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Myanmar burns confiscated drugs worth around $300 million

Myanmar burns confiscated drugs worth around $300 million
A police officer walks past a burning pile of seized illegal drugs during a destruction ceremony to in Yangon on June 26, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 26 June 2025

Myanmar burns confiscated drugs worth around $300 million

Myanmar burns confiscated drugs worth around $300 million
  • The destroyed drugs included opium, heroin, methamphetamine, marijuana, ketamine and the stimulant known as ice
  • Myanmar has a long history of drug production linked to political and economic insecurity caused by decades of armed conflict

YANGON: Officials in Myanmar’s major cities destroyed about $300 million worth of confiscated illegal drugs Thursday.
The destroyed drugs included opium, heroin, methamphetamine, marijuana, ketamine and the stimulant known as ice, or crystal meth, Yangon Police Brig. Gen. Sein Lwin said in a speech at a drug-burning ceremony.
The drug burnings came nearly a month after UN experts warned of unprecedented levels of methamphetamine production and trafficking from Southeast Asia’s Golden Triangle region, where the borders of Myanmar, Laos and Thailand meet, and Myanmar’s eastern Shan State in particular.
The production of opium and heroin historically flourished there, largely because of the lawlessness in border areas where Myanmar’s central government has been able to exercise only minimum control over various ethnic minority militias, some of them partners in the drug trade.
The UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said in a May report that the political crisis across the country after the military takeover in 2021 — which led to a civil war — has turbocharged growth of the methamphetamine trade.
In the country’s biggest city, Yangon, a massive pile of drugs worth more than $117 million went up in a blaze, Sein Lwin said.
Similar events to mark the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking also occurred in the country’s second-largest city of Mandalay, and in Taunggyi, the capital of eastern Myanmar’s Shan state, all areas close to where the drugs are produced.
A police official from the capital Naypyitaw told The Associated Press that the substances burned in three locations were worth $297.95 million. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the information has not yet been publicly announced.
Myanmar has a long history of drug production linked to political and economic insecurity caused by decades of armed conflict. It has been a major source of illegal drugs destined for East and Southeast Asia, despite repeated efforts to crack down.
That has led the flow of drugs to surge “across not only East and Southeast Asia, but also increasingly into South Asia, in particular Northeast India,” the UN said last month. Drugs are increasingly trafficked from Myanmar to Cambodia, mostly through Laos, as well as through maritime routes linking Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines, with Sabah in Malaysia serving as a key transit hub, it added.
The UN agency labeled Myanmar in 2023 as the world’s largest opium producer.


Trump is marching the country into a government shutdown, says Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries

Trump is marching the country into a government shutdown, says Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries
Updated 27 September 2025

Trump is marching the country into a government shutdown, says Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries

Trump is marching the country into a government shutdown, says Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries
  • Jeffries laments that Trump cancelled his meeting with Democratic leaders ahead of the Oct. 1 deadline
  • Democrats are trying to strike a deal to save health care funding from cuts, but the Republicans won't budge

 

