Photo Source: Los Angeles Times
National Institute of Advanced Studies (NIAS)
Indian Institute of Science Campus, Bangalore
For any further information or to subscribe to GP alerts send an email to subachandran@nias.res.in
The World This Week
Biden's climate summit, Putin's new redlines, China's media clampdown in Hong Kong, and India's alarming COVID case
|
GP Team 25 April 2021
|
The World This Week #116, Vol. 3, No. 17
Akriti Sharma, Harini Madhusudan, Sukanya Bali and Lokendra Sharma.
The US: Biden brings back the Climate change agenda
What happened?
On 22 April, President Joe Biden hosted online a two-day "Leaders Summit on Climate." The summit aimed at addressing the climate crisis, resilience and adaptation, reduction in emissions, innovation, finance, and job creation. The summit was attended by 40 world leaders along with business leaders around the globe.
"Time is short, but I believe we can do this," Biden said in his opening remarks. "We will do this." He also said: "As we transition to a clean energy future, we must ensure workers who have thrived in yesterday's and today's industries have as bright a tomorrow in the new industries as well as in the places where they live."
What is the background?
First, the return of the US to climate action. Earlier, on 1 June 2017, Trump announced the US withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement. On the first day as the President, Biden announced that the US would rejoin the Paris Climate Agreement. The Biden administration also appointed a Special Presidential Envoy for Climate, John Kerry, to look into the US climate and energy policy. By hosting the summit, Biden has brought the agenda of climate change back to the US. He has also attempted to bring climate change back on the global agenda.
Second, the revised targets. During the summit, the US, Canada, Japan announced revised emission targets way ahead of the UN Climate Change Conference set to take place later in 2021. Biden announced that the US would cut its greenhouse gas emissions by 50-52 per cent by 2030 below 2005 levels. He further announced that the US would double its annual financing commitments to developing countries by 2024. Canadian PM Justin Trudeau announced a cut of 40 per cent to 45 per cent by 2030 below 2005 levels. Japanese PM Yoshihide Suga announced a cut by 46 per cent by 2030 below 2013 levels, nearly doubling the previous target. Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro announced that Brazil would reach emissions neutrality by 2050, ten years ahead of the previous goal. The summit has enabled the countries to take a leadership role and announce the revised targets ahead of the Glasgow Climate Change Conference. However, India and China reiterated their previous targets.
Third, the presence of the key countries. The summit was attended by the world's largest emitters, the EU, China, Russia, and India, which account for most greenhouse emissions. Twenty out of forty countries in the summit account for 80 per cent of the global emissions. The summit was attended by countries representing all regions: Asia (including India, China, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, Vietnam, Singapore, Israel, UAE, and Saudi Arabia), Africa (including Kenya, Congo, Nigeria, and Gabon), Latin America (including Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Colombia, and Argentina). Island states, including Antigua and Barbuda, Jamaica, and the Marshall Islands that are heavily impacted by climate change also attended the summit. This highlights the inclusivity of the summit.
What does it mean?
First, the US leadership. During the pandemic, climate action has taken a back seat as the world is grappled with the socio-economic impact of COVID-19. The US has taken the responsibility of bringing back the climate change agenda to focus. By announcing the revised targets, Biden seems to be ahead of Obama in attempting to institutionalize climate action globally.
Second, the US engaging with the rivals. Biden is using soft power to deal with rival states like China and Russia to achieve its climate targets. The presence of the world's largest emitters, including China and the EU, further makes it significant to achieve the targets that cannot be achieved unilaterally by any country.
Third, setting up the pace for the upcoming UN Climate Change Conference. Countries like the US, Canada, and Japan have set up an example by releasing the targets way ahead of the COP26. The summit has promoted more meaningful interactions for the upcoming conference in Glasgow.
Russia: Putin draws redlines against the West, but withdraws troops from the Ukraine border
What happened?
On 21 April, during his state-of-the-nation address, President Vladimir Putin issued a warning regarding Russia's "swift" and "severe" response to hostile foreign actions. He told both houses of Parliament: "We want good relations...and really don't want to burn bridges." While referring to the West, he said: "I hope that nobody would decide to cross the so-called red line in relations with Russia, and we will define those [red lines] on our own in every individual case." He also discussed the issues of Covid in Russia, protests in favour of Navalny, and domestic economic hardships.
On 22 April, Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu announced the withdrawal of its military forces from the Ukrainian border. The announcement comes after weeks of military buildup at the Russia-Ukraine border, causing concerns of renewed conditions for a clash between Ukraine and Russia. The announcement states that the troops will withdraw from the region between 23 April and 1 May.
What is the background?
First, Putin's Redlines. While referring to the US, NATO and the EU, he said: "like a kind of sport, they have developed a 'highly unseemly habit' of picking on Russia for any reason, and most often for no reason at all." In recent weeks, there was a series of threats between the West and Russia, which Putin says targets their "core security interests." However, there is no mention of what the 'red lines' actually mean. Analysts like Sam Greene, the director of Russia Institute at King's College, called it an intentional policy paralysis, a deliberate move by Putin to keep everyone guessing what the redlines would mean.
Second, the growing international concerns about Russia and the US sanctions. First should be the recent legislation allowing Putin to contest till 2036. He is also seen preparing for the parliamentary elections in September 2021. A recent provocation also is the assassination attempt against the Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko. Russia's border tensions with Ukraine is another issue. Two sets of sanctions have been placed on Russia, one for the jailed opposition leader Navalny and the other over the solar-winds cyber attacks, since Biden took office in January. Biden, while stating that the Russians were involved in the 2020 US elections, has threatened to place more sanctions. Domestically, people took to the streets in demand of medical care and protested against the treatment of Alexy Navalny in jail. There is also a sense of dissatisfaction among the people over stagnant incomes and the rising inflation.
Third, the withdrawal of troops from the Ukraine border. During the recent weeks, despite fears of escalation, Russia maintained that the movement of troops in the borders was only part of their military exercises. Russian military blocked flights and closed navigation in the Black Sea and parts of Crimea for 'winter period control checks' throughout April. The withdrawal announcement could be unrelated. Or, it could indicate political balancing after a strong statement earlier by Putin to ensure the tensions do not escalate beyond control.
What does it mean?
During the recent weeks, there is international pressure on Putin. The redline statement by Putin is an effort to respond. Both Biden and Putin seem to be testing waters and see who blinks first.
With the Parliamentary elections in Russia six months away, Putin's statement could be catering to a local audience. Though the redline statement can be a political grandstanding, it was timely and carefully balanced with troops' removal from the borders.
Hong Kong: China now targets media freedom
What happened?On 22 April, Bao Choy Yuk-ling, a freelance journalist with Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK), was convicted of making false statements using license plate information from publicly accessible databases. She was fined USD 775 for violating the road traffic ordinance.
