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Tokyo (AFP) – Ukrainian sumo wrestler Danylo Yavhusishyn on Sunday became the first from his nation to win a tournament of the traditional Japanese sport.

The 21-year-old, who fled the war in Ukraine three years ago, won the Kyushu tournament after a tie-breaking victory over grand champion Hoshoryu from Mongolia.

Known by his ring name Aonishiki Arata and speaking fluent Japanese, he told fans at Fukuoka Kokusai Center in his televised victory interview that he was glad that he was able to show his usual performance.

"I am happy that I am able to achieve a goal of mine," he said.

Yavhusishyn, who arrived in Japan three years ago after fleeing Ukraine, has climbed the sumo ranks at record speed.

Japan Sumo Association will soon hold a special meeting to promote him to "ozeki", the second highest ranking under "yokozuna", or grand champion, national broadcaster NHK said.

He competed in the world junior sumo championships as a teenager but left Ukraine after Russia's February 2022 invasion.

He arrived in Japan two months later and made a blistering start to his career, reaching sumo's upper divisions in only a year and winning promotion to the fourth-highest rank.

Yavhusishyn was born in central Ukraine and took up sumo at the age of seven, becoming a national champion at 17.

His age meant he narrowly avoided Ukraine's military draft for men aged 18 and older when war broke out and he sought refuge in Germany before moving to Japan.

His parents stayed in Germany and he arrived in Japan knowing nothing of the language.

Yavhusishyn became the second Ukraine-born professional sumo wrestler when he made his debut in July 2023, following in the footsteps of compatriot Serhii Sokolovskyi, better known as Shishi.

Yavhusishyn's promotion to sumo's upper divisions was the fifth fastest since the current system of six tournaments a year was introduced in 1958.

The ambitious wrestler said he now has his sights set on reaching the top of the sumo hierarchy.

"I am happy (now) but there is one higher status. I want to work toward that," he said.

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Shanghai (AFP) – "Are you ready Shanghai?!" screamed the DJ, his glowing booth nestled at the heart of a huge intricate structure of pulsating colour and sound.

Thousands roared back "yes!" as Tomorrowland, one of the world's biggest dance music festivals, made its China debut this weekend.

The move is a vote of confidence in the country's small but lively electronic dance music (EDM) scene -- and in its earning potential, despite slack consumer demand elsewhere in the economy.

Renowned for its star-studded line-ups and spectacular stagecraft, Tomorrowland's home edition in Belgium's Boom is a bucket list item for many hardcore ravers.

"For me, Tomorrowland is a dream," said Chinese EDM fan Mark, wearing sunglasses and a bright yellow arrow headdress.

EDM was "relatively niche" in China, he said, but that could change.

"Over the course of the last 10 years it's really flourished, and now I feel like everyone around me -- including my parents -- have all started to learn about EDM," he said.

Tomorrowland is betting on enthusiasm growing among a young urban middle class looking to "premium-ise" their partying, said Cameron Sunkel of specialist outlet EDM.com.

"China, in my eyes, is where the demand curve is steepest for this type of experience," he said, comparing it to mature European and American markets where "production costs are climbing" for only incremental growth.

A spokeswoman for Tomorrowland told AFP they believed "strongly in China's long-term opportunities".

She compared it to Brazil, where Tomorrowland has hosted festivals since 2015.

"(It) was also a niche market when we first arrived, yet today we see a fast-growing community and incredible local talent emerging," she said.

"The Magic of Tomorrowland" is the festival's first event indoors.

On Saturday, many entering the main building gasped at the sight of the castle-like stage dominating one side of the cavernous hall, set against a 374-square-metre (4,000-square-foot) video wall.

At the second smaller stage, dancers shrieked as confetti cannons fired simultaneously with a bass drop, glitter falling like shimmering rain.

Slow domestic demand is vexing Chinese authorities, but young people in particular appear willing to splurge on "emotional consumption" -- things that make them feel good.

In 2024, ticket revenues from large- and medium-sized concerts and festivals grew by 66.5 percent to almost $4.2 billion, an annual industry report showed.

Tomorrowland is not alone in eyeing up the potential -- major festivals including Ultra and Creamfields have also held China editions.

Momentum was lost during the pandemic though.

"Ten years ago in Shanghai, there were a lot of EDM bars, but actually nowadays there's not that many," Grace, a 29-year-old Chinese influencer in hot-pink flares told AFP.

"So for a big (brand) like this to come to China, I'm obviously very excited."

The 10,000-capacity Shanghai event is tiny compared to the Belgian one, which saw 400,000 people over two weekends this year.

In China, Tomorrowland has partnered with entertainment companies Hero Esports and INS Land, and was supported by local authorities keen to burnish the city's international hub credentials.

The purpose-built main stage building was completed in just five months, including over a thousand moving lights, 118 speakers and dozens of laser, smoke and bubble machines.

The aim is to present "a fairy tale, an entire experience", said the event marketing chief, Hero Esports' Jay Lu.

EDM.com's Sunkel said the indoor event was "a way for Tomorrowland to test how their universe lands in China, how it's received under tightly managed conditions".

Common at such events in China, there was a visible security presence, and the last act -- global star Dimitri Vegas joined by Chinese rapper Masiwei -- finished at 10pm.

Some Europeans said they were bemused to find the bar payment system only allowed each person two alcoholic drinks for the event.

None of the organisers would divulge the costs involved in the event, nor exactly how long the partnership was set to last.

"We're excited for a long-term partnership so that we can educate the Chinese community on what EDM is... (and) just increase the bar for this whole industry," the event's CEO, Hero Esports' Clinton Lau, told AFP.

Asked whether this year would make a profit, Lau smiled.

"Every time you build something so grand... it takes time for the market to mature," he said.

"So we're starting here."

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Tokyo (AFP) – Shiina Ito has had fewer Chinese customers at her Tokyo jewellery shop since Beijing issued a travel warning in the wake of a diplomatic spat, but she said she was not concerned.

