Saturday, December 20, 2025

ANY EXCUSE WILL DO

US Homeland Security chief pauses green card lottery programme, says it was used by Brown University shooting suspect
Published December 19, 2025 


US Homeland Security chief Kristi Noem ordered the suspension of the diversity visa lottery progamme on Thursday after saying it was used by the suspect in a mass shooting at Brown University.

“The Brown University shooter, Claudio Manuel Neves Valente, entered the United States through the diversity lottery immigrant visa programme (DV1) in 2017 and was granted a green card,” Noem wrote on social media.


The Brown University shooter, Claudio Manuel Neves Valente entered the United States through the diversity lottery immigrant visa program (DV1) in 2017 and was granted a green card. This heinous individual should never have been allowed in our country.  In 2017, President Trump fought to end this program, following the devastating NYC truck ramming by an ISIS terrorist, who entered under the DV1 program, and murdered eight people.  At President Trump’s direction, I am immediately directing USCIS to pause the DV1 program to ensure no more Americans are harmed by this disastrous program.


“At president Trump’s direction, I am immediately directing US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to pause the DV1 programme to ensure no more Americans are harmed by this disastrous programme,“ she said.

According to the Associated Press, the diversity visa programme makes up to 50,000 green cards available each year by lottery to people from countries that are little represented in the US, many of them in Africa.

The lottery was created by Congress, and the move is almost certain to invite legal challenges, AP reported.

Officials said earlier that the suspect was dead as investigators said he also killed a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor two days after the rampage at Brown.

He had been a PhD student in physics who was familiar with the building where the shooting took place, officials said.

Providence police Chief Oscar Perez and Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha, speaking at a Thursday night press conference, said that Valente took his own life and investigators believe he acted alone.

GET THE FUCK OUT OF AMERIKA, NOW!


Tonight, I’m announcing a nationwide and international multimillion-dollar ad campaign warning illegal aliens to leave our country NOW or face deportation with the inability to return to the US. This serves as a strong warning to criminal illegal aliens to not come to America. If they do, they will be hunted down and deported. Thank you for securing our border and putting America first.




Rise in mild Karachi earthquakes prompts calls for disaster preparedness

The city’s building codes need enforcing, and the groundwater extraction that destabilises buildings needs controlling, say experts.
December 18, 2025 
DAWN



In June, consecutive tremors shook Pakistan’s largest city, Karachi. Fifty-seven low-intensity quakes, measuring 1.5-3.8 on the Richter scale, were recorded on 1-25 June, the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) reportedly said. Several months later, October began with a 3.2-magnitude quake in Malir, a neighbourhood in the city’s north.

Karachi sits near the boundaries of three major tectonic plates, and multiple fault lines run through the city. Some 49 earthquakes with a magnitude of four or above have struck within 300 km of Karachi in the last decade.

Mild quakes can sometimes act as “natural pressure releases, potentially reducing the risk of more destructive ones”, but the frequency of these earthquakes has raised concerns among experts, said geological oceanographer and former director of the Geological Survey of Pakistan, Asif Rana.

In Karachi, mild quakes can have potentially devastating impacts on buildings that lack structural integrity. The Association of Builders and Developers stated in July that some 700 buildings have been identified in the city as not stable enough for safe habitation. This was shortly after a dilapidated building collapsed in the densely populated Lyari area with no earthquake involved, killing 27 people.

Rana warns that, in densely populated areas, even moderate tremors of magnitude 3-4 can lead to “partial or complete collapse of vulnerable old buildings”.

Amid these dangers, experts say more needs to be done to improve structural resilience and disaster preparedness in Karachi. They have in mind a more powerful earthquake. “If a repeat of the 1945 event, the magnitude of which was 8.1, occurs near the Makran triple junction, much of coastal Karachi could be devastated,” noted Moin Raza Khan, an oil, gas and minerals exploration expert, on LinkedIn.

The Makran triple junction lies between the Eurasian, Indian and Arabian plates, which Karachi is located around 150 km from.
What makes Karachi’s buildings vulnerable?

Experts say buildings in Karachi are endangered by even mild earthquakes due to their unregulated construction, with instability being exacerbated by land subsidence.

Rapid urban development and construction are key reasons for the subsidence, notes Seema Naz Siddiqui, a retired professor of geology.

Before construction commences, groundwater, which supports the underground layers of soil and rock by filling the spaces between them, is pumped out to make the excavation area dry and stable.

Much of Karachi’s soils are already weak, being water-saturated and compressible sediments prone to liquefaction, noted Moin Raza Khan in an opinion piece for the Business Recorder. The excavation and piling from the subsequent construction disturb subsurface layers, explains hydrogeologist Haziq Khan.

In such conditions, soil compaction intensifies, leading to uneven settlement and structural instability, notes Haziq.

