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The EU's cybersecurity agency ENISA has confirmed that the hack on Collins Aerospace, owned by RTX, was a ransomware attack,
For many Tibetans and environmental advocates, the fireworks represented yet another example of outside forces imposing themselves on a fragile
From AI to defence and civil nuclear energy, the India France relationship is complex and growing in strategic areas
Abd el-Fattah has become Egypt's most prominent political prisoner after spending much of his adult life in and out of
The nations said a two-state solution was the only way to achieve peace, but Israel said the recognition of a
In August, UCLA said the Trump administration froze funding of $584 million after the federal government reprimanded the school for
Armed gangs have taken control of almost all of Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince, in a conflict that has forced some 1.3
"The police have launched an intensive investigation to determine what kind of drones these are," Copenhagen Police Deputy Assistant Commissioner
The Trump administration has said it is eager to end fighting that has killed thousands this year and attract billions
Economic Growth Minister Nicola Willis said in the statement that skilled and experienced migrants play an important role in plugging

Home Cyber Experts Warn Of Rising Ransomware Attacks After Airport Chaos

Cyber Experts Warn Of Rising Ransomware Attacks After Airport Chaos

Cybersecurity experts warned that cybercriminals are increasingly targeting high-profile systems to secure bigger payoffs and enhance their online notoriety, after a weekend attack crippled airport check-in networks across Europe and left thousands of passengers stranded.

The European Union’s cybersecurity agency ENISA confirmed on Monday that the hack on Collins Aerospace, owned by RTX, was a ransomware attack, but did not say where the attack originated from. The outage, which hit check-in and baggage drop services, has affected dozens of flights since Friday.

“Broadly, the majority of ransomware activity is still geared towards extortion through data encryption and theft,” said Rafe Pilling, Director of Threat Intelligence at Sophos, a British cybersecurity firm.

“The subset of attacks deliberately engineered for maximum disruption, often by Western-based groups, is the outlier, but they are becoming more visible and more ambitious,” he added.

It was not clear which group was behind the hack. Ransomware gangs routinely publicise attacks and leak stolen data on dark web “leak sites,” but websites that monitor those portals had not, as of Monday, detected any group claiming Collins Aerospace, or RTX, as a target.

Ransomware Attack

Ransomware is malicious software used by cybercriminals to encrypt a company’s data and demand payment for its release. They typically operate in the shadows, and many try to avoid targets which might earn them unwanted attention from law enforcement agencies.

Other groups, however, are becoming more brazen in the kind of targets they choose, cybersecurity experts said.

In April, a group of hackers dubbed Scattered Spider was widely reported to be behind an attack that crippled British retailer Marks & Spencer, preventing one of the best-known names in British retailing from taking online orders for weeks.

Last Thursday, Britain’s National Crime Agency charged two teenagers over a 2024 cyberattack on London’s Transport for London, which it said caused “significant disruption and millions in losses”.

Scattered Spider Behind Attack?

The NCA said investigators believed the TfL attack was carried out by members of Scattered Spider.

The FBI has said Scattered Spider was involved with approximately 120 network intrusions and has earned around $115 million in ransom payments.

“It’s clear from the number of recent cyberattacks and their impact that this is a problem that will grow, possibly rapidly, until software developers get much better at writing secure software and company IT staff get much better at evaluating the security of software their company choses to purchase or to use remotely,” said Martyn Thomas, Emeritus Professor of IT at Gresham College, London.

“We have been lucky so far, as the motivation of cyber criminals has been disruption or financial gain,” Thomas said. “If they were to decide to cause serious injury or many deaths, the same attack strategies could be used on critical systems in healthcare or major infrastructure.”

One potential factor adding to the rise in higher-profile and more criminally risky ransomware targets is the pursuit of reputation within criminal circles: The bigger the target, the more online clout cybercriminals have with other hackers.

“A small but determined set of largely Western-based cybercriminals are honing their skills and becoming emboldened by their past success and the success of others,” said Pilling at Sophos.

