Asia
Protests continue across Afghanistan to decry Hazara massacre after 53 fatalities
The Afghan women, especially female students in Kabul, Herat, Bamyan and Ghazni provinces took to the streets in the last three days to protests the killing of Hazara women between the aged of 18-24 in the suicide bombing.
At least 53 people, among them 46 girls and young women, were killed and another 110 wounded after a suicide bomber blew himself up inside a classroom as they took mock university entrance exams. The blast occurred in September 30.
The attack targeted Kaaj tutoring center in Dasht-e-Barchi, a western Kabul neighborhood home to the Afghan Shiite Muslim and Hazara community, which has been subjected to some worst violence in recent time.
At least 600 boys and girls students were inside the center
Survivors said there were at least 600 boys and girls, separated by a curtain as per as Taliban order, however, the girls were in front line, near the bomber.
The attack which came in the wake of several other targeting Hazara, has painted an idea which is nothing but a deliberate attack on Hazara community, calling it “Hazara genocide.”
Afghans inside the country and abroad rapidly floated in social media with Hashtag “StopHazaraGenocide” and called on the Taliban to take steps to maintain their security.
The Taliban also came under severe criticism for failing to provide security to the most persecuted Afghan minority group.
Protests in several cities
Beside domestic and international outrage, the attack had also prompted Afghan female students in several cities to stage protests.
Dozens of university students in Balkh province went on the march through the streets of the provincial capital city Mazar-e-Sharif, demanding justice for the victims.
According to social media videos, the Taliban had allegedly locked a group of women students in their dormitory to prevent them from joining the rally.
The Harici itself could not verify the authenticity of the footage that went viral showing a girl trying to break the door lock with a brick, while other girls were making a film and accused the Taliban of preventing them from joining other female protestors.
Kabul, the capital city, western Herat, Bamyan and Ghazni are the provinces where women and girls have held demonstrations since Friday by mostly Hazara women students.
Social media video again shows Taliban members are trying to disrupt protesters and fire warning shots in the air. However, some protestors said the Taliban beat them and directly fired toward them.
Demonstrators call for strengthening security of educational centers
“We came out to the streets to call on the Taliban to ensure safety of the educational centers of the Hazara community,” one of the protesters Fatima Samim told Harici.
Samim furthered that their lost hope is educational institutions, including schools and universities and called “attacking these places as a deliberate attempt by the enemies of education to prevent girls and women from education.”
Attacks on education centers are all too common, while no group has claimed responsibility for Friday’s atrocity, but a local affiliate of so-called Islamic State has taken credit for several similar attacks that killed dozens of young students.
Schools and the right to education to all have always been complicated in Afghanistan. Even with the support of billions of dollars to the past western-backed government, not all children were able to go to schools.
3.5 million Afghan children deprived of education
Even before the Taliban returned to power, 3.5 million Afghan children were deprived of going to schools. In 2017, the Human Rights Watch in a report said that 2.9 million Afghan girls were out of school and only 37 percent of teenage girls were literate. In 2020, the former government said at least 7,000 schools lacked physical buildings despite a $298 million World Bank pledge of educational assistance to the then government.
In the past 20 years, with millions of dollars being showered in Afghanistan, the large swathes of the country saw little development due to corruption and embezzlement, where even hundreds of ghost schools were built in provinces.
Taliban strongly condemned Kaaj attack
September 30 attack on the tutoring center has been widely condemned by the US, UNAMA and other countries and neighbors which amplify the need that the Taliban must bring to justice those responsible.
The Taliban foreign ministry has condemned the attack and called it the work of “malicious networks” and “a conspiracy by the enemies” of Afghanistan to create divisions among the Afghans.
“We are responsible to protect the lives of all Afghans irrespective of their ethnicity, and we don’t believe in any ethnic or religious division of the Afghan people,” Taliban foreign ministry said.
The Taliban pledged to beef up security of education centers, and already sent representatives to Hazara victim families in order to assure them of protection and to utilize every available option to prevent such incident at the future.
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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