Thursday, June 12, 2025

China-backed militia secures control of new rare earth mines in Myanmar


United Wa State Army (UWSA) soldiers march during a media display in Pansang, Wa territory in northeast Myanmar on Oct 4, 2016.
PHOTO: Reuters file

ASIA ONE
June 12, 2025 

BANGKOK — A Chinese-backed militia is protecting new rare earth mines in eastern Myanmar, according to four people familiar with the matter, as Beijing moves to secure control of the minerals it is wielding as a bargaining chip in its trade war with Washington.

China has a near-monopoly over the processing of heavy rare earths into magnets that power critical goods like wind turbines, medical devices and electric vehicles. But Beijing is heavily reliant on Myanmar for the rare earth metals and oxides needed to produce them: the war-torn country was the source of nearly half those imports in the first four months of this year, Chinese customs data show.

Beijing's access to fresh stockpiles of minerals like dysprosium and terbium has been throttled recently after a major mining belt in Myanmar's north was taken over by an armed group battling the Southeast Asian country's junta, which Beijing supports.


Now, in the hillsides of Shan state in eastern Myanmar, Chinese miners are opening new deposits for extraction, according to two of the sources, both of whom work at one of the mines. At least 100 people are working day-to-night shifts excavating hillsides and extracting minerals using chemicals, the sources said.

Two other residents of the area said they had witnessed trucks carrying material from the mines, between the towns of Mong Hsat and Mong Yun, toward the Chinese border some 200km away. Reuters identified some of the sites using imagery from commercial satellite providers Planet Labs and Maxar Technologies.

Business records across Myanmar are poorly maintained and challenging to access, and Reuters could not independently identify the ownership of the mines.


The mines operate under the protection of the United Wa State Army (UWSA), according to four sources, two of whom were able to identify the uniforms of the militia members.

The UWSA, which is among the biggest armed groups in Shan state, also controls one of the world's largest tin mines. It has long-standing commercial and military links with China, according to the US Institute of Peace (USIP), a conflict resolution non-profit. 
United Wa State Army (UWSA) soldiers seen in tin mine factory at Man Maw at ethnic Wa territory in northeast Myanmar on Oct 5, 2016.
PHOTO: Reuters file

Details of the militia's role and the export route of the rare earths are reported by Reuters for the first time.

University of Manchester lecturer Patrick Meehan, who has closely studied Myanmar's rare earth industry and reviewed satellite imagery of the Shan mines, said the "mid-large size" sites appeared to be the first significant facilities in the country outside the Kachin region in the north.

"There is a whole belt of rare earths that goes down through Kachin, through Shan, parts of Laos," he said.

China's Ministry of Commerce, as well as the UWSA and the junta, did not respond to Reuters' questions.

Access to rare earths is increasingly important to Beijing, which tightened restrictions on its exports of metals and magnets after US President Donald Trump resumed his trade war with China this year.

While China appears to have recently approved more exports and Trump has signalled progress in resolving the dispute, the move has upended global supply chains central to automakers, aerospace manufacturers and semiconductor companies.

The price of terbium oxide has jumped by over 27 per cent across the last six months, Shanghai Metals Market data show. Dysprosium oxide prices have fluctuated sharply, rising around one per cent during the same period.

Chinese influence

A prominent circular clearing first appears in the forested hills of Shan state, some 30km away from the Thai border, in April 2023, according to the satellite images reviewed by Reuters.

By February 2025 — shortly after the Kachin mines suspended work — the site housed over a dozen leaching pools, which are ponds typically used to extract heavy rare earths, the images showed.

Six km away, across the Kok river, another forest clearing was captured in satellite imagery from May 2024. Within a year, it had transformed into a facility with 20 leaching pools.

Minerals analyst David Merriman, who reviewed two of the Maxar images for Reuters, said the infrastructure at the Shan mines, as well as observable erosion levels to the topography, indicated that the facilities "have been producing for a little bit already".

At least one of the mines is run by a Chinese company using Chinese-speaking managers, according to the two mine workers and two members of the Shan Human Rights Foundation (SHRF), an advocacy group that identified the existence of the operations in a May report using satellite imagery.

An office at one of the two sites also had a company logo written in Chinese characters, said one of the workers, who spoke on condition of anonymity in order to discuss sensitive matters.

The use of Chinese operators in the Shan mines and transportation of the output to China mirrors a similar system in Kachin, where entire hillsides stand scarred by leaching pools.

