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India trials Delhi cloud seeding to combat deadly smog

India trials Delhi cloud seeding to combat deadly smog
Workers on a boat dissolve a solution intended to clear the toxic foam floating on the Yamuna river, ahead of the Hindu religious festival of Chhath Puja, in New Delhi, India, on October 24, 2025. (REUTERS)
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India trials Delhi cloud seeding to combat deadly smog

India trials Delhi cloud seeding to combat deadly smog
  • Cloud seeding is the practice of using aeroplanes to fire salt or other chemicals into clouds to induce rain
  • New Delhi, its sprawling metropolitan region of 30 million regularly rank among world’s most polluted capitals

NEW DELHI: India trialled cloud seeding over its smog-filled capital for the first time, spraying a chemical from an aeroplane to encourage rain and wash deadly particles out of the air.

Cloud seeding is the practice of using aeroplanes to fire salt or other chemicals into clouds to induce rain.

New Delhi city authorities, working with the government’s Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, launched a test run on Thursday afternoon using a Cessna light aeroplane over the city’s northern Burari area.

“A trial seeding flight was done... in which cloud seeding flares were fired,” Delhi Minister Manjinder Singh Sirsa said in a statement late Thursday.

“This flight was the proving flight for checking the capabilities for cloud seeding, the readiness and endurance of the aircraft, the capability assessment of the cloud seeding fitments and flares, and coordination among all involved agencies.”

It comes ahead of a planned rollout of the scheme.

Delhi’s Chief Minister Rekha Gupta said that “if conditions remain favorable, Delhi will experience its first artificial rain on October 29.”

It was not immediately clear what chemical was used in the test to encourage the rain.

New Delhi and its sprawling metropolitan region of 30 million people are regularly ranked among the world’s most polluted capitals, with acrid smog blanketing the skyline each winter.

Cooler air traps pollutants close to the ground, creating a deadly mix of emissions from crop burning, factories and heavy traffic.

Levels of PM2.5 — cancer-causing microparticles small enough to enter the bloodstream — at times rise to as much as 60 times UN daily health limits.

Pollution rose this week after days of fireworks launched to mark Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights, shooting PM2.5 levels to more than 56 times the limit.

That came after the Supreme Court this month eased a blanket ban on fireworks to allow the use of the less-polluting “green” crackers — developed to reduce particulate emission.

At dawn on Thursday, PM 2.5 levels were 154 micrograms per cubic meter in parts of New Delhi, according to monitoring organization IQAir, just more than 10 times World Health Organization limits.

A study found in September that the noxious air is even turning Delhi’s iconic 17th-century Red Fort black.

Scientists warned that the UNESCO World Heritage Site is being steadily disfigured by a black crust, according to a study published in the Heritage journal by a joint team of Indian and Italian researchers.

Invented in the 1940s, countries have been seeding clouds for decades to alleviate drought, fight forest fires and even to disperse fog at airports.

China used it in 2008 to try to stop rain from falling on Beijing’s Olympic stadium.

But research on the effects of cloud seeding on neighboring regions is mixed — and some evidence suggests it does not work very well even in the target area.


Europe must nurse itself after US aid cuts: WHO director

Updated 3 sec ago

Europe must nurse itself after US aid cuts: WHO director

Europe must nurse itself after US aid cuts: WHO director
COPENHAGEN: Drastic aid cuts, notably by the United States, have made it vital for Europe to better manage health resources, the director of WHO Europe told AFP.
“We have a huge challenge, because the majority of our programs were funded by USAID and the US,” Hans Kluge of the World Health Organization Europe told AFP in an interview days before a meeting of the 53 countries of the WHO European region.
Since taking office in January, US President Donald Trump has slashed US international aid and effectively dismantled USAID, the world’s largest humanitarian aid agency.
Kluge said the WHO was experiencing an “existential” crisis with countries such as Britain, France and Germany, in addition to the United States, contributing significantly less.
Despite a 20-percent budget cut, WHO Europe wants to boost its role within domestic European health administrations.
“The WHO Europe of the future... is healthier, stronger, trusted, evidence-based, and politically neutral,” he said.
Kluge’s plan is based on restructuring the organization and prioritising its missions.