Ivy Chui, West Kowloon Magistrate, said: "The regulations are not intended to allow the public to obtain vehicle particular without limitations." She highlighted that the public could obtain vehicle ownership records only for three stated purposes: legal matters, vehicle purchase or other transport or traffic-related matters. According to Reuters, Chris Yeung, Chief of Hong Kong Journalists Association, said: "it was a day of shame for the city." He also said: the criminalizing normal journalism is "recklessly destroying" press freedom
What is the background?
First, Hong Kong as a bastion of free media. Under constitutional guarantees of free speech, Hong Kong had engaged in independent journalism. From the Tiananmen massacre in 1989 to the Umbrella Movement in 2014, the press had far more freedom than the mainland in reporting the protests and regional politics. Social media has also played a prominent role in mobilizing support in the pro-democracy protest of 2019 in Hong Kong. Consequently, pro-Beijing officials blamed the negative coverage of China by the press as a reason for the rising anti-china sentiments in the territory.
Second, Beijing's strategy to target the independent media in Hong Kong. After the imposition of the national security law, freedom of expression has deteriorated in the territory, marking a clear shift from the media-friendly environment of Hong Kong. On 16 April, Jimmy Lai, founder of Apple Daily, who has been arrested on several occasions, was sentenced to 14 months in prison. In February, RTHK, a government-funded network, replaced its head with a bureaucrat and called for stringent supervision. Many international newspapers like New York Times have also relocated their offices to Seoul after facing pressure from the government. Journalists have shown concerns over raids, search warrants, and arrests. According to New York Times, Reporters without Borders said: The National Security law used by the government is a "full-blown intimidation" of journalists.
In September 2020, Hong Kong police announced that the designation of 'media representative' will be restricted to government-licensed organizations, effectively curbing reporting by freelance journalists.
What does it mean?
Boa's conviction indicates the growing pressure on media in Hong Kong. The use of national security law against media freedom has narrowed the space for dissent.
China seems to be moving towards a "one country, one media" environment by replicating mainland media's features in Hong Kong, thereby effectively eroding the territory's civil liberties.
India: The second wave drives an unprepared country into a humanitarian disaster
What happened?
On 22 April, India recorded over 3.14 lakh COVID-19 infections, the highest daily infection recorded anywhere in the world. On 23 April, even this grim milestone was surpassed as the country reported over 3.22 lakh infections and 2,247 deaths, taking the total reported cases to 1,62,57,337 cases and deaths to 1,86,919.
On 23 April, New Delhi's Sir Ganga Ram Hospital said that 25 patients had died due to a shortage of oxygen. In another incident, 20 patients died at Delhi's Jaipur Golden Hospital due to oxygen shortage.
On 23 April, PM Modi chaired a review meeting with chief ministers of 11 high burden states. Chief ministers flagged issues of oxygen supply and vaccine pricing. PM Modi asked states to ensure uninterrupted movement of medical oxygen and assured that the Railways and the Indian Air Force had been pressed into service.
On 22 April, the Supreme Court (SC) took cognizance of the rising cases. But, on 23 April, the SC adjourned the case till 27 April. Earlier, on 19 April, the central government announced that everyone above the age of 18 would be eligible for vaccine shots from May 2021.
What is the background?
First, an extremely overstretched healthcare system. With demand for beds, oxygen and drugs outstripping supply by a huge margin, Indian cities (Delhi, Mumbai, Lucknow, Ahmedabad and Bengaluru) have witnessed people dying in search of beds/oxygen and round-the-clock working crematoriums with waiting lists. The situation is so grim that the healthcare workers themselves cannot get beds in their own or other hospitals.
Second, the failure of the political class. Many political leaders, cutting across Indian geography and party lines, have either held political rallies or organized religious congregations. PM Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah held massive rallies in West Bengal even as the cases spiralled this month, flouting all safety protocols. Some leaders even downplayed the pandemic.
Third, the carelessness and culpability of people. After seeing a trend of declining cases for four months (November 2020 - February 2021), people assumed that the pandemic had waned away. With a false sense of security, they violated safety protocols like social distancing and wearing masking. A narrative about the innate immunity of Indian people also surfaced and was readily bought by them; this happened even when the epidemiologists have been continuously warning about the imminent second wave.
Fourth, failure of the three pillars of democracy. The SC and mainstream TV media and Election Commission of India (ECI) could have also played a better role. Taking a very delayed cognizance of the matter, and only after various High Courts passed very critical orders and observations, the SC adjourned the matter to 27 April, despite the urgency of the oxygen crisis. The ECI failed to rein in political parties and leaders as they campaigned in the polling states. Mainstream TV media also failed to highlight people's sufferings and, like the SC and the ECI, failed to hold the central and state governments accountable.
What does it mean?
The ongoing second wave has exposed the lack of administrative preparation at both federal and state levels. It has also highlighted the inadequacies of healthcare infrastructure to cope with any major crisis. Despite the experience of the first wave, and despite more than a year to build healthcare capacity, India did little on this front. And, that some states are even disrupting the movement of oxygen tankers highlights the failure of cooperative federalism in this moment of crisis. Finally, people would have to strictly adhere to safety protocols to beat the second wave as vaccination will take many months, if not years, to reach a significant proportion of the population.
The only positive story so far, notwithstanding the delayed approval to the Sputnik V vaccine, is India's vaccination programme. According to the Health Ministry, India became the fastest nation to administer 13 crore doses in 95 days. Rolling out vaccines for all aged above 18 is a welcome development.
Also, in the news …
By Sukanya Bali and Avishka Ashok
East and Southeast Asia This Week
China: Joint declaration on International Lunar Station with Russia
On 24 April, the China National Space Administration (CNSA) and Russia's Roscosmos issued a joint declaration on cooperation in creating the International Lunar Research Station (ILRS). ILRS design aims to carry multidisciplinary research activities, including exploration, lunar observations, fundamental research experiments, and technology verification with the long-term unmanned operation. Wu Yanhua, Deputy Chief of CNSA said: "China and Russia will work with other international partners in building the ILRS."
China: Australia scraps Belt and Road Initiative deal
On 21 April, Australia's foreign minister decided to cancel four deals, including two, which the State of Victoria agreed with China, in 2018 and 2019. FM said: "I consider these four arrangements to be inconsistent with Australia's foreign policy or adverse to our foreign relations." China's embassy in Australia showcased its "strong displeasure and resolute opposition" to the move.
China: Foreign ministry spokesperson condemns bomb explosion in Pakistan
On 22 April, China's foreign ministry spokesperson condemned the bomb explosion in the parking lot of Serena Hotel in Quetta, where the Chinese Ambassador to Pakistan was being hosted. The attack left four killed and 12 wounded. He said: "The relevant departments in Pakistan are currently investigating the incident, and China believes that Pakistan will find out the truth and bring the culprits to justice and ensure the safety of Chinese personnel and institutes in Pakistan."