Chinese mining firms can produce heavy rare earth oxides in low-cost and loosely regulated Myanmar seven times cheaper than in other regions with similar deposits, said Neha Mukherjee of London-based Benchmark Mineral Intelligence. "Margins are huge".

Beijing tightly controls the technology that allows for the efficient extraction of heavy rare earths, and she said that it would be difficult to operate a facility in Myanmar without Chinese assistance.

The satellite imagery suggest the Shan mines are smaller than their Kachin counterparts but they are likely to yield the same elements, according to Merriman, who serves as research director at consultancy Project Blue.
A satellite image shows an overview of West River rare earth mine, in Myanmar on May 6.
PHOTO: Reuters

"The Shan State deposits will have terbium and dysprosium in them, and they will be the main elements that (the miners) are targeting there," he said.
Strategic tool

The UWSA oversees a remote statelet the size of Belgium and, according to US prosecutors, has long prospered from the drug trade.

It has a long-standing ceasefire with the junta but still maintains a force of between 30,000 and 35,000 personnel, equipped with modern weaponry mainly sourced from China, according to Ye Myo-hein, a senior fellow at the Southeast Asia Peace Institute.

"The UWSA functions as a key instrument for China to maintain strategic leverage along the Myanmar-China border and exert influence over other ethnic armed groups," he said.

Some of those fighters are also closely monitoring the mining area, said SHRF member Leng Harn. "People cannot freely go in and out of the area without ID cards issued by UWSA."

Shan state has largely kept out of the protracted civil war, in which an assortment of armed groups are battling the junta. The fighting has also roiled the Kachin mining belt and pushed many Chinese operators to cease work.

China has repeatedly said that it seeks stability in Myanmar, where it has significant investments. Beijing has intervened to halt fighting in some areas near its border.

"The Wa have had now 35 years with no real conflict with the Myanmar military," said USIP's Myanmar country director Jason Towers. "Chinese companies and the Chinese government would see the Wa areas as being more stable than other parts of northern Burma."

The bet on Shan's rare earths deposit could provide more leverage to China amid a global scramble for the critical minerals, said Benchmark's Mukherjee.

"If there's so much disruption happening in Kachin, they would be looking for alternative sources," she said. "They want to keep the control of heavy rare earths in their hands. They use that as a strategic tool."
Lebanon’s Former Economy Minister Detained on Corruption and Embezzlement Charges


Former Lebanese Economy Minister Amin Salam
Beirut: Youssef Diab

2 June 2025 
AD ـ 16 Thul-Hijjah 1446 AH

Former Lebanese Economy Minister Amin Salam was arrested on Wednesday by order of Public Prosecutor Jamal al-Hajjar on multiple corruption-related suspicions, including embezzlement of public funds and the signing of questionable contracts during his tenure.

The arrest follows a three-hour interrogation by the Internal Security Forces’ Information Branch, conducted in the presence of Salam’s lawyer, Samer al-Hajj.

The move comes just two weeks after Salam was initially questioned at the Beirut Justice Palace. At that time, al-Hajjar had released him on a residency guarantee, lifted his travel ban, and returned his passport. However, new evidence has since prompted further legal action.

According to a senior judicial source, the renewed investigation was triggered by a formal complaint filed by the parliamentary Economic Committee, which accused Salam of embezzlement, forgery, illicit enrichment, and extortion of insurance companies in exchange for contract renewals. The Ministry of Economy reportedly submitted documentation indicating that several contracts signed by Salam were marked by serious irregularities and signs of corruption.

A new case was subsequently opened, prompting the Public Prosecutor to instruct the Information Branch to summon Salam for further questioning — a session that ultimately led to his detention.

The investigation is expected to expand beyond Salam himself. Authorities are reportedly looking into the activities of his inner circle at the ministry. Al-Hajjar plans to transfer the case to the Financial Prosecutor’s Office, which will determine further charges and refer the file to Investigative Judge Bilal Halawi. Halawi will then decide whether to issue a formal arrest warrant, release Salam on bail, or keep him in detention.

Salam’s legal troubles are not new. His former advisor, Fadi Tamim, was previously sentenced to one year in prison in a separate insurance-related corruption case. His brother and former chief of staff, Karim Salam, was also arrested two months ago and remains in custody.

This marks the first arrest of a senior Lebanese official on corruption charges since 2003, signaling what many observers see as a potentially significant shift in Lebanon’s long-stalled accountability efforts.



