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Bangladesh’s interim government head Muhammad Yunus expressed deep sorrow and urged authorities to investigate and support victims and families.
Hamas returned hostages' bodies after Israel announced it would cut in half the number of humanitarian aid trucks allowed into
The new commission will be set up under a new online safety bill that was introduced to lawmakers on Wednesday.
President Donald Trump's administration in August imposed a tariff of 19% on Malaysian exports to the United States, though items
Trump promised last week to cut "some very popular Democrat programmes that aren't popular with Republicans," during a federal government
“Today we're here to honour and remember a fearless warrior for liberty, beloved leader who galvanized the next generation like
The government has closed Fransiskus Xaverius Seda airport, located in Maumere, East Nusa Tenggara province, until Thursday, the airport operator
In a day of turmoil for the nation off southern Africa's coast, the 51-year-old leader, whose whereabouts are unknown, earlier
Authorities have deployed thousands of personnel to help evacuate, clean up and monitor the places that were hardest hit.
"The Trump administration is finding new ways to exert more pressure on Mexico," said Tony Wayne, U.S. ambassador to Mexico

Home Bangladesh Garment Factory Fire Kills 16, Death Toll May Rise

Bangladesh Garment Factory Fire Kills 16, Death Toll May Rise

A fire at a Bangladesh garment factory and nearby chemical warehouse on Tuesday killed at least 16 people and injured several others, with officials warning the death toll could rise.

The cause of the blaze wasn’t immediately known, fire service director Tajul Islam Chowdhury said.

“Sixteen bodies have been recovered from the second and third floors of the garment factory,” he said, adding that the number of deaths could rise as recovery operations were continuing.

The fire broke out at around midday on the third floor of the four-storey factory in the Mirpur area of the capital Dhaka, before spreading to a chemical warehouse storing bleaching powder, plastic and hydrogen peroxide, Talha Bin Jashim, a fire department official, said, citing witnesses.

Firefighters brought the factory blaze under control after nearly three hours, though the fire at the warehouse continued.

Grief-stricken relatives gathered to search for their loved ones, some clutching photographs.

In front of the blackened ruins, a father searched desperately for his daughter, Farzana Akhter. “My daughter worked there. When I heard about the fire, I came running. But I still haven’t found her….I just want my daughter back.”

History Of Industrial Disasters

Chowdhury said the owners of the factory had not yet been identified. “The police and the army are trying to locate them,” he said. He added that neither the garment factory nor the chemical warehouse had approval or any fire safety plan.

Based on the initial findings, he said the garment factory had a tin roof with a grilled door that was kept locked. “The workers couldn’t reach the upper level,” he said

“The chemical explosion caused a flashover that released toxic gas, leaving many unconscious and trapping them inside. They couldn’t escape either upward or downward.”

He said the victims were so badly burned, DNA testing may be the only way to identify them.

In a condolence message, Bangladesh’s interim government head Muhammad Yunus expressed deep sorrow and urged authorities to investigate and support victims and families.

Poor fire and building safety standards lead to dozens of such disasters in Bangladesh each year, and past accidents have tarnished the country’s garments sector, which employs 4 million people and makes up more than 10% of the country’s gross domestic product.

In 2012, a fire at Tazreen Fashions, which supplied global brands, killed 112 workers.

A year later, the eight-storey Rana Plaza building collapsed, killing 1,135 garment workers and triggering a wave of public outrage around the world about the human cost of cheap clothes.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Hamas Returns Hostages’ Bodies Following Israeli Threat To Halt Aid

Hamas Returns Hostages’ Bodies Following Israeli Threat To Halt Aid

Hamas transferred more bodies of deceased hostages to Israel on Tuesday, marking a rare sign of progress following several setbacks since U.S. President Donald Trump promoted his plan to end the Gaza war.

The bodies were returned after Israel announced it would cut in half the number of humanitarian aid trucks allowed into Gaza in a move to punish Hamas for what Israel called the militant group’s violation of its agreement to transfer remains under the ceasefire deal reached last week.

Meanwhile, re-emergent Hamas fighters demonstrated they were reasserting control in Gaza by deploying hundreds of security forces in the streets and executing several people they accused of collaborating with Israel.

The outlook for Trump’s peace plan darkened further when the president threatened Hamas with military strikes unless the militant group disarmed.

