Sunday, April 12, 2026

Women’s Ministry to review Batu Caves child sexual assault ruling before referring matter to AGC, says Nancy Shukri





Women’s Ministry to review Batu Caves child sexual assault ruling before referring matter to AGC, says Nancy Shukri



Women, Family and Community Development Minister Datuk Seri Nancy Shukri said understanding the court’s reasoning is essential before any further actions are taken. — Picture by Firdaus Latif

Saturday, 11 Apr 2026 6:26 PM MYT


KUCHING, April 11 — The Ministry of Women, Family and Community Development (KPWKM) will study the judgment in the child sexual assault case at a Batu Caves welfare home before raising the matter with the Attorney General’s Chambers (AGC).

Minister Datuk Seri Nancy Shukri said understanding the court’s reasoning is essential before any further actions are taken.

“I cannot give my opinion like an ordinary person. I have a legal background, so I need to read and understand the judgment.

“It would be unfair for me to criticise a decision without knowing the court’s reasoning. We can raise our concerns with the AGC because we find this case extremely serious; we cannot take it lightly.

“If we feel the need to intervene, any discussions will be among government officers, not based on external stories,” she told reporters at the WCaRE Outreach Programme: Empowering Ethnic Communities in Kampung Pasir Panjang today.

Nancy explained that the court’s decision is beyond her ministry’s authority and must be respected under the rule of law.

She added that parents or guardians of the victims who are dissatisfied with the court’s decision may use existing legal channels to file an appeal.

On Thursday, the caretaker of the welfare home, Retna Velu, pleaded guilty at the Ampang Sessions Court to 15 counts of physical and non-physical sexual assault, as well as unnatural intercourse, involving five boys aged eight to 13.

The offences were allegedly committed at the home between November 2025 and March this year. The court has set May 21 to hear the facts of the case and for sentencing.

In the same proceedings, the welfare home’s owner, S Valan, 31, pleaded not guilty to four charges of physical sexual assault against four male teenagers aged 13 to 16, allegedly committed between 2019 and March this year.

The court granted the accused bail of RM30,000 and set June 10 for the next case mention. — Bernama

MACC tracks RM203m foreign fund flows linked to ex-CEO in share sale scandal





MACC tracks RM203m foreign fund flows linked to ex-CEO in share sale scandal



MACC investigators have uncovered suspected abuse of power, bribery and money laundering involving a former statutory body CEO over share sales linked to public funds, with over US$51.3 million allegedly moved abroad. — Picture by Choo Choy May

Saturday, 11 Apr 2026 8:32 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, April 11 — Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) investigators have allegedly found indications of an alleged abuse-of-power scheme involving a former chief executive officer (CEO) of a government statutory body over share sales involving public funds.

A MACC source said the individual is believed to have determined the terms and purchase price of the shares, while also acting as both proposer and approver in closed-door negotiations with minority shareholders, giving him full control over the entire process.

“Preliminary investigations also found elements of bribery and money laundering through the transfer of transaction proceeds to offshore entities to conceal the identities of recipients, including the use of nominee accounts and beneficial owners,” he said.

“Investigations also found that part of the funds was believed to have been reinvested into publicly listed companies on Bursa Malaysia, estimated at around RM30 million, to disguise the financial flows as legitimate investments,” he added.


Overall, foreign fund flows detected in the investigation are estimated to exceed US$51.3 million (RM203.4 million) and are believed to involve companies incorporated in the British Virgin Islands (BVI).


Of the total amount, six transactions involving six bank accounts in Singapore were worth more than US$48 million.

Another transaction worth about US$3.3 million was traced to Labuan and involved two beneficial owners of companies that received payments from public funds.


Two bank accounts in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), believed to belong to the former CEO, are also being investigated, involving about US$10,000 and and 37,000 UAE dirhams — together equivalent to around RM80,000.

A total of RM16.8 million has been been frozen, including six individual accounts containing around RM11 million.

MACC Senior Director of the Special Operations Division Datuk Mohamad Zamri Zainul, when contacted, confirmed that investigations are ongoing.

He said the MACC is widening the probe, including seeking cooperation from authorities in Singapore, the British Virgin Islands, the United Arab Emirates and Labuan to examine cross-border transactions and trace related assets.

On April 9, the MACC remanded a former chief executive of a government statutory body and a company chairman for four days over alleged collusion in a share sale deal linked to the agency.

Investigators said preliminary findings indicated the 2022 to 2023 transaction involved an unreasonable overvaluation that may have caused losses to public funds exceeding RM300 million, while 62 personal and company bank accounts holding about RM450 million were frozen.


Israeli strikes kill at least 18 people across southern Lebanon




Israeli strikes kill at least 18 people across southern Lebanon


Lebanon’s Health Ministry says more than 2,000 people have been killed in Israeli attacks since March 2


Smoke rises from the site of an Israeli air strike that targeted an area in the southern Lebanese city of Nabatieh on April 11, 2026 [Abbas Fakih/AFP]



By Al Jazeera Staff, AFP and Anadolu
Published On 11 Apr 2026


Israeli strikes have killed at least 18 people across southern Lebanon, as Lebanese authorities reported that the overall death toll from the war that began last month between Israel and Lebanese group Hezbollah has surpassed 2,000.

Israeli strikes on a village near Sidon in southern Lebanon killed at least eight people and wounded nine others, Lebanon’s Health Ministry said on Saturday.