A souring of Beijing-Tokyo relations this month, following remarks by Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi about Taiwan, has fuelled concerns about the impact on the ritzy boutiques, noodle joints and hotels where holidaymakers spend their cash.

But businesses in Tokyo largely shrugged off any anxiety.

"Since there are fewer Chinese customers, it's become a bit easier for Japanese shoppers to visit, so our sales haven't really dropped," shop manager Ito told AFP.

Chinese buyers normally make up half of the clientele at her business in the capital's traditional Asakusa district, where crowds of tourists stroll through shop-lined alleys.

Many tourism and retail businesses in Japan rely heavily on Chinese visitors, who spend more on average than other foreign tourists on everything from sushi to skincare.

Some hotels, designer clothes shops and even pharmacies have Mandarin-speaking assistants, while department stores often have signs in Chinese.

In Tokyo's upscale Ginza district, Yuki Yamamoto, the manager of an Instagram-famous udon noodle restaurant, said he had not noticed any immediate impact on sales in the days since China warned its citizens to avoid Japan.

"I don't think there's been any sudden, dramatic change," he said, despite estimating that on a normal day around half the hungry diners who queue outside his door are Chinese.

"Of course, if customers decrease, that's disappointing for the shop. But Japanese customers still come regularly, so we're not extremely concerned."

China is the biggest source of tourists to the archipelago, with almost 7.5 million visitors in the first nine months of 2025 -- a quarter of all foreign tourists, according to official Japanese figures.

Attracted by a weak yen, they splashed out the equivalent of $3.7 billion in the third quarter.

Last year, each Chinese tourist spent on average 22 percent more than other visitors, according to the Japan National Tourism Organization.

However, a record 36.8 million arrivals from across the globe last year has also led to fears of overtourism affecting the daily lives of many in Japan.

On November 7, Takaichi implied Tokyo could intervene militarily in any attack on Taiwan, a self-ruled island which China claims as part of its territory.

Beijing then advised Chinese citizens to avoid travelling to Japan, and retail and tourism stocks subsequently plunged. Most have yet to recover.

In response, Kimi Onoda, Japan's hawkish minister of economic security, warned of the danger of "relying too heavily on a country that resorts to economic coercion whenever it is displeased".

That "poses risks not only to supply chains but also to tourism", she said.

Wu Weiguo, the manager of a travel agency in Shanghai, said that "the biggest impact is on group travel", with 90 percent of his clients requesting refunds for planned Japan itineraries.

But according to the national tourism board, only around 12 percent of Chinese visitors last year came to the archipelago as part of organised tours, down from almost 43 percent in 2015.

Transport Minister Yasushi Kaneko said the issue was not "something to get all worked up about", noting an increase in arrivals from other countries.

Nevertheless, hotels in Japan that heavily depend on Chinese customers are feeling the effects.

"Cancellations from travel agencies in China are coming one after another," said Keiko Takeuchi, who runs the Gamagori Hotel in central Japan. "About 50 to 60 percent of our customers are Chinese nationals.

"I hope the situation calms down quickly, but it seems it will take time," she fretted.

Beijing has made clear it was furious with Takaichi, summoning Tokyo's ambassador and, according to Chinese state media, postponing the release of at least two Japanese movies.

But travel agency manager Wu said that the spat would not stop holidaymakers dreaming of Tokyo.

"They believe the service is high-quality and shopping is reasonably priced," he said.

"Chinese people will continue to want to visit Japan."

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Tens of thousands of voluntary or forced members of Boko Haram and the Islamic State in West Africa have surrendered over the past 10 years. Nigeria is drawing on transitional justice – a set of mechanisms used to confront legacies of mass violence in the interest of accountability, reconciliation and lasting peace – to help former fighters return to their communities and live alongside victims of the jihadist groups.

A tiny black dot moves across the sky over Bama, in north-eastern Nigeria. The roar of an engine grows louder, drowning out all other sounds in this town some 50 kilometres from Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State.

Kachalla, who is building a wooden door frame, pauses his hammering. "It's a helicopter," sighs the carpenter.

"In the Sambisa Forest, as soon as our leaders heard a helicopter flying overhead, they thought the army was watching them from the air. So it was every man for himself, we hid under the trees until the aircraft disappeared from view."

Kachalla looks up at the sky and watches the helicopter recede into the distance, then resumes his work.

In 2020, this 30-something father left the ranks of Boko Haram. "I served as a soldier. At that time, we had no choice, we were forced to work for them. Otherwise, it was death if we refused to obey."

Kachalla joined the Association of the People of the Sunnah for Preaching and Jihad – the official name of Boko Haram, which was the name given to the group by local people in north-eastern Nigeria – in 2014.

He confesses to having committed acts of torture and bloody crimes within various factions, following orders including from the leader of Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau, who was killed in 2021.

"I also did it of my own free will," Kachalla admits, "because we were taught that it was the right thing to do. And our leaders kept telling us that if we died, we would go to paradise."

Today, Kachalla expresses his regrets only in private. He has resettled in Bama with his partner Bintugana, a former Boko Haram captive whom he "married" in the Sambisa Forest, and their two children – who were born in the Sambisa "sanctuary" led by Shekau.

Bintugana says Kachalla's carpentry skills have helped them build relationships in Bama. Despite knowing the couple's history, customers come to his workshop without fear.

Nevertheless, she believes their immediate neighbours still view them with contempt.

"We hear a lot of insults whispered by people, but it doesn't bother us because they can't physically fight us. At least our families don't reject us. That's why we don't want to go back to Sambisa," she explains.

In 2016, the Nigerian government launched Operation Safe Corridor to give members of Boko Haram and the Islamic State's West Africa Province (ISWAP – a breakaway faction aligned with the Islamic State group) the opportunity to disassociate themselves from these groups and reintegrate into society.

The initiative is supported by the Nigerian army and the country's security and intelligence agencies. At the same time, the state of Borno, the epicentre of the armed conflict, has also implemented a local approach: the Borno Model. Both have grown steadily alongside the mass defections from the Sambisa Forest, notably after the death of Shekau.