“Their motivation isn’t only financial, though, and pulling off a high-impact breach also brings social standing and credibility within their peer networks”.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Pyrotechnics Display In Tibet Triggers Backlash Over Environment

Pyrotechnics Display In Tibet Triggers Backlash Over Environment

In a recent incident, Canadian outdoor clothing brand Arc’teryx faced sharp backlash for staging a firework show in the Tibet.

The brand, in collaboration with a Chinese artist Cai Guo-Qiang, performed a high-altitude pyrotechnic show that ignited not only the skies over Shigatse but also debates over environmental damage and cultural sensitivity.

The ‘Rising Dragon’ performance involved long stretches of choreographed fireworks and clouds of colored smoke along snow-capped Himalayan ridgelines.

While designed as a dramatic promotional event, the display quickly drew criticisms online. Many netizens questioned both its aesthetics and its environmental impact.

“It doesn’t even look beautiful,” one user wrote, while another warned that “the shock is estimated to kill a lot of small animals.” Others criticized the brand’s price tag, with one post reading, “The clothes are quite expensive.” Another comment read “Let’s be more thoughtful in future.”

Accusations of cultural imperialism also surfaced noting that the event took place in a region where Chinese activities are already a source of tension. For many Tibetans and environmental advocates, the fireworks represented yet another example of outside forces imposing themselves on a fragile ecosystem and culture.

In response, Arc’teryx issued an apology, stating that only biodegradable, environmentally friendly materials were used, and that wildlife had been coaxed away using salt bricks.

Tibet, which is often described as the Third Pole, is experiencing climate warming twice the global average, putting major rivers and livelihood downstream at risk.

Dams across Tibetan rivers have drawn repeated criticism from environmentalists, especially the recent project on Yarlung Zangbo, which has raised concerns from the neighbouring countries as well.

The firework show, though centered on a single event, reflects deeper concerns. As China grapples with balancing economic growth, cultural sensitivities, and environmental issues, even a seemingly artistic display can trigger global debates.

Home India-France Review Ties, Firm Up Agenda For Key AI Summit Next Year

India-France Review Ties, Firm Up Agenda For Key AI Summit Next Year

A high-level team from France is now in Delhi to take forward discussions on the India-France Year of Innovation next year, covering cyber security and green tech, as also the summit on Artificial Intelligence (AI) to be held next February in Delhi.

French President Emmanuel Macron is expected to attend and the two sides will seek to build on the goals they have set: promoting the use of safe, secure and internationally regulated AI to realise the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

India aims to shape the global discourse on responsible AI, while France brings its own domestic experience with digital regulation and its broader role in EU tech policy.

Their collaboration on this front signals a shared ambition to influence global norms in areas where major powers remain divided, especially on data sovereignty, algorithmic accountability, and ethical AI.

But the visit of Anne-Marie Descôtes, Secretary General of the French Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs, was also an opportunity to review the broader relationship with Foreign Secretary Vikam Misri.

They co-chaired the Second Meeting of the India-France Special Task Force on Civil Nuclear Energy, where both sides reaffirmed their interest in advancing work on Small and Advanced Modular Reactors (SMRs and AMRs),  a next-generation technology that is central to India’s clean energy transition.

Discussions also covered the Horizon 2047 Roadmap, the Indo-Pacific strategy, and the Defence Industrial Roadmap.

Earlier this month, India and France held the 17th meeting of their Joint Working Group on Counter Terrorism in Paris, where they agreed to expand joint efforts to tackle cyber threats, online radicalisation, and misuse of emerging technologies by extremist groups.

In the political consultations, Descôtes and Misri discussed how both countries could respond to fast-evolving global challenges,  from the war in Ukraine and the worsening humanitarian crisis in Gaza, to the spread of AI-driven misinformation and the use of digital tools by terrorist networks.

France has set an ambitious goal of hosting 30,000 Indian students by 2030, a point  Descôtes underscored during a stop over at the Alliance Française de Delhi and Campus France.