Earlier, it said that at least 10 people, including three emergency workers, had been killed in Israeli strikes in the Nabatieh district.

In its latest tally, the Health Ministry reported that at least 2,020 people have been killed and 6,436 others wounded since Lebanon was drawn into the US-Israel war on Iran on March 2. Hezbollah launched rocket fire at Israel in support of its backer Iran, sparking massive Israeli strikes and a ground invasion.

Meanwhile, Israeli media reported that two Israeli soldiers were wounded during clashes with Hezbollah in southern Lebanon on Saturday.

Israel’s Channel 13, citing the military, said the two soldiers from the Paratroopers Brigade sustained moderate injuries from shrapnel during the confrontation.

The violence comes as Iran-backed Hezbollah renewed its rejection of direct negotiations between Israel and Lebanon aimed at ending the war.

President Joseph Aoun’s office said on Friday that officials from Lebanon, Israel and the United States would meet next week in Washington “to discuss declaring a ceasefire and the start date for negotiations between Lebanon and Israel under US auspices”.

Hundreds of people gathered on Saturday near the government headquarters in central Beirut in support of Hezbollah and to protest against the talks with Israel, some waving the group’s yellow flags or the Iranian standard.

Demonstrator Ruqaya Msheik said the protest was a message that Lebanon “will not be Israeli”.

“Whoever wants peace with Israel is not Lebanese,” she said, adding: “Those who shake hands with the enemy … are Zionists.”


Hezbollah supporters, some waving the party flag and holding up an image of slain Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, demonstrate near the Governmental Palace to protest the Lebanese authorities’ decision to engage in direct negotiations with Israel to end the ongoing war, in downtown Beirut on April 11, 2026 [Ibrahim Amro/AFP]


Hezbollah and its ally, the Amal Movement, issued a statement calling on supporters to avoid demonstrating “at this delicate stage”, citing interests of “stability, the protection of civil peace and avoiding any division that the Israeli enemy seeks”.

Earlier, Hezbollah lawmaker Hassan Fadlallah said the decision to hold direct talks with Israel was “a blatant violation of the [national] pact, the constitution and Lebanese laws”.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that any peace agreement reached with Lebanon must “last for generations” and also call for Hezbollah’s disarmament.

After a ceasefire was announced between the US and Iran this week, Washington and Tehran have been at odds over whether it also applies to Israel’s bombardment and invasion of Lebanon.

The dispute arose during the historic in-person ceasefire talks held in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad, between the US and Iran on Saturday afternoon.

Al Jazeera’s Ali Hashem, reporting from Tehran, said that Iran was able to secure “a kind of guarantee from the US that Israel is going to decrease its attacks on Lebanon”.

However, he said that “nothing [has] been confirmed … from Israel, with respect to Lebanon.” While “there have been fewer attacks on Beirut and the southern suburbs,” nothing has been “announced with respect to a ceasefire”, he said.


Pakistan sends fighter jets to Saudi Arabia amid fragile US-Iran ceasefire




Pakistan sends fighter jets to Saudi Arabia amid fragile US-Iran ceasefire


Deployment under mutual defence pact comes as Islamabad hosts US-Iran ceasefire talks


Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, meets with U.S. Vice President JD Vance. [Jacquelyn Martin Pool/Reuters]



By Faisal Ali
Published On 11 Apr 2026


Pakistan has deployed fighter jets to Saudi Arabia, its first visible military move under a mutual defence pact between the two countries, as it hosts ceasefire talks aimed at ending weeks of regional fighting between the US, Israel and Iran.

The aircraft — a mix of fighter and support jets — landed at King Abdulaziz Air Base in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province on Saturday, the Saudi Ministry of Defence announced.

The deployment came under a collective defence agreement signed in September 2025, which commits each country to treat an attack on the other as an attack on itself.

The pact was signed during a visit by Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to Riyadh last September, where he met Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.



Strait of Hormuz leverage looms over US-Iran talks in Islamabad



US-Iran talks : Analysts weigh nuclear rights, sanctions and regional risks


As the jets touched down in the kingdom, Pakistan was hosting direct negotiations between the United States and Iran in Islamabad, with senior delegations from both sides at the table and Pakistani mediators in the room, working on ending the weeks-long war.

Since Iran launched missile and drone strikes on what it described as US targets in Gulf states following the US-Israeli killing of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei on 28 February, Pakistan has been balancing its commitments on both sides.

Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said he personally warned Iranian leaders that Islamabad was bound by its obligations to Riyadh under the agreement in early March.

Iran sought guarantees that Saudi territory would not be used to attack it, Dar said, adding that he secured those assurances.

Iranian attacks on targets in Saudi Arabia, however, have continued, including key bases and a US embassy building.

Army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir flew to Riyadh in early March to discuss measures to halt Iranian strikes under the pact’s framework.

Four days before Saturday’s fighter jet deployment, Sharif called the crown prince to pledge Pakistan would stand “shoulder to shoulder” with the kingdom.

The two countries also agreed to expedite a pledged Saudi investment package for Pakistan worth $5bn.

Earlier on Saturday, Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed al-Jadaan had met Prime Minister Sharif in Islamabad alongside Dar and Munir.

Saudi Arabia is home to some 2.5 million Pakistani workers whose remittances help sustain a fragile economy, and has provided Islamabad with repeated financial assistance.

