India’s top court puts order to ban Islamic schools on hold

Indian Muslim students recite from the Quran in Jama Masjid Wazeer-un-Nissa during the month of Ramadan at Madrasa Imam Anwaarullah in Hyderabad on June 14, 2016. (AFP file photo)
Indian Muslim students recite from the Quran in Jama Masjid Wazeer-un-Nissa during the month of Ramadan at Madrasa Imam Anwaarullah in Hyderabad on June 14, 2016. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 06 April 2024
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India’s top court puts order to ban Islamic schools on hold

India’s top court puts order to ban Islamic schools on hold
  • Congress Party promises minority protection and jobs, Rahul attacks BJP

NEW DELHI; India’s top court put on hold a lower court’s order that effectively banned Islamic schools in the country’s most populous state, lawyers involved in the case said on Friday, giving a breather to thousands of students and teachers in the system.

The directive comes days before the country begins voting in a national election where Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party are seeking a third term.
The top court was responding to a challenge to the March 22 order of the Allahabad High Court which scrapped a 2004 law governing the schools, called madrassas, in Uttar Pradesh state, where one-fifth of the 240 million population is Muslim.

HIGHLIGHT

The top court was responding to a challenge to the March 22 order of the Allahabad High Court which scrapped a 2004 law governing the schools, called madrassas, in Uttar Pradesh state, where one-fifth of the 240 million population is Muslim.

Saying the law violated constitutional secularism, the High Court had also directed that pupils at these institutions be moved to conventional schools.
“We are of the view that the issues raised in the petitions merit closer reflection,” the Supreme Court said on Friday, news portal Live Law reported.
The matter will now be heard in July, and “everything will remain stayed” until then, lawyers said.
India’s federal election process will conclude in June.
Iftikhar Ahmed Javed, head of the board of madrassa education in Uttar Pradesh state, welcomed the court’s order, terming it a “big win.”
“We were really worried regarding the future of about 16 lakh students and now this order has come as a big relief for all of us,” he said.
In the 10 years of Modi’s tenure, members of his BJP and its affiliates have repeatedly been accused of anti-Islamic hate speech and vigilantism.
Meanwhile, India’s main opposition party Congress vowed to protect minorities — generally seen as a reference to the country’s Muslims — while accelerating growth and jobs in a manifesto for an election it is widely expected to lose.
Nearly a billion Indians will vote to elect a new government in six-week-long parliamentary elections starting on April 19, the largest democratic exercise in the world.
Many analysts see Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s re-election under his Hindu nationalist BJP banner as a foregone conclusion.
Congress led India’s independence struggle and dominated politics for most of the next seven decades but its secularist vision has since struggled against the BJP’s appeal to members of India’s majority faith.
In its manifesto, Congress promised to protect “linguistic and religious minorities.”
“The plurality of religions represents the history of India,” it said. “History cannot be altered.”
Party leader Rahul Gandhi — the son, grandson and great-grandson of prime ministers — said the upcoming election was “fundamentally different” from any other in India’s history.
“It is between those who want to end India’s constitution and democracy and those who want to save it,” he said.
The Congress manifesto, titled a “justice document,” offered “concrete guarantees unlike Modi’s empty promises,” said lawmaker and lead author P. Chidambaram.
The party has promised to address India’s “massive unemployment” on a “war footing,” adding that it would earmark half of all government jobs for women.
Young people voted for Modi in droves when he was first elected a decade ago after he said he would create 10 million jobs a year.
But a recent International Labour Organization report warned that India was hamstrung by a “grim” crisis, with unemployment on the rise.
Congress proposed an unconditional annual cash transfer of Rs100,000 ($1,200) “to every poor Indian family.”


UN’s food aid body warns of crisis as funding cut by 40%

UN’s food aid body warns of crisis as funding cut by 40%
Updated 8 sec ago
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UN’s food aid body warns of crisis as funding cut by 40%