The Safe Corridor and Borno Model are two of the main formal mechanisms of transitional justice in the country. They are open to all repentant individuals – men, women and children – in north-eastern Nigeria.

"When we fled Boko Haram, we imagined the worst," recalls Kachalla. "Then I simply surrendered with my weapon. I was not mistreated. My family and I were officially registered."

Mustapha Ali has taken in dozens of former combatants with similar profiles to Kachalla over the past few years. A theology expert, he teaches in the Department of Islamic Studies at the University of Maiduguri.

He is also one of the pillars of the Imam Malik Centre, an educational institution for children from nursery to high-school age in the capital of Borno State, founded in the mid-1990s.

"This place is not just a place to learn about Islam," says Ali. "Our director, Sheikh Abubakar Kyari, was the first at the time to confront Mohammed Yusuf [the founder of Boko Haram] and his misinterpretations of the verses of the Koran that led to this extremist ideology."

Having witnessed the devastation wrought by Boko Haram in the Lake Chad basin, Ali also draws on his religious knowledge as an independent consultant for the El-Amin Islamic Foundation, a Nigerian NGO involved in deradicalisation programmes.

"I work with a maximum of 20 repentant individuals," he explains. "We focus on specific verses from the Koran. My team of facilitators and I meet with them at least 15 times. This is essential, because extremist ideology is deeply rooted in the minds of the adults and children we work with."

To start the process of reintegrating, Bintugana and Kachalla were transferred to a rehabilitation centre in Maiduguri. Bintugana was able to see her children while following a programme more focused on professional skills.

But for Kachalla and the other former combatants he was grouped with, their programme meant six months of living without any contact with the outside world.

"Every day we were given advice: how to live in peace with others, how to endure good and bad situations, how to be patient in all circumstances," he recalls.

Chita Nagarajan is an independent analyst of armed conflicts. For five years, she headed the Centre for Civilians in Conflict in north-eastern Nigeria. The organisation has carried out numerous mediations between communities and security forces, based on human rights principles.

"Reintegration, reconciliation and healing are not one-off events," she says. "They are long-term processes in which everyone needs support and assistance – the direct victims of violence, but also the indirect victims and even the perpetrators of that violence."

Since 2021, Bintugana and Kachalla have been learning how to live as a family again in Bama, surrounded by their loved ones. But theirs is a fragile peace, with the armed conflict that began in the Lake Chad basin in 2009 far from over.

This article has been adapted from a report in French by RFI's special correspondent in northern Nigeria, Moïse Gomis.

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Toronto (Canada) (AFP) – When a wild wolf encounters a potential meal, its instinct is usually to pounce -- but researchers in western Canada have recorded at least one wolf taking a strikingly different approach.

The behavior captured on video in a remote part of British Columbia province shows a wolf completing multiple steps to retrieve a crab trap from deep water, sophisticated behavior researchers say marks "the first known potential tool use in wild wolves."

"I couldn't believe my eyes when we opened up that camera," said Kyle Artelle, an environmental biologist at the State University of New York.

The discovery, detailed in the journal Ecology and Evolution, came partly by accident.

For several years, crab traps have been submerged in deep water in the area as part of a program to eradicate European green crabs, an invasive species.

Researchers, working in collaboration with the Heiltsuk First Nation, observed that the traps had mysteriously been dragged ashore and the bait removed.

Because the traps had been set in deep water and never exposed during low tide, they assumed a marine predator was involved.

They set up cameras in May 2024 and quickly solved the mystery.

A female wolf was recorded swimming out and dragging the buoy attached to a trap to shore.

She then pulled in the line attached to the trap. With the trap on shore, she chewed through its netting to access the bait.

It was a "carefully choreographed sequence," the researchers said -- not a wild predator aggressively pursuing food.

Artelle said it was "incredible behavior."

"This wolf showed up and she just saw a float and she knew the float was attached to a trap. She knew how to pull the trap up. She knew if she pulled the trap onto the beach, she could get food... Really intelligent, really incredible, sophisticated behavior."

The researchers, who included University of Victoria geography professor Paul Paquet, conceded they do not know how pervasive such levels of sophistication are among wild wolves.

They noted the wolf may have figured out how to get the trap on shore through trial-and-error, stressing that wolves in the remote area are less exposed to danger -- including from humans -- and therefore may have more time to experiment.

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Bissau (AFP) – Caramba Souare focuses on cleaning the car in front of him despite a din of surrounding festivities on the last day of presidential campaigning in Guinea-Bissau.

Since leaving school, the 20-year-old has turned to washing cars to support himself and his parents.

While he had once dreamed of becoming finance minister, a lack of opportunity and money proved a reality check on his career goals, as is the case with many young people in Guinea-Bissau.

The small west African nation is one of the poorest in the world and around 40 percent of the population live in extreme poverty.

Young people under the age of 25 represent 65 percent of the country's population of 2.2 million.

"I passed my final school exam this year but I couldn't afford further education," Souare told AFP.

"Instead of staying at home and relying on my parents for everything, I preferred to come here to wash cars and earn some money."

Souare nevertheless remains hopeful that the next president will improve conditions for the country's young people.

Guinea-Bissau will elect a new president on Sunday, seeking to turn the page on a tumultuous history of coups and unrest.

Some 860,000 voters will choose between 12 candidates, including incumbent President Umaro Sissoco Embalo, who is favourite to land a second five-year term.

The election takes place without the main opposition party or candidate, after both submitted their candidacies too late.

Souare was among approximately a dozen young men in the heart of Bissau cleaning two rows of cars parked along the curb.

Soapy liquid dripped onto the pavement, mixing with rubbish thrown on the ground, as the young men used large, worn rags to wipe down the vehicles.

The work, they said, earned them up to 7,000 CFA francs (about $12) a day.

Nearby, Embalo's supporters blasted loud music out into the street.

Many young people interviewed by AFP said they expected Sunday's victor to create jobs and make vocational training more accessible.

They all said they planned to vote.

"It's hard to find work", Maxime Simao Ca told AFP.

"The new president needs to focus on job creation and vocational training. That could make it easier for young people to enter the work force".