Imtiaz Gul, an Islamabad-based security analyst, told Al Jazeera the deployment was not a military escalation, but an attempt to communicate Pakistan’s commitments to Iran.



Vance arrives in Pakistan for talks with Iran


“Three jets won’t make much of a difference militarily,” he said, given the scale of Saudi Arabia’s own air force.

“It’s messaging Tehran to be flexible in these talks, but also it is underlining to them that Pakistan has obligations under the mutual strategic agreement it has with Riyadh,” he said.

Michael Kugelman, a resident senior fellow for South Asia at the Atlantic Council, told Al Jazeera that Pakistan’s move was “a bit of a risky gambit”.

“This is Pakistan signalling to Iran that if Iran is not willing to make the types of concessions that lead to a deal and the conflict resumes and escalates, there is a chance that Pakistan could move itself closer to Saudi Arabia and conceivably invoke the mutual defence pact,” Kugelman said.


Israeli settlers kill Palestinian during raid on occupied West Bank village




Israeli settlers kill Palestinian during raid on occupied West Bank village


The raid comes just days after Israel approved 34 new illegal settlements in the West Bank


People carry the body of Palestinian Majed Hamadneh, who was killed during what the Palestinian Ministry of Health said was an Israeli settler attack, in Deir Jarir village near Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, April 11, 2026 [Mohammed Torokman/Reuters]



By Al Jazeera Staff and AFP
Published On 11 Apr 2026


Israeli settlers have killed a Palestinian man during a raid on a village in the occupied West Bank, the Palestinian Ministry of Health said.

Ali Majed Hamadneh, 23, was killed after settlers opened fire during a raid on Deir Jarir, northeast of Ramallah, the ministry said on Saturday.


Recommended Stories



“He was brought to the Palestine Medical Complex in a critical condition” and later succumbed to his gunshot wounds, the ministry said on Telegram.

Palestinian official news agency Wafa also reported the incident.

“Armed colonists, under the protection of Israeli forces, attacked Deir Jarir from its western entrance and opened fire toward residents in the area,” said Wafa.

There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military.

The raid comes two days after Israel approved 34 new settlements in the West Bank, a move condemned by the Palestinian Presidency’s office, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation and the European Union for violating international law.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing government has approved at least 102 settlements since coming to power in 2022 – a significant increase on past Israeli governments.

All Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank are illegal under international law.

Violence in the West Bank, which Israel has occupied since 1967, has risen sharply since Israel’s genocidal war against Palestinians in Gaza began in October 2023.

There has also been a spike in deadly attacks by Israeli settlers in the West Bank since the United States-Israel war on Iran began at the end of February, Palestinian authorities and the United Nations have said.

Settler assaults on Palestinians have persisted for years, often to the indifference of mainstream Israeli society.

But the recent surge has prompted criticism from influential rabbis, settler leaders, and even Israel’s military chief Eyal Zamir, who called the attacks “morally and ethically unacceptable”.


***


Just S-Whole land robbers


Russia-Ukraine Orthodox Easter ceasefire begins




Russia-Ukraine Orthodox Easter ceasefire begins


Both sides have agreed to observe the temporary truce, as US-led diplomatic efforts to end the war continue to stall


People hold pictures of missing Ukrainian soldiers as some of their comrades return from captivity after a prisoner of war (POW) swap, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in an undisclosed location in Ukraine, April 11, 2026 [Thomas Peter/Reuters]
By AFP and Reuters


Published On 11 Apr 2026


A temporary ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine has come into force, with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy saying Kyiv would respect it if Moscow did.

The ceasefire is due to last for 32 hours, from 4:00pm local time (13:00 GMT) on Saturday until midnight on Sunday, according to the Kremlin.

Russian President Vladimir Putin had ordered the ceasefire on Thursday to coincide with Orthodox Easter celebrations, more than a week after Zelenskyy first made the proposal.

Both sides have agreed to observe it.

“Ukraine will adhere to the ceasefire and respond strictly in kind. The absence of Russian strikes in the air, on land, and at sea will mean no response from our side,” Zelenskyy said in a post on social media.

The Ukrainian army said it was ready to “immediately” respond if Russia violated it.

Hours before the truce started, Russia launched at least 160 drones at Ukraine, killing four people in the country’s east and south and wounding dozens, Ukrainian authorities said.

The southern Odesa region was among the hardest hit, with authorities reporting two dead and damage to civilian infrastructure.



Russia announces Orthodox Easter ceasefire as Ukraine remains sceptical



Ukraine and Russia declare Easter ceasefire as 182 Ukrainians are freed in swap


Meanwhile, four people died in Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian-occupied parts of Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk and Kherson regions, according to Russian-installed officials.

Ukrainians have expressed scepticism about whether the truce will hold.

The two sides held a ceasefire for Orthodox Easter last year, but both accused the other of hundreds of violations.

Despite tensions over the truce, the warring sides exchanged 175 prisoners of war each on Saturday, according to officials.

The United Arab Emirates helped mediate the exchange, the Russian Ministry of Defence said.

During more than four years of war, Kyiv and Moscow have carried out regular POW exchanges. They are among the few concrete results to emerge from several rounds of United States-brokered peace talks between Ukraine and Russia, which remain stalled over the issue of territory.



Russia returns bodies of 1,000 Ukrainian service members


Ukraine has proposed freezing the conflict along the current front lines.