WASHINGTON: House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said President Donald Trump and the Republican Party are “marching the country” into a government shutdown over their refusal to meet with Democrats and strike a deal to save health care funding from cuts.
Jeffries told the Associated Press in an interview late Friday that he remained hopeful Congress could reach an agreement to prevent a federal funding lapse next week, ahead of the Oct. 1 deadline.
But with Republicans having canceled next week’s House voting session and Trump canceling his meeting with the Democratic leaders this week, he said, “the onus is on Donald Trump to show some presidential leadership.”
“Donald Trump and Republicans are chaos agents,” Jeffries said. “At moments in time that require stable, presidential leadership, Donald Trump is incapable of providing it.”
This shutdown, not the nation’s first, could be more difficult. Trump’s budget office this week ordered federal agencies to prepare a mass firing of federal workers, rather than the typical temporary employee furlough, if the federal government were to close.
The Republican leaders, Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, say a shutdown can still be avoided if Democrats drop their demands. Before leaving town, House Republicans approved legislation that would keep the government funded into November, as Congress works to finish up its regular appropriations work. But that measure failed in the Senate, as did a Democrat alternative that included the health care funds.
“It’s my hope that we can find resolution over the next few days and avoid a government shutdown,” Jeffries said.
The Democratic leader, who is in line to become the House speaker if Democrats regain the majority in next year’s midterm elections, has become the party’s chief messenger in the high-stakes funding fight. The Democrats are confronting restive voters demanding that they stand up to the Trump administration and quit funding the White House’s agenda.
Trump may not say Jeffries’ name out loud — the Democratic leader said he was informed recently that in the past decade, since Trump entered politics, the Republican president has not mentioned the Democrat from Brooklyn – but Jeffries this week repeatedly name-checked him.
“Donald Trump, Get back to Washington, DC.,” Jeffries said earlier at the US Capitol, as the president attended the Ryder Cup in New York. “Why are you at a golf event right now? And the government is four days away from closing. That’s outrageous.”
After Trump abruptly canceled the planned meeting with him and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, Jeffries said at the Capitol, “Why did you back out of the meeting, bro?”
Jeffries told his colleagues on a private conference call on Friday with House Democrats to “stay the course.”
Democrats are fighting to shore up health care funding, and in particular to prevent the expiration of enhanced subsidies, put in place during the COVID-19 crisis, that helped Americans pay for insurance through the Affordable Care Act exchanges. Without action, the boosted subsidy will lapse, risking premium spikes for millions of Americans nationwide.
Republicans have said Democratic demands to roll back the Medicaid cuts in the GOP’s big tax cuts and spending bill that Trump signed into law this summer are a nonstarter. And the GOP leaders have said talks on the ACA subsidies can wait until the end of the year, when they are set to expire.
“House Democrats are united,” Jeffries said. “Donald Trump and the Republican Party are marching the country into a painful government shutdown because they do not want to address the health care crisis that they created.”
The Republican congressional leaders believe Democrats are heading toward a political cliff.
“They’re walking in a trap they all set for themselves,” Johnson, of Louisiana, said during an interview on the Moon Griffon radio show in his home state.
Johnson acknowledged he encouraged Trump not to meet with the Democratic leaders this week after the White House had already agreed to Thursday’s scheduled meeting. Trump abruptly pulled out.
“He and I talked about it at length yesterday and the day before. I said, look, when they get their job done, once they do the basic governing work of keeping the government open, as president, then you can have a meeting with him,” Johnson said on the Mike & McCarty Show. “Of course, it might be productive at that point, but right now, this is just a waste of his time.”
Trump has been here before. During his first term, the country endured the longest shutdown, some 35 days over the 2018-19 winter holiday season, as lawmakers refused his demand for funding to build a promised US-Mexico border wall.
Before that, the government shut down for more than two weeks in 2013, during the Obama administration, over failed Republican efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.
Jeffries expects this shutdown, if it happens, would end as those past ones did, he said.
“At the end of both of those shutdowns, Republicans came to the conclusion that their position was unsustainable,” he said. “And in my view, that’s exactly what will take place this time around, if Republicans shut the government down because they want to continue to gut the health care of everyday Americans.”
 


US to revoke Colombian president’s visa over ‘incendiary actions’

US to revoke Colombian president’s visa over ‘incendiary actions’
Updated 27 September 2025

US to revoke Colombian president’s visa over ‘incendiary actions’

US to revoke Colombian president’s visa over ‘incendiary actions’
  • The US State Department said: “We will revoke Petro’s visa due to his reckless and incendiary actions”

WASHINGTON: The US State Department said Friday it would revoke the visa of Colombia’s leftist President Gustavo Petro for his “incendiary actions” during a street protest in New York.
“Earlier today, Colombian president @petrogustavo stood on a NYC street and urged US soldiers to disobey orders and incite violence,” the State Department said in a post on X.
“We will revoke Petro’s visa due to his reckless and incendiary actions,” it said.