“If they don’t disarm, we will disarm them. And it will happen quickly and perhaps violently,” Trump said at the White House, one day after he spoke before the Knesset in Jerusalem.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has maintained the war cannot end until Hamas surrenders its weapons and cedes control of Gaza, a demand the fighters have rejected.

On Monday, Trump proclaimed the “historic dawn of a new Middle East” to Israel’s parliament, as Israel and Hamas were exchanging the last 20 living Israeli hostages in Gaza for nearly 2,000 Palestinian detainees and prisoners.

But the return of 28 dead hostages has remained one of the final details to be worked out in the deal to end more than two years of hostilities that began with Hamas attacks on Israel on October 7, 2023. Hamas has now handed over eight coffins of dead hostages, leaving at least 19 presumed dead and one unaccounted for still in the Gaza Strip.

On Tuesday, the Israeli military said it received four coffins from the Red Cross at a meeting point in the northern Gaza Strip. Those coffins, escorted by Israeli forces, crossed the border into Israel shortly before midnight (2100 GMT) and were being taken for forensic identification, the Israeli military said.

Hamas also confirmed the transfer was under way.

“At this moment, the men are continuing to oversee the implementation of what was agreed upon regarding the handover of bodies as part of the agreement to end the war in Gaza,” Hamas spokesperson in Gaza Hazem Qassem said on Facebook.

It was not immediately clear if the handing over of bodies was sufficient for Israel to restore a full complement of aid deliveries.

Israeli officials said they had decided to restrict aid, allowing only half the agreed number of aid trucks into Gaza starting Wednesday, and to delay plans to open the southern border crossing to Egypt because Hamas had violated the ceasefire deal by failing to turn over the bodies of hostages.

Israel’s two-year assault has left much of the enclave in ruins, and Gaza City and the surrounding areas are suffering from a famine that has afflicted more than half a million Palestinians, creating great need for the expected 600 aid trucks to enter Gaza daily during the ceasefire.

Plans have yet to be implemented to open the crossing to Egypt to let some Gazans out, initially to evacuate the wounded for medical treatment.

Hamas Asserts Control

Hamas, which seized Gaza in a brief 2007 civil war, has swiftly reclaimed the streets of Gaza’s urban areas following the partial withdrawal of Israeli troops last week. Gaza residents said Hamas fighters were increasingly visible on Tuesday, deploying along routes needed for aid deliveries.

In a video circulated late on Monday, Hamas fighters dragged seven men with their hands tied behind their backs into a Gaza City square, forced them to their knees and shot them from behind, as dozens of onlookers watched from nearby storefronts.

A Hamas source confirmed that the video was taken on Monday and that Hamas fighters participated in the executions. Reuters was able to confirm the location by visible geographic features.

Trump has previously given his blessing to Hamas to reassert some control of Gaza, at least temporarily. Israeli officials have so far refrained from commenting publicly on the re-emergence of the group’s fighters.

Palestinian security officials said dozens of people had been killed in clashes between Hamas fighters and rivals in recent days.

In addition, Israel, using aerial drones, killed five Palestinians as they went to check on houses in a suburb east of Gaza City, and an Israeli airstrike killed one person and injured another near Khan Younis, Gaza health authorities said.

Hamas accused Israel of violating the ceasefire. The Israeli military said it had fired on people who crossed truce lines and approached its forces after ignoring calls to turn back.

Hamas sources told Reuters on Tuesday the group would tolerate no more violations of order in Gaza and would target collaborators, armed looters and drug dealers.

The ceasefire has stopped two years of devastating warfare in Gaza triggered by the October 7, 2023, attack in which Hamas-led gunmen killed around 1,200 people and took 251 hostages back to Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.

Israel’s military has killed at least 67,000 people in Gaza, according to local health authorities, with thousands more feared dead under the rubble. Gaza’s Civil Defence Service said 250 bodies had been recovered since the truce began.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home New Bill Gives Singapore Powers To Block Harmful Online Content

New Bill Gives Singapore Powers To Block Harmful Online Content

Singapore on Wednesday tabled a bill in parliament to set up a new online safety commission with powers to direct social media platforms to block harmful content.

The new law comes after researchers from the Infocomm Media Development Authority found in February that more than half of legitimate user complaints about harmful posts relating to issues like child abuse and cyber-bullying had not been immediately addressed.