But Russia has rejected this, saying it wants Ukraine to give up all the territory in the Donetsk region that it currently controls – a demand Kyiv says is unacceptable.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia had not discussed the Easter proposal in advance with the US, nor did it signal any immediate revival of three-way peace talks.

Fighting on the front has come to a near standstill.

Russia has made small territorial gains at a high cost. But Kyiv recently managed to push back in the southeast, and Russian advances have been slowing since late 2025, according to the US-based Institute for the Study of War.

Moscow occupies just more than 19 percent of Ukraine, most of which was seized during the first weeks of the conflict.


Saturday, April 11, 2026

Footage Confirms World’s Most Expensive Air Defence Radar Destroyed in Iranian Strike


Military Watch:


Footage Confirms World’s Most Expensive Air Defence Radar Destroyed in Iranian Strike

Middle East , Missile and Space


Footage released by Qatari state media has for the first time shown the destruction on the ground of the AN/FPS-132 Block 5 Upgraded Early Warning Radar near Umm Dahal in Qatar, showing substantial internal damage after Iranian attacks on February 28. The radar is one of the most important and capable ground-based radar systems in the U.S. global missile warning architecture, although its extreme cost prevents widespread deployments, meaning the radar in Qatar is the only one of its kind outside the U.S. mainland. The system has a detection range of over 5,000 kilometres, and can provide an early warning of missile attacks within minutes of launch.

Damaged AN/FPS-132 Radar in Qatar
Damaged AN/FPS-132 Radar in Qatar

The AN/FPS-132 is the most costly early warning radar in the world, and is one of multiple high value radar systems destroyed in Iranian attacks, with three AN/TPY-2 X-band mobile radar system from the THAAD anti-ballistic missile system, each valued at an estimated $700 million to $1.1 billion, having also been struck in Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia. The destruction of these key radar systems within hours of the U.S. and Israel launching an assault on Iran on February 28 paved the way for a much higher success rate when Iran launched ballistic missile attacks against the U.S. and its strategic partners’ targets across the Middle East. By late March Iranian missiles striking targets in Israel were assessed by Israeli sources to have an 80 percent success rate, as missile defences increasingly faltered in large part due to the destruction of anti-missile radars. 

AN/TPY-2 Radar From THAAD System Destroyed in Engagements with Iranian Forces
AN/TPY-2 Radar From THAAD System Destroyed in Engagements with Iranian Forces

The AN/FPS-132 uses thousands of solid-state transmit/receive modules, and provides continuous surveillance, rather than intermittent scans. Each radar costs an estimated $1.1 billion, with U.S. sources assessing that it will take five to eight years to replace the one destroyed in Qatar. The radar became operational in 2013, and was deployed with the specific purpose of countering the Iranian and Syrian ballistic missile arsenals. Reporting by U.S. sources has widely indicated the destruction of the AN/FPS-132 seriously degraded missile-warning capabilities in the region because such radars are rare and hard to replace. 





U.S. Seeks OMEN to Boost Aircrew Awareness After Multiple F-15E Losses, F-35 “Shock” in Iran War



Saturday, April 11, 2026


U.S. Seeks OMEN to Boost Aircrew Awareness After Multiple F-15E Losses, F-35 “Shock” in Iran War


By Sumit Ahlawat
-April 11, 2026



The Iran War has been a rude awakening for the US. In little over one month, the US has lost at least eight aircraft, including Four F-15E Strike Eagles (3 in friendly fire and one shot down), one A-10 Thunderbolt, and one KC-135 aerial refueling aircraft.

The US forces lost (destroyed) two MC-130J transport planes when the aircraft were unable to take off from their makeshift runway in Iran during the rescue of the downed F-15E jet’s crew. Besides, at least seven aircraft have been damaged, including one F-35, one F-16, and five KC-135 tankers.

In drones, the US losses have been even more striking. Reportedly, the US has already lost more than 15 MQ-9 Reaper drones in the Iran War. This means that, on average, the US has been losing one aircraft per day.

Of course, all these aircraft were lost under different circumstances and for various reasons. For instance, the five KC-135 tankers were damaged while parked on a runway.

The vulnerability of drones is well known, and they have been hit in Yemen, Lebanon, Ukraine, Syria, and in various other conflict zones.

However, it is the loss of aircraft during combat operations that is hurting the US the most. The F-35 incident was the first recorded event in which a US Lightning II stealth aircraft was successfully struck.

However, in almost all mid-air shoot-downs during Operation Epic Fury, one thing that stands out is the lack of a common operating picture that integrates all relevant intelligence and data into actionable information.

Now, the Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) is seeking solutions to this vexing problem.

In its problem statement, the DIU described the handicap as follows: “Aircrew operating in contested environments lack an integrated, in-flight common operating picture (COP) that combines threat awareness, tactical datalink fusion, and blue-force integration.”

The three F-15E Strike Eagles were shot down in Kuwaiti airspace in a suspected case of ‘friendly fire’. This friendly fire incident could have been avoided had the fighter pilots had access to an updated battlefield picture that clearly identified all friendly forces and assets.

Similarly, the freak mid-air accident involving two KC-135 aerial refueller tankers could have been avoided had the pilots had access to real-time data on the position of other friendly aircraft in the vicinity.

Furthermore, the US forces had to self-destroy two MC-130J transport planes because they got stuck in muddy terrain.

U.S. President Donald Trump said in a press conference, “It was sandy, wet sand, so we thought there may be a problem taking off because of the weight of the plane… And then we also had all the men jumping back onto the planes, and they got pretty well bogged down.”