He adds that neighbourhoods in Karachi built on soft clays or alluvial deposits – material deposited by rivers, such as silt, mud or sand – are most vulnerable as their typically shallow water tables amplify soil weakness. A 2022 study noted that much of the Karachi metropolis has been built above alluvium deposits.

Unregulated high-rise construction accelerates subsidence by adding heavy loads to the weak soil, he says.

These fragile soils and unchecked groundwater withdrawal, when combined with weak building-code compliance, could make even moderate seismic events into disasters, says Haziq.

He notes that areas lacking proper planning codes and foundation design face disproportionate risks, particularly dense urban zones with poor drainage. This includes areas such as North Karachi and parts of the Old City.

The poor drainage prevents water from escaping, saturating loose soil and making it vulnerable to liquefaction, thereby contributing to subsidence.

Smaller constructions face risks too, notes Zahid Farooq, an urban-planning expert and board member of the Karachi non-profit Urban Resource Centre. He highlights that houses are typically built on small plots, with extra floors added to the building as the family expands. Throughout this process, “no one checks how old or strong the foundation is”.

A 2023 study estimates subsidence in key areas of the city at up to about 17 mm annually and notes that the rate is steadily increasing. It stated that in some areas, subsidence may be partly caused by damaged infrastructure such as broken sewer and water lines. These have been noted as the cause of “variations in localised subsidence patterns where leaking water may cause liquefaction and subsidence over time”.

The study also established that the city has an active fault, meaning it is likely to result in an earthquake in future. The authors note that the data demonstrates a “clear displacement along the fault, most notably along a 10 km-long section”. This poses an “alarming risk” to the city due to a lack of studies on the strain accumulation – the storing of energy that, when eventually released, leads to an earthquake – of this fault. The lack of data leaves the city “unprepared to forecast and plan for the potential of a large seismic event”.
Talking solutions

Amid these risks, experts say Karachi’s safety can be improved through a combination of managing subsidence, enforcing building codes and doing geophysical surveys.

Haziq says subsidence risks can be mitigated by enforcing “geotechnical-based” building codes [meaning grounded in the realities of the soil and subsurface] and restricting high-rise construction in vulnerable zones.

Urban planning should integrate drainage improvements and land-use zoning, Haziq adds.

Rainwater harvesting and aquifer recharge can also help stabilise soil by maintaining groundwater levels and reducing compaction, he notes.

But while these measures slow further subsidence, they cannot reverse permanent soil settlement, he says, making early prevention essential. To do this, groundwater extraction would need to be seriously curtailed. “We would need to enforce bans or strict limits on unregulated borewells and tanker [companies] drilling [for water]”, he says. Pakistan’s National Water Conservation Strategy for 2023-2027 has called for monitoring and controlling of groundwater extraction.

Haziq suggests a few solutions the government could implement: expanding piped-water networks to avoid the need for unregulated borewells; establishing recharge schemes to balance extraction and replenishment; curbing water overuse through public and industrial awareness on conservation, and by encouraging reporting of illegal borewells.

Karachi also needs to undertake regular earthquake drills, he says.

Rana notes that Pakistan’s building code – adopted in 2007 after the devastating 2005 Kashmir earthquake that killed at least 79,000 people – takes important steps toward addressing earthquake risks. But, he said, “there’s still a long road ahead in terms of enforcement and adaptation”. While the building code is a solid framework, many local bylaws in Karachi do not fully enforce it, he adds.

Siddiqui stresses the importance of increasing awareness about disaster preparedness, lamenting the lack of any dedicated avenues to talk about approaches. “We need forums where scientific and practical solutions are discussed, and governance policies are developed to face the potential disasters that earthquakes in Karachi can cause.”

Farooq says authorities also have a responsibility to conduct surveys to “ensure that the land [being built on] is not on or near a fault line”.

Haziq said conducting detailed geophysical surveys via satellite InSAR, which measures ground deformation using radar images, and seismic monitoring in the tremor zones can help map subsidence and fault behaviour.

While the earthquake’s magnitudes have been low, their frequency raises enough cause for concern about the city’s tectonic drivers, subsidence and urban vulnerability, wrote Moin Raza Khan. “History reminds us – from the 1935 Quetta earthquake to the 1945 Makran tsunami-generating quake – that our risks are not theoretical.”

He stresses: “This is not alarmism – it is a call for preparedness, policy reform, and urgent resilience measures”.

This article was originally published by Dialogue Earth and has been republished with permission.

Header image: The collapse of a residential building in Karachi’s Lyari area in July 2025 raised concerns over the city’s poor construction standards and its preparedness for seismic events. — Pakistan Press International / Alamy
West Bengal: How Climate Change is Supercharging Lightning Strikes Across State


Subhrajit Sen | 18 Dec 2025


As hotter, wetter summers drive up lightning strikes across Bengal, rural families in Hooghly are left to face deadly storms with patchy alerts, thin compensation and a trail of invisible survivors.