Powerful New Regulator

The new commission will be empowered under a new law to address local user reports of harms like online harassment, doxxing, online stalking, the abuse of intimate images and child pornography by the end of the first half of 2026.

It will also have powers to direct social media platforms to restrict access to harmful material within Singapore, give victims a right to reply, and ban perpetrators from accessing their platform.

The commission will also be able to order internet service providers to block access to specific online locations, such as group pages or even a social media platform’s website.

More harms, including the non-consensual disclosure of private information and “the incitement of enmity”, will be introduced over stages following the initial launch.

The new commission will be set up under a new online safety bill that was introduced to lawmakers on Wednesday. It will be debated at the next available session of parliament.

Meta Targeted

The setting up of an online safety commission was first mooted during the Ministry of Digital Development and Information’s budget debate in March this year.

“More often than not, platforms fail to take action to remove genuinely harmful content reported to them by victims,” said Josephine Teo, Minister for Digital Development and Information.

The government recently targeted Meta with the first order issued under the nation’s new Online Criminal Harms Act, which came into force in February 2024.

In September, the home affairs ministry threatened Meta with a fine of up to S$1 million and fines of up to S$100,000 per day after the end of the month if it failed to introduce measures like facial recognition to curb impersonation scams on its social network Facebook.

The home affairs ministry could not immediately be reached to confirm if Meta complied with the order.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Malaysia To Hold Talks With U.S. On Sectoral Tariffs At ASEAN Summit

Malaysia To Hold Talks With U.S. On Sectoral Tariffs At ASEAN Summit

Malaysia will engage in discussions with the U.S. secretary of commerce next week on sectoral tariffs, including those affecting semiconductors, during the ASEAN regional summit, Malaysian state media reported on Wednesday, citing the country’s trade minister.

President Donald Trump‘s administration in August imposed a tariff of 19% on Malaysian exports to the United States, though items like semiconductors are currently exempt pending a U.S. national security probe.

Trump in August proposed a 100% levy on imported chips, though he said it would not apply to companies that already had a manufacturing footprint in the United States or planned to build one.

Malaysia, the world’s sixth-largest exporter of semiconductors, has warned that any removal of tariff exemptions on its semiconductor exports by Washington could hurt its competitiveness and strain supply networks.

Trade Minister Tengku Zafrul Aziz said he will hold discussions with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick on tariffs for semiconductors and other sectors, which have yet to be finalised, state news agency Bernama reported.

Final Tariff Agreement

“I will hold discussions with Lutnick. He will also be attending the ASEAN Leaders Summit next week,” Tengku Zafrul said, referring to a meeting of leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations set to run from October 26 to October 28 in the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur.

He said Malaysia and the United States were currently negotiating a final tariff agreement, which is expected to be signed by both countries at next week’s meeting.

Malaysia’s agriculture, industrial, and manufacturing sectors, as well as those involved in trade and investment with the United States, are likely to benefit from the agreement, Tengku Zafrul added.

Several other countries are also expected to sign trade agreements with Washington at the upcoming ASEAN meeting, Tengku Zafrul said, without elaborating.

U.S. tariff rates for export-reliant Southeast Asia have been set at 19% and 20% for most of the region. Laos and Myanmar have been hit with a 40% rate, while Singapore has a 10% tariff.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Trump Administration Fires Staff Of College Prep Programme Backed By Republicans

Trump Administration Fires Staff Of College Prep Programme Backed By Republicans

The Trump administration has laid off nearly all 60 employees of a college-preparation programme serving low-income students, two people familiar with the decision said. The move, which effectively shutters the initiative, targets a service that Republican lawmakers had publicly defended earlier this year.

Trump promised last week to cut “some very popular Democrat programmes that aren’t popular with Republicans,” during a federal government shutdown in its 14th day on Tuesday.

The permanent layoffs disclosed on Friday also targeted education programmes supported by Republicans, including the federal Education Department’s TRIO programmes that assist around 900,000 students across all 50 states from middle school onward to prepare for college.

Almost all of the approximately 60-person staff overseeing the programmes were cut, said the two people, who asked for anonymity to share details the administration did not reveal in a legal filing that disclosed more than 4,200 layoffs across the federal government.

