Asia
Afghan educator “beaten and detained”
The Taliban arrested and beat a university professor who voiced outrage on live television against closure of education doors to women.
In December, veteran lecturer Ismail Mashal in an unprecedented move teardown his degree certificates during a live tv debate, protesting the ban of university for women and higher education for girls.
Footage of Mashal destroying his certificates on private channel TOLOnews went viral on social media and many people supported Mashal’s move in support of education.
He did not stop here. Two days ago he appeared in Kabul roads where he was offering passers-by with books. On top of his carting books he wrote, “Iqra”, which means read. However, he has been detained now. Abdul Haq Hammad, Taliban director at the Ministry of Information and Culture confirmed Mashal’s arrest and accused him of echoing “conspiracies against the state.”
Mashal is under investigation, the official said, and many Afghan social media users, including journalists and civil society workers called on the Taliban to immediately release Mashal. Many journalists said that Mashal was simply protesting against the Taliban ban on female schools and universities.
His crime was that he took to the streets in a symbolic gesture and started giving away his personal library to education lovers across the city.
Mashal is arrested without any crime
Mashal is a university teacher and in the past one decided he served his people through education, but today he is behind bars, said a close family member of Mashal to Harici.
Speaking in condition of anonymity, he said that the Taliban dragged him and detained him on Thursday evening despite having committed no crime. He was just giving away books to the students and protesting the education ban, he added.
“Mashal was giving free books to girls and boys,” he said, adding that they are not aware where Mashal is being held. “The Taliban are not giving us information where Mashal has been taken and what his health condition is,” he added.
Reactions over Mashal’s arrest
UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Afghanistan Richard Bennett said that they are concerned about Thursday’s arrest of peaceful education activist and university lecturer Ismail Mashal by the Taliban. “Targeting and suppressing peaceful civil activities is unacceptable and contrary to Afghanistan’s intention obligations. I call for his immediate and unconditional release,” Bennett added.
Reminding the authorities that education for all without discrimination is not a privilege but a right, he said, adding that “They have an obligation to protect and promote this right, including lifting the ban on girl’s education and opening up space for peaceful civil activities.”
It has been for 501 days that the Taliban banned girls from going to school and over two months that they were prevented from university. The Taliban in their first days of returning to power in August 2021 banned girl’s education above 6th grade.
The international community has repeatedly called on the Taliban to reverse the decision and let the girls and women go to schools and universities.
US State Department Spokesman Ned Price on Friday said that the Taliban cannot expect the respect and support of the international community until they respect the human rights and fundamental freedoms of all Afghans, including women and girls.
Deeply conservative society
Indeed, Afghanistan has been suffering from a deeply conservative and patriarchal society where men rarely protest in support of women. Of course there were a number of men who stood beside their female classmates when they were barred from entering into classes. The male students also avoided writing exams, but this was not enough. Many other Afghan men working in different organizations inside the Taliban administrative or in NGOs did not raise their voice. They still remain silent, but Mashal, who ran a co-educational institute, said he would stand up for women’s rights.

Pashtun women at a school in Kandahar.
Once Mashal said that as a man and a teacher he can’t do anything but was able to tore his certificates as “I felt they were become useless now.” He said he will not slow down his efforts and will stand with his sisters until their rights to education prevail.
The Taliban had promised to let the girls go to schools and women to workplaces, but after returning to power, they failed to honor their promises. In December, Taliban also banned women from working in NGOs including aid organizations. The women had already been barred from going to parks, gyms and public baths as well as traveling long distances without male partner.
Afghan woman and Nobel Peace Prize 2023
On February 1, 2023, the Oslo Peace Research Institute announced that Mahbouba Seraj, an Afghan women’s rights advocate has been shortlisted as a candidate for the 2023 Nobel Peace Prize.
Henrik Urdal, the director of the Institute said that people who work to defend women’s and human rights are at the top of this year’s Nobel Peace Prize list.
Urdal termed Ms. Seraj a “champion of children’s health, education, fighting corruption and empowering survivors of domestic abuse.”
The Nobel Peace Prize is one of the five Nobel most prestigious awards established in 1985 by the will of Swedish industrialist, inventor and armaments manufacturer Alfred Nobel, along with prizes in Chemistry, Physics, Physiology, Medicine and Literature.