Hooghly, West Bengal: On June 6, 2021, lightning killed 26 persons in West Bengal in a single day. Ten of them were from Hooghly district, just a few kilometres from this reporter’s home in Chandannagar. Among the dead were Hemanta Guchait (40) and Malabika Guchait (35) of Balipur village in Tarakeshwar block. They were returning from their paddy field when lightning struck, leaving behind their daughter, Raika (12).

When this reporter visited the family in October 2025, Raika’s grandmother, Puja Samanta (65), still struggled to speak about that afternoon. “Raika goes to school now,” she said, “but we don’t let her step outside when clouds gather. Even a distant rumble makes her cry.”

Raika has grown taller since that day, but she carries memories too heavy for her age. “I miss my Baba,” she whispered. “He used to drop me at school.”

Her story captures what’s happening across Hooghly, one of West Bengal’s richest agricultural regions, now witnessing a quiet but deadly crisis.

Hooghly district lies along the banks of the river Hooghly, in the lower stretch of the Ganga. Known for its potato, sugarcane and rice production, it is among the state’s top agricultural contributors. But with open farmlands and humidity carried in from the Bay of Bengal, it is also one of West Bengal’s most lightning-prone regions, according to the India Meteorological Department.

Blocks like Pandua and Tarakeshwar sit at the centre of this danger zone. Pandua, a 282-square-kilometre administrative block, is mostly agricultural, with the Behula and Kunti rivers running through it. Tarakeshwar, a major pilgrimage site 58 kilometres from Kolkata, shares the same flat topography and weather patterns, perfect conditions for frequent thunderstorms and lightning.

Between 2018 and 2024, 1,259 people died in West Bengal due to lightning strikes, IMD data shows. In 2025 alone, over 139 deaths have already been reported. Nationally, lightning accounts for more than 35% of all natural hazard deaths.

Climate patterns turning violent


Scientists say these deaths are not random. “Rising global and surface temperatures, along with warming water bodies, are making the atmosphere more unstable,” said Mahesh Palawat, Vice-President (Meteorology and Climate Change) at Skymet Weather. “That instability leads to stronger convection, which produces more thunderstorms and lightning.”

A 2021 study published in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics by R Chakraborty et al. (IIT Kharagpur) found that the Gangetic plains and eastern coast have become new lightning hotspots. The study links the surge to higher surface heating and moisture inflow from the Bay of Bengal which is a direct consequence of climate change.

Palawat added, “We’re seeing longer thunderstorm durations and multiple strikes in one event. Global warming has supercharged what used to be normal monsoon behaviour.”

Multiple national studies indicate a sharp rise in lightning activity across India, with total strikes increasing nearly 400% between 2019-20 and 2024-25. National Crime Records Bureau data confirms that lightning deaths continue to grow each year — 2,728 fatalities in 2021, 2,885 in 2022 and 2,558 in 2023 — making lightning the single deadliest natural hazard in the country.

The survivor’s body remembers

For Debashree Das of Beremul village in Hooghly, that scientific explanation offers little comfort. Her husband, Gokul Das, died in July 2020 when lightning struck his field beside their home.

She was 32 then, raising two daughters aged three and six. She had no savings, no job, and no support system. “We ran out of money within months,” she said. “I couldn’t feed my children or my old mother-in-law.” With no steady income, the village elders arranged her remarriage to a local farmer. She now has a third child from this marriage.

“How will my daughters live their whole life without their father?” she asked. “They still get scared when thunder starts. Even a small rainfall makes them hide under the bed.”

Lightning deaths ripple through rural families, leaving women socially and economically vulnerable long after the storm ends.

In Khanyan, a small town in Pandua block, Sekh Hasibuddin Khan (35) still feels pain in his right arm three years after being struck. He survived, but barely.

“It felt like a truck hit me from behind,” he recalled. “Then everything went dark.” When he woke up, he was in Pandua Rural Hospital. His mother said he spent two years unable to move. “His right side was paralysed. We borrowed around Rs 50,000 for private treatment because the government hospital couldn’t help,” she said.

Even now, Hasibuddin walks slowly and avoids open fields during the monsoon. “I can sense it before a storm starts,” he said. “The air changes, and I get scared.”

Across West Bengal, a growing number of non-fatal lightning injuries go unrecorded. Survivors face neurological issues, burns and trauma, but rarely receive compensation or medical follow-up.

Under the state’s ex-gratia scheme, families receive Rs 2 lakh for deaths caused by lightning strikes.

Since over the past few years we have observed lightning strikes increasing every year, the state government has included them under the ex-gratia scheme in 2005, West Bengal Disaster Management and Civil Defence Department officer in charge Nirmal Senapati said.