“The whole crux of the support staff is to ensure that taxpayer money is spent appropriately and we are not there anymore to do it,” said one of the people familiar with the layoffs.

The White House and Education Department did not respond to a request for comment.

Move To Dismantle Education Department

This move follows the administration’s goal of dismantling the Education Department and its 2026 budget request to cut the $1.2 billion in funding approved by Congress for the multiple TRIO programmes, including Upward Bound for high school students and Talent Search to identify promising younger students for eventual post-secondary opportunities.

Six Education Department offices were targeted, impacting dozens of programmes, according to Rachel Gittleman, the head of the local AFGE union that represents 2,700 department employees.

Republican lawmakers, who earlier this year had defended the programme, were not informed of the decision to cut staff, aides said.

Republican senators, including Susan Collins of Maine and Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, defended the programme at a hearing in June, after the administration proposed eliminating it in the fiscal year that began October 1.

“I strongly disagree with the president’s proposal,” Collins, chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, told Education Secretary Linda McMahon at the hearing.

“I have seen the lives of countless first-generation and low-income students, not only in Maine but across the country, who often face barriers to access a college education, changed by the TRIO programme,” Collins said, wearing a pin dedicated to her state’s programme.

McMahon responded by saying, “I know that these programmes are very near and dear to your heart.”

Capito, the top Senate Republican overseeing Education Department funding, has previously led bipartisan legislation meant to strengthen the TRIO programmes through a slate of administrative changes that would have been carried out by the staff now facing permanent elimination.

TRIO Funding

In September, two other Republican senators, Chuck Grassley of Iowa and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, joined more than 30 Democrats in a letter demanding the disbursement of TRIO funds after months of delay.

The federal government has gone through 15 shutdowns since 1981, most lasting a few days, but in the past workers were temporarily furloughed, returning to their jobs once Congress agreed on a plan to reopen agencies. Unions representing federal workers have challenged the legality of the cuts.

TRIO funding was eventually awarded to grantees by the end of September, but dozens of other recipients were notified by the department that their funding would be discontinued, according to a lawsuit by the Council for Opportunity in Education, a TRIO advocacy group.

Senator Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, the top Democrat overseeing education funding, in a Tuesday statement criticized the Trump administration’s move, saying “their choice is ripping the hopes and dreams away from deserving Americans just trying to get a good education and build a good life.”

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Trump Honours Charlie Kirk With Nation’s Top Civilian Award As Left-Wing Clampdown Deepens

Trump Honours Charlie Kirk With Nation’s Top Civilian Award As Left-Wing Clampdown Deepens

U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday honoured Charlie Kirk, the conservative activist who was killed last month, by presenting him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian award. Trump praised Kirk as a powerful force in shaping America’s conservative movement.

“Today we’re here to honour and remember a fearless warrior for liberty, beloved leader who galvanized the next generation like nobody I’ve ever seen before,” Trump said in a Rose Garden event.

Kirk, founder of Turning Point USA, was shot on September 10 while speaking at an event at Utah Valley University, a killing that shocked the nation and reignited debates over political violence.

Kirk’s assassination has become a rallying point for the Republican president, who has used it to energize his base and push for sweeping measures by the state against what he calls “radical left extremism.”

Trump’s Left-Wing Crackdown

The Trump administration has launched a broad crackdown on left-wing organizations, deploying multiple federal agencies, including the FBI, Department of Homeland Security, and IRS, to investigate and disrupt groups accused of funding and organizing political violence.

At the same time, Trump has downplayed violence from right-wing groups, insisting political violence is primarily a problem rooted in the left. Experts say political violence is bipartisan, with historically more attacks inspired by right-wing ideology.

Officials have found no evidence that the suspect in Kirk’s shooting acted in concert with any group.

The ceremony drew a mix of top Republican lawmakers, media personalities and Trump allies, including Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and U.S. Senators Ted Cruz, Mike Lee, and Rick Scott, as well as House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson.

A key figure in conservative politics, Kirk mobilized young voters for Trump’s 2024 campaign. His influence was significant but divisive, marked by attacks on LGBTQ+ rights and civil rights. Supporters hailed him as a champion of free speech, while critics argue he helped mainstream extremist views.