Home Egypt’s President Sisi Grants Pardon To Prominent Activist Alaa Abd El-Fattah

Egypt’s President Sisi Grants Pardon To Prominent Activist Alaa Abd El-Fattah

Egypt‘s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi on Monday pardoned prominent Egyptian-British activist Alaa Abd el-Fattah and five others, ending a prolonged imprisonment marked by hunger strikes and international appeals for his release, his lawyer confirmed.

Abd el-Fattah, 43, has become Egypt’s most prominent political prisoner after spending much of his adult life in and out of detention due to his activism, and is a rare symbol of opposition to a far-reaching crackdown under Sisi.

Despite campaigns calling for his release, notably during the COP27 climate summit that Egypt hosted in 2022, hopes for his release were only raised when Sisi ordered authorities in September to study his possible pardon. Abd el-Fattah’s name had been removed from Egypt’s “terrorism” list months earlier.

Release Expected When Pardon Published

Egypt’s National Council for Human Rights, a state-funded body, welcomed the decision, saying it signalled a growing emphasis on swift justice.

His lawyer, Khaled Ali, confirmed the release, which another member of the defence team said is expected to take place after the pardon is published in the official gazette, within hours or days.

Abd el-Fattah’s mother, Laila Soueif, and sister, Sanaa Seif, waited outside Wadi al-Natroun prison, some 100 km northwest of Cairo, where they told Reuters they were hopeful he would be released on Monday.

Abd el-Fattah, who obtained British citizenship through his mother in 2021, comes from a family of well-known activists and intellectuals who have launched several campaigns for his release. His mother met British Prime Minister Keir Starmer earlier this year to lobby for her son.

The former blogger had been detained both before the Arab Spring uprising that toppled Egypt’s autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak in 2011 and during the upheaval that followed. But it was his criticism of crackdowns on dissidents after then-army chief Sisi took power that landed him his longest prison stints by far.

In 2014, Abd el-Fattah was sentenced to 15 years in prison for protesting without permission, which was later reduced to five years.

Accused Of Spreading Fake News

He was released in 2019, but remained on parole and was arrested again later that year, accused of spreading fake news after sharing a social media post about a prisoner’s death. He was later sentenced to another five-year term.

His mother Soueif intensified her campaign in September last year, when she was expecting his release due to time spent in pre-trial detention. Prosecutors argued he should remain in custody until January 2027.

Soueif staged a lengthy hunger strike in Britain, ending it only after pleas from her family as her health significantly deteriorated. Starmer promised he would do everything he could to secure his release.

Abd el-Fattah has also staged multiple hunger strikes in detention to protest against his imprisonment and in solidarity with his mother, most recently in early September.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Trump To Discuss Gaza Governance With Arab, Muslim Leaders

Trump To Discuss Gaza Governance With Arab, Muslim Leaders

US President Donald Trump is set to meet leaders and officials from several Muslim-majority nations on Tuesday to discuss the escalating crisis in Gaza, which remains under heavy assault by Washington’s ally, Israel.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Monday that Trump will hold a multilateral meeting with Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Turkey, Indonesia and Pakistan. A person familiar with the matter said Gaza will be discussed.

Axios reported Trump will present the group with a proposal for peace and post-war governance in Gaza.

Discussion To Feature Post-War Governance In Gaza

In addition to freeing hostages and ending the war, Trump is expected to discuss US plans around an Israeli withdrawal and post-war governance in Gaza, without Hamas involvement, according to Axios.

Washington wants Arab and Muslim countries to agree to send military forces to Gaza to enable Israel’s withdrawal and to secure funding for transition and rebuilding programmes, Axios reported.

UNGA

Trump will address the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, a day after dozens of world leaders gathered at the United Nations to embrace a Palestinian state, a landmark diplomatic shift nearly two years into the Gaza war that faces fierce resistance from Israel and the United States.

The nations said a two-state solution was the only way to achieve peace, but Israel said the recognition of a Palestinian state was a reward to extremism.

Israel’s assault on Gaza since October 2023 has killed tens of thousands, internally displaced Gaza’s entire population, and set off a starvation crisis. Multiple rights experts, scholars and a UN inquiry assessed it amounts to genocide.