Neia Te, a 30-year-old mother, said she walks nearly seven kilometres (four miles) each day selling fruit from the tray she balances on her head, earning at most 3,000 CFA francs.

"It's very hard", she said. "But I have to do this to have something to bring home at the end of the day."

Te said she planned to cast her vote on Sunday to "make a difference".

Simao said he wass constantly stressed about his future.

He dreams of one day reaching Europe but not via the treacherous Atlantic migration route.

"That's not part of the way young people in Guinea-Bissau do things," he said.

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Pa Bon (Thailand) (AFP) – Deep in a Thai forest a young man sprints through the undergrowth, blowpipe in hand, before pumping a poisoned dart at a monkey.

The group closes in, shouting out to each other, and the animal falls to the ground.

The kill was in keeping with centuries of tradition for the Maniq, one of Thailand's smallest ethnic minorities, who were the country's last hunter-gatherers.

But the lures of a settled home, among them education and healthcare, mean their way of life is changing.

The Maniq are now demanding ownership rights to land they say has effectively been theirs for generations, but is today protected by Thai law.

As the youngest of the Maniq hunters, still learning the ways of the jungle, Dan Rakpabon, 18, carried the kill back to the thap –- seven leaf-covered bamboo shelters in a clearing in Pa Bon.

Singeing the animal over a fire to burn off the fur, he carefully butchered it and divided the meat among the community, with the largest families receiving the biggest shares.

"I feel happy every time we hunt. This is our food," he said.

But wildlife is protected in Thailand's conservation zones, making the kill illegal.

It is a predicament faced by many Indigenous people globally, under pressure to abandon traditional lifestyles and fighting for rights to land they have long called home.

In many cases, they are effectively the victims of environmental conservation efforts, despite studies showing the low-intensity forest use associated with Indigenous peoples often protects biodiversity.

It is a point some officials in Thailand recognise.

"We are not concerned about the Maniq's traditional way of life," said Chutiphong Phonwat, head of the Khao Banthat Wildlife Sanctuary.

"They do not destroy the forest."

For centuries the Maniq, part of the wider Negrito ethnic lineage, lived as hunter-gatherers, roaming the rainforests of the Malay Peninsula, moving with the seasons in search of food.

Just 415 Maniq remain, according to the Indigenous Peoples' Foundation for Education and Environment, scattered across southern Thailand's Banthat mountains.

Most have abandoned the nomad lifestyle of their ancestors and settled on the edges of forests, drawn by access to education for their children and healthcare, as in Pa Bon, in Phatthalung province.

The change comes with challenges: living in the modern world requires cash, so men work on rubber plantations for $3-8 a day, while women make pandanus leaf bags to sell.

Some have smartphones and the community's children live in a village 10 kilometres (six miles) away during the week for school.

"One day, my child came to me and said, 'Today I can write my name.' Just hearing that made me proud," said mother Jeab Rakpabon, who weaves for a living.

Hunting has become an occasional activity rather than a source of daily sustenance.

"I grew up following my father into the forest to hunt and forage," said Tom Rakpabon, leader of the 40-strong community -- all of whom were given the same surname by officials when they obtained identity cards.

"Now we have to buy rice, meat and vegetables from the market," he added.

Caught between their old traditions and modern lives, the Maniq and their supporters want ownership rights in perpetuity over protected forest to provide them with settled livelihoods.

"We want proper houses, land to grow our own vegetables," said Jeab adding that, "leaf shelters like this are only temporary".

The forest is now classified as a conservation zone where Thai law bars private landownership and puts strict limits on resource use.

"Not only the Maniq people, but everyone must obey the law equally," said Chalerm Phummai, director of Thailand's Wildlife Conservation Office.

Under Thai regulations, established Indigenous communities on protected land can request 20-year usage permits -- and several have been issued.

But critics say the process reduces Indigenous groups to temporary occupants of their ancestral forests.

One Maniq community have lived for more than 30 years in Plai Khlong Tong in Trang province, establishing their own rubber plantations and permanent but sparsely-furnished wooden and concrete houses among the forest's towering resin trees.

But it is not easy.

"It's frustrating to live like this," said Thawatchai Paksi, whose mother's marriage to a Thai rubber-grower was the catalyst for the transition. "We need permission for almost everything — even cutting down a tree or building a house."

Living without title deeds leaves the community in a precarious position, explained local leader Sakda Paksi.

"If the Maniq had land, we could stand on our own feet."

The situation has created real hardship for some.

Some Maniq in Satun province have been reduced to begging because they cannot find work.

"If nobody gives us food, it's difficult," said their leader Jin Sri Thung Wa.

The group travels several kilometres from their forest shelter to beg on a roadside.

"There's nothing left in the forest here, and no work we can do," she said.

The Maniq also face discrimination.

Kritsada Inchalerm, a Thai who stopped to give them food and money, said they reminded him of a film, Sagai United –- a title that incorporated a Malay word for slave used as a derogatory term for the minority.

"The Maniq are not savages," said Tao Khai, leader of another community. "We are people who live in the forest."

The owners of a resort and rubber plantation allow his group to live on their property, but they have no fields to cultivate and survive on daily wage work in the area, supplemented by hunting.

Every morning a plantation staffer drives Duan Srimanang, 13, and dozens of other children from several local Maniq communities to school.

She has been put into second grade according to her abilities and learns alongside seven-year-olds, but can now write her name and is learning to read.

"When I grow up, I want to have a job and earn money so I can take care of my mother and make her comfortable and happy," she said.

A new Thai law in September introduced "protected ethnic areas" for Indigenous groups, with a more flexible regulatory regime.

"The Maniq will not be granted land ownership, but they will receive rights to use the land in accordance with their traditional way of life," said anthropologist Apinan Thammasena.

"Land security does not necessarily have to come in the form of ownership. It can come in the form of guaranteed, permanent rights to use the land," he added.

But MP Laofang Bundidterdsakul, who helped draft the bill and is from the Hmong hill tribe, said existing environmental rules were left in place, potentially undermining the new measure's impact.