UN’s food aid body warns of crisis as funding cut by 40%
  • Despite the generosity of many governments and individuals, WFP is ‘experiencing a steep decline in funding across its major donors’
ROME: The UN’s World Food Programme warned Friday of an “unprecedented crisis” as it faces a 40 percent drop in funding this year, risking life-saving aid for 58 million people.
The WFP said that despite the generosity of many governments and individuals, it is “experiencing a steep decline in funding across its major donors.”
“Right now, the organization is facing an alarming 40 percent drop in funding for 2025, as compared to last year,” the Rome-based agency said in statement.
It added: “The severity of these cuts, combined with record levels of people in need, have led to an unprecedented crisis for tens of millions across the globe reliant on food aid.”
It did not name any individual country, but the United States, by far the WFP’s biggest donor, has dramatically cut its aid funding since President Donald Trump took office in January.
Other countries have also cut overseas aid, including Germany, the second biggest development aid donor behind the United States, and the UK, which is instead boosting defense spending.
“WFP is prioritizing countries with the greatest needs and stretching food rations at the frontlines,” said Rania Dagash-Kamara, WFP Assistant Executive Director for Partnerships and Innovation.
“While we are doing everything possible to reduce operational costs, make no mistake, we are facing a funding cliff with life-threatening consequences.”
The WFP highlighted 28 of its most critical operations which it said were facing severe funding constraints and “dangerously low food supplies” through to August.
They include Lebanon, Sudan, Syria, South Sudan, Chad, Afghanistan, Myanmar, Uganda, Niger, Burkina Faso, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Yemen, Mali, Bangladesh, Venezuela, Haiti, Mozambique, Nigeria, Somalia, Kenya, Ukraine, Malawi, Burundi, Ethiopia, the Palestinian territories, Central African Republic, Jordan, and Egypt.
The WFP had Thursday warned it had only two weeks’ worth of food left in Gaza, where “hundreds of thousands of people” are at risk of severe hunger and malnutrition.

Rwanda bans ‘any kind of cooperation’ with Belgian government

Rwanda bans ‘any kind of cooperation’ with Belgian government
Updated 28 March 2025
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Rwanda bans ‘any kind of cooperation’ with Belgian government

Rwanda bans ‘any kind of cooperation’ with Belgian government
  • The ban also extends ‘faith-based organizations’ and common-benefit companies
  • Rwanda’s government severed links with Belgium on March 17

KIGALI: National and international NGOs working in Rwanda have been banned from cooperating with Belgian institutions, the Rwanda Governance Board said, after Kigali cut off diplomatic ties with Brussels earlier this month.
The RGB, which oversees service delivery in the east African nation, said the ban also extended to “faith-based organizations” and common-benefit companies.
Rwanda’s government severed links with Belgium on March 17, accusing it of having “consistently undermined” it during the conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Belgium, the former colonial power in Rwanda and the DRC, called the move “disproportionate” and promised tit-for-tat measures on Rwandan diplomats.
Rwandan troops are supporting the M23 armed group in the DRC, which has taken control of large swathes of the mineral-rich east of the country since 2021.
The group launched a lightning push earlier this year, capturing the cities of Goma and Bukavu, the capitals of North and South Kivu provinces.
The RGB said any current projects or agreements with the Belgian government or its affiliates were “prohibited” and “must be terminated immediately and reported.”
“No funds, grants, donations, or financial contributions shall be received from or disbursed to the government of Belgium, its institutions, affiliated agencies or programs,” it said in a statement issued Thursday.
“Any attempts to circumvent these financial restrictions, including indirect transactions through subsidiaries or partner organizations, will be subject to strict penalties.”
Political and human rights activist Pelly Prudence Iraguha said the decision should have been submitted to parliament.
But RGB chief executive Doris Uwicyeza Picard wrote on X: “RGB has powers to take such decisions backed by laws passed by parliament.
“These laws give RGB powers to suspend NGOs involved in activities that infringe on citizens unity or security.”


King Charles III seen in public one day after hospitalization for cancer treatment side effects

King Charles III seen in public one day after hospitalization for cancer treatment side effects
Updated 28 March 2025
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King Charles III seen in public one day after hospitalization for cancer treatment side effects

King Charles III seen in public one day after hospitalization for cancer treatment side effects
  • The king’s health has been closely watched ever since early last year when he announced that he had been diagnosed with an undisclosed form of cancer
  • Charles waved to people as he left his residence at Clarence House in London by car on Friday morning

LONDON: King Charles III was seen in public on Friday for first time since his brief hospitalization for the side effects from his cancer treatment.
Charles waved to people as he left his residence at Clarence House in London by car Friday morning.
The king canceled his engagements for Thursday afternoon and Friday after his brief stay in the hospital.
The king’s health has been closely watched ever since early last year when he announced that he had been diagnosed with an undisclosed form of cancer.