South Korea’s top diplomat says his nation has asked Trump to be a ‘peacemaker’ with North Korea

South Korea’s top diplomat says his nation has asked Trump to be a ‘peacemaker’ with North Korea
Updated 27 September 2025

South Korea’s top diplomat says his nation has asked Trump to be a ‘peacemaker’ with North Korea

South Korea’s top diplomat says his nation has asked Trump to be a ‘peacemaker’ with North Korea
  • Trump “welcomed” the request from Seoul “and he expressed his willingness to be engaged with North Korea again,” says South Korean FM
  • The US president and North Korea's Kim Jon Un met three times in 2018 and 2019 as North Korea was building a nuclear weapons stockpile 

UNITED NATIONS: South Korea’s president has asked President Donald Trump to become “a peacemaker” and use his leadership to get North Korea to talks to reduce military tensions on the Korean Peninsula, the South’s top diplomat said Friday.
Trump “welcomed” the request from President Lee Jae-myung “and he expressed his willingness to be engaged with North Korea again,” Foreign Minister Cho Hyun said in an interview with The Associated Press. There was no immediate word from the White House.
Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un met three times as North Korea was building a nuclear weapons stockpile, which Kim views as key to the country’s security and his continued rule of the northeast Asian country.
There were two summits in Singapore in June 2018, and in Vietnam in February 2019, where Trump and Kim disagreed about US-led sanctions against the North. A third meeting that year at the border between the two Koreas failed to salvage their nuclear talks — and Kim has since shunned any diplomacy with the US and South Korea.
“It would be fantastic if they met with each other in the near future,” Cho said. “And President Lee Jae-myung made it clear to President Trump that he will not be sitting in the driver’s seat. He asked president Trump to become a peacemaker, and he relegated himself to become a pacemaker,” the foreign minister said. “We don’t mind. On the contrary, we want president Trump (to) exercise his leadership to pull North Korea to dialogue table.”
Can a meeting happen?
Since Trump returned to power in January, he has repeatedly expressed hope of restarting talks with Kim. The North Korean leader said Monday he still has “good memories” of Trump but urged the United States to drop its demand that the North surrender its nuclear arms as a precondition for resuming long-stalled diplomacy.
Trump is expected to visit South Korea next month to attend the Asia-PacificEconomic Cooperation summit, which has prompted media speculation that he might meet Kim again at the border. Trump is also expected to meet with Chinese leader Xi Jinping during that meeting.
The foreign minister said Lee asked Trump to take the lead because the world has changed and become “much more precarious” since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.
“Accordingly, we are equally worried about any possible military skirmish on the Korean Peninsula,” Cho said. “So we are compelled to explore dialogues with North Korea to reduce the military tension, and at least we want to have a hotline.”
He stressed that denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula “is the imperative – we cannot let it go.”
Tensions between the Koreas continue apace
Early Friday, South Korea’s military said it fired warning shots to drive away a North Korean merchant ship that briefly crossed the disputed western sea boundary between the two countries, amid continuing high tensions.
“I’m not surprised at all,” Cho said, “but this incident justifies the policy of the new government that we need to have a hotline between the militaries, reduce the military tension and build confidence between the two parties.”
Lee, who headed the left-leaning Democratic Party, won a snap election in June following the impeachment of former President Yoon Suk Yeol after his short-lived imposition of martial law in December. Cho, a career diplomat and former UN ambassador, took office as foreign minister on July 19.
In Lee’s speech to the annual meeting of world leaders at the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, he said South Korea has come back to the international community as a normal state after the domestic turmoil and has demonstrated its commitment to democracy.
Cho said he felt “a bit uncomfortable” talking about the previous government compared to the current government, since Yoon was elected. But Cho recalled that when Yoon was elected, he was convinced “he would become an aberration.”
Peace is the priority, the diplomat says
Since becoming foreign minister, Cho said he has been explaining to neighboring countries, including during visits to Japan and China, that the new government “is determined to seek peace on the Korean Peninsula and also in northeast Asia.”
He said the government wants to engage China and he had a “very good constructive meeting” with Foreign Minister Wang Yi, “but I meade it clear that there are certain things we cannot accept.”
Cho referred to China’s installation of “something” in the Yellow Sea that infringes on South Korea’s sovereignty. “So we made it clear that it be removed. Otherwise, we would think about taking proper measures,” he said.
Cho flew to Washington after a massive raid by US immigration officers at a Hyundai plant in southeast Georgia detained 475 people, the majority of them South Koreans, became a major diplomatic issue between the two countries. The minister said Trump intervened and wanted them to remain, but they were chained and handcuffed and his primary objective was to get them back home.
Cho said his talks with Secretary of State Marco Rubio ended up having “a silver lining” because obtaining visas for South Korean workers has been a longstanding problem and “we were able to address this issue squarely and we will be able to sort out the problem.”
 