"Land rights remain largely unchanged," he said. "For example, land matters remain under the same forestry law. Road construction, access to electricity and water still require permission from the Forestry Department."

At the rubber plantation, where Duan and her friends did their homework under the glow of headtorches, Tao Khai returned home from a hunt.

"This land was given to us only temporarily," he said. "The Maniq want a home where we can live forever."

This story is a collaboration between AFP and HaRDstories, with support from the Pulitzer Center.

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Port-au-Prince (AFP) – Fireworks and dancing erupted across Haiti in a reprieve from gang violence as people came together to celebrate their national team punching its ticket to the 2026 World Cup.

Haiti, the poorest nation in the Americas, will be making its first appearance on international football's biggest stage in more than 50 years, and only its second overall, after qualifying for the tournament on Tuesday night.

"We need a national holiday to celebrate it, with schools closed. We need pleasure and joy. Unlock the country and eradicate the gangs," an ecstatic fan in Port-au-Prince told AFP.

But even the gangs joined in on the celebrations that stretched into Wednesday in the capital and other cities such as Cap-Haitien and Miragoane.

Jimmy "Barbecue" Cherisier, the UN-sanctioned leader of a gang coalition known as Viv Ansanm (Living Together), was seen in videos posted to social media partying with residents in his neighborhood.

Just three days earlier, the gang boss had announced his intention to confront the police as he urged residents of Port-au-Prince to stay indoors.

In Haiti's main city, thousands of people celebrated in the streets to the rhythm of popular songs and chants performed by rara bands, the country's festive music.

Several fans paraded shirtless, waving national flags amid applause and fireworks.

"I shouldn't be out on the street at this hour, but since it's for Haiti, I'm doing it anyway," said supporter Widenie Bruno.

Because of security concerns stemming from the gang threat in Port-au-Prince, the national team had to play all of its qualifying home matches in the Caribbean island nation of Curacao.

It was there that Haiti, known as the Grenadiers, beat Nicaragua 2-0 to clinch their spot in the World Cup, which will be staged in the United States, Mexico, and Canada.

Haitian fans, however, may not be able to travel to the US to watch their team play because, in June, President Donald Trump's administration included Haiti among 12 countries whose citizens are banned from entering the United States.

Haiti's qualification brings a moment of relief for a population strained and exhausted by the violence of organized gangs, which control 90 percent of the capital.

Those groups, accused of murders, rapes, looting, and kidnappings, have contributed to a severe humanitarian crisis in Haiti, a small nation long burdened by political instability.

The situation has worsened since early 2024, when gangs forced the then-prime minister Ariel Henry to resign.

But on Tuesday night, everyone in the nation seemed focused on what was happening in Curacao.

After the victory against Nicaragua, Haitian fans still had to wait for Costa Rica and Honduras to play to a scoreless draw before they could celebrate what had seemed impossible -- Haiti's first berth in the World Cup since 1974, when West Germany hosted the tournament.

Another young fan of the Grenadiers said he planned to party all night long -- whatever the cost.

"I am so proud of Haiti that I will spend everything tonight," he said. "I will wake up broke. We will spend the night in the streets."

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Kathmandu (AFP) – Months after a deadly uprising, Nepalis are again lining up -- not to demonstrate, but to register to vote and potentially run in the election they helped bring about.

"We must have new faces in the election," said Kishori Karki, a 25-year-old law graduate, who is not only a first time voter but also applied to register a new party for March 2026 polls.

She is among the young Nepalis stepping forward as candidates in a political system long dominated by familiar, ageing faces.

Footage of Karki taking an injured demonstrator to hospital on a motorbike -- on the first day of protests that toppled the government -- was among the many videos that went viral.

The September 8-9 demonstrations, initially triggered by anger over a brief government ban on social media, were spearheaded by protesters under the loose "Gen Z" umbrella title.

Anger, however, ran deeper. Years of economic stagnation and entrenched corruption had primed the country of 30 million people for upheaval.

Karki says she wants to keep the movement's spirit alive.

"It was important that we bring the people who were in the movement, who want to do something, under one umbrella," she told AFP.

At least 76 people were killed during the demonstrations. Parliament, courts and government offices were torched, and four-time prime minister KP Sharma Oli, 73, was ousted.

Thousands of young activists then used the group-chat app Discord to nominate 73-year-old former chief justice Sushila Karki as their preferred interim leader.

Days later, she was appointed to steer the Himalayan nation until elections on March 5, 2026.

"If the very generation that led the protest which brought this government to power does not participate in the election it is now conducting, then how will the movement be truly institutionalised?" asked Uparjun Chamling.

The 25-year-old, who participated in the protest, also intends to stand in the upcoming election.

"In the spirit of the Gen Z movement we need new faces," he said. "But, more importantly, we need new thinking."

Voter interest has surged, especially among young people who see the election as a critical test of whether their movement can translate into meaningful change.

"The protest sparked my interest in politics," said Sabita Biswokarma, a 26-year-old student, among the young who queued this week to register before the November 21 deadline.

Nearly 675,000 new voters have already registered, half of them through a new online system that young Nepalis have welcomed.

"The online registration was encouraging," added Biswokarma. "So to some extent, Gen Z demands are being heard."

At the Election Commission, 123 parties have registered with 32 new parties under consideration. The party deadline to register is November 26.

Many of those involved in the protest have been campaigning for voter registration, and say they will continue to raise awareness on the ground ahead of the polls.

However, most key Gen Z figures are yet to either join -- or open -- a new political party.

"People are expecting a new party from Gen Z," said Kaushal Kafle, a journalist reporting on political developments within the Gen Z community.

"But when the protest began, this degree of change was not expected -- so they were not prepared."

Kafle said that while "many new parties are coming up", some Gen Z leaders were seeking to back candidates they support, rather than taking the political plunge directly.

"It seems that most are anxious to take that step," Kafle said. "Their focus is to build a network across the country, and support if there are candidates for the election."

The path to the March elections remains fraught. Nepal's political landscape is volatile, scarred by deep public distrust in the established parties.