China: Scientists accuse WHO director of being "extremely irresponsible"
On 21 April, Chinese scientists accused the WHO Director of being "extremely irresponsible" for pursuing "lab leak theory." A foreign ministry spokesperson said: "all parties should respect science and the opinion and conclusion of scientists, WHO in particular should play an exemplary role." Last month, after the release of the joint report on origin COVID-19, Tedros suggested further investigation on 'lab leak theory', which was described as an 'extremely unlike' scenario in the report.
China: Foreign minister urges Japan to reconsider its Fukushima wastewater release
On 22 April, the Chinese foreign minister urged Japan to reconsider its decision on dumping nuclear-contaminated wastewater with all stakeholders and IAEA. A foreign ministry spokesperson said: "The dumping of Fukushima radioactive wastewater concerns global ecological environment security and the public health of all nations; it is not a private issue for Japan, but a matter that could cause major environmental damage". He also said: "The decision should not be a 'unilateral' or 'black box' operation."
Japan: China accused of cyberattack
On 20 April, 200 Japanese companies, research organizations, and space agencies faced a cyberattack believed to be linked with the Chinese military. Japan Chief Cabinet Secretary said: "Police have forwarded the case involving attacks on the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency to prosecutors for further investigation." He also said: "The involvement of China's People's Liberation Army is highly likely." As of now, no actual data leak or damage has been found. Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson has denied the allegation.
Myanmar: UN Secretary General's calls for a regional solution, as violence continues
On 19 April, the UN Secretary-General called for the ASEAN members to collectively find a solution to the crisis in Myanmar. On 20 April, the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) attacked a police post in Kachin State. No casualties were reported. KIA also warned local people to relocate to safe places. A series of attacks also took place in Injangyang, Momauk, Namtu, Hpakant, Tanai and Shwegu townships.
Myanmar: ASEAN demands an end to violence
On 24 April, ASEAN released a five-point statement, demanding an end to the continuous violence in Myanmar. The group of nations pushed for a "constructive dialogue" to restore peace and stability in the country. A special envoy of the ASEAN chair will facilitate mediation and provide humanitarian assistance. On the same day, the parallel government, the National Unity Government, expressed satisfaction with ASEAN's united stand on the political crisis in the country.
Indonesia: Navy declares all 53 on board of the missing submarine dead
On 24 April, the Indonesian navy announced: "missing submarine had sunk and cracked open, killing 53 crew members aboard." Searchers have found parts of torpedo straightener, a grease bottle, debris from prayer rugs, and a broken piece from a coolant pipe. Navy chief said: "With the authentic evidence we found, believed to be from the submarine, we have now moved from the 'sub miss' phase to 'sub sunk'."
South Asia This Week
India: The fifth batch of Rafael jets arrives
On 22 April, the fifth batch of four Rafale fighter jets arrived in India, completing the first Rafale squadron No. 17 Golden Arrows based in Ambala. Air Chief Marshal RKS Bhadauria said: "The fifth ferry marks end of training of our third batch of pilots and all our maintenance crew." The jets flew with air-to-air refuelling support by the French and UAE Air Force.
Sri Lanka: Radioactive material detected in a China-bound vessel
On 21 April, Sri Lanka detected radioactive material from a China-bound vessel. The vessel, citing "mechanical emergency" had sought permission to berth at Hambantota port. Sri Lanka Atomic Energy Authority officials said: "the ship was on its way to China from Rotterdam port". Later, the port authority asked the ship to leave the port, citing the vessel's failure "to disclose its radioactive cargo (Uranium hexafluoride) after docking at the port."
Afghanistan: Trilateral meet on Taliban, reaffirm commitment to peace
On 23 April, FM of Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Turkey held talks about Afghanistan's future. As per the joint statement, the ministers underlined: " 'the urgent need for an immediate ceasefire' to end the violence and 'provide a conducive atmosphere for peace talks.'" They also "called on all parties, in particular the Taliban, to reaffirm their commitment for achieving an inclusive negotiated settlement leading to lasting peace in Afghanistan desired by the Afghan people, the region, and the international community."
Afghanistan: US Military sends B-52s to protect the withdrawing forces
On 23 April, the White House approved the temporary deployment of six B-52 bombers in order to protect the US and NATO forces as they withdraw from Afghanistan. of which two have already arrived. Bloomberg reported: the bomber deployment was approved by the Defense Secretary as the US prepares withdrawal of 2,500 troops from the country by September.
Afghanistan: Taliban negotiators in Pakistan
On 22 April, the Taliban's chief negotiator travelled to Pakistan to seek guidance. Taliban recently stated: "the extension of US troops in the country was a reason for their non-participation at the Turkey conference." President Ashraf Ghani said: "Now is the time for Pakistan to choose either a win-win policy or a lose-lose policy."
Central Asia, Middle East and Africa This Week
Georgia: The EU declares an end to the political crisis
On 20 April, the European Council President announced that the political crisis in Georgia was officially "over" despite the opposition's refusal to join the EU-mediated deal. On 19 April, the ruling party of Georgia and a few of the opposition leaders agreed to sign an agreement to bring an end to the political crisis in the country. However, a majority of the opposition has rejected the deal and held protests against the government, demanding the release of the chairman and new elections.
Armenia: The US recognizes the 1915 massacre of Armenians as genocide
On 24 April, the US officially recognized the massacre of Armenians by the Ottomans during World War I as "genocide." US President Joe Biden addressed the killing of the 1.5 million Armenians on the Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day. He said: "Each year on this day, we remember the lives of all those who died in the Ottoman-era Armenian genocide and recommit ourselves to preventing such an atrocity from ever again occurring. The American people honour all those Armenians who perished in the genocide that began 106 years ago today."
Israel: Continuous escalation of violence in the Gaza Strip
On 24 April, Palestinian militants from the Gaza Strip fired more than 20 rockets into Israel's territory. The Israeli military also responded to the attacks by targeting the areas controlled by the Hamas group. The recent clashes took place soon after an unprecedented rise in tensions in Jerusalem which injured at least four policemen and six other protestors. The rise in violence also comes during the holy month of Ramadan and does not seem to be ending soon.
Iran: Talks on JCPOA enter the second round in Vienna
On 20 April, the talks in Vienna entered the second round of discussions as countries pushed towards achievable goals. Iran, China, Russia, Germany, France, the UK and the EU agreed to form a third expert working group to prioritize the restoration of the accord. On 19 April, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said: "we will reach results in a short time if the Americans move within the framework of honesty." The talks have achieved about 70 per cent progress in reaching its goals. However, on 21 April, a US State Department official revealed that despite some progress, important disagreement with Iran continues to exist.
Iran: Pakistan's Foreign Minister visits President Rouhani
On 21 April, the Foreign Minister of Pakistan visited Tehran and met with President Rouhani. The Iranian President expressed the country's commitment to enhance bilateral relations with Pakistan in the field of trade, investment and border management and stressed mutual concerns such as security. The leaders agreed to cooperate on energy sharing and enforce peace and security in the future amidst the looming threat of rising instability once the US withdraws completely from Afghanistan.