N. Korea discharges uranium waste into waters flowing to S. Korea

Unlike past concerns about aging pipeline leaks, North Korea has now deliberately constructed drainage systems to dump uranium waste directly into rivers that flow south to South Korean water


By Bruce Songhak Chung
- June 12, 2025




North Korea operates a critical uranium refining facility in North Hwanghae province’s Pyongsan county that serves as a critical link in its nuclear weapons chain. The plant converts mined uranium ore into yellowcake concentrate—essentially purified uranium ready for the next stage of weapons production. This yellowcake then travels to the Yongbyon Nuclear Complex, among other facilities, where scientists enrich it to the high levels needed for nuclear bombs.

Waste generated at the Pyongsan uranium facility has historically been sent to a reservoir across the river for sedimentation. However, satellite imagery has captured evidence that as the sedimentation pond reached capacity, North Korea began discharging wastewater directly into the river system.

My satellite analysis utilized WorldView-3 imagery available through the World Imagery Wayback service provided by the Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI) in the United States to examine the wastewater discharge situation. Wastewater released from the sedimentation pond flows downstream along waterways, eventually joining the Yesong River and flowing south through Ganghwa Bay before entering the West Sea. This raises serious concerns about contamination of South Korean rivers and coastal waters.
Satellite imagery shows the Pyongsan uranium facility’s sedimentation pond connected to drainage channels, with sediment discharge visible. The wastewater flows 2 kilometers along a small stream before joining the Yesong River, then continues south to discharge into the West Sea. Photo: WorldView-3

High-resolution satellite imagery (60 centimeter resolution) captured in late October last year shows wastewater from the Pyongsan uranium facility’s sedimentation pond being discharged through drainage channels into a small stream. This stream flows two kilometers before joining the Yesong River, which then flows south to meet waters from the Han River, passes through Ganghwa Bay, and eventually reaches the West Sea.

As visible in the upper left of the satellite image, the Pyongsan uranium facility has historically sent waste through pipelines to the reservoir for sedimentation. As solid waste accumulated in the reservoir, black sludge formed and built up from the bottom, rising to the water surface level. The wastewater appeared ready to overflow beyond the sedimentation pond. Satellite imagery has captured North Korea neglecting the sedimentation facility and discharging untreated wastewater directly into the river system.
An underground tunnel was excavated beneath the embankment next to the sedimentation pond, with leachate flowing through drainage channels. This represents unauthorized discharge of uranium concentrate waste into waterways. Photo: WorldView-3

High-resolution satellite imagery shows that North Korea excavated an underground tunnel connecting the external drainage system to the sedimentation pond, creating a discharge pathway for wastewater. The leachate flowing from the sedimentation pond through the drainage channels appears as dark coloration in the imagery. This constitutes unauthorized discharge of uranium concentrate waste beyond the sedimentation facility.

Construction of this drainage system was first identified by Jacob Bogle, a U.S. civilian satellite imagery expert, who published details of the mysterious excavation work on his website (AccessDPRK) on January 5, 2023. Satellite imagery indicates the drainage construction began around March 2022, in early spring. I also confirmed and analyzed the drainage construction situation in detail on June 22, 2024. The late October satellite imagery shows the drainage system connected to the sedimentation pond through underground tunnels, with leachate confirmed flowing along the small stream.

As waste accumulates in the Pyongsan uranium facility’s sedimentation pond, sludge (solid waste) continues to increase. October satellite imagery shows the sedimentation pond reaching saturation and exhibiting algal blooms. Photo: Google Earth and WorldView-3

Across the river from the Pyongsan uranium facility lies a large reservoir with a surface area measured at 34 hectares. Satellite imagery indicates that as North Korea has continued nuclear material production activities, waste has accumulated in the sedimentation pond to saturation levels. Chronological satellite imagery shows that sludge covered only 1.9 hectares in 2006, expanded to 7.5 hectares by 2018, and significantly increased to 16.6 hectares by October 2024. The accumulation of solid waste sludge and surrounding wastewater spread has substantially increased the sedimentation pond’s surface area. The pond has become severely contaminated, turning green with visible algae blooms. The toxic, noxious odors likely permeate the surrounding area.

Several years ago, North Korea-focused internet outlets 38 North and Radio Free Asia (RFA) raised concerns that wastewater from the Pyongsan uranium facility was leaking into the Yesong River, potentially contaminating South Korea’s Han River estuary and West Sea with radioactive waste. As domestic media coverage heightened awareness of the situation’s severity, South Korea’s Ministry of Unification collected samples from the Han River and West Sea for water quality analysis by testing agencies and publicly announced the results. The ministry’s October 21, 2019 announcement concluded there were “no unusual findings in Han River and West Sea samples, and no highly radioactive contaminants exist at the Pyongsan uranium refining facility.”

