At least 8 killed in an explosion and fire at a pharmaceutical factory in southern India

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Updated 30 June 2025
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At least 8 killed in an explosion and fire at a pharmaceutical factory in southern India

NEW DELHI: An explosion and fire at a pharmaceutical factory in India’s southern state of Telangana killed at least eight people and injured several others, authorities said Monday.

The fire department recovered the charred bodies of six workers in an industrial area about 50 kilometers (31 miles) from the state capital Hyderabad (31 miles), the state’s fire services director G.V. Narayana Rao told The Associated Press.

Two other workers succumbed to burns and were pronounced dead at a hospital, Rao said, adding that debris of the gutted pharmaceutical unit of Sigachi Industries was being removed to find out if any more workers were trapped.

“It was an explosion in a spray dryer unit of the factory, which is used to process raw material into fine powder for making drugs,” Rao said.

India is home to some of the world’s top pharmaceutical companies, playing a pivotal role in the global supply of generic medicines and vaccines. The country’s robust manufacturing and cost-effective production have made it a hub for pharma giants.

Industrial accidents, particularly involving chemical reactors, aren’t uncommon in such factories, underlining the need for authorities to implement stringent safety protocols and regulatory oversight in a sector critical to public health.

Sigachi Industries Limited is an Indian company dealing with active pharmaceutical ingredients, intermediates and vitamin-mineral blends, according to the company’s website. It has five manufacturing facilities across India, and also subsidiaries in the USand the United Arab Emirates.


Fugitive Moldovan oligarch implicated in $1 billion bank fraud detained in Greece

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Fugitive Moldovan oligarch implicated in $1 billion bank fraud detained in Greece

Vladimir Plahotniuc fled Moldova in 2019 as he faced a series of corruption charges
The Greek police unit tackling organized crime said Interpol was seeking Plahotniuc on suspicion of participating in a criminal organization

CHISINAU: A fugitive Moldovan oligarch implicated in a $1 billion bank fraud and other illicit schemes was detained Tuesday in Greece, Moldova’s national police said.

Vladimir Plahotniuc fled Moldova in 2019 as he faced a series of corruption charges including allegations of complicity in a scheme that led to $1 billion disappearing from a Moldovan bank in 2014, which at the time was equivalent to about an eighth of Moldova’s annual GDP.

Plahotniuc has denied any wrongdoing.

Moldovan police said in a statement they were informed by Interpol’s office in Athens that two Moldovan citizens had been detained, including Plahotniuc, who was placed on Interpol’s international wanted list in February. Authorities did not name the other detainee.

The Greek police unit tackling organized crime said Interpol was seeking Plahotniuc on suspicion of participating in a criminal organization, fraud and money laundering.

Moldova’s Ministry of Justice and Prosecutor’s Office are in the process of exchanging information to begin seeking extradition of Plahotniuc and the other detainee, a government official told The Associated Press.

Plahotniuc, one of Moldova’s wealthiest men, fled to the US from Moldova in June 2019 after failing to form a government with his Democratic Party.

The US declared him persona non grata in 2020 and his whereabouts were unknown for years.

The powerful businessman and politician was added to a US State Department sanctions list in 2022 for alleged corruption. The charges included controlling the country’s law enforcement to target political and business rivals and meddling in Moldova’s elections.

He was added to a UK sanctions list in 2022 and barred from entering the country. His assets were frozen in the UK and its overseas territories.

Japan avoids criticizing Israel for bombing and invading Syria

Updated 4 min 50 sec ago
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Japan avoids criticizing Israel for bombing and invading Syria

  • Foreign Minister Takeshi Iwaya reiterated Japan’s commitment to peaceful conflict resolution
  • He emphasized that Syria’s territorial integrity, sovereignty, and independence should be respected

TOKYO: Despite the recent attacks on Gaza and Syria, Japan has notably refrained from condemning Israel’s actions.

This stance contrasts sharply with Tokyo’s more vocal criticisms of military actions taken by other nations, such as Russia.

