year-old said he had received a barrage of abusive messages at last month’s Four Continents Championships in Beijing, which he went on to win.

“The notifications were annoying,” he said.

The head of Japan’s delegation at the Milan-Cortina Games, Hidehito Ito, asked people to “support the athletes”.

“The athletes have worked incredibly hard to get this far, and thoughtless words can take a big toll on their mental state,” he said.

EU tells TikTok to change ‘addictive’ design


By AFP
February 6, 2026


The European Commission launched the probe into TikTok under its content law, the Digital Services Act, in February 2024 - Copyright AFP Adnan Beci


Raziye Akkoc

The EU said Friday that it had told TikTok it needs to change its “addictive design” or risk heavy fines, after the Chinese-owned platform was found in breach of the bloc’s digital content rules.

The European Commission, announcing preliminary conclusions of a probe opened two years ago, said it found TikTok was not taking effective steps to address negative impacts from some of its features, especially for young people and children.

It said TikTok was believed to be “in breach of the Digital Services Act for its addictive design”, including through features such as infinite scroll, autoplay, push notifications, and a highly personalised recommender system.

The commission said its probe so far indicated that TikTok did too little to “assess how these addictive features could harm the physical and mental wellbeing of its users, including minors and vulnerable adults”.

To address the concerns — and avoid the risk of hefty fines — EU tech chief Henna Virkkunen told reporters that “TikTok has to take actions, they have to change the design of their service in Europe to protect our minors and their wellbeing.”

The commission gave examples of what the platform could alter, such as:

— the platform’s “infinite scroll” offering users an uninterrupted feed

— implementing effective “screen time breaks”, including during the night

— adapting its recommender system, the algorithms used by platforms to feed users more personalised content.

– ‘Compulsive use’ of TikTok –

The February 2024 investigation was the first opened into TikTok under the DSA, the bloc’s powerful content moderation law that has faced the wrath of the US administration under President Donald Trump.

The DSA is part of a bolstered legal armoury adopted by the EU in recent years to curb Big Tech’s excesses, and officials have said TikTok has been cooperating with the bloc’s digital regulators so far.

The commission findings raised concerns about TikTok design features that “fuel the urge to keep scrolling”.

Brussels accused TikTok of disregarding “important indicators of compulsive use of the app” such as the time spent on the platform by children at night.

It also said TikTok had not implemented effective measures to mitigate risks, taking particular aim at screen time management and parental control tools.

The commission found that TikTok’s time management tools were “easy to dismiss” including for young users, while parental controls required “additional time and skills from parents to introduce” them.

– ‘Extremely cooperative’ –

The findings come as several European countries move to curb access to social media for younger teenagers — with officials weighing whether it is time to follow suit at EU level.

Briefing reporters Friday, Virkkunen said her priority was to make platforms safe for all users, children included.

“Social media should be so safe by design that we shouldn’t have that kind of very high age restriction,” she said.

TikTok may now access the EU’s files and defend itself against the claims.

If the regulator’s views are confirmed, the commission can impose a fine of up to six percent of the company’s total worldwide annual turnover.

The EU began a separate probe into TikTok in December 2024 on alleged foreign interference during the Romanian presidential elections.

EU digital affairs spokesman Thomas Regnier said Wednesday that TikTok had been “extremely cooperative” with regulators during that investigation and had been taking measures to address the commission’s concerns.

Regnier added that while the probe remained open, regulators could monitor how TikTok behaves during other elections.


Opinions of Zuckerberg hang over social media addiction trial jury selection

By AFP
February 7, 2026


Instagram and its parent company Meta, led by Mark Zuckerberg, have been accused of addicting young users of the social media app, to the detriment of their mental health - Copyright AFP DAVID GRAY


Benjamin LEGENDRE

A jury has been confirmed in a landmark social media addiction trial in the US state of California, a process dominated by references to tech giant Meta’s divisive founder Mark Zuckerberg.

Meta’s lawyers fought for six days in court to remove jurors who they deemed overly hostile to Facebook and Instagram, two of the social media platforms involved in the case.

The plaintiff’s lawyers sought to dismiss people, mostly men, who believed that young internet users’ mental health issues are more attributable to parental failures rather than tech platform designers.

With the jury of 12 members and six alternates approved on Friday, arguments in the case are now scheduled to begin Monday in Los Angeles Superior Court.

The case is being called a bellwether proceeding because its outcome could set the tone for a tidal wave of similar litigation across the United States.

Defendants at the trial are Alphabet and Meta, the tech titans behind YouTube and Instagram. TikTok and Snapchat were also accused, but have since settled for an undisclosed amount.