However, the current situation differs significantly from the past. Previously, the concern involved aging pipelines leaking waste into the Yesong River. Since then, pipeline repairs or replacements appear to have addressed the leakage situation, as no such leaks are visible in satellite imagery.

Now, satellite imagery reveals North Korea’s intentional discharge of sedimentation pond wastewater into waterways. North Korea completed drainage construction in the latter half of 2024, and high-resolution satellite imagery has captured full-scale wastewater discharge from the Pyongsan uranium facility’s sedimentation pond. Despite knowing that the international community monitors North Korea’s key facilities closely through satellite surveillance, North Korea has proceeded with unauthorized waste discharge. North Korea appears to show no consideration for its neighbors. The contaminated Yesong River water now flows south through Ganghwa Bay and Gyeonggi Bay before ultimately reaching the West Sea. Verification efforts appear necessary.

International Trade Union Confederation




World Day Against Child Labour: Urgent action needed to end global injustice



On the World Day Against Child Labour, 12 June, the ITUC calls on the global community to act with renewed urgency as the world is dangerously off-track to meet the 2025 deadline under Sustainable Development Goal 8.7.


Thu. 12 June 2025


Credit: ILO-UNICEF

New ILO-UNICEF global estimates reveal that nearly 138 million children are still trapped in child labour – 54 million of them in hazardous work. Behind every number is a child denied their right to education, safety and a future..

ITUC General Secretary Luc Triangle said: “Child labour is a symptom of deeper injustice. It reflects a decent work crisis. When adults are underpaid, unprotected, or unemployed, their children pay the price. Poverty wages, informal work, and lack of social protection force families into impossible choices.

“The international community has committed under SDG 8.7 to end child labour by 2025, and yet we are not on track. This is not a failure of resources. Ending child labour is a test of justice, of accountability, and of political will. It cannot wait. We must act now, with laws, with budgets, with union power to end this injustice and give every child a future.”

The ITUC demands urgent action from governments and employers:Guarantee living wages and decent work for all.
We welcome the new ILO–ITUC–IOE Global Programme on Living Wages. No family should be forced to choose between hunger and sending a child to work.
Deliver universal social protection for all.
Child benefits, income support and healthcare are proven tools to prevent child labour. Governments must fund this, especially in low-income and rural communities.
Enforce ILO Conventions 138 and 182.
Child labour laws must be backed by adequate labour inspection and penalties for violations, and workplace union access. The recruitment of children in armed conflict must be fully prohibited with support for their reintegration into society.
Invest in quality, public education and just transition.
Free, quality public education systems must reach all children, especially girls, migrant children, and those in remote or conflict-affected areas. Employers must support just transition strategies that formalise work, uphold labour rights and reinforce communities, not exploit them.

As we move toward the UN World Social Summit in Doha this November, governments must make solid commitment to ensure that every child is in school, every worker has a living wage, and no child is left behind in crisis .

The 6th Global Conference on the Elimination of Child Labour in Morocco next year must deliver a roadmap with real accountability from governments, corporations and international institutions to deliver structural change through binding rules, fair supply chains, and enforcement of labour standards.

We support initiative like Alliance 8.7 to strengthen coordination and knowledge sharing among countries. Such international cooperation has to amplify the voice of local actors in civil society, survivor-led movements, trade unions and communities themselves. We need more investment into south-south collaboration to co-create solutions and to continue expansion of Child Labour Free Zones (CLFZs) and community-based monitoring programs.

Watch here the high-level event organized at the 113th International Labour Conference to mark the World Day Against Child Labour 2025 with the launch of the ILO-UNICEF joint report on the lates global estimates of child labour.

SIPRI Conversation: 

The Expansion of the NewSpace Industry

 

In this SIPRI Conversation video, Stephanie Blenckner talks to Lauriane Héau and Kolja Brockmann, Researchers with SIPRI’s Dual-Use and Arms Trade Control Programme, about the expansion of the NewSpace industry. As space technology advances, dual-use technologies, essential to both civilian and military applications, raise concerns about missile proliferation. 

 

Watch more films and interview on SIPRI’s YouTube channel


Jun 12, 2025 



Ex-CIA analyst gets 3 years in jail for leaking Israeli strike plans on Iran

SHOULD HAVE GOTTEN A MEDAL INSTEAD

Ex-CIA analyst Asif Rahman was sentenced to 37 months in prison for leaking classified Israeli plans to strike Iran. The documents later surfaced on a pro-Iranian Telegram channel amid rising regional tensions.