Israel calls its actions self-defence after an October 2023 attack by Palestinian Hamas militants that killed 1,200 people and in which more than 250 were taken hostage. Israel has also bombed Iran, Lebanon, Yemen, Syria and Qatar during the course of its war in Gaza.

Elusive Resolution

Trump had promised a quick end to the war in Gaza, but a resolution remains elusive eight months into his term.

Trump’s term began with a two-month ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, which ended when Israeli strikes killed 400 Palestinians on March 18. More recently, images of starving Palestinians, including children, have sparked global outrage against Israel’s assault on Gaza.

In February, Trump proposed a US takeover of Gaza and a permanent displacement of Palestinians from there. It was labeled as an “ethnic cleansing” proposal by rights experts and the United Nations. Forcible displacement is illegal under international law. Trump cast the plan as a re-development idea.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Court Orders Trump Administration To Resume Federal Funding For UCLA

Court Orders Trump Administration To Resume Federal Funding For UCLA

A U.S. judge has ruled that the Trump administration must reinstate federal grants previously frozen for the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), the court filing revealed on Monday.

In August, UCLA said the Trump administration froze funding of $584 million after the federal government reprimanded the school for its handling of pro-Palestinian protests.

The Los Angeles Times and Politico said U.S. District Judge Rita Lin’s ruling ordered that more than $500 million in funding be restored to the university.

Lin had ordered the Trump administration in August to restore part of the suspended federal funding to UCLA.

The Trump administration has cut or threatened to withhold federal funds to universities over their handling of protests against Israel’s assault on Gaza. The government says universities, including UCLA, allowed displays of antisemitism during the protests.

Pro-Palestinian protesters, including some Jewish groups, say their criticism of Israel’s assault on Gaza and its occupation of Palestinian territories should not be characterized as antisemitism and their advocacy for Palestinian rights should not be equated with extremism.

Lin, a judge in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, said in her order the indefinite suspensions of grants from the National Institutes of Health were likely “arbitrary and capricious.”

Lin ordered that research funds from NIH, the Department of Defence, and the Department of Transportation be restored as part of her preliminary injunction. Her injunction was preliminary as the broader legal case proceeded.

Labor unions, faculties and students in the University of California education system, of which UCLA is a part, sued the Trump administration last week over the freezing of federal funds and other actions that they say aim to stifle academic freedom.

Concerns Of Free Speech

Rights groups say Trump’s actions hurt free speech.

The University of California, Berkeley, another campus in the University of California system, said earlier this month it provided information on 160 faculty members and students to the government as part of an investigation.

University of California President James Milliken says the university system was facing one of the gravest threats in its history. It receives more than $17 billion each year in federal support.

The Trump administration has also faced other legal roadblocks in its funding freeze attempts. A federal judge ruled earlier this month it had unlawfully terminated over $2 billion in grants for Harvard University.

The government in July settled federal investigations with Columbia University, which agreed to pay more than $220 million to the government, and Brown University, which said it will pay $50 million to support local workforce development. Both accepted certain government demands.

Large demonstrations at UCLA last year included a violent attack by a pro-Israeli mob on a pro-Palestinian encampment. The school unveilednew protest rules on Friday, that formalized interim policies put in place in September 2024.

The federal government had proposed settling its probe into UCLA through a $1 billion payment from the university. California Governor Gavin Newsom called that offer an extortion attempt.

Human rights advocates noted a rise in antisemitism and Islamophobia due to conflict in the Middle East. Trump has not announced probes into Islamophobia.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home At UN, US Pushes For Larger Haiti Deployment As Kenya Flags Vehicle Issue

At UN, US Pushes For Larger Haiti Deployment As Kenya Flags Vehicle Issue

The United States on Monday pressed at the United Nations (UN) for broader backing to expand an international mission against Haiti’s armed gangs, a Kenyan-led effort that President William Ruto acknowledged has faced staffing and logistical hurdles.

Armed gangs have taken control of almost all of Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince, in a conflict that has forced some 1.3 million people from their homes and fueled famine-level hunger.