- Mental health crisis -

Kluge said WHO Europe needed a “dual track” approach needing to manage “manage a current crisis — (it) can be war, flooding” while keeping “core public health programs operational.”
“This is the biggest lesson learned from (the) Covid-19” pandemic, he said.
In Ukraine, for example, Europe is focusing its efforts on defense and “not enough on health.”
Europe must also tackle its mental health problem, aggravated by war, loneliness, anxiety and the aftermath of the Covid pandemic, he said.
“That’s one of the big things, the hottest issues,” he said, stressing the need to build up “citizen resilience.”
One European in six and one child in five will experience mental health problems at some point in their life, according to the WHO.
Kluge said his organization also needed to address worrying regional trends including youth addiction, a lack of online protection, the climate crisis and non-infectious diseases.
“We can channel our few resources in those directions,” he insisted.
Vaccinations are also crucial, he said, pointing out that in 2023, there were 366,000 children who had never received any kind of vaccine. In 2024, that number had risen to 440,000.
Mainly reasons such as the need to travel for vaccinations, costs and a lack of qualified health personnel led to this, he said, adding that medical misinformation was rampant as well.
Vaccination is “the most cost-effective public health tool which we have. So, we cannot afford to lose it.”
Prevention was also key to ensuring Europeans’ health, Kluge stressed.
“You put one euro in prevention, you get seven euros out of it,” said the 56-year-old doctor.
“It is time that Europe should take care of Europe.”

False claim spreads of Japan ‘mass deportations’ ministry

False claim spreads of Japan ‘mass deportations’ ministry
Updated 24 min 9 sec ago

False claim spreads of Japan ‘mass deportations’ ministry

False claim spreads of Japan ‘mass deportations’ ministry
  • One of the widely circulated posts on X said that Takaichi was “sworn in and IMMEDIATELY created a ministry for mass deportations” received more than nine million views
  • Another video spread on Facebook falsely claimed that Japan’s emperor had approved “the nationwide deportation plan”

TOKYO: False claims that Japan’s new prime minister has created a ministry for “mass deportations” have been widely spread online, as immigration misinformation swirls after a “Japanese first” party did well in elections earlier this year.
The misleading statements circulating on X and Facebook — largely in English — say Sanae Takaichi, Japan’s first woman premier who was sworn in this week, asked Kimi Onoda to lead the ministry.
Onoda was on Tuesday tapped for a number of roles, chiefly economic security minister and minister in charge of a “society of well-ordered and harmonious coexistence with foreign nationals.”
A department with the same name was created under Takaichi’s predecessor, Shigeru Ishiba, although the appointment of a cabinet minister to supervise it is new.
At a press conference Wednesday, Onoda said that Japan “will strictly handle foreign nationals who do not follow the rules,” but there was no mention of mass deportations.
“The inappropriate use of various systems by some foreign residents, their crimes and misbehavior are causing anxiety and a sense of unfairness among Japanese people,” she said.
Immigration levels in Japan remain low compared to other rich economies, but with an aging population, one of the world’s lowest birth rates and worker shortages in many industries, the number of immigrants is increasing.
The rising numbers of foreigners, including tourists, was a major issue in the race for the ruling Liberal Democratic Party leadership earlier this month, which Takaichi won before being elected prime minister.
Takaichi accused foreigners of kicking deer in her hometown Nara.
One of the widely circulated posts on X said that Takaichi was “sworn in and IMMEDIATELY created a ministry for mass deportations” received more than nine million views.
Another video spread on Facebook falsely claimed that Japan’s emperor had approved “the nationwide deportation plan.”
The false claims were also circulating in Thai, German and Spanish.
They come after a Japanese cultural and social exchange program with four African nations was canceled last month, after it triggered floods of emails and phone calls from people falsely believing that it was a new immigration policy.
Also last month Kitakyushu city was reportedly inundated with complaints after inaccurate claims that it planned Muslim-friendly school lunches.
In July, the anti-immigration Sanseito party did well in upper house elections, growing its seat tally to 15 from two. In the lower chamber it has three MPs.
Its agenda echoes other populist movements around the world, railing against “elitism” and “globalism,” and saying it will “bring power back to the people.”


Ecuador’s president says he was target of attempted poisoning

Ecuador’s president says he was target of attempted poisoning
Updated 24 October 2025

Ecuador’s president says he was target of attempted poisoning

Ecuador’s president says he was target of attempted poisoning
  • It is the second time that Noboa’s administration has alleged an attempt on his life, amid Indigenous anti-government protests and spiralling crime
  • Earlier this month, the government said that Noboa’s vehicle bore bullet marks after his motorcade was set upon by a group of stone-throwing protesters angry about rising fuel prices