Foreign Minister Takeshi Iwaya reiterated Japan’s commitment to peaceful conflict resolution, emphasizing the need for restraint and dialogue. He also expressed appreciation for the efforts of countries working to resolve the situation in Syria.

“As I mentioned previously, we are deeply concerned about the situation in Syria,” Iwaya stated, adding that Israel’s attacks on Syria could be “severely worsening” the situation there.

“We are calling for the steadfast implementation of the ceasefire agreement agreed upon by the involved parties and strongly urging all parties, including Israel, to exercise maximum restraint.”

Furthermore, Iwaya emphasized that Syria’s territorial integrity, sovereignty, and independence should be respected. He acknowledged that the Syrian government has engaged in dialogue aimed at achieving a political solution and national reconciliation.

“We are committed to demanding that all parties play a constructive role in achieving a peaceful and stable transition in Syria,” he added.

Israel’s aggressive invasion of Syrian territories and its ongoing bombings of critical Syrian establishments — most recently, airstrikes on the presidential palace and the defense ministry — have raised serious concerns.

When Iwaya was asked whether Japan would take a stronger stance, including condemnation and sanctions against Israel like its response to Russia’s actions in Ukraine, he reiterated, “We are committed to demanding that all parties play a constructive role in achieving a peaceful and stable transition in Syria.”


New UK records reveal Bush viewed Iraq war as a ‘crusade’

Updated 51 min 35 sec ago
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New UK records reveal Bush viewed Iraq war as a ‘crusade’

  • Diplomatic files released Tuesday reveal tension between White House and former Prime Minister Sir Tony Blair over invasion
  • Other details include birthday messages with Vladimir Putin and proposal to send Afghan map to France’s Chirac as ‘a laugh’

LONDON: A series of released records in the UK have revealed that President George W. Bush viewed the Iraq war as a “crusade.”

Cabinet Office papers made public on Tuesday show Bush considered the US “God’s chosen nation” tasked with ridding the world of “evil-doers,” including Saddam Hussein.

Sir Christopher Meyer, the UK’s ambassador to Washington, wrote in December 2002 in a diplomatic cable to Whitehall: “More than anything else, he (Bush) fears another catastrophic terrorist attack on the homeland, especially one with an Iraqi connection.”

He added: “His view of the world is Manichean. He sees his mission as ridding it of evil-doers. He believes American values should be universal values. He finds the Europeans’ differentiation between Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein self-serving.

“He is strongly allergic to Europeans collectively. Anyone who has sat round a dinner table with low-church Southerners will find these sentiments instantly recognisable.”

In January 2023, Sir Tony Blair met with Bush in the US to urge him to use diplomacy, but Sir Christopher wrote Jan. 29: “It is politically impossible for Bush to back down from going to war in Iraq this spring, absent Saddam’s surrender or disappearance from the scene.” 

On Jan. 30, Sir David Manning, a UK foreign policy adviser, told Sir Tony to warn Bush that a UN resolution was “politically essential for the UK, and almost certainly legally essential as well.”

Sir David told Condoleezza Rice, Bush’s secretary of state, that an invasion of Iraq without one could bring down the Labour government, and that “the US must not promote regime change in Baghdad at the price of regime change in London.”

He added in a message to Sir Tony: “I said that Bush could afford to gamble. He wanted a second resolution but it was not crucial to him. He already had congressional authority to act unilaterally. This was quite different from the situation you were facing.

“Condi acknowledged this but said that there came a point in any poker game when you had to show your cards. I said this was fine for Bush. He would still be at the table if he showed his cards and lost. You would not.”

The cables also reveal other aspects of Sir Tony’s time in office, including a birthday message from Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2001.

“Dear Tony,” the message read, “accept my sincere congratulations on your birthday and heartfelt wishes of good health, happiness, success and well being to you and your family.

“With great warmth I recollect our last meeting in Stockholm, I am convinced that regular contacts between us will further facilitate the development of Russian-British relations, strengthening international security and stability.”

Other revelations include a thorny diplomatic incident, when former French President Jacques Chirac had spoken in private to Sir Tony about Clare Short, the international development secretary, to complain she was “viscerally anti-French and insupportable.”

