World news
India, China Trade Words Over Disputed Border

India on Tuesday rejected Chinese allegations that its forces had crossed a disputed border and fired warning shots.
It accused Chinese troops of the action during a new border face-off.
This will be the first time in more than four decades that shots have been fired in the contested Himalayan region of Ladakh, breaking an agreement barring the use of firearms.
No casualties were reported.
Ties between the nuclear-armed Asian giants have steadily deteriorated since the neighbours have been locked in a tense stand-off in the high-altitude region since May.
China’s western military command in a statement late Monday night said the Indian incursion occurred along the Shenpao Mountain area on the southern bank of Pangong Lake on Monday.
After the Indian army fired the shots, the statement said, Chinese forces took “countermeasures to stabilise the situation,” although it was not clear what these were.
It demanded that the Indian forces withdraw and “strictly investigate and punish the person who fired shots.”
India’s actions “seriously violated relevant agreements, pushing up regional tensions … They are serious military provocations and are of a very bad nature,” the statement citing spokesman Zhang Shuili said.
But in its response on Tuesday, New Delhi said Chinese forces had closed in on Indian positions and fired shots in the air, accusing Beijing of trying to mislead its domestic and international audience.
The Indian army maintained that at no stage had its soldiers crossed the Line of Actual Control (LAC), a de-facto border, or resorted to any aggressive means, including firing.
“It is the (Chinese army) that has been blatantly violating agreements and carrying out aggressive manoeuvres, while engagement at the military, diplomatic and political level is in progress,” army spokesman Colonel Aman Anand said.
He said the Indian army was “committed to maintaining peace,” but it was also “determined to protect national integrity and sovereignty at all costs.”
Ladakh was the scene of hand-to-hand combat between Indian and Chinese soldiers in June in which 20 Indian soldiers were killed.
It was the worst border confrontation between the neighbours in 45 years.
China did not confirm any casualties.
Indian media reported that Indian troops had recently gained a tactical advantage by occupying heights in the Pangong Lake region, another flashpoint in Ladakh, to foil Chinese attempts to carry out incursions into Indian territory.
Monday’s flare-up comes after the Indian military this weekend alerted Chinese officials over reports that five Indian civilians were abducted by Chinese troops from another disputed border section in Arunachal Pradesh, in the eastern Himalayas.
The countries have held military and diplomatic talks between representatives since then to disengage and withdraw troops, but the deadlock has not been resolved.
Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar is expected to meet his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi, in Moscow on the sidelines of a Shanghai Cooperation Organization meeting on Thursday.
India and China fought a brief border war in 1962 and dispute several sections along their ill-defined, 3,500-kilometre border.
India disputes China’s rule over 38,000 square kilometres of land in Aksai Chin, which it claims to be part of Ladakh region.
China has laid claims to 90,000 square kilometres of territory in Arunachal Pradesh, which it says is part of southern Tibet.
World news
Trump Flexes Military Might At Anniversary Parade As Protests Sweep US