Pro-Duterte rallies as former Philippine leader marks 80th birthday in jail

Pro-Duterte rallies as former Philippine leader marks 80th birthday in jail
Updated 28 March 2025
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Pro-Duterte rallies as former Philippine leader marks 80th birthday in jail

Pro-Duterte rallies as former Philippine leader marks 80th birthday in jail
  • Duterte supporter: ‘Almost all Filipinos love him and are very sad for him now’
  • The former president will next appear in court on September 23

MANILA: Family and supporters of former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte rallied Friday to mark his 80th birthday and protest against his detention in The Hague on a charge of crimes against humanity.
Duterte could spend the remainder of his life in jail if convicted at the International Criminal Court (ICC) of the charge tied to his “war on drugs” in which thousands were killed.
Police told AFP they had blocked a convoy of at least 100 motorcycle riders near the Philippine presidential palace, brandishing posters that read “Bring Him Home.”
In the southern city of Davao, thousands of the ex-president’s supporters massed for a candle-lit rally, one of more than 200 birthday gatherings demanding his release.
“Almost all Filipinos love him and are very sad for him now,” 44-year-old supporter Darbie Bula said.
Presidential palace spokeswoman Claire Castro said that protesters had the right to assemble, but warned against acts that “sow fear (or) promote hatred toward the government, bordering the line of inciting to sedition.”
Castro told reporters that Philippine officials wished Duterte “good health, good fortune” — adding that “he needs that.”
Philippine Vice President Sara Duterte, his eldest daughter, who has been in the Dutch city since shortly after his arrest, said the support “makes the challenges he is facing today more bearable.”
Another of the ex-president’s daughters, 20-year-old Veronica Duterte, said her father had “always been a force to be reckoned with, even in his sunset days,” in a post on social media.
Outside the detention center in The Hague, hundreds gathered with a sound system blasting music, punctuated by calls for Duterte’s release.
“We hope that he will be back in the Philippines as soon as possible,” organizer Aldwin Villarta said.
“I don’t think that he has a case to answer. I think it’s very unfair for him to be here.”
Nicholas Kaufman, Duterte’s lead defense lawyer, said his client had been made aware of the events in Davao and The Hague.
“He was touched by the huge presence of supporters on this milestone birthday and we will work to ensure that he will celebrate future birthdays in their company,” he said via email.
The ICC chief prosecutor’s application for his arrest said Duterte’s alleged crimes were “part of a widespread and systematic attack directed against the civilian population” in the Philippines.
“Potentially tens of thousands of killings were perpetrated,” the prosecutor alleged of the campaign that targeted mostly poor men, often without proof they were linked to drugs.
But Sara Duterte has said that the once wildly popular president is convinced that what the ICC did “was wrong and there is no case to begin with.”
Duterte’s arrest on March 11 and rapid handover to the international tribunal came on the heels of his family’s bitter falling out with his successor, President Ferdinand Marcos.
Cracks began to appear in their alliance soon after Marcos teamed up with Sara Duterte to sweep the presidential and vice presidential elections in May 2022.
The vice president quit her cabinet post as education secretary after being denied the defense portfolio, while Duterte himself began calling Marcos a drug addict.
Last month, Sara Duterte was impeached by a pro-Marcos House of Representatives on charges that include an alleged assassination plot against the president.
The outcome of her Senate trial will likely depend on the number of seats her allies win in May 12 mid-term elections.
The ex-president will next appear in court on September 23.


UK government warns Britons to leave South Sudan ‘now’

UK government warns Britons to leave South Sudan ‘now’
Updated 28 March 2025
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UK government warns Britons to leave South Sudan ‘now’

UK government warns Britons to leave South Sudan ‘now’
  • The message comes after Wednesday’s arrest of First Vice President Riek Machar
  • British nationals who chose to remain in the country do so ‘at your own risk’

LONDON: British citizens “should leave South Sudan now,” UK foreign minister David Lammy has warned, with fears growing the country is tipping closer to civil war as a fragile peace deal unravels.
“My message to British nationals in South Sudan is clear. If you judge it is safe to do so – leave now,” Lammy said on X late Thursday, as the foreign ministry updated its travel warning for the country.
The message comes after Wednesday’s arrest of First Vice President Riek Machar, a long-time rival to President Salva Kiir, which observers warn could throw the country back into war.
A power-sharing deal between Kiir and Machar has been gradually unraveling, risking a return of the civil war that killed around 400,000 people between 2013 and 2018.
Lammy said: “South Sudan’s leaders must make efforts to de-escalate. A descent into violence and conflict is in no-one’s interests.”
In its updated travel advice, the Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) said British nationals who chose to remain in the country did so “at your own risk.”
“You should have a personal emergency plan that does not rely on the UK government,” it added, warning Britons they “should not assume that the FCDO will be able to provide assistance... in the event of serious unrest.”
South Sudan – which declared independence from Sudan in 2011 – has remained plagued by poverty and insecurity since the 2018 peace deal.
Regional powers have scrambled to mediate in the latest crisis, with Kenyan President William Ruto posting that he had spoken to Kiir about Machar’s arrest.
Analysts say the aging Kiir, 73, has been seeking to ensure his succession and sideline Machar politically for months through cabinet reshuffles.
More than 20 of Machar’s political and military allies in the unity government and army have also been arrested since February, many held incommunicado.