At an event organised by the U.S. and Kenya on the sidelines of the annual U.N. gathering of world leaders, Ruto said the 15-month-old force – known as the Multinational Security Support mission – had been operating at only 40% of the expected strength of 2,500 security personnel.

The U.N. Security Council mandate for the MSS mission is due to expire on October 2. A Security Council resolution requires at least nine of the 15 votes in favour and no vetoes by the U.S., Britain, China, France or Russia.

“I must commend the United States. They did make available logistics and vehicles. But unfortunately, most of the vehicles were second-hand vehicles, and therefore, they broke down a lot, many times. And in fact, it put our personnel in great danger when they broke down in very dangerous places,” Ruto said.

“But at least they stepped up,” he added. “We didn’t, however, get any useful support from any other quarter.”

The United States and Panama last month put forward a draft resolution to transition the existing 15-month-old MSS mission into a new, larger Gang Suppression Force supported by a new U.N. field office.

The proposed new force would still rely on voluntary international contributions of personnel and funding, but the leadership structure would be different. It would be led by a group of representatives from countries that have contributed personnel, plus the United States and Canada.

Haiti At The Crossroads

The proposal follows a U.S.-led push last year to convert the Kenyan-led mission into a formal U.N. peacekeeping force to bolster its resources, which was opposed by Russia and China.

“Haiti stands at a crossroads. Port-au-Prince faces an escalating security crisis with gangs terrorising communities, extorting families and recruiting desperate children to commit horrors on behalf of gang leaders,” said U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau, who also announced the U.S. was sanctioning two former Haitian officials.

He said the MSS lacks “the mandate and the resources necessary to address the mounting scale of the challenge” in Haiti.

China’s deputy U.N. Ambassador Geng Shuang said Beijing supports the mission in Haiti continuing to play “its significant role and stands ready to engage with all parties to explore all possible, and also feasible, ways forward.” He also said Haiti needs to “ownership and assume primary responsibility by taking concrete actions.”

Laurent Saint-Cyr, president of Haiti’s Transitional Presidential Council, told the event on Monday that the security situation in the country “remains the main obstacle to finalising our objective – ensuring a peaceful transition to power through elections.” Haiti supports the creation of a new gang suppression force, he said.

Ruto said Kenya was ready to participate in any new mission, but warned: “If we don’t correct the mistakes of the past, we will, most unlikely, succeed.”

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Drone Sightings Temporarily Halt Flights At Copenhagen And Oslo Airports

Drone Sightings Temporarily Halt Flights At Copenhagen And Oslo Airports

Copenhagen Airport, the Nordic region’s busiest hub, said early Tuesday it had resumed operations after drone activity forced a suspension of all departures and arrivals for nearly four hours. Norway’s Oslo Airport also reopened after closing its airspace due to a reported drone sighting.

“The police have launched an intensive investigation to determine what kind of drones these are,” Copenhagen Police Deputy Assistant Commissioner Jakob Hansen told reporters. “The drones have disappeared and we have not taken any of them,” he added.

Hansen said authorities in Denmark and Norway would cooperate to determine whether there was a link between the two incidents.

The airspace at Oslo airport in Norway was reopened by 3:22 a.m. (0122 GMT), a spokesperson for Norwegian airport operator Avinor said in a statement.

It had been shut since midnight (2200 GMT) due to a drone observation, with all flights diverted to the nearest airport.

Large Drones Spotted

Danish police said earlier on Monday that two or three large drones had been seen flying near Copenhagen’s airport, closing it to all traffic.

The airport halted operations at 8:26 p.m. (1826 GMT) on Monday, according to flight tracking service FlightRadar. Around 50 flights were diverted to alternate airports, FlightRadar said on X.

After it reopened, Copenhagen Airport said on X that delays and some cancelled departures would persist and urged passengers to check with their airlines.

The airport shutdowns came after a string of disruptions at European airports in recent days.

A cyberattack last Friday knocked out check-in and boarding systems supplied by Collins Aerospace, a unit of RTX, affecting operations at London’s Heathrow and the Berlin and Brussels airports. Over the weekend and into Monday, the fallout continued to snarl travel across the region.

