Iran faces US military deadline as former prince Andrew arrested in Epstein probe and South Korea's ex-president gets life for martial law.
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🥇 Must Know

Trump sets 10-day deadline for Iran nuclear deal as massive military buildup surrounds Tehran

US President Donald Trump warned Iran it has 10-15 days to reach a nuclear agreement or face "really bad things", as Washington deploys a second aircraft carrier strike group, dozens of fighter jets and refuelling tankers to the Middle East. Iran's foreign minister told the UN it would respond "decisively" to military aggression, while conducting live-fire drills in the Strait of Hormuz. The standoff follows inconclusive talks in Geneva and represents the most serious US-Iran confrontation since Trump's second term began.

Why it matters: A US military strike on Iran would reshape the Middle East, potentially triggering wider war and disrupting global oil supplies through the Strait of Hormuz, which handles a fifth of the world's petroleum.

BBC World (center) · Financial Times (center-right) · Globe and Mail (center) · The Economist (center-right)

Former prince Andrew arrested in Epstein investigation, first royal detention in four centuries

British police arrested Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor on suspicion of misconduct in public office related to sharing confidential government documents with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The former prince was detained for several hours before being released under investigation. King Charles issued a statement saying "the law must take its course." The arrest marks the first time in nearly 400 years that a senior British royal has been taken into police custody.

Why it matters: The arrest fundamentally challenges the British monarchy's mystique and raises constitutional questions about whether royal privilege can coexist with the rule of law in a modern democracy.

How reporting varies:
  • The Guardian (center-left): Emphasizes constitutional crisis and end of royal immunity from law
  • Financial Times (center-right): Focuses on political implications for UK government and Prime Minister Starmer

BBC World (center) · The Guardian (center-left) · NYT World (center-left) · Globe and Mail (center)

South Korea's former president Yoon sentenced to life in prison for martial law insurrection

Former South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol received a life sentence after a court convicted him of insurrection for his December 2024 martial law decree. The judge said Yoon's actions "fundamentally damaged South Korea's democracy." Five other former officials also received long prison terms. Yoon is expected to appeal. South Korea has not executed anyone since 1997, making the death penalty prosecutors sought unlikely to be carried out.

Why it matters: The conviction sets a powerful precedent for accountability in Asian democracies and signals that no leader is above the law, even in politically turbulent times.

BBC World (center) · NYT World (center-left) · CBC News (center) · NPR World (center-left)

🥈 Should Know

Over 1,000 Kenyans recruited to fight for Russia in Ukraine war, intelligence report reveals

A Kenyan intelligence report presented to lawmakers found that more than 1,000 Kenyan nationals were lured to fight for Russia in Ukraine after being misled with false promises of jobs in Russia. Investigators described a well-organised trafficking ring involving immigration staff and security agencies. Moscow denies the allegations. Families are demanding the return of their loved ones from the frontlines.

Why it matters: The recruitment scheme reveals how Russia is exploiting poverty and institutional corruption in developing nations to replenish its military losses in Ukraine.

BBC World (center) · Deutsche Welle (center) · Al Jazeera (center)

UN finds evidence of renewed genocide by RSF in Sudan's Darfur region

A UN fact-finding mission concluded that Sudan's Rapid Support Forces paramilitary systematically killed and raped members of ethnic groups in El Fasher, with attacks bearing "hallmarks of genocide." The RSF acted with genocidal intent during a monthslong siege of the city, according to human rights experts. At least 6,000 people were killed over three days during one RSF attack.

Why it matters: The findings document ongoing atrocities in a conflict that has received limited international attention despite causing one of the world's worst humanitarian crises.

Globe and Mail (center) · NYT World (center-left)

Indonesia offers to send thousands of troops to Gaza under Trump's Board of Peace plan

Indonesia announced it will send troops to Gaza as part of an international security force, joining Morocco, Kosovo, Kazakhstan and Qatar in pledging personnel. Egypt and Jordan will provide training for police. The deployment is politically risky for President Prabowo Subianto as Indonesia has no official relations with Israel. Qatar pledged $1 billion to support the mission.

Why it matters: Indonesia's participation represents a significant shift for the world's largest Muslim-majority nation and tests whether Trump's unconventional diplomatic framework can succeed where traditional peace efforts failed.

Al Jazeera (center) · Deutsche Welle (center) · Reuters (center)

Venezuela passes limited amnesty bill that could free hundreds of political prisoners

Venezuela's National Assembly unanimously approved an amnesty law that could lead to the release of hundreds of people detained for political reasons. Acting President Delcy Rodríguez is expected to sign the measure. According to NGO Foro Penal, while 450 prisoners have already been freed under US pressure, more than 600 remain behind bars. Critics say the law excludes too many people and falls short of offering genuine relief.