Syria: President Assad to run for the third term in May
On 18 April, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad submitted his candidacy for a third term as President. The parliament speaker announced the second elections amidst the war, set to take place on 26 May 2021. The US and the opposition party in the country have expressed their discontent against the election.
Syria: Idlib receives the first batch of COVID-19 vaccines
On 21 April, the first batch of AstraZeneca vaccines was dispatched to the Idlib region in northwestern Syria. A total of 53,800 doses have been sent to the country as a part of the COVAX initiative. The medical personnel and first responders are being given priority and will be vaccinated in the coming days. Senior citizens above the age of 60 and younger age groups with chronic diseases will be vaccinated next.
Ethiopia: UNSC issues first collective response to the Tigray conflict
On 22 April, the United Nations Security Council issued a press statement on the humanitarian situation in the Tigray region. The statement expressed concern regarding the violation of human rights and sexual violence in the region. It acknowledged the Ethiopian government's efforts to provide assistance and access to humanitarian aid. However, the UNSC called for a bigger response to restore normalcy in the war-torn region.
Chad: Slain President Idriss Deby's son appointed as replacement
On 21 April, a charter released by the presidency announced that Idriss Deby's son would be appointed as the President in place of the slain leader. The charter said: "General Mahamat Idriss Deby will occupy the functions of the president of the republic and also serve as head of the armed forces." The new charter will discard the previous constitution and will be considered as the "basic law of the republic."
Europe and The Americas This Week
The European Union: European Commission introduces new regulations on AI
On 21 April, the European Commission revealed a set of proposed regulations on the use of artificial intelligence, which may threaten people's safety and rights. The regulations aim to keep a check on high-risk technology and bans a majority of surveillance and live facial scanning applications. An EU official stated: "With these landmark rules, the EU is spearheading the development of new global norms to make sure AI can be trusted." However, Belgium has raised concerns regarding the regulations causing a ban on 'social scoring' systems and creating a barrier for the EU to become a leading player in the field of AI.
France: Police employee stabbed to death by a Tunisian immigrant
On 23 April, a female police officer was stabbed to death at a police station in South-west Paris by a Tunisian man. The assailant who shouted "Allahu Akbar" while assaulting the woman was shot dead right after the attack. The anti-terror prosecutors have initiated an inquiry into the attack while treating it as a terrorist attack. The President also commented on the attack and said that the country would not surrender to "Islamist Terrorism."
Czech Republic: Government issues a cap on Russian employees in the embassy
On 22 April, the government announced that it would impose a ceiling on the number of Russian embassy workers in the country. The move would force dozens of employees of the Russian embassy to return home by the end of May. As the diplomatic tensions between the two countries continue to rise, the Czech Foreign Minister asked the Russian embassy to reduce the number of employees to the same level as the Czech embassy in Moscow.
Russia: Alexei Navalny ends hunger strike in prison
On 23 April, Alexei Navalny thanked his supporters and announced an end to his three-week hunger strike. He addressed his supporters through an Instagram post and revealed that he was denied medical help and his own medical records. He said: "I have been examined twice by a team of a civilian doctor. Their words that 'very soon there will be no one to treat' deserves attention. Taking into account all the circumstances, I am getting out of the hunger strike."
Venezuela: World Food Programme to provide food for school children
On 19 April, Venezuelan officials and the United Nations World Food Programme announced a deal to provide food for school children in the country, which is suffering from an economic collapse. The program will attempt to reach out to 1,85,000 children by the end of 2021 and will stretch to cover 1.5 million children by 2022-23. The President addressed the country on state television and said: "This is the first step toward a series of ambitious projects that will provide food support to all of the Venezuelan people."
Cuba: Raul Castro hands over the party chief position to Miguel Diaz-Canel
On 19 April, the Communist Party of Cuba chose Miguel Diaz-Canel to lead the party as the first secretary. For the first time since 1959, the country will have a different leader, not from the Castro family. Diaz-Canel succeeded Raul-Castro as the President in 2018 and has since shown himself as loyal to the Castro model of governing the country. As President of Cuba, he has maintained strong relations with North Korea, China, Russia, Bolivia and Venezuela.
Argentina: Local laboratory produces the first batch of Sputnik V vaccines
On 19 April, Richmond SACIF, a pharmaceutical company in Argentina, announced that it produced the first batch of the Sputnik V vaccine in the local laboratories. The indigenously produced batch, consisting of 21,176 doses, has now been sent to Russia for quality checks and will start mass-producing the vaccines by June. Argentina is the first Latin American country to produce the vaccine. On 20 April, the country also marked 60,000 COVID-19 deaths and added 26,000 new infections to its pre-existing list.
Mexico: Sharp rise in migrant children at the Mexican border
On 19 April, the UNICEF regional director for Latin America reported that the number of migrant children in Mexico showed a sharp increase from 380 to almost 3500. On average, over 275 children are caught trying to cross over to the US and are being returned to the authorities in Mexico. He said: "Most of the shelter facilities I visited in Mexico are already overcrowded and cannot accommodate the increasing number of children and families migrating northward. We are deeply concerned that living conditions for migrant children and mothers in Mexico could soon deteriorate further."
The US: The Senate passes Anti-Asian hate crimes bill
On 22 April, the US Senate passed a bill to address the hate crimes against Asians. The bill received immense support in the Senate, with 91 lawmakers voting in support of the bill and one voting against it. The bill mandates the Justice Department to review hate crimes and support local bodies to respond to violent acts of targeted hate. The bill will be sent to the House of Representatives and then to the President for final approval.
About the Authors
Harini Madhusudan, Lokendra Sharma and Akriti Sharma are PhD Scholars in the School of Conflict and Security Studies at the National Institute of Advanced Studies. Sukanya Bali and Avishka Ashok are Research Associates at the Institute.
| |
Bookmark |
GP Team
Seven Major Developments This Week I US and Japan: President Trump’s Visit I US and South Korea: Trump’s Visit and a Trade Deal
GP Team
Five Major Developments
GP Team
Afghan Foreign Minister's and UK Prime Minister’s Visits to India
GP Team
Who said what at the UNGA 2025: Major takeaways
GP Team
EU-India Free Trade Negotiations: Convergences and Divergences
GP Team
The World This Week#323-324
GP Team
The World This Week#322
GP Team
The World This Week#321
NIAS Global Politics Team
US-EU Tariff tensions, Australian Prime Minister’s visit to China, and PM Modi’s visit to Brazil and Argentina
GP Team
The World This Week #318
GP Team
The World This Week #317
GP Team
The World This Week #316
GP Team
The World This Week #315
GP Team
The World This Week #314
GP Team
The World This Week #313
GP Team
The World This Week #312
GP Team
The World This Week #310-311
The US-Ukraine Mineral Deal I East Asia-US Tariff Negotiations I Canada Elections
GP Team
President Xi’s Southeast Asia Visit: Vietnam, Malaysia and Cambodia
GP Team
The US-China Tariff War, and the US-Iran Nuclear Negotiations
GP Team
Tariffs, Tariffs, Tariffs: What, Why and What Next
GP Team
China’s Two Sessions, Modi’s Mauritius Visit and Canada’s New PM
GP Team
US-China tariff tensions
GP Team
The Good, Bad and Ugly of the Trans-Atlantic Divide, and the Elections in Germany
GP Team
Munich Security Conference 2025
GP Team
AI Summit in France, Trump’s Tariff Threats, and China’s DeepSeek
GP Team
South Korea’s Political Crisis and Biden’s rejection of Nippon Steel deal.