Destroyed E-3 Aircraft: Via: X


This could have been avoided if the US forces had updated, real-time information on the terrain, weather, and other variables.

This handicap is particularly acute for large aircraft, such as military transport planes and aerial refueling tankers, as they often operate with outdated maps and terrain data.

“This problem is especially relevant for large, high-value airlift and tanker aircraft that utilize avionics and mission systems that are optimized for more permissive operations.”

“This requires crews to rely heavily on pre-mission planning products, voice updates, and aging platform-specific displays that cannot dynamically integrate with enterprise battlefield, intelligence, communications, and logistics networks, or ingest mission-relevant updates under degraded, disrupted, intermittent, or limited (DDIL) communication environments,” the DIU said in its problem statement.

The lack of a common integrated picture directly impacts the survivability of aircraft in contested environments.

“As operations evolve toward contested logistics and increased threat scenarios, this gap directly degrades aircraft survivability, limits dynamic retasking, and constrains the ability of commanders to project and sustain force.”

To overcome these challenges, the US Air Force (USAF) aircraft are currently employing platform-agnostic, open mission systems for networking and interoperability, offering enhanced connectivity and flexibility. These systems include, but are not limited to, Software-Defined Radios (SDRs), on-board compute and storage with aircraft data bus interfaces, COTS display systems, software-defined networking (SD-WAN), sensor/data integration subsystems, and off-the-shelf communications equipment to get the data they need.

However, there are no overarching standards to follow, so during complex combat operations, aircraft often cannot communicate with one another or share critical battlefield information.

To address these shortcomings, the DIU is asking for an open-architecture software suite that fuses real-time data into a clear, credible common operating picture of moving objects, threats, and environmental conditions.

“To fully capitalize on these emerging open system architectures, the Department seeks prototype solutions for a modular, open mission engine (OMEN) that powers a suite of new mission applications and plugins for aircrew operating in contested environments.”

This engine should enable rapid development, deployment, and sustainment of mission applications across approved airborne and mobile form factors, it added.

The first application on the platform, the DIU proposal clarifies, should be an aviation Tactical Moving Map tool that improves in-flight situational awareness, threat understanding, and mission decision support under DDIL environments.

“The moving map tool will serve as a baseline for future mission capabilities,” it added.

In particular, the DIU seeks solutions to three technical lines of difficulty:

First, a government-owned, modular application engine with an open Software Development Kit (SDK), published application interfaces (APIs), reusable high-fidelity commercial-grade user interface (UI) components, and support for cross-platform deployment.

Solutions should support scalable lifecycle management, configuration control, secure software delivery, observability, and operation in connected, disconnected, and DDIL environments, it said.

Secondly, a mission application that fuses relevant operational data into a single aircrew display, including blue-force awareness, threat and airspace overlays, mission updates, and route decision support.

Solutions should emphasize usability, performance, offline resiliency, and suitability for operational aviation use, it added.


A handout picture provided by the Iranian Army office on December 31, 2022, shows Iranian troops during a military drill in Makran beach on the Gulf of Oman, near the Hormuz Strait. (Photo by Iranian Army office / AFP) / === RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – MANDATORY CREDIT “AFP PHOTO / HO / IRANIAN ARMY OFFICE” – NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS – DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS ===


And, thirdly, a data integration layer that normalizes operational and aeronautical data through a language-agnostic Critical Abstraction Layer (CAL) and modular protocol adapters. Relevant sources include Cursor on Target (CoT) for TAK ecosystem integration, Universal Command & Control Interface (UCI) / J-series pathways aligned to the Department of the Air Force’s Battle Network (DAF Battle Network), Unified Data Library (UDL), and common aviation sources such as DAFIF, D-FLIP, NOTAMs, and related mission data services.

The DIU further said that a successful delivery of the prototype would result in follow-on production agreements that might be substantially larger in scope.

“The magnitude of the follow-on production contract or agreement could be significantly larger than that of the Prototype OT agreement,” it said.

The solution will provide US aircraft pilots, even on older transport and refueling tankers, with access to a common aircrew display that provides real-time, map-based information on terrain, weather, friend-and-foe identification, and threat prioritization in contested environments, including disconnected and DDIL environments.

This could go a long way toward reducing US aircraft losses during complex combat operations.



Sumit Ahlawat has over a decade of experience in news media. He has worked with Press Trust of India, Times Now, Zee News, Economic Times, and Microsoft News. He holds a Master’s Degree in International Media and Modern History from the University of Sheffield, UK.

He can be reached at ahlawat.sumit85 (at) gmail.com

Thailand's enormous fishing industry highlights 'big trouble' caused by Middle East war






By Asia editor Karishma Vyas and Supattra Vimonsuk in Samut Sakhon, Thailand

6 hours ago



Fishermen say rising fuel prices are making their jobs unsustainable. (ABC News: Haidarr Jones)



When Captain Wongduen Meesamrong steered his fishing boat back to port through the Gulf of Thailand earlier this month after spending 15 days at sea, he was not expecting to return to unemployment.

Before he left, diesel was sitting at 83 cents a litre.

By the time he got back, it had more than doubled to about $2.22 a litre, a price that is far beyond the reach of most fishermen.

Iran war live updates: For the latest news on the Middle East crisis, read our blog

"I'll have to stop working for a long time," he told the ABC as his crew offloaded crates of squid and small fish in Samut Sakhon, Thailand's largest fishing and seafood processing port.