The central government adds another Rs 2 lakh from the Prime Minister’s National Relief Fund (PMNRF).But survivors of lightning injuries receive nothing.

Treatment, meanwhile, is expensive. Many require long-term care for paralysis or burns, and nearby sub-divisional hospitals often lack the necessary facilities, pushing families towards private hospitals they cannot afford. As a result, many survivors fall into heavy debt while trying to recover.

In Itachuna Gram Panchayat, under Pandua block, Dipa Mandal (45) remembers the night lightning hit her roof in August 2025. Sparks shot through her home, burning her eight-month-old granddaughter’s feet. “We thought we were going to die,” she said.

The baby survived after two weeks in hospital, but what followed shook the family in a different way. “People avoided our house. They said lightning strikes where evil spirits live,” Dipa recalled. “Those words hurt more than the lightning.”

For days, the family lived without electricity because no one, not even local electricians, was willing to visit. “Only after we went to the Gram Panchayat office and reported it did they finally send someone to fix it,” she said. The active boycott has ended, but she still senses mistrust among some neighbours.

In many villages of West Bengal, superstition deepens the impact of lightning, leaving survivors to cope not just with injury, but with isolation.

Outdated systems


Lightning detection in India is improving, but still patchy. The Indian Lightning Location Network (ILLN), run by Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM) and the IMD, has expanded, yet coverage gaps persist in rural Bengal.

“Cities like Kolkata and Cuttack have only two Doppler radars, both old and covering about 100 nautical miles (185.2 km),” said Palawat. “We need more radars across eastern India for real-time tracking.”

A Doppler radar measures the speed and movement of weather systems by sending out microwave signals and analysing the frequency shift when they return. It helps meteorologists track storm clouds, rainfall intensity, and wind patterns which are crucial for monitoring thunderstorms and lightning-producing clouds. But its range of 100 nautical miles means it cannot capture fast-forming, hyperlocal storms beyond that radius. For districts like Hooghly, this often leaves dangerous blind spots.

Palawat also pointed to communication gaps. “Forecast data exists, but it doesn’t always reach those who need it like farmers working in the fields.”

To address this, the IITM and the Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES) developed the “Damini” app, which sends GPS-based lightning alerts 30-40 minutes before a strike and provides safety tips in regional languages.

In reality, the app rarely functions in rural Bengal. “We installed it,” said Hasibuddin, “but it never warns us in time.” Every farmer interviewed echoed this, none reported receiving an alert before a lightning strike, and many cannot afford smartphones capable of running weather apps. Even when alerts exist, they simply do not reach the people actually working in the fields.

Srimanti Basak, Block Development Officer (BDO) of Pandua, acknowledged the problem. “We are working with IIT to fix the app,” she said. “Sometimes we don’t get proper data from the Gram Panchayat offices, which delays announcements.” Verified reports from the panchayats consistently show lightning deaths and injuries each year across Pandua, Tarakeshwar, Beremul, Khanyan and Itachuna — data the block office depends on to issue warnings.

Gram Panchayat members confirmed these gaps. They said they often send lightning-related reports to the block office, but poor connectivity, delayed verification and the lack of dedicated staff slow down the process. “By the time information reaches the right place, the storm has already passed,” one member said. Several added that they have been asking for automated weather-linked systems so that early warnings don’t depend on manual reporting.

Residents say the failure of alerts has made them distrustful of technology altogether. “If someone had warned us that day, maybe my husband would have stayed home,” said Debashree.

People across Hooghly have one clear demand: reliable, real-time warnings. “We get cyclone alerts,” said Hasibuddin. These arrive on mobile phones through government text messages, often 24-48 hours in advance, followed by loudspeaker announcements from panchayat offices. Households stock food, bring cattle indoors and avoid going out. “Why not lightning alerts through loudspeakers? It could save lives.”

Palawat agrees. “We need hyperlocal alerts integrated with panchayat systems. Even a 15-minute warning could prevent hundreds of deaths each year.”

The BDO of Pandua said her office is planning awareness campaigns through schools and community centres. “We’re training teachers and local leaders to spread safety information before the monsoon,” she said. This includes telling residents not to go outside when heavy clouds gather or during kalboishakhi storms, and to immediately take shelter if thunder starts suddenly. Many villagers, however, say this advice is difficult to follow when their livelihoods depend on working in open fields.

In Balipur, Raika still walks to school past the same field where her parents died. “When thunder starts,” she said, “I run home.”

Her voice carries the truth of an entire district, where families live with both the memory and the constant threat of lightning. As the climate warms and systems falter, Bengal’s farmers face not just storms, but the uncertainty of survival every time the sky turns grey.

Subhrajit Sen is a freelance journalist and a member of 101Reporters, a pan-India network of grassroots reporters.