In an effort to improve relations with Chirac, UK officials also considered purchasing a map of Afghanistan for Chirac denoting British military failures in the country for “a laugh” for his birthday in November 2001.


Spain proposes declassifying secret Franco era files

Updated 22 July 2025
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Spain proposes declassifying secret Franco era files

  • Justice Minister emphasizes citizens’ right to historical documentation
  • Advocacy group urges full access to Church, King Juan Carlos documents

MADRID: The Spanish government on Tuesday introduced a bill to automatically declassify all secret government files older than 45 years, including documents from Francisco Franco’s dictatorship and the transition to democracy.
If approved by parliament, the proposed law could shed light on some of Spain’s darkest chapters, including Franco’s ties to Adolf Hitler, the locations of mass graves where victims of his 1939-75 rule were buried, and details of the 1966 Palomares nuclear accident caused by the mid-air collision of two US Air Force planes over a fishing village in southern Spain.
“With this law we will overcome an obstacle in our legislation to put us in line with European standards,” Justice Minister Felix Bolanos told reporters.
“Citizens have the right to know. Administrations have the obligation to provide documentation that is important for history,” he added.
The bill seeks to replace the existing law governing official secrets, enacted during Franco’s rule, which lacks provisions for automatic declassification based on the amount of time that has passed.
The law would automatically declassify all documents older than 45 years unless they constituted a justified threat to national security, Bolanos said.
For documents created after that period, the draft law outlines a tiered system: “highly classified” documents would remain secret for up to 60 years; “classified” files for up to 45 years; “confidential” material for up to nine years; and “restricted” documents for up to five years.
The government should not restrict access to documents related to the Catholic Church or former King Juan Carlos, said the Association for the Recovery of Historical Memory (ARHM), a volunteer group dedicated to identifying victims of political violence during Spain’s Civil War and Franco’s dictatorship.
It also warned that some documents may have already been removed or redacted, and it called for the immediate digitization of records to ensure public access.
Bolanos said that declassifying Franco-era files would be a gradual process given their volumes.
The draft law must now pass through parliament, where Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s minority government struggles to garner sufficient votes as it weighs concessions to disparate political factions.


Ivorian jailed for saying president should not have been born

Updated 22 July 2025
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Ivorian jailed for saying president should not have been born

  • Tokpa Flan Japhet, a 43-year-old nurse, “was tried and sentenced on July 18 to 36 months in prison“
  • Japhet had in a Facebook post said if Ouattara’s mother had “had an abortion” she “would have saved Africa“

ABIDJIAN: Ivory Coast has sentenced a nurse to three years in jail for saying Africa would have been saved if President Alassane Ouattara had not been born.

The sentence comes months before the west African country’s presidential election at the end of October, with the opposition accusing Ouattara’s government of attempting to stifle dissent in the run-up.

Six youth leaders from the main opposition Democratic Party of Ivory Coast (PDCI) have been arrested since June over a social media post calling for mobilization against the government.

PDCI party leader Tidjane Thiam is among several prominent opposition figures to have been excluded from the October 25 vote.

Tokpa Flan Japhet, a 43-year-old nurse, “was tried and sentenced on July 18 to 36 months in prison” and fined $8,500 “despite his request for a pardon,” Abidjan’s public prosecutor Oumar Braman Kone said in a statement on Monday.

Japhet had in a Facebook post said if Ouattara’s mother had “had an abortion” she “would have saved Africa.”

“Neither repentance... nor a request for forgiveness has any effect on the reality of the offenses,” Kone said.

Another man, Moussa Diakate, was arrested after posting a video in which he “made death threats against supporters of a political group,” the prosecutor said.

Ivory Coast, a former beacon of stability in troubled west Africa, has repeatedly experienced violence during elections after the country’s first coup in 1999.

In late 2010 and early 2011, poll-related violence claimed some 3,000 lives after then-president Laurent Gbagbo refused to recognize Ouattara’s election victory.

Ouattara, 83, has not confirmed whether he will run for a fourth term, although he has been
tapped by his party to do so.