"The fuel price is so expensive. We can't go out.

"We're in big trouble. All over the sea, people are feeling it."


Wongduen Meesamrong says fishermen "all over the sea" are feeling the pain.(ABC News: Haidarr Jones)


Across the country, tens of thousands of small and commercial vessels working in Thailand's multi-billion-dollar fishing industry are stranded on shore as the war in the Middle East and the blockade on the Strait of Hormuz strangle fuel supplies and push up prices.

Thailand is vulnerable because it imports about 50 per cent of its energy from the Middle East.

And in Samut Sakhon, fishermen and fishmongers alike tell the ABC their problems are compounded by the fact that consumers are trying to save money, reducing demand for their catch.


From the markets to the docks


"Millions of people will feel the impact because fisheries is an upstream business — there are a lot of businesses connected to it," said Sombat Rungruangsakorn, who owns two vessels, including the one Mr Wongduen captains.

The industry is extremely fuel-intensive. Thailand's fishing boats consume about 80-90 million litres of fuel per month, with many making voyages that stretch for weeks and cover more than 100 kilometres offshore. Even a small hike in prices can be difficult to manage.

Mr Sombat said the last time he saw such sudden and astronomical price surges was more than 30 years ago, during the Gulf War in the early 1990s.


Consumers, feeling the impact of fuel prices too, are also buying less seafood.(ABC News: Haidarr Jones)


Once fuel prices climb above $1.30, he said, it is simply not profitable to send his boats out.

At stake is not only the livelihood of fishermen and their families, but also the hundreds of thousands of migrants, mostly from war-torn Myanmar, who work on the vessels.


Stolen fuel and jobs on the line


While the war has created this crisis, fishermen tell the ABC that unscrupulous actors are compounding it.

They are suspicious that at least some fuel is being hoarded on ships offshore as suppliers wait for prices to rise further before selling it on.

And they have good reason to be sceptical, with reports that up to 70 million litres of oil have gone missing from the southern port city of Surat Thani. The Department of Special Investigation (DSI) said it was examining transport records, vessel routes and possible ship-to-ship transfers at sea.


The fuel crisis is impacting on all parts of the supply chain in Thailand.(ABC News: Haidarr Jones)


Justice Minister Police Lieutenant General Rutthapon Naowarat told Thai media the fuel was unloaded from tankers onto smaller vessels, never to be seen again.

With anger mounting among small and large fishing businesses, the Thai government announced it was working on increasing supplies of B20, a cheaper fuel that mixes diesel with biodiesel, a type of alternative fuel usually manufactured from vegetable oil or animal fats.

This week, the government also began cutting retail diesel prices by roughly 9 cents per litre.


Mongkol Mongkoltrirak says thousands of workers could lose their jobs.(ABC News: Haidarr Jones)


But the measure has not been welcomed by fishermen, who say the discount will do little to alleviate their problem.

"The price of seafood won't catch up with the price of fuel, which has increased rapidly in one month," said Mongkol Mongkoltrirak, the director of the Samut Sakhon Fisheries Association.

"If more than 80 per cent of fishing vessels are grounded, 150,000 workers will lose their jobs."


More on fuel prices

Mr Mongkol said he wanted the government to waive income tax for fishermen this year and create a recovery fund that offered loans without interest for those who had been forced to hang up their nets.

Without drastic measures, he warned, it would only be a matter of time before seafood supplies were affected in Thailand and abroad.

"The price of seafood will not increase immediately because there is still enough supply, but the demand is decreasing," he said.

"Consumers are worried that the crisis might drag on, and they want to keep money in their pocket."
$40 of diesel for $9 of fish

All eyes are now on peace talks between the US and Iran that are taking place in Pakistan. Many in Thailand's fishing community aren't familiar with how or why the war started, but they know that it has come with a high cost.

In the Tha Chin River in Samut Sakhon, just before it opens into the Gulf of Thailand, Sooksan Kanual woke up in the dark to try his luck.


Sooksan Kanual spent $40 on diesel just to return with $9 worth of fish.(ABC News: Haidarr Jones)


The 50-year-old fisherman scraped together some money for fuel and took his long-tail boat out at four in the morning. But five hours later, when the ABC met him, he was regretting his decision.

He had spent almost $40 on diesel, and all he had to show for it was $9 worth of fish.

"It is not worth it. The fuel is so expensive, I can't stand it anymore. I'll have to find a job on land. It is the only way to survive," he said.


Defence minister says no tolerance for misconduct after soldier dies from Bentong incident injuries






Defence minister says no tolerance for misconduct after soldier dies from Bentong incident injuries



Defence Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin said he was deeply saddened by the soldier’s passing and extended condolences to the family. — Bernama pic

Saturday, 11 Apr 2026 4:09 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, April 11 — The Defence Ministry today expressed sorrow over the death of Prebet Muhammad Amirul Raziq bin Rosafindi, a Malaysian Army personnel who succumbed to injuries following an incident in Bentong, Pahang.

Defence Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin said he was deeply saddened by the soldier’s passing and extended condolences to the family.

“I am deeply saddened to receive the news of the passing of Prebet Muhammad Amirul Raziq bin Rosafindi, a Malaysian Army personnel, following an incident in Bentong, Pahang.


