Author: tio

  • Blackouts and shortages disrupt healthcare across Cuba

    Hospitals across Cuba are suspending surgeries, struggling to keep lifesaving equipment running and facing severe medicine shortages as blackouts and fuel shortages push the country’s healthcare system deeper into crisis, senior UN officials warned on Friday.
  • Afghan mothers and children face worsening hunger crisis, WFP warns

    Afghanistan’s deepening malnutrition crisis is pushing mothers and children to the brink, the UN World Food Programme has warned, as mass returns from neighbouring countries and severe funding shortfalls overwhelm already strained humanitarian operations.
  • WHO sounds alarm over nicotine pouches targeting young people

    Brightly coloured nicotine pouches promoted through social media influencers, music festivals and youth-oriented advertising are driving a rapid rise in nicotine use among young people worldwide, the World Health Organization (WHO) warned on Friday.
  • World News in Brief: UN relief vehicle struck in Ukraine, emergency airdrops in South Sudan, backlash against LGBTIQ+ rights

    The Secretary-General is alarmed that a clearly marked United Nations vehicle was struck twice in Kherson city in Ukraine on 14 May, his spokesperson said in a statement.
  • US Securities Regulator Moves to Settle Adani Civil Case

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has asked a federal court to approve final judgments to settle a civil case against Indian billionaire Gautam Adani, and his nephew Sagar Adani. The settlement would require Gautam to pay $6 million and Sagar $12 million, “without admitting or denying the allegations in the complaint.”

    The SEC alleged that the Adanis “orchestrated a scheme to pay or promise to pay the equivalent of hundreds of millions of dollars in bribes to Indian government officials in exchange for commitments to purchase energy at above-market rates, thereby benefiting Adani Green.” OCCRP previously reported that the Adani Group rejected the allegations as “baseless.”

  • Weekly Roundup: May 15

    On Monday, Sabeel Rahman responded to Beau Baumann’s recent call for legislative primacy. Such a vision, he argued, offers an attractive long-term vision for democracy. But to realize it, we’ll need to use every tool available (both legislative and executive) to address the underlying configurations of economic and political power that enabled the current crisis. On Wednesday…

    Source

  • Cartels, Triads, and Australian Gangs Moving Drugs Through Fiji: Defense Minister

    A global collection of organized crime groups have entered into the lucrative business of trafficking drugs through Fiji — and they are increasingly arming themselves, the Pacific island nation’s defense minister said in an interview with OCCRP this week.

    Fiji Defense Minister Pio Tikoduadua told OCCRP that the growing threat from groups ranging from South American cartels, Asian triads, and Australian street gangs was evident in two attempted raids on Republic of Fiji Military Forces armories last month, which led to the detention of a drug suspect who then died in army custody.

    “It was an important event indicating to the nation and the government and the people that these guys are serious about their business,” he said of the attempted raids. 

    “They’re narcotics syndicates, and narcos come with … arms and ammunition, obviously, to protect whatever they have.”

    Tikoduadua told OCCRP that South American cartels now operate in Fiji alongside Asian triads and Fijian-born members of the Australian street gang KVT. Some ex-soldiers have joined organized crime groups, he said, but did not specify how many. 

    “We know that some of them work for some of these syndicates,” he told OCCRP. “If one goes on to work against the very security that they are supposed to hold, then they become enemies of the state.”

    Tikoduadua declined to comment on the investigation into the death while in military custody of a suspect in an attempted break-in at an armory, a Fijian man named Jone Vakirisi. Fiji Police Force have announced they are investigating his death as a murder.

    The defense minister did, however, confirm that there is a separate and ongoing military investigation into at least one soldier for alleged involvement in the attempted armory raids.

    Allegations of police and military corruption, abuse of office and active collusion in the drug trade have been repeatedly made in recent years.

    Late last year, alleged conversations between police officers and criminals were leaked on social media and widely circulated. The messages appeared to show senior anti-narcotic officers conspiring with a drug kingpin to sabotage raids, plant evidence, move weapons and drugs, and plan to murder a possible informant.

    Last week, police appeared to confirm their authenticity with an announcement that an investigation of the messages had been completed and referred to the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions for independent legal advice.

    “There is great concern … that service personnel, both blue and green, have been compromised,” said Tikoduadua, who oversaw the police as home affairs minister from 2022-24, referring to the colors of the uniforms worn by police officers and soldiers, respectively. 

    “Our situation is not unredeemable,” he added. “There is only a few rotten eggs. The solution is to pluck them out, put the eggs back in the basket and take them to the market.”

    Corruption concerns have grown in parallel with reports of the amounts of drugs flowing through the island nation of just under 1 million people.

    In 2024, Fijian authorities intercepted 4.5 metric tons of methamphetamines in the tourist resort town of Nadi that were reportedly supplied by Mexico’s Sinaloa Cartel and intended for a well-known criminal network in Australia. 

    In January, 2.6 metric tons of cocaine were intercepted at a wharf on the northern coast of Fiji’s main island, Viti Levu, after the drugs were reportedly unloaded from a so-called narco sub. Police arrested 16 people including four Ecuadorians who reportedly told a Fijian court that they had been coerced into the operation by a South American cartel. 

    Correction: A previous version of the story mistakenly paraphrased Fiji Defense Minister Pio Tikoduadua as saying criminal groups were bringing weapons into Fiji.

  • Former Russian Official Charged With Fraud After Fleeing the Country

    A former Russian deputy minister who fled the country in April has been charged with large-scale fraud, becoming the latest target in a widening dragnet aimed at senior officials and state-linked executives in Moscow.

    Denis Butsaev, who had been tapped to oversee Russia’s waste-management reforms, is accused of embezzling funds from the Russian Ecological Operator, or REO, a state-backed company he led. Investigators have accused him of fraud “committed on an especially large scale,” according to the Russian state news agency TASS.

    Two of his former deputies at the company, Yekaterina Stepkina and Maxim Shcherbakov, have also been charged in connection with the alleged scheme. Russian media have not disclosed the exact total of the funds allegedly stolen.

    The criminal charges follow a sudden and quiet exit by Butsaev. A government order published on April 22 stated that he had been relieved of his duties “at his own request.” His name later surfaced on the Russian Interior Ministry’s wanted-persons database under an unspecified criminal statute.

    According to Faridaily, an independent Russian political newsletter, Butsaev left the country shortly after his resignation. He reportedly traveled through Minsk, Belarus, and Tbilisi, Georgia, before successfully reaching the United States by late April.

    His current whereabouts and legal representation remain unclear, and Russian authorities have yet to publicly release a detailed indictment or court ruling.

    The case against Butsaev unfolds against the backdrop of a broader crackdown within the Russian government. In recent months, a sweeping series of criminal investigations has ensnared numerous current and former senior government officials, as well as managers of prominent state-linked enterprises. 

  • The Only Candidate Chuck Schumer Fears

    The Only Candidate Chuck Schumer Fears

    Dr. Abdul el-sayed is, according to a new poll released on Monday, the front-runner in the Democratic Senate primary in Michigan. He joined Current Affairs editor-in-chief Nathan J. Robinson to discuss the state of the race, how politics in America seem to be shifting to the Left, why he supports Chris Van Hollen to lead the Senate, and how to stop wars and deliver universal healthcare.