Why it matters: The amnesty represents a rare concession by Venezuela's authoritarian government and reflects the Trump administration's willingness to use pressure to secure releases, though its limited scope disappoints human rights groups.

NPR World (center-left) · Reuters (center) · NYT World (center-left)

NASA classifies Boeing's Starliner mission as 'Type A' mishap in scathing report

NASA released a sharply critical report on Boeing's botched Starliner mission that left two astronauts stranded in space in 2024, classifying it among the agency's worst disasters. Administrator Bill Nelson said "the most troubling failure revealed by this investigation is not hardware" but rather dysfunction and heated emotions during the crisis. The report blamed engineering vulnerabilities in Boeing's spacecraft along with internal NASA mistakes.

Why it matters: The mishap underscores ongoing problems with Boeing's space programme and raises questions about NASA's commercial crew programme as competition with China intensifies.

Ars Technica (center) · Le Monde (center) · Reuters (center)

Trump orders Pentagon to release files on UFOs and aliens

US President Donald Trump directed the Pentagon and other government agencies to identify and release files related to extraterrestrials and UFOs because of "tremendous interest." Trump said he doesn't know if aliens are real but accused former President Barack Obama of disclosing classified information when Obama said last week that aliens exist. The announcement follows years of growing public and congressional interest in unidentified aerial phenomena.

Why it matters: While largely symbolic, the directive reflects Trump's penchant for spectacle and could reshape public discourse on government transparency around unexplained phenomena.

Al Jazeera (center) · BBC World (center) · Deutsche Welle (center)

🥉 Also Notable

🌎 Americas

Argentina's labor reform passes lower house amid nationwide strike — Straits Times

Truck explosion kills four in Santiago, Chile — Reuters

Mexico navy seizes submarine with four tons of cocaine — Reuters

Alberta plans referendum to wrest immigration control from Canadian government — Straits Times

Evo Morales reappears in Bolivia after weeks-long unexplained absence — The Guardian

Peru's new interim president under fire for comments on child sex — The Hindu

International aid convoy to arrive in Cuba in March as fuel crisis deepens — Straits Times

🌍 Europe

France and Germany's fighter jet programme falters over leadership dispute — The Guardian

Austrian climber convicted of manslaughter after girlfriend froze to death on mountain — BBC World

France floods: four departments remain on red alert as Storm Pedro approaches — Le Monde

Hungary's opposition Tisza party maintains lead in latest poll ahead of April elections — Reuters

Belarusian opposition politician Mikola Statkevich freed after stroke in prison — BBC World

Christine Lagarde says she intends to complete her ECB term, denies early resignation plans — Reuters

Italy voices 'absolute opposition' to Russia and Belarus flags at Winter Paralympics — The Guardian

🌏 Asia-Pacific

Bangladesh's BNP wins landslide in first free election in 18 years — The Economist

Japan panel approves world's first iPS cell-based therapies — Nikkei Asia

Chinese scientists claim breakthrough on 2D semiconductor wafers as potential silicon successor — SCMP China

Vietnam elevates EU partnership to match ties with China and US — Reuters

Japan's Takaichi warns of China 'coercion', vows defence build-up and security overhaul — The Hindu

Pakistan military kills 216 militants in week-long Balochistan operation — Reuters

At least 16 killed in Pakistan building explosion due to suspected gas leakage in Karachi — The Hindu

🌍 Middle East & Africa

Iran sentences British couple on world motorcycle tour to 10 years for spying — SCMP World

Israeli settler killed Palestinian-American teen in West Bank, health ministry says — Straits Times

Al-Aqsa Mosque: six-decade prayer agreement collapses as Israel curbs Muslim access ahead of Ramadan — The Guardian

Tunisia jails lawmaker for eight months for mocking president on social media — Straits Times

Mugabe's son Bellarmine arrested after gardener shot at South Africa home — SCMP World

Epstein estate agrees to $44 million settlement in victim class action — Straits Times

New Mexico reopens criminal investigation into Epstein's Zorro Ranch — Al Jazeera

🤖 Tech

Ars Technica retracts article containing fabricated AI-generated quotations — Hacker News

Security nightmare: OpenClaw AI agent tricked into installing itself everywhere via prompt injection — The Verge

Google announces Gemini 3.1 Pro with improved complex problem-solving — Ars Technica

Nvidia close to investing $30 billion in OpenAI's mega funding round — Reuters

Meta cuts stock awards by 5% for most employees, FT reports — Reuters

MuMu Player (NetEase) silently runs 17 reconnaissance commands every 30 minutes — Hacker News

California proposes bill requiring DOJ-approved 3D printers that report themselves — Hacker News