Reuters
Washington,
Jun 12, 2025 
Posted By: Akshat Trivedi

In ShortAsif Rahman pleaded guilty to illegally distributing classified information
Leak occurred amid high tensions between US ally Israel and Iran
Rahman arrested in Cambodia, held top secret clearance before termination

A former CIA analyst who pleaded guilty in January over a leak of classified Israeli plans to strike Iran was sentenced to 37 months in prison on Wednesday, the US Department of Justice said.

In pleading guilty, Asif William Rahman, who had worked at the US intelligence agency since 2016, acknowledged that he illegally downloaded, printed and distributed classified information on multiple occasions, including several in 2024.

WHY IT'S IMPORTANT

US ally Israel and its regional rival Iran were in the midst of high tensions at the time and exchanged some blows.

Israel at the time was preparing to strike some Iranian sites in retaliation for a ballistic missile attack that the Iranian government said was a response to Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh's assassination by Israel in Tehran.
CONTEXT

Rahman had a "Top Secret" security clearance with access to Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI) until his employment was terminated after his arrest in late 2024.

The documents, which entailed plans by Israel to strike Iran, later appeared online after a pro-Iranian Telegram account called "Middle East Spectator" published them.

Rahman, 34, is from Vienna, Virginia, and was arrested in Cambodia, according to court records.

KEY QUOTE

"Asif Rahman violated his position of trust by illegally accessing, removing, and transmitting Top Secret documents vital to the national security of the United States and its allies," Erik Siebert, US Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, said on Wednesday.




U.S. to review AUKUS as part of Trump’s ‘America First’ agenda


U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth meets with Australian Defence Minister Richard Marles at the Pentagon in Washington in February. | REUTERS

By Gabriel Dominguez
STAFF WRITER

The future of the AUKUS security partnership between Australia, Britain and the U.S. — and with it Canberra’s plans to acquire American nuclear-powered submarines — could be at stake as Washington reviews the initiative to ensure it aligns with U.S. President Donald Trump’s “America first” agenda.

Announced late Wednesday by a Pentagon spokesperson, the decision, likely to raise eyebrows among U.S. allies and partners, was swiftly criticized by congressional Democrats but downplayed by Canberra.

“The Department is reviewing AUKUS as part of ensuring that this initiative of the previous (Joe Biden) administration is aligned with the president’s America First agenda,” the spokesperson told The Japan Times in an emailed statement.

“This means ensuring the highest readiness of our servicemembers, that allies step up fully to do their part for collective defense, and that the defense-industrial base is meeting our needs,” the official added.

The remarks suggest that Washington is not only concerned about meeting its own submarine needs as it doubles down on deterring China, but also that it might want to use the review to increase pressure on Canberra to hike defense spending to 3.5% of its gross domestic product "as soon as possible."

Asked about the review and whether he still thinks Canberra will get submarines out of AUKUS, Australian Defence Minister Richard Marles said, “I'm very confident this is going to happen,” calling the deal a “treaty-level agreement” between the three countries.

“I think the review that's been announced is not a surprise,” Marles told ABC Melbourne Radio. “We welcome it. It's something which is perfectly natural for an incoming administration to do,” he said, pointing out that Britain recently conducted its own defense review in which AUKUS was “very” positively assessed.

In terms of whether Canberra should consider a Plan B, Marles said that “chopping and changing” would guarantee that Australia “will never have the capability.”

“You just need to look at the map to understand that Australia absolutely needs to have a long‑range submarine capability,” he added. “So, there is a plan here, we are sticking to it and we're going to deliver it.”

The review will be led by Elbridge Colby, the Pentagon’s undersecretary of defense for policy.

While Colby has described AUKUS as a “model” of the cooperation type Washington needs to meet 21st-century challenges, he has expressed skepticism over the benefits of the submarine sales element of the initiative, arguing before the U.S. Senate’s Armed Service Committee in March that his country wasn’t producing enough submarines to meet its own requirements in the Indo-Pacific region.

“It would be crazy” to have fewer U.S. nuclear-powered submarines in the right place and time, he tweeted last year, when referring to a potential conflict with China over democratic Taiwan.

But Colby also said during his confirmation hearing in March that it “should be the policy of the United States government to do everything we can to make this (AUKUS) work."

Launched in 2021, AUKUS is Australia's biggest-ever defense project and arguably also its most geopolitically consequential.

Canberra wants to acquire up to eight nuclear-powered submarines, including three Virginia-class subs from the United States from 2032, with the potential to acquire up to two more if needed. The remaining boats for the Royal Australian Navy, called “SSN-AUKUS,” would then incorporate Australian, British and U.S. technologies.