GP Team
The Year That Was & More Questions for 2025
GP Team
Interim President in South Korea, China's record space walk and the New Chief Executive of Macau
GP Team
Elections in Ireland, Political Crisis in France and the Busan Plastic Pollution Summit
GP Team
APEC Summit 2024 and Sri Lanka Parliamentary Elections 2024
GP Team
North Korean Troops in Russia, Finland President's Visit to China and Elections in Japan
GP Team
The BRICS Summit at Kazan and the Modi-Xi Meeting
GP Team
The Quad Summit 2024, Volodymyr Zelenskyy's US Visit, LDP Elections in Japan, and Modi’s US Visit
GP Team
Beijing Xiangshan Forum and Meloni-Starmer Meeting
GP Team
The Ninth Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) and Elections in East Germany
GP Team
Kiribati Elections 2024 and Political turmoil in Bangladesh
GP Team
China, Southeast Asia and the Lancang-Mekong Cooperation
GP Team
Interim government in Bangladesh
GP Team
Tenth Pacific Island Leaders Meeting and President Biden’s Address
GP Team
Political Instability in Pakistan, Nepal and Bangladesh
GP Team
Labour Victory in the UK elections, Rise of the Right France elections, and the Xi Show at the SCO Summit
GP Team
International Tariffs on Chinese EVs and China’s Fourth Icebreaker
GP Team
Putin’s Visit to North Korea and Vietnam, and China-South Korea 2+2 Dialogue
GP Team
South Africa Elections and the Decline of ANC, China-Arab States Summit, and Trump Trial Verdict Fallouts
GP Team
The US Sanctions on China and Putin-Xi Summit
GP Team
President Xi’s Visit to Europe: Major Takeaways of China’s Strategic Approach towards France, Hungary and Serbia
GP Team
Baidu, Chang'e and Fujian: The Rise of China's S&T Capabilities in EV, Space and Maritime Sectors
GP Team
Elections in the Maldives and Remembering the Chernobyl nuclear accident
GP Team
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz's Visit to China
GP Team
Iran’s Drone Attacks on Israel and Biden-Kishida Summit
GP Team
75 Years of NATO
GP Team
Elections in Senegal
GP Team
Presidential Elections in Russia and the Summit for Democracy in South Korea
GP Team
China's Two Sessions and 25 Years of NATO's First Expansion
GP Team
ASEAN-Australia Summit, and President Biden’s State of the Union Address
GP Team
Pakistan's new Prime Minister, Putin's State of the Nation Address, and a Review of Global Diplomacy Index
GP Team
Elections in Finland and Indonesia
GP Team
The US divide over Ukraine, and the US-Israel differences over the war in Gaza
GP Team
North Korea's Cruise Missile Test, Tuvalu Elections, EU Summit and Italy-Africa Elections
GP Team
Taiwan Election 2024
GP Team
Xi Jinping’s New Year Eve’s Speech: Six Takeaways
GP team
Special Edition: The World in 2023
Hoimi Mukherjee | Hoimi Mukherjee is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science in Bankura Zilla Saradamani Mahila Mahavidyapith.
Chile in 2023: Crises of Constitutionality
Richa Chandola | Richa Chandola is an independent scholar.
Peru in 2023: Political Tensions, Civil Unrest, and Governance Issues
Aprajita Kashyap | Aprajita Kashyap is a faculty of Latin American Studies, School of International Studies at the Jawaharlal Nehru University New Delhi.
Haiti in 2023: The Humanitarian Crisis
Shreya Pandey | Shreya Pandey is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science, Xavier’s College, Ranchi. Her research interests include EU-India relations, and current trends in international relations.
Russian Invasion on Ukraine: An assessment of its impact upon unity, economy and enlargement of the EU
Binod Khanal | Binod Khanal is a Doctoral candidate at the Centre for European Studies, School of International Studies, JNU, New Delhi.
The Baltic: Energy, Russia, NATO and China
Rishika Yadav | Rishika Yadav is a Research Assistant at NIAS.
Finland in 2023: Challenges at Russia's border
Padmashree Anandhan | Padmashree Anandhan is a Research Associate at the School of Conflict and Security Studies, National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangaluru.
Germany in 2023: Defence, Economy and Energy Triangle
Anu Maria Joseph | Anu Maria Joseph is a Research Assistant at NIAS.
Ethiopia and Sudan in 2023: Governance in deadlock
Nuha Aamina | Nuha Aamina is an undergraduate student at the Department of International Relations, Peace and Public Policy, St Joseph's University.
Thailand: Economic stability despite political instability
Alka Bala | Alka Bala is an undergraduate student at the Department of International Relations, Peace and Public Policy, St Joseph's University.
Myanmar in 2023: Extended Emergency, Political Instability and State-led violence
Sayani Rana | Sayani Rana is an undergraduate student at the Department of International Relations, Peace, and Public Policy, St Joseph's University, Bangalore.
Australia in 2023: Challenges of Economy, Employment and Immigration
Ashok Alex Luke | Ashok Alex Luke is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science at CMS College, Kottayam.
China and South Asia in 2023: Advantage Beijing?
Annem Naga Bindhu Madhuri | Annem Naga Bindhu Madhuri is a postgraduate student at the Department of Defence and Strategic Studies at the University of Madras, Chennai.
China and East Asia
Femy Francis | Femy Francis is a Research Assistant at the National Institute of Advanced Studies.
China in 2023: Cracks in the Great Wall
Amit Gupta | Dr Amit Gupta is an international security and economics analyst based in the USA
The US: The Year of Living Dangerously?
Kuri Sravan Kumar | Kuri Sravan Kumar is a PhD scholar at the Department of East Asian Studies, University of Delhi.
North Korea in 2023: Military buildups and Close Connections with Russia
Yogeshwari S | Yogeswari S is a postgraduate student at the Department of Defence and Strategic Studies at the University of Madras, Chennai.
South Korea in 2023: Addressing Climate Change and the Global Supply Chains
Abhishek Ranjan | Abhishek Ranjan is a PhD student at the Korean Studies, Centre for East Asian Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi.