But a political spark has been lit.

"I was never interested in politics," said Sunita Tamang, 40, who also registered to vote for the first time.

"But after this political change, I felt that I should exercise my voting rights to choose good leadership."

10
 
 

Dhaka (AFP) – Bangladesh's police have unveiled new uniforms in a symbolic bid to signal reform and rebuild deeply eroded public trust, just weeks ahead of the first elections since a mass uprising.

The police force was cast into turmoil after the 2024 overthrow of the autocratic government of now-convicted fugitive Sheikh Hasina, which left at least 1,400 dead and thousands maimed -- many by police gunfire.

"Bangladesh Police have been facing an unprecedented crisis," police spokesman Sahadat Hossaine told AFP. "The policymakers suggested... that a new uniform may bring a positive change."

Police are now trading the familiar turquoise-and-blue uniforms for iron-grey shirts and chocolate-brown trousers.

Whether a new colour scheme can mend a shattered reputation remains doubtful.

"Whenever I see a policeman, I feel like biting his flesh off. I don't know if I'll ever get over this hatred," said Nazma Akhtar, 48, whose 17-year-old son Golam Nafeez was killed during the uprising.

Akhtar's son was shot, denied entry to a hospital, and died from blood loss on August 4, 2024.

"How can a new uniform change their attitude?" Akhtar added. "I saw them beating teachers just for demanding a pay rise."

The nation of 170 million people is expected to hold elections in February 2026, with the security forces critical to ensuring they are peaceful.

Former prime minister Sheikh Hasina was sentenced to death by a Dhaka court on Monday, for charges that included ordering the security forces to use deadly force against protesters.

Hasina's bid to cling to power failed after she ordered the army to crush the protests and they refused.

Vandalism and arson attacks in the chaotic aftermath of her fall targeted roughly 450 of the country’s 600 police stations, according to officials.

"They left the police stations immediately after the previous government stepped down, and now they are struggling to get back on their feet", Hossaine said.

Researchers have documented widespread brutality by police during the uprising.

That included the killing of unarmed teenage student Ashiqur Rahman Hridoy, who was "sandwiched between two groups of police and shot from point-blank range," Fawzia Afroz of Tech Global Institute policy group told AFP.

Around 1,500 police personnel now face criminal charges, mostly for murder, with dozens in detention. The former police chief, who pleaded guilty in the same trial as Hasina, was sentenced to five years.

Police say an estimated 55 senior officers, also wanted for murder, have fled to India.

But serving officers express their own frustrations: 44 officers were also killed during the unrest, yet the interim government has agreed "legal immunity" for protesters.

Sultana Razia watched as her husband, a police inspector, was beaten to death by a mob in the chaos after Hasina fled.

"He wasn't supposed to die this way," Razia said.

A mid-ranking officer speaking on the condition of anonymity told AFP that "police are also human beings".

The interim government, led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, formed a police reform commission, but progress has been slow.

Allegations of excessive force persist and public trust has fallen so sharply that in many areas mobs now routinely take justice into their own hands, often times abducting suspects and killing them.

"I don't see many changes," said Abu Ahmed Faijul Kabir of the human rights organisation Ain o Salish Kendra, noting that "around 28 people died in custody in the last 10 months".

Nearly 300 people were killed in political violence in Bangladesh in the year since the uprising, human rights group Odhikar said in November.

"Police were used as political tools by successive governments," said Alamgir Hossain, 60, a motor rickshaw driver.

"They never bothered about the law of the land," he added.

11
 
 

Berlin (AFP) – Two long-lost organ pieces written by a teenage Johann Sebastian Bach were unveiled in Germany on Monday in a discovery described as a "great moment for the world of music".

The two solo organ works, written while Bach was working as an organ teacher in the town of Arnstadt in Thuringia early in his career, first caught the attention of researchers over 30 years ago.

But it is only now that experts have been able to prove they were written by Bach after finally confirming the identity of the person who penned the manuscripts.

The Chaconne in D minor BWV 1178 and Chaconne in G minor BWV 1179 have been added to the official catalogue of Bach's works as of Monday.

They were also performed for the first time in 320 years at the St Thomas Church in Leipzig, where Bach is buried and served as a cantor for 27 years.

In a press conference before the works were performed, Culture Minister Wolfram Weimer hailed the discovery as a "global sensation" and a "great moment for the world of music".

"This is a source of great joy for many, many music lovers around the world," he said.

Bach researcher Peter Wollny first came across the works in the Royal Library of Belgium in 1992, according to the Bach Archive in Leipzig, which documents and researches the composer's life and work.

The manuscripts were undated and unsigned but are thought to have been written in around 1705, when Bach would have been 18 years old.

Wollny was fascinated by the works from the outset because they contained several characteristics that were unique to Bach during that period.

But the identity of the manuscript writer remained a mystery.

Several years ago, experts came across some very similar handwriting in a letter dating from 1729 written by a former pupil of Bach in Arnstadt, Salomon Guenther John.

But since the letter was written 20 years after the manuscripts and the handwriting was not identical, more evidence was needed.

It was only recently that earlier samples of John's writing were found, from around the same period, providing definitive proof that the handwriting was his.

"I searched for a long time for the missing piece of the puzzle to identify the compositions -- now the whole picture is clear," Wollny said.

"We can now say with certainty that the copies were made around 1705 by Bach's pupil Salomon Guenther John."

Ton Koopman, the Dutch organist and head of the Bach Archive who performed the works on Monday, said they were "of a very high quality".

"When one thinks of the young Bach or Mozart, it is often assumed that genius comes later in life -- but that is not the case," he said.

"I am convinced that organists worldwide will be very grateful for this virtuoso, lively new repertoire and will perform it regularly in future."

The performance of the D minor piece lasted around six-and-a-half minutes, while the G minor one lasted around three-and-a-half minutes.

Bach was born in Eisenach in central Germany in 1685 and died in 1750.

Best known for composing the Brandenburg Concertos, he was described by the 18th-century composer Ludwig Van Beethoven as "the immortal god of harmony".