The trial focuses on allegations that a 20-year-old woman identified by the initials K.G.M. suffered severe mental harm because she became addicted to social media as a child.

She accuses Meta and YouTube of knowingly designing addictive apps, to the detriment of her mental health.



– ‘Start fairly’ –



Jury selection was dominated by recurring references to Zuckerberg, the head of Meta and co-founder of Facebook who reached global fame after the Hollywood film “The Social Network.”

“I feel impartial toward the plaintiff, but based on things Mark Zuckerberg has done objectively — I have strong feelings about — and I think the defendant would start further behind,” said one young woman.

Many potential jurors criticized Facebook’s early days — it was designed as a platform for college students to rate women’s looks — and cited the Cambridge Analytica privacy breach of 2018.

They also said it would be difficult for them to accept the billionaire’s testimony — expected in the next two weeks — without prejudice.

Meta’s lawyer, Phyllis Jones, raised frequent objections to such jurors.

She said it was “very important that both sides start fairly, with no disadvantage, that you look at the evidence fairly and decide.”

Others were dismissed for the opposite reason.

“I like this guy,” said one rare Zuckerberg fan. “I regret not owning Meta shares.”

He was dismissed by the plaintiff’s lawyer, Mark Lanier.

Others to be removed included a man who expressed his anger against psychiatrists, and several people whose loved ones suffered from social media addiction or harassment.



– Seeking distance –



Alphabet’s lawyers were keen to ensure that their platform YouTube was not lumped in with Meta.

“Does everybody understand that YouTube and Meta are very different companies? Does everyone understand that (Zuckerberg) doesn’t run YouTube?” asked Luis Li, a lawyer for Google’s video platform.

One man said he saw the potential for YouTube to seek to trigger “immediate dopamine” rushes among users through its “Shorts” feature.

He said his niece spends too much time on TikTok, which popularized a platform that provides endless scrolling of ultra-short-format videos.

The case will focus not on content, on which front platforms are largely protected by US law, but on the design of algorithms and personalization features.

The plaintiffs allege that the platforms are negligent and purposely designed to be harmful, echoing a strategy successfully used against the tobacco industry.

Meta and YouTube strongly deny the allegations, and also unsuccessfully argued on Friday for the judge to declare statements comparing their platforms to tobacco and other addictive products to be illegitimate.

The debate on the platform’s level of responsibility for their effect on users was already underway, even at this early stage of the trial.

Alphabet’s lawyer Li asked the panel if people spend too much time on phones, with the majority nodding in agreement.

“As a society, is it a problem?” he asked, with most hands again going up.

He then asked if this is “because of YouTube?” prompting hesitation from the jurors.


Telegram founder slams Spain PM over under-16s social media ban


By AFP
February 4, 2026


Telegram founder Pavel Durov warned a proposed social media ban for under-16s 'could turn Spain into a surveillance state' - Copyright AFP/File Yuri KADOBNOV

Telegram founder Pavel Durov on Wednesday joined fellow tech tycoon Elon Musk in slamming Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez over his “dangerous” plan to ban social media for under-16s.

The Socialist leader announced a series of measures in Dubai on Tuesday to protect Spanish minors from harmful social media content such as violence and pornography.

As well as the ban, Sanchez pledged to change Spanish law to make the chief executives of tech platforms “face criminal liability for failing to remove illegal or hateful content”.

Durov spoke of “dangerous new regulations that threaten your internet freedoms” in a Wednesday post on his Telegram messaging app, which has an estimated billion users and is known for its privacy features.

“These measures could turn Spain into a surveillance state under the guise of ‘protection’,” he wrote, saying mass data collection and censorship would result from their enforcement.

Musk reacted to the announcement with a string of posts on his social media platform X on Tuesday, calling Sanchez “dirty”, a “tyrant and traitor to the people of Spain” and “the true fascist totalitarian”.

The SpaceX and Tesla boss had already been embroiled in a public spat with Sanchez over his government’s regularisation of hundreds of thousands of undocumented migrants.

Spain’s move to ban social media for under-16s came after Australia became the first country to introduce such a measure in December.

France, Greece and Denmark have been leading a push for similar steps in the European Union.

Next in Putin’s sights? Estonia town stuck between two worlds


By AFP
February 6, 2026


Two medieval fortresses face each other across the Narva River separating Estonia from Russia on Europe's eastern edge - Copyright AFP STR


Anna Smolchenko

Two medieval fortresses face each other across the Narva River separating Estonia from Russia on Europe’s eastern edge.