Since his death, Trump has called Kirk a “martyr for American freedom” and vowed at his memorial service to carry on his work. In September, both the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate approved resolutions declaring October 14 a “National Day of Remembrance for Charlie Kirk.”

Trump also signed a proclamation on Tuesday declaring October 14, 2025 — on what would have been Kirk’s 32nd birthday — as a “National Day of Remembrance for Charlie Kirk.”

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Indonesia: Mount Lewotobi Erupts, Alert Raised To Highest

Indonesia: Mount Lewotobi Erupts, Alert Raised To Highest

Indonesia’s Mount Lewotobi Laki-laki erupted on Wednesday, spewing volcanic ash 10 kilometres (6.21 miles) into the sky, prompting authorities to raise the alert status to its highest level, according to the country’s volcanology agency.

Located in East Nusa Tenggara province, the volcano erupted on Wednesday at 1:35 a.m. local time (Tuesday 1835 GMT) for around nine minutes, the country’s Geological Agency said in a statement. Lewotobi also erupted two hours before; the volcanic ash from that shot nine kilometres into the sky.

Significant Rise In Activity

Late on Tuesday, the agency raised its alert level to the highest point after recording “significant rising of the volcano’s activities” since Monday, its head, Muhammad Wafid, said.

“People living near the volcano should be aware of the potential volcanic mudflow if heavy rain occurs,” Wafid said, adding that people should clear a six- to seven-kilometre area around the site.

Frequent Eruptions

The volcano last erupted in August. It also erupted in July, causing flight disruptions to and from the nearby resort island of Bali.

Dozens of people living in villages nearest to the volcano were evacuated after the eruptions, according to Avelina Manggota Hallan, an official at the local disaster mitigation agency.

Most of the residents left their villages after Lewotobi Laki-laki’s major eruption, which killed 10 people and damaged thousands of houses in November 2024, Hallan added.

The government has closed Fransiskus Xaverius Seda airport, located in Maumere, East Nusa Tenggara province, until Thursday, the airport operator said in a post on social media.

“Francis Xaverius Seda Maumere Airport Flight Operations Temporarily Closed Until Thursday, October 15, 2025 At 06.00 WITA,” a translated post on the official Instagram account of the airport read.

Indonesia, which has more than 120 active volcanoes, sits on the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” an area of high seismic activity that is atop multiple tectonic plates.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Madagascar President Impeached, Military Declares Takeover

Madagascar President Impeached, Military Declares Takeover

Amid intensifying youth-led protests, a top army commander in Madagascar on Tuesday announced that the military had taken control of the government, shortly after lawmakers impeached President Andry Rajoelina and he fled the country.

Rajoelina had refused to step down despite escalating Gen Z demonstrations demanding his resignation and widespread defections in the army.

Military Hands Out List Of Suspended Institutions

“We have taken the power,” Colonel Michael Randrianirina declared on national radio and said that the military was dissolving all institutions except the lower house of parliament or National Assembly.

Randrianirina later told reporters a committee led by the military would rule the country for a period of up to two years alongside a transitional government before organising new elections.

“The following institutions are suspended: the Senate, the High Constitutional Court, the Independent National Electoral Commission, the High Court of Justice, and the High Council for the Defense of Human Rights and the Rule of Law,” a statement from the country’s military leaders said.

In a day of turmoil for the nation off southern Africa’s coast, the 51-year-old leader, whose whereabouts are unknown, earlier sought to dissolve the lower house by decree.

But lawmakers went ahead with a vote to impeach him, leaving the country in a constitutional deadlock which the military seized upon to declare they were taking charge.

Rajoelina, who himself came to power in a coup in 2009, condemned the power grab by the military in a statement.

Military Suspends Institutions

Randrianirina, a commander in the elite CAPSAT army unit that played a key role in Rajoelina’s 2009 coup, broke ranks with him last week.

In a defiant address to the nation on Monday night, Rajoelina said that he had been forced to move to a safe place because of threats to his life. An opposition official, a military source and a foreign diplomat told Reuters he had fled the country on Sunday aboard a French military plane.

His isolation increased further on Tuesday when even lawmakers from his ruling coalition, which holds a parliamentary majority, voted to impeach him on charges of engaging in activities deemed incompatible with presidential duties.

Rajoelina had repeatedly warned in recent days that an attempted coup was underway in the Indian Ocean island nation.