Founded 75 years ago, the Bach Archive has helped to unearth several previously lost works by the composer.

In 2008, an organ piece called "Wo Gott der Herr nicht bei uns haelt" (Where God the Lord does not stay by our side) was found in an auction lot by professors from the Martin-Luther University in Halle.

In 2004, a Bach cantata that had been lost for decades was rediscovered in the papers of Japanese pianist Chieko Hara.

12
 
 

Nandurbar (India) (AFP) – Each morning, 17-year-old Ramati Mangla sets off barefoot with a steel pot in hand, walking several kilometres to fetch water from a distant spring in India's Maharashtra state.

By the time she returns, school has already started.

"I have kept my books," she said. "But what if I never get a chance to go back?"

In the drought-hit villages of Maharashtra's Nashik and Nandurbar districts, wells are drying up and rainfall has become increasingly erratic -- forcing families to adapt to harsher living conditions.

As men migrate to nearby cities in search of work, girls like Mangla are left to take on the responsibility of collecting water.

It's a chore that can take hours each day and leaves little time for school.

Local officials estimate that nearly two million people in these regions face daily water shortages.

A 2021 UNESCO report warned that climate-related disruptions could push millions of girls worldwide out of classrooms.

It is a pattern already visible across India's rural heartlands.

Teachers say attendance among girls has sharply dropped in recent years, particularly during the dry months.

Many families, struggling to survive, see no option but to keep their daughters home or marry them early.

"Children living in drought prone areas, with family responsibilities for fetching water, struggle with attending school regularly -- as collecting water now takes a longer time due to water scarcity and pollution," the UN children's fund wrote in a report.

For Mangla, and many other girls across India, climate change is turning the simple act of fetching water into a choice between survival and education.

Mangla's story has been spotlighted alongside a photography series shot by Shefali Rafiq for the 2025 Marai Photo Grant, an award open to photographers from South Asia aged 25 or under.

The theme for 2025 was "climate change" and its impact on daily life and the community of the photographers who enter.

The award is organised by Agence France-Presse in honour of Shah Marai, the former photo chief at AFP's Kabul bureau.

Shah Marai, who was an inspiration for Afghan photographers throughout his career, was killed in the line of duty at the age of 41 in a suicide attack on April 30, 2018, in Kabul.

13
 
 

Dublin (AFP) – Ireland hosts one of the world's fast-growing clusters of data centres, but is running headlong into the difficult consequences.

The server farms powering global tech giants now consume a fifth of the small nation's electricity, igniting concerns over both grid stability and Ireland's commitments to boost renewable energies and cut gas emissions.

Already home to over 80 data centres, a 2024 report by US-based researchers Synergy ranked Dublin behind only the US state of Virginia and Beijing in its density of such state-of-the-art facilities built for colossal amounts of data.

Vast energy-hungry warehouses around Dublin's ring road host thousands of servers handling massive amounts of cloud computing, storage and AI demands for data giants like Google, Meta, Microsoft and Amazon.

The facilities are a quietly purring economic engine, injecting billions in investment, employment and anchoring the tech multinationals which, coupled with big pharma, fund over half of Ireland's corporate-tax take, according to analysts.

But doubts are mounting over the environmental cost.

Campaigner group Friends of the Earth told AFP such centres are "completely unsustainable".

"It's one of the fundamental climate justice issues of our times," said spokesperson Rosi Leonard.

Data centres' share of Irish metered electricity consumption reached 22 percent by 2024, compared to an EU-wide average of 2-3 percent, according to official data.

National grid operator EirGrid projects that data centres could account for 30 percent of demand by 2030 as the growth of artificial intelligence technology accelerates.

That is equivalent to powering two million homes for a full year, energy analysts Wood Mackenzie said in July.

Some data centres in high-pressure areas in Dublin have already turned to generators for back-up, which are usually gas and oil-powered, said Leonard.

That could hamper Ireland's already fraught efforts to meet EU 2030 climate targets that threaten multi-billion euro fines if missed.

Leonard said the server farms are also gobbling up much of the renewable energy like wind and solar that is being added to the grid.

"We want a moratorium on further expansion of data centres until they pose no threat to our climate and carbon budgets," she said.

EirGrid plans capacity upgrades to accommodate future data centre demand more evenly nationwide. And the government has said a new strategy will be published soon with a pledge to update the grid within five years.

But experts doubt whether those plans will deliver in time to meet demand.

As Ireland aims "to reduce emissions... expanding a sector that's going to increase emissions very significantly just... doesn't make sense," said Barry McMullin, a climate change expert at Dublin City University.

Data centre compatibility with emissions goals "is unlikely for another decade", he told AFP.

Some planning authorities have already pushed back.

Last year, a local council in Dublin refused a Google data centre development, citing "insufficient (grid) capacity" and a "lack of significant on-site renewable energy".

Ireland's digital sector contributes an estimated 13 percent to GDP.

But Maurice Mortell, head of Digital Infrastructure Ireland (DII), a group representing data centres, warns the nation could lose out on AI-driven investment due to grid and planning blockages.

"We've over 18 billion euros ($21 billion) of investment in digital infrastructure here already, with another 5.8 billion planned, but without power, so potentially marooned," he said.

"Ireland's lead, particularly in cloud computing, is at risk," he told AFP, highlighting its fading appeal and frustrations from large US firms.

"Our sector is in limbo, we need a grid that's capable, and a clear policy environment," he said.

A 2022 government strategy paper said data centres should demonstrate a "clear pathway to decarbonise" and "net-zero data services by design".

Meanwhile, a project launched in 2023 by Amazon Web Services (AWS) in partnership with a local Dublin authority shows how some climate impacts could be offset.

Waste heat provided from an AWS data centre is carried via hot water through pipes to a local heating hub next door to heat offices and a library, and soon hundreds of homes.

"There is potential for other data centres to do the same," said Admir Shala, a project manager at the heating hub called Heatworks.

But expert McMullin was sceptical.

"We don't really have heat networks to plug this waste heat into," he said, adding that data centres run year-round whereas homes only need to be heated for about six months a year.