“My condolences to the entire family of the late. May they be granted strength and patience in facing this difficult time. Let us pray that the deceased is placed among the faithful and righteous,” he said in a statement.


He said the ministry viewed the incident seriously, stressing that any form of violence, misconduct or disciplinary breach does not reflect the values, integrity, and professionalism upheld by the Malaysian Armed Forces.

“There will be no compromise against any party involved. The case is currently under legal process and will be determined fully by the courts in accordance with the rule of law,” he said.


He added that the ministry would ensure justice is fully served and has instructed the Malaysian Armed Forces to strengthen discipline and integrity within its ranks.

“This is to ensure that incidents like this do not recur,” he said.

Earlier reports said Muhammad Amirul Raziq had been receiving treatment at a hospital in Temerloh, Pahang, after being allegedly assaulted in an incident linked to a military camp in Bentong.

The case has since drawn attention following reports that several personnel were involved in the alleged assault, with investigations ongoing.

At least seven Palestinians killed in Israeli attacks on Gaza




At least seven Palestinians killed in Israeli attacks on Gaza


An early-morning strike hits a group of civilians in ​​Bureij camp as drones attack a tent in Khan Younis displacement site


Palestinians mourn over the bodies of people killed in an Israeli strike in Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza Strip on April 11, 2026 [Abdel Kareem Hana/AP]



By Al Jazeera Staff and AFP
Published On 11 Apr 2026


At least seven Palestinians have been killed, and others wounded, in Israeli strikes across the central and southern Gaza Strip.

An Israeli drone fired two missiles close to a police post in Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza, Mahmoud Bassal, a spokesman for Gaza’s civil defence rescue service told the AFP news agency on Saturday.

Medical sources confirmed the early morning attack to Al Jazeera, saying the strike hit a group of civilians in the “Block 9” area of Bureij. Several people were killed and seriously wounded, they said.

Ambulance crews faced difficult conditions as they worked to transport the bodies and those injured to nearby hospitals, the sources added.

The al-Aqsa hospital in central Gaza told AFP it had received six bodies and seven wounded people, including four in critical condition. The nearby al-Awda hospital said it received one fatality and two wounded people.

Separately, in the southern Gaza Strip, Nasser Medical Complex said it received three wounded people following an Israeli drone strike against a tent of displaced people in the town of Bani Suheila, located east of Khan Younis.

Al Jazeera’s correspondent on the ground also reported Israeli artillery shelling and heavy tank fire near Bani Suheila and east of Gaza City.

Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza has killed more than 72,300 people since it began in October 2023, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health, including at least 738 since the so-called ceasefire went into effect last October.

The tally includes at least 32 deaths since the start of April alone – among them Al Jazeera journalist Mohammed Wishah, who was killed in an attack west of Gaza City earlier this week.

United Nations human rights chief Volker Turk on Friday condemned Israel’s recent violence in the Gaza Strip, saying that “the unrelenting pattern of killings” reflects Israel’s “sweeping impunity”.

“For the past 10 days, Palestinians are still being killed and injured in what is left of their homes, shelters and tents of displaced families, on the streets, in vehicles, at a medical facility and a classroom,” Turk said.


Israeli settlers stand at a water slide in the Israeli-occupied West Bank village of Ras Ein al-Auja on April 9, 2026 [Ilia Yefimovich/AFP]


West Bank raids, arrests continue

Meanwhile, in the occupied West Bank, Israeli settlers and forces stormed homes and villages throughout the morning, continuing an escalating campaign to expand their illegal settlements.

The Palestinian Wafa news agency reported that Israeli forces arrested seven people east of Qalqilya and separately descended upon Bir al-Basha, near the city of Jenin, where they detained various residents and interrogated them.

In al-Maniya, southeast of Bethlehem, Israeli settlers fanned out across the streets, shone spotlights inside homes and provoked residents.

Another group of settlers set fire to a house in the village of Duma in the Nablus governorate, according to village council head Suleiman Dawabsheh.

Residents managed to control the fire and prevent it from spreading, Dawabsheh said.

Israeli media outlets have reported the recent secret approval of 34 new illegal West Bank settlements, adding to 68 that have been endorsed since Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government rose to power in 2022.

Various foreign governments and organisations, including the European Union, Turkiye, Sweden and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, have condemned the move as a flagrant violation of international law.


Israel rejects ceasefire with Hezbollah ahead of Lebanon talks next week




Israel rejects ceasefire with Hezbollah ahead of Lebanon talks next week


Talks due in Washington as Israel continues deadly strikes in Lebanon, and Iran says there is no ceasefire without it


Relief efforts and debris removal in Beirut after Israeli attacks in the Dahieh district [Houssam Shbaro/Anadolu Agency]



By Al Jazeera Staff, AFP and Reuters
Published On 11 Apr 2026


Israel says it will not discuss a ceasefire with Hezbollah when it meets Lebanese officials for talks in Washington next week – as Israeli attacks on Lebanon go on.

Israeli and Lebanese ambassadors held late-night discussions on Friday to finalise arrangements for the meeting due at the state department on Tuesday.

Israel’s ambassador, Yechiel Leiter, said the talks would mark the start of formal negotiations with the Lebanese government, despite the absence of diplomatic relations between the two countries.

“Israel agreed to begin formal peace negotiations” with Lebanon, he said.

But he ruled out any discussion involving Hezbollah.

“Israel refused to discuss a ceasefire with the Hezbollah terrorist organisation, which continues to attack Israel and is the main obstacle to peace between the two countries,” he added.