Escalating Demonstrations

Demonstrations first erupted in the country on September 25 over water and power shortages and quickly escalated into an uprising over broader grievances, including corruption, bad governance and a lack of basic services.

The anger mirrored recent protests against ruling elites elsewhere, including Nepal and Morocco.

Earlier on Tuesday, at Antananarivo’s 13 May Square, along the main drag lined with palm trees and French colonial buildings, thousands of protesters danced, marched, sang and waved banners denouncing Rajoelina as a French stooge because of his dual citizenship and support from Madagascar’s former coloniser.

Many were waving Malagasy flags and the signature Gen Z protest banner of a skull and crossbones from the Japanese “One Piece” anime series.

At one point, Randrianirina took the stage and asked: “Are you ready to accept a military takeover?”, drawing cheers of approval from the crowd.

Later, as news of the military takeover filtered through to protesters, many were jubilant.

“We’re so happy Andry Rajoelina is finally gone … We will start again,” high-school student Fih Nomensanahary said, with four of her friends cheering alongside her.

Others were more cautious. “They need to hand over to a civilian administration quickly and have an election,” said Rezafy Lova, a 68-year-old IT consultant.

Economy In Tatters

CAPSAT had joined the protesters over the weekend, saying it would refuse to fire on them. It went on to take charge of the military and appointed a new army chief, prompting Rajoelina to warn on Sunday of an illegal attempt to seize power.

Since then, the paramilitary gendarmerie and the police have also broken ranks with Rajoelina.

Madagascar, where the average age is less than 20, has a population of about 30 million, three-quarters of whom live in poverty. Between its independence in 1960 and 2020, GDP per capita plunged 45%, according to the World Bank.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Torrential Rains Kill 64 In Mexico; 65 Still Missing

Torrential Rains Kill 64 In Mexico; 65 Still Missing

Torrential rains that battered Mexico last week have left at least 64 people dead and 65 others missing, the government said on Monday, after a tropical depression unleashed devastating landslides and severe flooding across parts of the Gulf Coast and central states.

The unnamed depression came toward the end of the rainy season, battering land and bursting rivers that had already been soaked by months of rains, while forecasters were focused on tropical storms and two hurricanes on the Pacific coast.

Unexpected Intense Rain

“This intense rain was not expected to be of such magnitude,” President Claudia Sheinbaum told reporters.

Admiral Raymundo Morales, Mexico’s Navy secretary, said the flooding was the result of the coming together of warm and cold air fronts over rivers that were already filled to the brink and mountains weakened by months of rain.

Around 100,000 homes were affected, Sheinbaum said. She is set to meet with the finance ministry later in the day to discuss rebuilding efforts, and visit some hard-hit states.

Laura Velazquez, national coordinator of civil protection, said Hidalgo and Veracruz were the states worst affected, with 29 deaths and 18 missing reported in Veracruz, and 21 deaths and 43 missing in Hidalgo.

Infrastructure Destroyed

The rain also destroyed infrastructure such as bridges and left streets filled with mud. Videos and images from last week showed emergency responders wading through deep waters to find stranded residents and get supplies to affected communities.

Authorities have deployed thousands of personnel to help evacuate, clean up and monitor the places that were hardest hit.

Thanking volunteers, Sheinbaum said, “We do not skimp on resources to support the population affected by the rains,” in a tweet originally posted in Spanish.

Electricity, which had been knocked out in towns across five states, has largely been restored. Authorities said they will also focus on containing the spread of viruses such as dengue, carried by mosquitoes that breed in stagnant water.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Over 50 Mexican Politicians Stripped Of U.S. Visas In Drug Cartel Crackdown

Over 50 Mexican Politicians Stripped Of U.S. Visas In Drug Cartel Crackdown

The United States has revoked visas for more than 50 Mexican politicians and government officials as part of the Trump administration’s expanded campaign against drug cartels and their suspected political connections, according to two Mexican officials.

A handful of these cases have been publicized, but media reports show the visa cancellations are far more widespread than previously reported.

According to three former U.S. ambassadors, previous administrations have revoked visas in this way – but not to the same degree, which they said was indicative of President Donald Trump’s willingness to use the diplomatic tool to achieve policy goals.