Trump hailed the United States as the “hottest country in the world” after watching tanks, aircraft and troops file past him in Washington on Saturday to honour the 250th anniversary of the US army.
It formed a stark split screen with turmoil at home and abroad, as police used teargas to disperse protesters in Los Angeles and US ally, Israel, traded missile fire with Iran in a rapidly escalating conflict in the Middle East.
Trump’s parade on an overcast night in Washington came after hundreds of thousands of “No Kings” demonstrators thronged the streets in cities including New York, Philadelphia, Houston and Atlanta.
The Republican largely avoided his usual domestic political diatribes in an unusually brief speech and instead focused on praising the US army, saying that they “fight, fight, fight, and they win, win, win.”
The display of military might comes as Trump asserts his power domestically and on the international stage.
Trump used his parade address to send a warning to Washington’s adversaries of “total and complete” defeat, with the United States increasingly at risk of entanglement in Israel’s conflict with Iran.
“Time and again, America’s enemies have learned that if you threaten the American people, our soldiers are coming for you,” Trump said.
Trump had openly dreamed since his first term as President of having a grand military parade of the type more often seen in Moscow or Pyongyang.
The last such parade in the United States was at the end of the Gulf War in 1991.
Trump stood and saluted on a stage outside the White House as tanks rumbled past, aircraft roared overhead and nearly 7,000 troops marched by.
Troops and military hardware from different eras passed by, with an announcer reeling off US victories in battles with Japanese, German, Chinese, and Vietnamese forces in past wars.
The army said the parade cost up to $45 million.
The crowd sang “Happy Birthday” and there were occasional chants of “USA! USA!” but the atmosphere was less intense than one of the barnstorming rallies that swept Trump to power.
The White House said that “over 250,000 patriots showed up” for the event, without providing evidence.
Communications Director, Steven Cheung, described the “No Kings” protests as a “complete and utter failure.”
“No Kings” organisers said protesters gathered in hundreds of places, with AFP journalists seeing large crowds in several cities.
Organisers said they were protesting against Trump’s dictatorial overreach, particularly what they described as the strongman symbolism of the parade.
“I think people are mad as hell,” Lindsay Ross, a 28-year-old musician, told AFP in New York, where tens of thousands of people rallied.
Some protesters targeted Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, while a small group even gathered in Paris.
“I think it’s disgusting,” protester Sarah Hargrave, 42, said in the Washington suburb of Bethesda, describing Trump’s parade as a “display of authoritarianism.”
Thousands turned out in Los Angeles to protest against Trump’s deployment of troops in the country’s second-largest city following clashes sparked by immigration raids.
“He’s trying to bully Los Angeles into complying with everything that he’s trying to do, and we’re not going to do that. We’re a city of immigrants,” a protester who gave his name as Armando told AFP.
After a day of largely peaceful protests, police unexpectedly began moving people away from the LA protest area, igniting confusion and anger among demonstrators caught off guard and unsure of where to go.
Police on horseback pushed crowds back as law enforcement fired tear gas and flash-bang grenades hours ahead of an 8 pm (0300 GMT) curfew.
Police officials said a “small group of agitators” had begun throwing rocks, bottles, and fireworks at officers, prompting the decision to deploy tear gas and order the crowd to disperse.
Violence shattered the calm elsewhere, with a shooting at a “No Kings” demonstration in the western US city of Salt Lake City.
At least one person was critically injured and three people were taken into custody, police said.
The killing of a Democratic lawmaker and her husband in the northern state of Minnesota on Saturday, in what the governor called a targeted attack, also cast a pall over the parade.
Trump was quick to condemn the attacks outside Minneapolis in which former state speaker, Melissa Hortman, and her husband were killed, while another state lawmaker and his wife were hospitalized with gunshot wounds.
AFP
News
King Charles Honours Indian Air Crash Victims At Birthday Parade

The king, 76, requested amendments to the parade, known as Trooping the Colour, “as a mark of respect for the lives lost, the families in mourning and all the communities affected by this awful tragedy”, a Buckingham Palace spokesperson said.
A total 279 people, including passengers, crew and people on the ground, died on Thursday when a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner bound for London’s Gatwick Airport crashed on take-off from Ahmedabad in eastern India.
The victims included 52 Britons. A sole survivor has been named as British man Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, from the central English city of Leicester.
In a written message after the disaster, Charles said he was “desperately shocked by the terrible events” and expressed his “deepest possible sympathy”.
Trooping the Colour, a minutely choreographed military tradition dating back more than two centuries, marks the British sovereign’s official birthday.
It starts at Buckingham Palace and moves down The Mall to Horse Guards Parade, where Charles receives a royal salute before inspecting soldiers.
Hundreds of people gathered outside the palace and along The Mall to watch the spectacle.
They included a small group of anti-monarchist protesters with yellow placards reading “not my king” and “down with the crown”.
Charles, who is still undergoing weekly treatment for an unspecified cancer, was accompanied by Queen Camilla for the parade.
Also present were heir Prince William, 42, his wife Catherine, also known as Kate, and their three children: George, 11, Charlotte, 10 and Louis, seven.
World news
UK ‘alarmed’ by escalating middle east conflict, urges de-escalation

“Alarmed by further strikes in the Middle East overnight, with reports of fatalities and injuries in Israel, Lammy said in a post on X, ”We must urgently de-escalate & prevent any further harm to civilians.”
Lammy also confirmed speaking with Iran’s Foreign Minister, Abbas Araghchi, to “urge calm” amid growing international calls for restraint.
At least three civilians were killed and 70 others wounded in Iranian ballistic missile barrages that targeted central Israel.
Tehran has not yet released an updated casualty figure from the Israeli strikes that hit military and nuclear facilities across Iran.
According to The Times of London, the UK was not notified in advance of Israel’s initial strike on Iran.
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