Regarded as a key element of the Biden administration’s “integrated deterrence strategy” against China, the trilateral program, which includes the establishment of a rotational presence of British and U.S. submarines at an Australian naval base near Perth, is forecast to cost between $268 billion and $368 billion Australian dollars ($174 billion to $239 billion) between now and the mid 2050s.

But AUKUS is not merely a submarine program.

Under the initiative’s second pillar, the partners also want to step up research cooperation in advanced areas, such as quantum computing, artificial intelligence, electronic warfare and hypersonic missile capabilities. For these projects, the members have said they would be open to cooperating with close partners such as Japan, South Korea, Canada and New Zealand.

The review comes as Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is set to meet Trump next week on the sidelines of the Group of Seven meeting in Canada, where the two sides are expected to discuss U.S. tariffs as well as Washington’s demand that Canberra boost military spending to 3.5%.

Albanese has said Canberra would not be dictated to by its ally, noting that the country is already planning to pour a significant amount of cash into defense coffers. Australia aims to increase its defense budget to about AU$67.4 billion in 2027-28 and AU$100 billion by 2033-34, putting it at 2.3% of GDP.

The review also triggered a swift response from Democrats, with Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine calling on the president to “work expeditiously” with Canberra and London to strengthen the agreement and further boost the U.S. submarine industrial base if he is “serious about countering the threat from China.”

Anything less, Kaine warned, “would play directly into China’s hand.”

Analysts such as John Blaxland, from the Australian National University’s Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, argue that while Trump may try and use the review to strike a deal — potentially on a slower submarine delivery schedule or Canberra hiking military spending — he is unlikely to spike AUKUS entirely.

Writing in an analysis after the announcement, Blaxland noted several reasons why Trump might not scrap it. AUKUS is already several years in and over 100 Australian sailors are already operating in the U.S. system, he said. Perhaps more crucially, he also pointed to Canberra’s potential contribution to the United States’ submarine production line and the strategic value of the sub base near Perth, which is widely viewed as key in pushing back against Chinese military assertiveness in the region.
US Federal judge orders Mahmoud Khalil to be released by Friday on $1 bond

Khalil was the first leader of last year’s pro-Palestinian student protests to be arrested under the Trump administration’s push to deport non-citizens who they said fueled antisemitism on campuses.

Demonstrators gather outside the Federal Courthouse in New York City to show support for Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil and to demand his release from ICE detention on March 12, 2025.(photo credit: Mostafa Bassim/Anadolu via Getty Images)ByPHILISSA CRAMER/JTAJUNE 12, 2025 03:52

A federal judge has decreed that Mahmoud Khalil, the Palestinian Columbia University protest leader, cannot be detained or deported and set the stage for him to go free as early as Friday.

Khalil was the first leader of last year’s pro-Palestinian student protests to be arrested under the Trump administration’s push to deport non-citizens who they said fueled antisemitism on campuses.

Others have already been released on court orders after multiple federal judges ruled that the administration had violated the students’ rights by detaining them despite not accusing them of crimes.

Judge says Khalil's deportation was likely unconstitutional Last month, Judge Michael Farbiarz of the Federal District Court in New Jersey ruled that the law that the State Department cited in justifying Khalil’s deportation — a little-used provision that says the United States can seek to eject non-citizens whose actions undermine US policy — was likely unconstitutional.

On Wednesday, he additionally ruled that Khalil had shown that he was being irreparably harmed by being detained while the government seeks to deport him. Khalil’s son was born in New York since his arrest.

Muslim protesters pray outside the main campus of Columbia University during a demonstration to denounce the immigration arrest of Mahmoud Khalil, a pro-Palestinian activist who helped lead protests against Israel at the university, in New York City, US, March 14, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/David Dee Delgado)

Farbiarz left a small window of opportunity for the Trump administration to press for Khalil’s continued detention, saying that they could argue by 9:30 am Friday that Khalil had lied about his affiliations when seeking a student visa. But he indicated that he was unlikely to be swayed by such an argument and said Khalil could otherwise go free after posting a $1 bond.
Trump both booed and cheered attending Les Misérables at Kennedy Center


‘We want to bring it back, and we want to bring it back better than ever,’ Trump said about the Kennedy Center

Andrea Cavallier
in New York
Thursday 12 June 2025 
THE INDEPENDENT

Trump to attend 'Les Mis' open as Kennedy Center faces revenue decline

President Donald Trump was greeted with boos, as well as cheers, and chants of “USA!” as he took his seat for the opening night of Les Misérables at the Kennedy Center on Wednesday.