Once a symbol of cooperation, the “Friendship Bridge” connecting the two snow-covered banks has been reinforced with rows of razor wire and “dragon’s teeth” anti-tank obstacles on the Estonian side.

“The name is kind of ironic,” Eerik Purgel, the regional border chief, told AFP in the Russian-speaking town of Narva.

Some fear the border town of over 50,000 people — a mixture of Estonians, Russians and people left stateless after the fall of the Soviet Union — could be Vladimir Putin’s next target.

On the Estonian side of the bridge, the NATO flag flutters in the wind beside those of Estonia and the European Union.

People in cars used to queue up to cross the Narva River to go shopping and see relatives in Russia. But today the crossing is closed to traffic and travellers pull their luggage across on foot.

“Maybe there should not be a bridge at all,” said Purgel.

As Moscow’s war against Ukraine approaches its fourth anniversary, the mood in Narva is gloomy.

“Here at the edge of Europe the war feels different,” said mayor Katri Raik. “We see Russia across the border every day.

“We’re all thinking about what comes next,” she added inside a freshly renovated 17th-century town hall, surrounded by drab Soviet-era buildings.



– ‘Most difficult period’ –



Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Estonia — along with the fellow Baltic nations of Latvia and Lithuania — has reinforced its defences.

Estonia’s army is tiny. The defence ministry says a force of just under 44,000 people can be deployed to defend the country if necessary, alongside around 2,000 troops from allied NATO countries in the country.

The Estonian authorities have also sought to enhance national security with other measures. They have stripped Russians and stateless residents of the right to vote in local elections, and are switching to teaching in Estonian in dozens of schools.

Those reforms have hit Russian-speaking Narva hard.

The changes, combined with high unemployment, soaring energy bills, a collapse in ties with Russia and fear of conflict, have heightened tensions in the border town.

“This is the most difficult period in our history in about 40 years,” said Mihhail Stalnuhhin, chairman of the town council, denouncing policies targeting Russian speakers.

“It’s compounded by the constant talk of war, war, war, war, war. People are going through a very difficult moral, economic and social situation.”



– Russian passports –



In Narva, around half of all residents are Estonian, a third hold Russian citizenship, and roughly 7,000 people are stateless.

Strategically located, the town has in past centuries been ruled by the Danes, Germans, Russians, Swedes, and Estonians.

Much of the historic baroque Old Town was destroyed during World War II, and under Soviet rule Narva became predominantly Russian-speaking.

Thirty-five years after Estonia won independence, Narva is still struggling with its sense of identity.

Vladimir Aret, a 32-year-old hotel manager and member of the town council, said many in Narva felt caught between two worlds.

“I am European, but we sometimes joke that we do not understand what our homeland is,” he said.

While many — including Aret — call themselves Estonian patriots, some praise Putin.

Some people in Narva speak only Russian. They watch Russian television and are nostalgic for the Soviet past.



– ‘Russophobic madness’ –



Russia regularly rails against the Estonian government.

Russia’s foreign ministry slammed “Estonia’s growing Russophobic madness” and the authorities’ “neo-Nazi” policies in a report released in December.

The ministry, in its report on the rights of Russians abroad, also said that the large number of stateless people in Estonia was a major problem.

Some back the Moscow view.

“We, Russian speakers, are being discriminated against,” a woman in her mid-50s said in Narva on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.

Olga Kolesnikova, a stateless 64-year-old, disagreed.

“I don’t feel disadvantaged,” said the retired baker, adding that three of her four children were Estonian citizens.

Aleksandr Gruljov, a 59-year-old construction worker, said he was even considering giving up Russian citizenship.

“Nobody is oppressing anyone here,” he added.



– ‘Perfect gateway’ –



But German political scientist Carlo Masala said depriving Russian citizens in Estonia of the right to vote in local elections was “a perfect gateway for Russian propaganda”.

As in Donbas in eastern Ukraine, “Russia can argue that the rights of its minorities living abroad are under threat, providing a reason to protect them, if necessary by military means,” he told AFP.

In his best-selling book “If Russia Wins: A Scenario”, he imagines Russian troops capturing Narva in 2028 in order to launch a broader attack on the Baltic States and trigger a possible collapse of NATO.

Under such a scenario, Russians troops would conquer Narva within hours, aided by “parts of the local civil population,” who would be supplied with small arms and machine guns ahead of the assault.

Masala told AFP several other cities with sizable Russian communities including Kirkenes in Norway and Daugavpils in Latvia could also be vulnerable to a possible Russian attack.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has cast the political sympathies of Estonia’s Russian-speaking population into the spotlight.