Pakistani envoy mending anti-education remarks
After being bombarded from the Pashtun community in Afghanistan and Pakistan for relating restrictions by the Taliban on women with the Pashtun culture, Pakistan’s envoy to the United Nations Munir Akram tried to mend his statement and issue a clarification in this regard.
On Wednesday at the UN Headquarters in New York Akram said that “the restrictions that have been put by the Afghan interim government flow not so much from a religious perspective as from a peculiar cultural perspective of the Pashtun culture, which requires women to be kept at home.”
“And this is a peculiar, distinctive cultural reality of Afghanistan which has not changed for hundreds of years, Akram said.
However, now he is reversing his comment and explained that his comments were referring to a “peculiar perspective” of a small minority that has resulted in restrictions on women and not the Pashtun culture.
Akram said that he regrets if his remarks were misunderstood or hurt anyone’s feelings. “There was no disrespect meant to the Pashtun culture which is highly progressive and deserves full respect all across the world,” he explained.
In response to his comment, people in Afghanistan and in Pakistan flowed to social media and told Akram that Afghan women were cabinet members in Afghanistan at a time when Pakistan was not born. Schools for girls were opened in 1921 in Afghanistan when Pakistan did not exist.
Asia
China launches patrols east of Taiwan after Japan and Philippines open maritime boundary talks
Beijing said it had conducted law enforcement patrols in waters east of Taiwan in response to a decision by Japan and the Philippines to launch talks on maritime boundary delimitation.
According to a statement from the China Coast Guard, a flotilla led by the vessel Daishan carried out law enforcement patrols “in accordance with the law” on Monday.
China Coast Guard spokesperson Jiang Lue said the operation was “a necessary action” in response to Japan and the Philippines “unilaterally announcing the start of negotiations on maritime delimitation in waters east of China’s Taiwan Island.”
“Such an announcement seriously infringes upon China’s territorial sovereignty and its maritime rights and interests,” Jiang said.
“We urge Japan and the Philippines to immediately cease all illegal actions that violate China’s sovereignty and rights,” he added.
Jiang also said the coast guard would continue strengthening its control and management of the relevant waters and that China would take concrete measures to “resolutely safeguard territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests.”
The United States and most of its allies, including Japan and the Philippines, do not recognize Taiwan as an independent state and acknowledge it as part of China. The United Nations has also adopted resolutions reflecting this position. However, Washington continues to provide arms to Taiwan as part of its broader efforts to counter China and encourages its allies to do the same.
Following a summit in Tokyo between Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., the two countries said in a joint statement issued on Thursday that they had agreed to begin “formal negotiations” to delimit their exclusive economic zones (EEZs) and continental shelves.
Beijing condemned the planned talks as “completely illegal and invalid” and swiftly lodged formal diplomatic protests with both Tokyo and Manila.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said on Friday: “The so-called delimitation negotiations are entirely illegal, invalid and void. They will have no impact whatsoever on China’s claims or on China’s exercise of its legitimate rights in the area east of Taiwan Island.”
The latest escalation comes at a time when relations between Beijing and both Tokyo and Manila are already strained. Japan and the Philippines are treaty allies of the United States, while China remains engaged in separate territorial disputes with Japan in the East China Sea and with the Philippines in the South China Sea.
As US attention and resources have increasingly shifted toward the war involving Iran, and as the White House has made the Western Hemisphere a strategic priority, Japan and the Philippines have stepped up diplomatic engagement in the region commonly referred to as the Indo-Pacific.
That effort has included building closer security and defence ties with other countries, prompting Beijing to accuse them of encouraging bloc confrontation in the region.
Japan and the Philippines do not share a maritime boundary. However, their seabed claims could overlap because both countries seek to extend their legal continental shelves beyond 200 nautical miles, equivalent to 370 kilometres or 230 miles.
The overlapping area lies east of Taiwan, southwest of Japan’s Ryukyu Islands and north of the Philippines’ Batanes Islands.
Yang Xiao, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China’s highest-ranking state-affiliated think tank, said Taiwan’s EEZ and continental shelf are part of the area under discussion.
“These are China’s rights and are not something that the two sides can negotiate among themselves,” Yang said.
In an interview published on Sunday by Yuyuan Tantian, a social media account affiliated with state broadcaster CCTV, before the China Coast Guard announced the patrols, Yang said Beijing would take “historic and unprecedented” countermeasures against Tokyo and Manila.