Australia’s Albanese confident on AUKUS pact after meeting UK’s Starmer

Australia’s Albanese confident on AUKUS pact after meeting UK’s Starmer
Updated 27 September 2025

Australia’s Albanese confident on AUKUS pact after meeting UK’s Starmer

Australia’s Albanese confident on AUKUS pact after meeting UK’s Starmer

SYDNEY: Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese expressed confidence on Friday that the AUKUS nuclear submarine deal with the US and Britain would move forward, after meeting his British counterpart, Keir Starmer.
Speaking in London, Albanese said the meeting was a chance to discuss the “strongly building” support for AUKUS between the two allies but would not be drawn on the position of US President Donald Trump.
The AUKUS pact, sealed in 2021, aims to provide Australia with nuclear-powered attack submarines from the next decade to counter China’s ambitions in the Indo-Pacific region.
Trump’s administration is undertaking a formal AUKUS review led by Elbridge Colby, a top Pentagon policy official and public critic of the agreement.
Asked if his meeting with Starmer gave him increased confidence that AUKUS would proceed, Albanese said: “I have always been confident about AUKUS going ahead.
“Every meeting I’ve had and discussions I’ve had with people in the US administration have always been positive about AUKUS,” he said, according to an official transcript.
Under AUKUS — worth hundreds of billions of dollars — Washington will sell several Virginia-class nuclear-powered submarines to Canberra, while Britain and Australia will later build a new AUKUS-class submarine.
Australia and Britain signed a treaty in July to bolster cooperation over the next 50 years on AUKUS.
During his visit, Albanese is also expected to meet with King Charles, Australia’s official head of state.


Venezuela at UN seeks support against US ‘threat’

Venezuela at UN seeks support against US ‘threat’
Updated 27 September 2025

Venezuela at UN seeks support against US ‘threat’

Venezuela at UN seeks support against US ‘threat’
  • US President Donald Trump has deployed eight warships and a nuclear-powered submarine to the southern Caribbean as part of a stated plan to combat drug trafficking

UNITED NATIONS, United States: Venezuela called Friday at the United Nations for solidarity against the “threat” of the United States, which has carried out deadly strikes against alleged drug-trafficking boats.
“As they can’t accuse Venezuela of having weapons of mass destruction or nuclear weapons, they’re making up vulgar and perverse lies that no one believes, neither in the United States nor around the world, to justify an atrocious, extravagant and immoral multi-billion-dollar military threat,” Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yvan Gil Pinto said in an address to the General Assembly.
“We would like to thank the governments and peoples of the world, including from the United States, for denouncing this attempt to wage war,” he said.
US President Donald Trump has deployed eight warships and a nuclear-powered submarine to the southern Caribbean as part of a stated plan to combat drug trafficking.
US forces have destroyed at least three suspected drug boats in the Caribbean in recent weeks, killing over a dozen people in a move decried as “extrajudicial execution” by UN experts.
The United States has also refused an appeal for dialogue by President Nicolas Maduro, a firebrand leftist not recognized by the United States after wide allegations of irregularities in his last election.
Maduro and his late predecessor Hugo Chavez had once been regular presences at the annual week of leaders’ meetings at the United Nations.
Maduro did not come this year, with Secretary of State Marco Rubio describing him as a fugitive from justice over a US indictment on drug-trafficking allegations.