“Will they support the state in the event of war, possibly against Russia?” asked a 2023 study of the country’s Russian-speaking minority.

According to its findings, 65 percent of Estonia’s Russian speakers said they were “rather or definitely patriots of Estonia,” whereas 28 percent said that they were “rather or definitely not.”



– ‘We are ready’ –



Jelisei Solovjov knows where his loyalties lie.

The 18-year-old fatigue-clad member of the Kaitseliit, a voluntary national defence organisation, already knows how to dig trenches and shoot.

“We are ready to defend our country, we are not afraid,” he said.

Masala, the analyst, said that Narva today resembled a “fortress.”

“This would make military action much more difficult than it would have been a few years ago.”

Estonian border chiefs dismiss the idea that Narva is particularly vulnerable to a Moscow assault.

Egert Belitsev, the head of the country’s border service, said Berlin also had a large Russian population.

With such a pretext, “you can also invade Berlin,” he said.

Back at the Narva border crossing, Purgel was defiant.

“It’s our town, we will protect it with our lives,” he said.

DON'T MINE, DEMINE!

In Finland’s forests, soldiers re-learn how to lay anti-personnel mines


By AFP
February 6, 2026


Finnish soldiers are exploring the most effective way to use mines
 - Copyright AFP STR


Mathieu RABECHAULT

Finland is barely out of the treaty banning them but the country’s armed forces are already training soldiers to lay anti-personnel mines, citing a threat from neighbouring Russia.

Trudging through snow, a young Finnish conscript carefully draws a thin blue wire between two pine trees. The other end is attached to a hidden mine some 20 metres (65 feet) away.

“We are in the process of figuring out what’s the most effective way to use them,” said Lieutenant Joona Ratto, who teaches military service conscripts how to use the devices that Finland had banned in 2012.

Stationed with the Kainuu Brigade, which is responsible for defending 700 of the 1,340-kilometre (833-mile) border Finland shares with Russia, Ratto and his colleagues are gearing up to train the 500 active-duty soldiers, 2,500 conscripts, and 5,000 reservists who pass through the garrison each year.

Dropping decades of military non-alignment, Finland applied to join NATO in the wake of Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine and became a member in 2023.

Like the nearby Baltic states and Poland, it also decided to withdraw from the Ottawa Convention, which prohibits the use, stockpiling, or production of anti-personnel mines.

No longer bound by the international treaty since January 10, Finland is now free to bury or conceal the small, inexpensive devices, which have been criticised for causing injuries to civilians long after conflicts end.

From a military perspective, antipersonnel mines are a necessary evil, according to Ratto.

“We can use them to either stop the enemy or maybe alarm our own troops in the defensive positions”, giving troops time to prepare for “the firefight”, he told AFP among the wintery landscape of pine and spruce trees.

While the war in Ukraine has cemented the role of drones, the trench war had demonstrated that, although old, “they are still effective and they have an important role on the battlefield”, said Colonel Riku Mikkonen, inspector of engineering for the Finnish Army.

Nearby, other soldiers train on a road.

A warning sign has been put up reading “Miinoja, mines”, depicting a skull in a downward-pointing red triangle — the international symbol for a mined area.

A powerful drill is used to penetrate the frozen ground to bury training anti-tank mines, which were never banned.



– One million mines –



For now, the Finnish army has no caches of antipersonnel mines. It therefore trains with the directional Claymore mine, which projects shrapnel up to 50 metres.

Mikkonen believes the situation will be resolved within two years as Finland’s defence industry needs to resume its domestic production of simple, low-cost mines.

Having them produced in Finland guarantees that they can be supplied “also in wartime”, he explained.

With 162 states still party to the Ottawa Convention — but not the United States or Russia — there also are not enough sellers around internationally to satisfy Finland’s needs, he added.

But what those needs are exactly has not yet been finalised.

“We used to have one million infantry mines before the Ottawa Convention in our stocks, that’s a good amount, but let’s see,” he said.

Currently, Finland’s army does not intend to deploy mines along its eastern border and it will be a decision for the government to make in a crisis.

Mikkonen hoped that the decision will be made months in advance of actual hostilities, ideally six months out.

Detailed minefield plans would then have to be drawn up, on paper and via a smartphone app which is in development.

With the risk of leftover mines posing a hazard after the end of fighting, some modern mines include a self-neutralising mechanism, but Mikkonen said he would “rather not have them”.

“Because the war can last for a long time while the self-destruction happens after three to four months. It makes sense of the humanitarian side, not on the military side.”