The diplomatic push comes as Israeli strikes intensify across Lebanon. The National News Agency reported the killing of three people on Saturday when an air strike destroyed a residential building in Mayfadoun in Nabatieh district.

Media reports suggest Washington and Beirut have urged Israel to pause attacks before the talks. Reuters, citing Axios, said both the Lebanese government and the Trump administration have requested a temporary halt to hostilities, though the White House has not publicly confirmed the report.

Trump said he had asked Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu to scale back the ongoing bombardment, warning that continued strikes could undermine the fragile ceasefire between the US and Iran. Talks between them are set to begin in Pakistan on Saturday.



Pakistan ambassador speaks to Al Jazeera on eve of US-Iran talks



Israeli drone attack kills Palestinians near Gaza mosque



Vance arrives in Pakistan for talks with Iran


Iran: No talks without Lebanon

Tehran has said that the two-week pause in hostilities agreed earlier this week with Washington includes an end to fighting between Israel and Hezbollah. Israel has rejected that interpretation and continued its military campaign, including a large-scale assault on Wednesday that killed and wounded over 1,000 people.


Iran responded by continuing to keep the Strait of Hormuz shut.

Trump later said that Lebanon was not part of the ceasefire arrangement, contradicting claims by Iran and mediator Pakistan.

The speaker of Iran’s Parliament, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, said Tehran would not engage in negotiations without a ceasefire in Lebanon and the release of frozen Iranian assets.

The US vice president, JD Vance, envoy Steve Witkoff and adviser Jared Kushner are among the American delegation which landed in Islamabad for talks with Iranian representatives.

Despite diplomatic efforts, fighting in Lebanon shows no sign of easing. Israel has carried out repeated strikes since a ceasefire started in November 2024. It has been violated hundreds of times.

After the start of the US and Israel’s war on Iran on February 28, Hezbollah launched a cross-border retaliatory attack on March 2. Israel then escalated its campaign, launching a widespread bombardment and ground offensive in southern Lebanon.

Lebanese authorities say the fighting has killed close to 2,000 people in recent weeks, with more than 350 killed on Wednesday alone.

With Israel refusing to include Hezbollah in ceasefire discussions, next week’s talks are likely to focus on demands directed at the Lebanese state, which has long struggled to contain the armed group.


Palestinians alarmed as Israel approves 34 new West Bank settlements


FMT:

Palestinians alarmed as Israel approves 34 new West Bank settlements


The 34 settlements come on top of 68 others already approved since prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu's right-wing government came to power in 2022


The Israeli settlements are illegal under international law. (Reuters pic)


DEIR AMMAR: Israel has approved 34 new settlements in the occupied West Bank, according to an NGO and Israeli media, causing concern among Palestinians that their land could soon be confiscated.

“The security cabinet secretly decided to establish 34 new settlements,” said the anti-settlement watchdog Peace Now of the decision taken on April 1.

The 34 settlements come on top of 68 others already approved since prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing government came to power in 2022.


The decision has not been officially published by any government body, and the defence ministry, in charge of settlements in the occupied West Bank, declined to respond to AFP’s questions.

“We are not addressing this issue,” a spokesperson for the ministry told AFP.

According to news channel i24News, 10 of the 34 settlements are already existing outposts, which are illegal under Israeli law, but will now be retroactively legalised under the decision.

The remaining 24 are yet to be built.

All settlements are illegal under international law.

In the Palestinian village of Deir Ammar, residents said they were worried that a settler outpost established on a hilltop near their area about a year ago would be one of the legalised settlements.


According to a list of the 34 settlements published by the Palestinian Authority’s Colonisation and Wall Resistance Commission, which deals with settlement matters, the location of the future settlement of Ramatim Tzofim matches that of the outpost near Deir Ammar, whose residents have been attacked at least three times by the new settlers.


‘We are finished‘

Nael Mussa, a farmer whose chicken coop and its adjacent farmhouse were attacked on several occasions, told AFP he feared the government decision would lead to more land grabs.

“We are effectively finished. If this becomes a settlement, we are finished in Deir Ammar. We will have no land left at all,” 54-year-old Mussa told AFP.


Palestinian farmer Ismail Awdeh expressed a similar sentiment.

“What we fear is that tomorrow this area will become a settlement and the land will be taken from us… of course it will grow,” Awdeh said, referring to the settlement.

“This affects every resident in this area… This land is considered the food basket of the village,” he told AFP.

Residents said settlers placed rocks on a road used by farmers to reach their fields near the new outpost, and damaged an olive tree orchard there.

News website Ynet reported that military chief Eyal Zamir warned during the security cabinet meeting on April 1 that the army could “collapse” because of increasing demands on its manpower.

That included the legalisation of dozens of outposts, granting them official settlement status and therefore for protection from Israeli troops.

Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967.

Excluding east Jerusalem, more than 500,000 Israelis now live there in settlements, among some three million Palestinians.

Settlement expansion has been a policy under successive Israeli governments since 1967, but has accelerated significantly under the current Netanyahu-led coalition, widely regarded as one of the most right-wing in Israel’s history.

Rights groups say approvals of new settlements, land seizures and settler violence have further increased since the start of the Gaza war in October 2023.


***


Just frigging land robbers like white settlers elsewhere, eg. America, South Africa, Aus, Malaya, Indon, India, South America etc