It’s the first time Trump has attended a show at the venue since he fired the Kennedy Center’s leadership, putting MAGA loyalist Richard Grenell in charge of the famed performing arts institution and naming himself chairman of the board.

He promised to scrap “woke” programming that aligned with what he called leftist ideology, which includes drag shows and “anti-American propaganda,” the president wrote on Truth Social.

The move upset some of the center’s patrons and performers, and it was reported that several cast members planned to skip the show in protest of his attendance on Wednesday.

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Les Miserables actors drop out because Trump is attending show

When one group of ticket holders found out that Trump, Vance and their wives, Melania and Usha, would be in attendance, they donated their tickets to a group of drag performers, according to Qommittee, as reported by Houston Public Media.

Videos posted on social media show the drag performers being cheered before Trump arrived. Other videos showed the president taking his seat to a combination of boos and cheers from the audience.

When Trump walked the red carpet with first lady Melania Trump ahead of the show, he said he was not bothered by the reported boycott.

“I couldn’t care less, honestly, I couldn’t,” Trump said.

“All I do is run the country well. The economic numbers you saw them today, they’re setting records. We took $88 billion in tariffs in two months, far beyond what anybody expected. There’s no inflation. People are happy. People are wealthy. The country is getting back to strength again. That’s what I care about.”

Trump also spoke about his plans for the Kennedy Center, whose board he replaced with loyalists, some of whom were in attendance Wednesday, including Usha Vance, Attorney General Pam Bondi and White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles.

“We want to bring it back, and we want to bring it back better than ever,” Trump said from the red carpet. “As you know it needs a little help from the standpoint of age and fitness, but it’s going to be fantastic.”


open image in gallery(Getty Images)

Trump has previously proclaimed his love for Les Misérables, telling Fox News: “I love the songs; I love the play. I think it’s great.”

He has played the musical’s rebellion anthem, “Do You Here the People Sing?” at past events and rallies. The story revolves around revolution in France, and has been a massive smash for decades.

Trump also suggested that “we may extend” the show’s run. Currently, Les Misérables is slated to run at the Kennedy Center through July 13.

The political drama at the center comes just two months after audience members booed the Vances and they took their upper-level seats at the National Symphony Orchestra.

Back in 2016, incoming vice president Mike Pence was booed when he attended a production of Hamilton with his family.

Pence acknowledged that he heard “a few boos" and "some cheers" and told his kids at the time, “that’s what freedom sounds like.”

The ethnically diverse cast of the popular and sold-out musical, which tells the story of America’s Founding Fathers, asked Pence not to leave the venue before he listened to what they wanted to say – which was that people were worried that Trump would “not protect them.”

While Trump demanded an apology from the cast at the time and called the show "overrated", Pence told Fox News at the time that he, his daughter and cousins "really enjoyed the show".



Indian agent had NDP leader Jagmeet Singh under close surveillance

By Stewart Bell & Mercedes Stephenson Global News
Published June 12, 2025


A suspected Indian government agent had Jagmeet Singh under close surveillance, prompting the RCMP to place the New Democratic Party leader in police protection 18 months ago, sources have told Global News.

The agent, who is allegedly tied to activities directed by the Indian government, had access to intimate knowledge of Singh’s daily routines, travel and family, according to the sources familiar with the matter.

He was also described by the sources as associated with the Lawrence Bishnoi gang, which the Indian government has been accused of using to commit violence in Canada.

Police notified Singh about a credible risk to his life in late 2023 and put tight security around him and his homes. Singh revealed during the 2025 federal election that he had been under police protection.

But no details of the investigation have been publicly disclosed until now, and Singh has said the RCMP never told him who was behind the threat, although “the implication was a foreign government.”

Police responded to the threat at the time and Singh is no longer considered to be in imminent danger. Singh lost his seat in the 2025 federal election and has stepped down as NDP leader.

The allegation that a suspected Indian agent was gathering information about the day-to-day movements of a federal party leader will likely raise new questions about foreign interference.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh steps off campaign plane as member of his RCMP security detail stands by in Winnipeg, April 23, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck.

Singh did not respond to requests for comment through an intermediary. Global News is not identifying the multiple sources with knowledge of the investigation who spoke on condition they would not be named.

The Indian High Commission in Ottawa has not responded to questions about the allegations. The RCMP said it does not discuss “protective measures, nor confirm individuals who may be designated to receive protection.”