In 2018, drone sightings over the runway at Gatwick near London stranded tens of thousands of passengers and disrupted hundreds of flights at the height of the holiday season.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Congo President Rules Out ‘Auctioning’ Mineral Resources To U.S.

Congo President Rules Out ‘Auctioning’ Mineral Resources To U.S.

President of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Felix Tshisekedi, said on Monday that a U.S.-brokered peace agreement with Rwanda signed in June has failed to ease fighting in eastern Congo, while expressing gratitude to President Donald Trump for efforts to resolve the conflict.

On June 27, U.S. mediators brokered the peace deal between Congo and Rwanda aimed at ending the support that Washington and U.N. experts say Kigali provides M23 rebels.

The Trump administration has said it is eager to end fighting that has killed thousands this year and attract billions of dollars of Western investment to a region rich in tantalum, gold, cobalt, copper, and lithium. The deadline to implement part of the U.S. deal is this month.

Despite his support for U.S. mediation, it “does not mean that we will auction our mineral resources,” Tshisekedi told reporters in New York.

“We will, as part of this partnership, be working in the development of the mining sectors, developing the value chain, developing infrastructure with a particular emphasis on energy,” he said.

Deal With The U.S.

Tshisekedi said the country had signed a strategic partnership with China. “Today, we are negotiating a similar partnership with the USA. And we hope that we will complete it,” he said. He did not provide substantial details about the partnerships.

Congolese officials say the success of the deal hinges on Rwanda ceasing its support for M23, which Kinshasa accuses of atrocities in the east. M23 has disputed allegations of attacks on civilians and Rwanda has long denied helping M23, saying its forces act in self-defence.

“(Rwanda) pretended to withdraw their troops, but actually, they are increasing their support to M23,” Tshisekedi said.

In March, Qatar brokered a surprise sit-down between Tshisekedi and Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame during which the two leaders called for a ceasefire. That led to direct talks between Congo and M23, though the two sides missed an August 18 deadline to reach a peace agreement.

M23 says it wants prisoners freed before talks can advance. But a Congolese government official directly involved in the talks said that prisoners could only be released after an agreement is signed.

Tshisekedi said there has been some positive development on a possible prisoner exchange.

“As a matter of fact, we are waiting for the Red Cross to give us a go ahead to proceed with the exchange of prisoners,” he said.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home New Zealand Eases Residency Rules For Certain Migrants

New Zealand Eases Residency Rules For Certain Migrants

The New Zealand government announced on Tuesday that it will create two additional residency pathways for migrants, part of a strategy aimed at supporting economic growth.

Economic Growth Minister Nicola Willis said in the statement that skilled and experienced migrants play an important role in plugging workforce gaps, and in turn help businesses to grow.

“Businesses told us it was too hard for some migrants to gain residence, even when they had crucial skills and significant experience that was not available in the existing workforce. We’re fixing it,” she said.

From mid-2026, the government will roll out two distinct streams: the Skilled Work Experience pathway and the Trades and Technician pathway.

The first targets migrants in roles classified under ANZSCO Levels 1-3 who have at least five years of relevant job experience (with at least two years’ work inside New Zealand) and earn at least 1.1 times the current median wage.

The second residency path will accommodate those in specified trade or technical occupations holding Level-4 or higher qualifications, with four years’ post-qualification experience including a minimum of 18 months in New Zealand at or above the median wage.

New Pathways

The new pathways are for skilled workers and tradespeople and technicians, and require them to have relevant experience both overseas and in New Zealand and to meet salary thresholds, the statement said.

Business groups have welcomed the change, saying it will help fill labour shortages and give firms confidence to plan long term.

New Zealand’s economy has been struggling having seen negative growth in three of the last five quarters and the government has been introducing a number of policies aimed at supporting it, including boosting foreign investment in the country.

While the country’s net migration has remained positive, it has come off the highs seen following the reopening of the borders in 2022 as a historically high number of New Zealanders leave.

Government coalition partner New Zealand First said it does not support the policy.

(With inputs from Reuters)