QUITO: Ecuadoran President Daniel Noboa said Thursday that an unknown assailant had attempted to poison him with chocolate and a jam laced with chemicals, gifted to him at a public event.
Noboa told CNN the presence of three “highly concentrated” toxic substances in the sweets “could not have been accidental,” saying his team had proof to back up his claims.
The 37-year-old president said the toxic substances could not have come from the products themselves or their packaging.
The military body responsible for his security detail had filed a complaint with prosecutors.
It is the second time that Noboa’s administration has alleged an attempt on his life, amid Indigenous anti-government protests and spiralling crime.
Earlier this month, the government said that Noboa’s vehicle bore bullet marks after his motorcade was set upon by a group of stone-throwing protesters angry about rising fuel prices.
Defense Minister Gian Carlo Loffredo called it an “assassination attempt.”
No evidence was presented from the scene, such as bullet casings. Noboa emerged unscathed.
The country’s largest organization of Indigenous peoples, called Conaie, have blocked roads — including in the capital’s Pichincha province — since September 22 over mounting fuel costs.
Some experts have suggested that Noboa’s allegations about attempts on his life could be a way to portray the protesters as violent to boost his political fortune.
“No one throws a Molotov cocktail at themselves...or poisons themselves with chocolate, or throws stones at themselves,” Noboa said.
The president is preparing for a November 16 referendum which he hopes will pave the way for him to draft a constitution that is tougher on drug-related crime.
Ecuador, once one of Latin America’s safest countries, has become a key cocaine transit hub between top producers Colombia and Peru, and consumers around the world.
Murder rates have soared, while car bombings, assassinations and prison massacres have become routine.


Trump says all Canada trade talks ‘terminated’

Trump says all Canada trade talks ‘terminated’
Updated 24 October 2025

Trump says all Canada trade talks ‘terminated’

Trump says all Canada trade talks ‘terminated’

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on Thursday that all trade talks with Canada were terminated following what he called a fraudulent advertisement in which former President Ronald Reagan spoke negatively about tariffs.
“Based on their egregious behavior, ALL TRADE NEGOTIATIONS WITH CANADA ARE HEREBY TERMINATED,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford said earlier this week that the ad with anti-tariff messaging had caught Trump’s attention. The ad showed Reagan, a Republican, criticizing tariffs on foreign goods while saying they caused job losses and trade wars.
“I heard that the president heard our ad. I’m sure he wasn’t too happy,” Ford said on Tuesday.
Trump has used tariffs as leverage on many countries around the world.
His trade war has increased US tariffs to their highest levels since the 1930s and he has regularly threatened more duties, sparking concerns among businesses and economists.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney told reporters on Thursday that Canada will not allow unfair US access to its markets if talks on various trade deals with Washington fail.
Trump imposed tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminum and autos earlier this year, prompting Ottawa to respond in kind. The two sides have been in talks for weeks on a potential deal for the steel and aluminum sectors.
Next year, the US, Canada and Mexico are due to review their 2020 continental free-trade agreement.


Trump says declaration of war not needed on drug cartels

Trump says declaration of war not needed on drug cartels
Updated 24 October 2025

Trump says declaration of war not needed on drug cartels

Trump says declaration of war not needed on drug cartels
  • Trump: I think we’re just going to kill people that are bringing drugs into our country

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on Thursday that his administration plans to brief the US Congress on operations against drug cartels and that even though he did not need a declaration of war, operations against cartels on land would be next.
The US military has been increasing its presence in the Caribbean, including deployments of guided-missile destroyers, F-35 fighter jets, a nuclear submarine and thousands of troops.
“Well, I don’t think we’re going to necessarily ask for a declaration of war. I think we’re just going to kill people that are bringing drugs into our country. OK? We’re going to kill them,” Trump told reporters at the White House. The United States has carried out a number of strikes against suspected drug vessels in the Caribbean and Pacific Ocean since early September, killing nearly 40 people. While the Pentagon has provided little information, it has said some of those strikes have been against vessels near Venezuela.
“Now they  are coming in by land ... you know, the land is going to be next,” Trump added, echoing comments he has made in recent weeks.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, speaking at a live event in Caracas on Thursday, warned that if the US ever intervened in the country, “the working class would rise and a general insurrectional strike would be declared in the streets until power is regained,” adding that “millions of men and women with rifles would march across the country.”
Last week, Reuters was first to report that two alleged drug traffickers survived a US military strike in the Caribbean. They were rescued and brought to a US Navy warship before being repatriated to their home countries of Colombia and Ecuador.
Sitting next to Trump at the same event on Thursday, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth defended the decision to repatriate two survivors, likening it to battlefield practices during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
“In those conflicts, we captured thousands on the battlefield and handed over 99 percent to host-nation authorities,” Hegseth said. “Did we always like the outcome? Not always. But it was the standard, and it’s the same here.”