“Since they are negotiating in a three-party overlapping zone, we can also take further steps to advance our jurisdiction in the waters east of Taiwan,” Yang said.
“If the other side insists on reckless and destructive actions, we will inevitably introduce new countermeasures.”
Yang described the waters east of Taiwan as a vital maritime area for the island’s economic activities.
“If these waters are divided between Japan and the Philippines, that would clearly harm the interests of the people living on Taiwan Island,” he added.
Asia
SoftBank overtakes Toyota to become Japan’s most valuable company
As artificial intelligence reshapes industrial structures in Japan and South Korea, stock market rankings are being redrawn. SoftBank Group has overtaken Toyota Motor to become Japan’s most valuable listed company.
SoftBank shares have surged as the global artificial intelligence rally gathers momentum, lifting the technology conglomerate’s market capitalisation above that of Toyota for the first time in more than two decades.
The shift reflects a broader reordering of Japan’s equity market. Automakers, alongside banks, steelmakers, energy companies and other traditional heavy industries, are losing ground to chipmakers and companies linked to artificial intelligence.
SoftBank shares jumped 14% on Monday, reaching a new record high. The company’s market value climbed to 48 trillion yen, or $301 billion, making it the most valuable company listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
Toyota had long held the top position, with a market capitalisation of approximately 45 trillion yen. The last time SoftBank surpassed Toyota was in March 2000, at the peak of the dot-com bubble.
SoftBank’s rapid rise has been driven by strong earnings performance and its substantial investment in ChatGPT developer OpenAI.
The Japanese company reported net profit of 1.82 trillion yen, or $11.4 billion, for the first three months of 2026, 3.5 times higher than in the same period a year earlier. The group is also increasing its investment in OpenAI, completing a $10 billion investment in April and committing to invest an additional $20 billion later this year. Total investment is expected to reach roughly $65 billion.
According to The Wall Street Journal, OpenAI plans to file for an initial public offering and aims to list in the United States as early as September. Some media reports suggest the company could seek to raise $60 billion through the offering, potentially valuing it at more than $1 trillion. Such a transaction could become the largest initial public offering in history.
Investors expect the IPO to significantly boost SoftBank’s investment gains. Those expectations have helped drive the technology group’s share price higher. SoftBank shares have risen about 127% since early April.
The company is also planning to invest up to 14 trillion yen in the construction of data centres in France.
Asia
China and Serbia agree to expand cooperation in emerging sectors
Chinese President Xi Jinping met Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic in Beijing, where the two leaders discussed bilateral ties and oversaw the signing of multiple cooperation agreements. Xi also awarded Vucic the Friendship Medal of the People’s Republic of China.
The meeting between Xi Jinping and Aleksandar Vucic began with an official welcoming ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.
The two leaders then proceeded to formal talks. Xi said China and Serbia had achieved “positive results” since jointly launching the construction of a “China-Serbia community with a shared future in the new era” in 2024.
Xi said the partnership had not only benefited the two peoples but had also set an example for international relations.
The Chinese president described relations between China and Serbia as an “iron friendship” based on deep historical ties and mutual trust.
Calling on both sides to strengthen exchanges, deepen practical cooperation and continue supporting each other on issues concerning their core interests, Xi also said the two countries should align their development strategies and advance cooperation under the Belt and Road Initiative. In this context, he pointed to transport, energy and infrastructure projects.
Xi also called for expanding cooperation in emerging sectors such as artificial intelligence, the digital economy, green energy and advanced manufacturing.
Aleksandar Vucic congratulated China on the start of implementation of its 15th Five-Year Plan. Vucic also expressed confidence in China’s future development under Xi Jinping’s leadership.
The Serbian president said Belgrade attached great importance to relations with China and firmly supported Beijing on issues concerning China’s core interests.
Vucic thanked Chinese companies for their contributions to Serbia’s economic development and infrastructure construction.
Saying the two countries had made notable progress since establishing their comprehensive strategic partnership, Vucic added that cooperation had expanded across numerous sectors.
The Serbian president also praised China’s role in international affairs, saying Beijing approached smaller countries on the basis of equality and respect and defended international law.
Following the talks, the two leaders witnessed the signing of more than 20 cooperation agreements covering politics, trade, science and technology, education, legal affairs and culture.
The two sides also issued joint statements on steadily advancing the construction of a China-Serbia community with a shared future in the new era and jointly supporting the implementation of four global initiatives.
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