East Asia in 2023: Big Power Politics and New Defence Strategies
GP Team
Cases of COVID-19 Sub-variant in China
GP Team
Regional Round-ups: News from around the World
GP Team
Henry Kissinger: A profile
GP Team
North Korea’s New Satellite, EU-Canada Summit, and the CSTO Summit
GP Team
APEC Summit: US-China “de-risking and diversifying”
GP Team
Russia’s CTBT de-ratification and the G7 meeting in Tokyo
GP Team
UK’s AI Summit
GP Team
19th EU-Central Asia Ministerial meeting and the Palenque Summit in Mexico
GP Team
Ten years of BRI, Elections in Poland, and the Crisis in the US Congress
GP Team
GCC-EU Joint Council and Ministerial Meeting, and EUs New Pact on Migration
GP Team
Taiwan: Launches its first domestically built submarine “Hain Kun”
GP Team
China: Xi Jinping reaffirms his resolve to rebuild Syria
GP Team
A Brief Roundup: 78th United Nations General Assembly
GP Team
Russia and North Korea: Putin-Kim Meeting
GP Team
The return of South China Sea and the controversy over Fukushima release
GP Team
BRICS Summit and the Journey of Chandrayaan-3
GP Team
Trump indictment, Moscow Conference and the Iran-US Prisoner Exchange deal
GP Team
Japan-Australia's Reciprocal Access Agreement, and the Amazon Summit
GP Team
China: Xi welcomes “Old friend” Henry Kissinger
GP Team
India: Prime Minister Narendra Modi meets President of UAE
GP Team
The SCO Summit and Top Ten Technologies in 2023
GP Team
The High Seas Treaty, Global Financing Pact Summit, and the IMF-Pakistan Deal
GP Team
Modi's US Visit, and the Wagner Revolt in Russia
GP Team
China: Palestine Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’ visit emphasizes hope for statehood
GP Team
Political Crises in Maldives, Domestic instability in Colombia, and the Debt Crisis in Pakistan
GP Team
North Korea's space ambitions, Turkey elections, and The US debt ceiling
GP Team
Thailand elections, G7 Summit challenges, and Ecuador's new instability
GP Team
G7 Summit in Japan, and China-Central Asia Summit in Xian
GP Team
Sheikh Hasina’s Visit to the US, UK and Japan
GP Team
ASEAN- India Maritime Exercise, and President Marcos' US Visit
GP Team
Leaked Pentagon Documents: Major Takeaways
GP Team
100 days of Lula in Brazil, and Pension reforms in France
GP Team
Macron's China Visit, Tsai's US Visit, Artemis-II Mission and OPEC's Crude Oil Cuts
GP Team
Turkey and Finland’s NATO membership, and expanding Russia-South Africa relations
GP Team
Saudi Arabia - Iran rapprochement, the AUKUS deal and China's 14th National Party Congress
GP Team
The UK's new bill on illegal migration
GP Team
Macron's Africa visit, Suspension of the START treaty and the return of COVID origin debate
GP Team
Japan, Philippines and the tensions in the South China Sea
GP Team
Russia in Africa, and Biden's State of the Union address
GP Team
Two years after the coup in Myanmar, and the EU-Ukraine Summit
Avishka Ashok
China: A complicated economic recovery
Madhura Mahesh
Latin America: Elections, problems of governance and deteriorating economy
Padmashree Anandhan
Europe: An impending energy crisis and its economic fallouts
Ankit Singh
Defence: Towards a new cold war
Riya Itisha Ekka
Brazil: Managing Bolsonaro’s legacy
Apoorva Sudhakar
Africa: Despite the elections, democratic backslide will continue
Sayani Rana
Australia, China and Japan: Diplomatic challenges in East Asia
Anu Maria Joseph
Africa: Domestic instability, bilateral conflicts, and insurgencies ahead
Abigail Miriam Fernandez
Pakistan in 2023: Between elections, economic turmoil and climate crisis
Sethuraman Nadarajan
Sri Lanka in 2023: A troubling economy and an unstable polity
Avishka Ashok
Chinese Foreign Minister's visit to Africa
GP Team
North American Leaders Summit, US-Japan 2+2 dialogue and the World Banks' prospects for 2023
GP Team
The return of Lula and China's relaxation of travel rules
GP Team
Top 22 developments from the world in 2022
Allen Joe Mathew, Sayani Rana, Joel Jacob
Newsmakers: From Putin to Rushdie
Sethuraman Nadarajan
Rest in Peace; Queen Elizabeth. Mikhail Gorbachev, Pelé...
Ankit Singh
Global economy in 2022: The year of cooling down
Bhoomika Sesharaj
Digital world: Elon Musk and the Twitter Chaos
Madhura Mahesh
The FTX Collapse: Depleting cryptocurrencies
Harini Madhusudan
The Space race: Scaling new technological feats
Avishka Ashok
G20: More challenges
Akriti Sharma
COP27: Hits and Misses
Padmashree Anandhan
The Ukraine War
Poulomi Mondal
French Exit from Mali: More questions than answers
Mohaimeen Khan
Yemen, Syria, and Sudan: Continuing humanitarian crises
Padmashree Anandhan
NATO and the Madrid Summit: Expanding defence frontiers
Madhura Mahesh
Elections in Colombia and Brazil: Re-emergence of the Pink Tide
Padmashree Anandhan
Elections in France, Sweden, and Italy: The rise of the right
Janardhan G
North Korea: Missile Tests Galore
Sapna Elsa Abraham
China and the Middle East: Xi Jinping’s visit towards a “new era” and “China-Arab community”
Avishka Ashok
The Taiwan Strait: Political and military assertions
Anu Maria Joseph
Ethiopia: Uncertainties despite ceasefire
Apoorva Sudhakar
Tunisia: The end of the Jasmine Revolution
Rashmi BR
Iraq: Deadlock and breakthrough
Kaviyadharshini A
Iran: Anti-government protests
Avishka Ashok
China: 20th Party Congress and Xi Jinping's consolidation
Chrishari de Alwis Gunasekare
Sri Lanka: Political and Economic Crises
Aparupa Bhattacherjee
Myanmar: The coup and after
GP Team
Thaw in China-Australia relations, and the return of Ramaphosa in South Africa
GP Team
The US-Africa Leaders Summit and the FTX CEO's arrest
Xi's visit to Saudi Arabia and Peru's political instability
GP Team
The Taiwanese local elections and the legacies of Jiang Zemin
Vignesh Ram
Anwar Ibrahim: Malaysia's new Prime Minister
GP Team
G-20 and COP-27 Summits: Key Takeaways
GP Team
Brief updates from around the world
GP Team
Elon Musk's Twitter deal and Putin's Valdai address
GP Team
China's 20th Party Congress and Former Prime Minister Liz Truss' resignation in the UK
GP Team
UN deems Russia’s referendums illegal
GP Team
The US easing sanctions on Venezuela, OPEC's production cut, and the WTO report on global trade
GP Team
The new DART Mission: A new era of planetary defence
GP Team
Putin and Russia's New Ukraine Strategy
GP Team