“The security environment in which public figures operate is constantly evolving, and the RCMP takes all threats against public officials seriously,” spokesperson Marie-Eve Breton said on Wednesday.

The reasons police became concerned about Singh’s safety a year-and-a-half ago have emerged as Prime Minister Narendra Modi is scheduled to visit Canada on the weekend.

With President Donald Trump in the White House, Prime Minister Mark Carney has said he wants to diversify Canada’s trading relationships and has invited Modi to the G7 summit in Kananaskis, Alta.

But the decision has faced criticism because New Delhi is still not cooperating with RCMP investigations into India’s suspected involvement in the 2023 killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, among other violent crimes.

RCMP Commissioner Mike Duheme held a news conference last October to announce that investigators had found evidence linking “agents of the government of India to homicides and violent acts” across the country.

Police said India was collecting information on potential victims in Canada and using the Lawrence Bishnoi crime group, and similar drug and extortion outfits, to target them.

They also said “well over a dozen credible and imminent threats to life” had led them to issue warnings to members of the South Asian community, specifically those active in the pro-Khalistan movement.

Singh told reporters in April that police had advised him in the winter of 2023 that his life could be in danger. They did not tell him who was behind the threat but he said the implication was that it was a foreign government.

He said he stayed in his basement, avoided windows and considered quitting politics over fears about his family’s safety. He decided to carry on but was forced to lead the NDP for a period under police protection.

A lawyer who became federal NDP leader in 2017, Singh has angered India by pressing the Canadian government to take a harder line against Modi’s government over its problematic human rights record.

Indian press reports have wrongly labelled Singh a supporter of anti-India “terrorists” and reported that the intelligence agency that works for Modi’s office had prepared dossiers on him.



Under Modi, New Delhi has amped up its claims that Canada has not done enough to counter the Khalistan movement that seeks independence for India’s Sikh-majority Punjab.

It has also meddled in all levels of Canadian politics and now ranks as the “second most active country engaging in electoral foreign interference in Canada,” according to the Hogue Commission.

With the murder of Nijjar, however, India has allegedly taken its grievances against Canada to another level. A Sikh temple leader, Nijjar was leading a referendum campaign on Khalistan independence when he was gunned down.

Then-prime minister Justin Trudeau told the House of Commons in September 2023 that investigators were probing the involvement of Indian government agents.

Police believe India used gang members to carry out the killing. Sources have told Global News that Modi’s right-hand man Amit Shah allegedly approved the operation. India has denied that.

Canada later expelled six Indian diplomats and consular officials for allegedly collecting information on Canadians of Indian descent that was fed back to intelligence officers in New Delhi and used to direct attacks.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh speaks at campaign rally in Winnipeg, April 23, 2025.
 THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck.

The alleged surveillance of Singh is not unprecedented. Before Nijjar was killed, he told a close friend that a tracking device had been found on his pickup truck when he was having it serviced.

“He told me this personally,” said Moninder Singh, the spokesperson for the Sikh Federation who is also among those police have warned about threats to their lives.

Nijjar was shot dead inside the same vehicle outside Surrey’s Guru Nanak Sikh Temple. Moninder Singh said he did not know whether agents had followed him too.

“I’ve had multiple warnings but have never been told or known if I was under surveillance, but I would think I would be and do live my life as though I am,” he said.

“There’s no other way.”

As someone living under threat, he said Modi’s visit to Canada had added “insult to injury.”

After Modi said he would attend the G7, Liberal MP Sukh Dhaliwal said his constituents had told him that inviting the Indian prime minster was sending the wrong message.

Carney has said that Modi agreed to “continued law enforcement dialogue and discussions addressing security concerns” and that countering foreign interference was high on the summit agenda.


2:24
Carney lays out G7 priorities, faces criticism over Modi invite


But a Canadian Sikh coalition wrote to MPs this week to voice their “anger and sense of betrayal” over Carney’s decision to extend an invitation to the leader of a government that has not yet been held to account for Nijjar’s killing.

“His death was not an isolated act but part of a coordinated campaign of transnational repression that continues to violate Canadian sovereignty to this day,” the four Sikh organizations wrote.

“To extend an invitation to the architect of these policies who proudly boasts that India ‘enters the homes of its enemies and kills them,’ without any public commitment to justice or accountability, undermines the very principles Canada claims to uphold.”

The letter was signed by the leaders of the World Sikh Organization of Canada, Sikh Federation of B.C., Ontario Gurdwara’s Committee and Quebec Sikh Council. The groups are holding a news conference on Parliament Hill on Thursday.

Stewart.Bell@globalnews.ca