Pressure On Mexico

“The Trump administration is finding new ways to exert more pressure on Mexico,” said Tony Wayne, U.S. ambassador to Mexico from 2011 to 2015.

The move has sent quiet shockwaves through Mexico’s political elite, who regularly travel to the U.S. and require a visa to do so. It also marks a significant broadening of U.S. anti-narcotics action, with the Trump administration targeting active politicians usually seen as too diplomatically sensitive.

One of the sources, a senior Mexican politician, said more than 50 politicians from the ruling Morena party have had their visas revoked, as well as dozens of officials from other political parties. The sources requested anonymity to speak on a sensitive topic.

The names of the Mexican officials whose visas have been revoked could not be ascertained. So far, only four have publicly confirmed they lost their visas, including Baja California state Governor Marina del Pilar Avila, who has categorically denied any links to organized crime.

The U.S. does not need to provide explanations for revoking someone’s visa and the threshold for doing so is much lower than for imposing sanctions or a prosecution, sources said.

A senior U.S. State Department official said: “Visas, including those held by foreign officials, may be revoked at any time” for “activities that run contrary to America’s national interest.”

“The Trump administration has had a good working relationship with the Sheinbaum government, and we look forward to continuing to advance our bilateral relationship in the interest of the America first foreign policy agenda,” the official added.

Mexico’s presidency and the Mexican foreign ministry did not reply to requests for comment.

Widespread Visa Revocations

The Trump administration has also been revoking visas elsewhere in Latin America against perceived political and ideological foes.

Christopher Landau, former U.S. ambassador to Mexico and the State Department’s no. 2 official, has made no secret of his penchant for denying access to the U.S., referring to himself on X as “El Quitavisas,” which translates to “The Visa Snatcher.”

The State Department said last month it would pull Colombian President Gustavo Petro’s visa after he spoke at a pro-Palestinian demonstration in New York and urged U.S. soldiers to disobey Trump’s orders. Petro hit back, declaring: “I don’t care.”

In Brazil, more than 20 top judges and officials have lost their visas, while in Costa Rica, at least 14 politicians and business leaders, including former president and Nobel Prize Peace laureate Oscar Arias, have had theirs revoked. Arias, who had been critical of Trump on social media, said he was given no reason for the revocation.

In Mexico, the widespread visa revocations – especially of members of President Claudia Sheinbaum’s ruling Morena party – threaten to complicate the country’s already uneasy relationship with the United States.

Amid high-stakes trade negotiations and security talks, Sheinbaum has opted to collaborate closely with the U.S. to go after the cartels. Still, she has condemned repeated suggestions by Trump administration officials that the U.S. could take unilateral military action in Mexico, which she has said would violate Mexico’s sovereignty.

Trump’s Security Strategy

A third source with knowledge of the visa process said the revocations are part of Trump’s security strategy, adding that the administration’s designation of some cartels as terrorist organizations means intelligence held by the Drug Enforcement Administration increasingly impacts someone’s U.S. visa status.

ProPublica first reported that U.S. officials expected to revoke dozens of visas of political figures in Mexico for suspected links to the cartels. Reuters reported in June that the Trump administration was pressuring Mexico to investigate and prosecute politicians with suspected links to organized crime.

No Explanation For Revocations

The U.S. has refused to give explanations for the visa revocations to the individuals involved, four Mexican sources said, sowing confusion among officials that they could be next as well as concern it could mean they are under criminal investigation. Nearly all of the people impacted have avoided talking about it publicly because it is seen as a stain on their reputation, the sources said.

Roberta Jacobson, who served as ambassador to Mexico from 2016 to 2018, said when she was in government visa cancellations of politicians usually only happened because of a conviction or an ongoing criminal case. She said having a visa pulled could indicate that the U.S. is investigating the person for criminal activities, but not necessarily.

“The likelihood is that you won’t know whether or not the U.S. is investigating potentially for years,” she said.

The State Department does not publish figures on how often it revokes visas of foreign officials but John Feeley, ambassador to Panama from 2015 to 2018, said he did not recall any Panamanian politician having their visa canceled when he was ambassador.

He said the widespread revocations could backfire and strain U.S.-Mexico cooperation on security. “It could spur blowback, where President Sheinbaum sees collaborating with the U.S. as too high of a political cost.”

(With inputs from Reuters)