The SCO Summit, and the Sweden Elections
GP Team
Military exercises in Russia’s Far East, Eastern Economic Forum summit, and India-Bangladesh relations
GP Team
Floods and Emergency in Pakistan
GP Team
Regional round-ups
GP Team
Pelosi's visit to Taiwan, Sri Lanka's appeal to the IMF and Amnesty's report on Ukraine's Human Rights Violation
GP Team
Taiwan and Biden-Xi conversation, and a controversial referendum in Tunisia
GP Team
Putin’s meeting with Khamenei and Erdogan
GP Team
Biden's Middle East visit, and Elon Musk's backtracking on the Twitter deal
GP Team
Boris Johnson's resignation in UK, Shinzo Abe assassination in Japan, and the G-20 meeting in Bali
GP Team
NATO Summit, G-7 Summit, Instability in Israel, and NATO's New Strategic Concept
GP Team
BRICS Summit, Approval of Ukraine's candidature for the EU, and Saudi Arabia-Turkey rapprochement
GP Team
The US federal reserve interest rate increase and its global fallouts
GP Team
India-Nordic Summit, and New EU sanctions on Russia
GP Team
New US assistance for Ukraine
GP Team
China's Boao Forum for Asia, Russia's new ICBM test, and a Cold War in the Solomon Islands
GP Team
Elon Musk and the battle for Twitter
GP Team
New sanctions on Russia, and a new IPCC report on climate change
GP Team
Russia's gas ultimatum to Europe
GP Team
The G7 Summit, and Europe’s new focus on defence
GP Team
War in Ukraine: Strategies of China, Europe and the US
GP Team
EU’s Versailles Declaration on Ukraine, China’s National Peoples Congress meeting, and South Korea’s Presidential elections
GP Team
Sanctions against Russia and their limitations, and Biden’s State of the Union address
GP Team
Russia’s Ukraine invasion: Three days later
EU-Africa Summit, and France’s exit from Mali
GP Team
The One Ocean summit in France, and the Quad meeting in Australia
GP Team
Escalation and de-escalation in the Ukraine crisis
GP Team
Return of the Normandy Format on Ukraine and a Thaw in China-Australia diplomatic rhetoric
GP Team
US, Russia and the Geneva talks on Ukraine
GP Team
North Korea tests new missiles, and the US remembers 6 January
GP Team
The Complete Compendium for 2021
GP Team
China, East Asia, and South East Asia in 2021
GP Team
The Americas in 2021
GP Team
Europe in 2021
GP Team
Middle East and Africa in 2021
GP Team
South Asia in 2021
GP Team
The Biden-Putin, and Modi-Putin Summits
GP Team
China in Africa, and Elections in Honduras
GP Team
Strategic oil reserves' release, and another migrant crisis across the English Channel
GP Team
Biden-Xi virtual summit, and Russia's ASAT test
GP Team
The Coal compromise in COP 26, Xi’s power consolidation in China, and a Migrant Crisis in Europe
GP Team
COP 26 agreements on methane and deforestation, and elections in Japan
GP Team
China's White Paper on Climate Change
GP Team
China's hypersonic tests, Russia's Afghanistan summit, and EU's Poland challenge
GP Team
India-China military dialogue, G20 summit on Afghanistan, and China-Taiwan tensions
GP Team
Europe's Energy Crisis
GP Team
Biden's infrastructure bill trouble in the US, and a new Prime Minister in Japan
GP Team
The Quad reinvigoration, UN General Assembly meeting, Elections in Russia and Canada, and another political turmoil in Tunisia
GP Team
The AUKUS pact, North Korea's New Missile Test, New SpaceX Mission, and the State of EU address
GP Team
20 years after 9/11, Paris terror trial, and a new government in Lebanon
GP Team
The New Afghanistan
GP Team
Kamala Harris' visit to Southeast Asia
GP Team
Taliban's friendly neighbourhood: China, Russia and Pakistan
GP Team
The rise of Delta variant, and the fall of Afghan State
GP Team
New tensions in South China Sea, an ASEAN envoy to Myanmar, and 76 years after Hiroshima bombing
GP Team
Olympics in Japan, Six months of military rule in Myanmar, and a political opening in Lebanon
GP Team
Nord Stream-2, Floods in India and China, Peru election results, and another COVID origin probe
GP Team
Europe's floods and EU's Climate package, SCO meet on Afghanistan, and Political crises in Lebanon and Nepal
GP Team
Haiti's political crisis, and China's control of tech giants
GP Team
Hundred Years of Communist Party of China
GP Team
The EU Council Summit, the Merkel-Macron proposal on Russia, and Moscow's response
GP Team
G7, NATO and Biden-Putin summits, and the Iran elections
GP Team
G7 Summit, China's new anti-foreign sanctions law, Peru Elections, and France's Sahel exit
GP Team
China's Three Child policy, the US ban on investments in China, Biden's support for COVAX, and Israel's new government
GP Team
Another US investigation on COVID origin, Russia's Belarus embrace, Mali's second coup, and Europe's Africa apology
IPRI Team
EU's China investment freeze, Arctic Council meeting, Cryptocurrency crash, and a BBC apology
GP Team
China's new census, Cyber attack on a US energy grid, and 100 days of military rule in Myanmar
GP Team
100 days of President Biden, and three years of inter-Korean dialogue
GP Team
Biden's climate summit, Putin's new redlines, China's media clampdown in Hong Kong, and India's alarming COVID case
GP Team
Return of the Iran nuclear talks, Pak-Russia rapprochement, Greenland elections, and Russia-Ukraine tensions
GP Team
The WHO Report on COVID-19, and Brazil's political crisis
GP Team
Fifty years of India-Bangladesh relations, Israel's elections and North Korea's new missile tests
GP Team
Quad Summit, Ten Years of Fukushima and China's Two Sessions
GP Team
The case against MBS, the Ireland trouble post-Brexit and the Pope's Iraq visit
GP Team
India-Pakistan Ceasefire, US-Saudi Arabia reset, Afghan dialogue in Doha, and the Australian new media law on Facebook/Google
GP Team
US-Iran restart, Munich Security Conference, Libya ten years after Gaddafi and the US Cold Storm
GP Team
India-China border disengagement, Senate acquittal of Donald Trump, UAE’s Mars mission success, and the WHO’s findings on the COVID
GP Team
Biden's new US foreign policy priorities, Russia-EU tensions over Navalny, and China's redline on Xinjiang, Hong Kong and Taiwan
GP Team
The Daniel Pearl case in Pakistan and the new vaccine complications in Europe
GP Team
The US returns to the Paris Agreement, and India reengages the region through a Vaccine diplomacy
GP Team
North Korea's Party Congress, Houthis as terrorists, and Elections in Uganda
GP Team
Disorderly transition in the US, Breakthrough over Qatar, Enrichment in Iran and Arrests in Hong Kong
GP Team
The Year of COVID, Protests and Elections
GP Team
India-Bangladesh reset and China's Chang'e-5 success
GP Team
Morocco recognizes Israel, Maduro consolidates in Venezuela and No-deal Brexit gets reals
GP Team
UK Vaccine approval, China-Australia spat, and an intra-Afghan agreement
GP Team
The Joshua Wang trial in Hong Kong, and a worsening conflict in Ethiopia
GP Team
Trump's setbacks in Georgia and Pennsylvania, hectic American engagements in the Middle East, and the race for the COVID-19 vaccines
GP Team
Impending catastrophe in Yemen, Elections in Myanmar, and another crisis in Hong Kong
GP Team
Joe Biden as the new American President, Pan-European measures against Islamic Extremism, and Civil-Military tussle in Myanmar elections
GP Team
A new India-US defence agreement, another terrorist attack in France, and a looming Russia-Turkey Cold War
GP Team
Anti-government movement in Pakistan, Emergency in Thailand, and new Israeli settlements in the West Bank
GP Team
The Quad summit in Japan, the World Bank report on South Asia and the European Parliament on Saudi Arabia
GP Team
An ugly Presidential debate in the US, a new bill to prevent Islamic separatism in France, and new EU sanctions against Turkey
GP Team
The Second COVID Wave in Europe, Japan's rapprochement in East Asia and a SAARC summit in South Asia
GP Team
The Abraham Accords in the Middle East, a new PM in Japan, and a TikTok deal in the US
GP Team
The new Brexit crisis, India, China and the SCO meeting in Moscow, and the Wildfires in the US
GP Team
India-China Border Standoff, Second Wave in South Korea, and Russia-Europe tensions over Navalny poisoning
GP Team
Greece-Turkey Tensions, Iran and the UNSC, China and the South China Sea and Shinzo Abe's resignation in Japan
GP Team
Selecting Kamala Harris in the US, Arresting Jimmy Lai in Hong Kong and Facing the Second Wave in Europe
GP Team
Sri Lanka's election brings Mahinda Rajapaksa back, while India and Pakistan respond differently to J&K
GP Team
Forthcoming elections in Sri Lanka, a migrant problem turning political in Italy, and the Second wave in Vietnam
GP Team
China's Economic Recovery, India-China Disengagement, India-Iran Chabahar Challenge and the UK's Huawei ban
GP Team
Half a million COVID deaths in Coronavirus, Russian bounties to Taliban and Putin to remain President till 2036
GP Team
Two years of Trump-Kim personal diplomacy, and the US troop withdrawal from Germany
GP Team
Global Coalition on China, North Korea-US tensions, UAE's jibe at Israel and the COVID Peak in Brazil
GP Team
India-China border standoff, Locust attack in India & the EU's Largest Recovery Fund
GP Team
US-China Trade Talks, Locust attacks across Africa and Asia, Iraq's New PM, and finally, a government in Israel
GP Team
Iran’s Military Satellite, Tensions in the South China Sea and Israel’s New Government
GP Team
Europe's Rescue Package, Wuhan's Reopening, Saudi Arabia's Yemen Ceasefire and the WHO controversy
GP Team
Taliban Violence in Afghanistan, Lockdown in Germany and the US-China blame-game
GP Team
The Senate acquits Trump in the US; and the Coronavirus impacts Southeast Asia more
GP Team
World Economic Forum, Wuhan Coronavirus, China-Myanmar MoUs, and a new government in Lebanon
GP Team
US-Iran Tensions in the Middle East, 6G in China, Fires in Australia, and a New Nuclear declaration in North Korea
GP Team
Impeachment in the US, Brexit Vote in the UK, an Islamic Summit in Malaysia and a Death Sentence in Pakistan
GP Team
Sui Kyi at the ICJ, Boris Johnson as the new British PM, Greta Thunberg as TIME's person, and none to speak at the COP 25
GP Team
NATO at 70, Protests in Iran, COP 25 in Madrid
GP Team
Protests in Iran and Attacks in London
GP Team
Elections in Sri Lanka and Protests in Georgia, Chile & Czech
GP Team
The Crisis in Bolivia, the BRICS Summit in Brazil, and renewed violence in Israel & Hong Kong
GP Team
US-China Tariffs, Beijing's support for Carrie Lam, India's RCEP exit, Iran's nuclear enrichment, and Russia's new Arctic endeavours
GP Team
Protests in Lebanon, ISIS post-Baghdadi, UK Elections, Afghan QCG meet in Moscow and human trafficking across Europe
GP Team
The new Turkey-Russia axis in the Middle East, Trump Impeachment inquiry, Protests in Latin America and the Oil spill in Brazil
GP Team
Turkey's Syrian Offensive, Spain's Catalonia Crisis, a new Brexit Deal and an increasing divide in Hong Kong
GP Team
Turkey-Syria border tensions, Modi-Xi summit, Ecuador Protests and the Impeachment Inquiry against Trump
GP Team
70 years Celebrations in China, Tipping Point in Hong Kong, a Brexit Roadmap, Protests in Iraq, and Khashoggi's death anniversary
GP Team
Elections in Israel, Violence in Afghanistan, Drone Attacks in Saudi Arabia, and the Climate Change Protests
GP Team
Trump in DMZ, Hong Kong Protests, Violence in Libya, Agreement in Sudan, Taliban's Dual Strategy and Hafiz Saeed Charged
GP Team
Gaza Violence, China-US Trade Negotiations, North Korean Missile Tests, Iran’s Partial Withdrawal and Mueller Report
GP Team
Masood Azhar Ban, Venezuela Crisis, Huawei in UK & the Sri Lankan Bombers
GP Team
Elections in Spain, BRI Summit 2.0, Kim's Russia visit and Terror attacks in Sri Lanka
GP Team
Indonesian Elections, North Korea's New Weapon Test, Trump's Yemen Veto, Venezuela Crisis and Climate Change Protests
GP Team
Coup in Sudan, Protests in Algeria & Libya, and another Brexit Extension
GP Team
Brexit Deadlock, Crises in Sudan & Algeria and the Elections in Maldives
GP Team
US-China Trade Talks, Mueller Report, Gaza Anniversary and Thailand Elections
GP Team
The New Zealand Massacre, The JeM discussion in the UN, The Brexit rejection, US-Taliban peace talks and Climate protests
GP Team
India in OIC, India-Pakistan and Trump-Kim Summit
GP Team
Doha Dialogue with the Taliban, Saudi Arabia in Asia and the Crisis in Venezuela
GP Team
US Emergency, Nord Stream-2 and Indo-Pak tensions
GP Team
US, South Korea and Thailand
GP Team
Yemen, Venezuela and US-China
GP Team
Between a Terror attack in Nairobi and a Political Disaster in UK
GP Team
Kim-Xi Meet, US Shutdown & US-China Trade Talks
GP Team