14
 
 

Washington (AFP) – It is one of the world's most famous unsolved codes whose answer could sell for a fortune -- but two US friends say they have already found the secret hidden by "Kryptos."

The S-shaped copper sculpture has baffled cryptography enthusiasts since its 1990 installation on the grounds of the CIA headquarters in Virginia, with three of its four messages deciphered so far.

Yet K4, the final passage, has kept codebreakers scratching their heads. The sculptor Jim Sanborn, 80, has been so overwhelmed by guesses that he started charging $50 for each response.

In August, Sanborn announced he would auction the 97-character solution to K4 as he no longer had the "physical, mental or financial resources" to maintain the code.

In a sign of wide interest in Kryptos, which has inspired cultural figures including "The Da Vinci Code" author Dan Brown, the code's solution is on course to fetch more than $240,000 in a sale due to end this Thursday.

So when two friends announced in October they had uncovered the last message held by Kryptos ("hidden" in ancient Greek), it invoked fury and concern from the auction house and Sanborn.

Jarett Kobek, a writer from Los Angeles, told AFP how the pair came across the code after he noticed a reference to Washington's Smithsonian Institution, where Sanborn held his archives, in the auction catalog.

He asked his friend Richard Byrne, who is based in the US capital, to take a look through the files.

"I took images of all the coding stuff in the files," said Richard Byrne, a journalist and playwright.

A few hours later, Kobek called him and said "Hey, you might have found something interesting," he recalled.

Using Byrne's photos and clues previously shared by Sanborn, Kobek unraveled the K4 message.

The two men decided to write to Sanborn to share their discovery -- but instead of congratulations, they were met by alarm.

Sanborn, the pair said, asked them to sign non-disclosure agreements in exchange for a share of the money raised in the auction.

"The NDA is a total non-starter," Kobek said. "You are running an auction where what you are selling is intellectual property exclusivity."

"If I take money from that sale, I feel like this would almost certainly make me party to fraud."

They later went public with their discovery in a New York Times piece in October.

Sanborn, explaining his communication with the men, wrote in a public letter: "I was trying to save K4 from disclosure by any means possible. I had succeeded for 35 years after all."

Kobek said the pair were keen to avoid disrupting the K4 auction.

"The last thing anyone wants to do is take money from an 80-year-old artist," he said.

Even if they have no intention of revealing the code's solution, the two men say the auction house has sent them cease-and-desist letters.

Sanborn has acknowledged his error in archiving the crucial information -- but he downplayed the discovery.

He said the pair had "found and photographed five pieces of scrambled texts that I had accidentally placed in the archive boxes all those years ago."

"The scrambled plain text was found, but without the coding method or the key. This is a very important distinction," he separately told a news conference in November.

And, he added, the discovery does not end the mystery of Kryptos.

K5, with a "similar but not identical" coding system to K4, is also to be released after the current auction sale.

15
 
 

Mumbai (India) (AFP) – India's $60-billion Bollywood industry is facing a deepening credibility crisis, as insiders warn that manipulated film reviews and inflated box office numbers are distorting public perception, ultimately hurting ticket sales.

Streaming platforms have disrupted traditional cinema but industry veterans say Bollywood's woes are also self-inflicted -- including the trend to declare a film a "hit" even before its release.

"If you don't engage these influencers and critics, they will write bad reviews, even if the film is good," producer-distributor Suniel Wadhwa told AFP.

"If the film is bad, they will write good things about the film, provided the producer or studio has paid them."

Trade analyst and veteran distributor Raj Bansal said audiences have grown sceptical of early rave reviews.

"As soon as the media gives four stars, people message me saying, 'Sir, that means the movie is not good,'" Bansal said.

"And, even if the film is good, they don't trust it."

That distrust is now visible at the box office.

"Regular cinema-goers wait to know the correct reports," Bansal said.

That means ticket sales during the vital opening shows "take a major dip" as film fans wait for word of mouth or "genuine reviews" to come out, he added.

Industry insiders allege that some influencers have "rate cards", with prices rising for films that generate low pre-release buzz.

Producers, meanwhile, are accused of bulk-buying tickets to inflate opening-week numbers.

"Everything is bought and manipulated," Bansal said, referring to both reviews and social media personalities.

Sudhir Kasliwal, owner of Jaipur's Gem Cinema, recalled seeing hundreds of online bookings for one of superstar Shah Rukh Khan's releases, but only a fraction of the audience showed up in person.

"Producers, directors and actors themselves buy tickets... the future of Bollywood looks very bleak if this practice continues," Kasliwal said.

"The wrong messages are conveyed to people and unless good content is produced, things will never improve."

Recent controversies include Bollywood A-lister Akshay Kumar's fighter jet action movie "Skyforce".

The film's director denied allegations of so-called "block booking" to boost first-week numbers, but a Mumbai-based trade analyst claimed its gross was inflated from about $6 million to over $9 million.

"Online booking platforms showed full houses, but many theatres were nearly empty," the analyst told AFP, requesting anonymity.

Bansal said that critics who refuse to play along also risk being sidelined, while those who comply "flourish".

"Whenever I (post) that the film has opened with weak collections (ticket sales), I receive a barrage of calls from actors, producers asking me to remove it," he said.

Producer-distributor Wadhwa said that the box office collection of the 2025 romantic comedy horror "Thamma" was also manipulated, claiming true sales were around $15 million while the film reported $18 million.

Thamma director Aditya Sarpotdar defended the $18 million figure, calling it the "most accurate", having come from distributors and exhibitors.

"When a film is still in theatres, the collection figures between producers and the trade will vary," Sarpotdar told AFP.

"Producer numbers are always the honest numbers."

Experts warn that falsifying box office data has lasting consequences, from inflated star salaries to shrinking opportunities for new talent.

"You can't take the audience for granted. They know the truth," said Wadhwa, adding that to have both reviews and ticket sales manipulated was "a very sad situation."

Streaming platforms, now major players in film distribution, have begun demanding audited box office figures before striking deals which has added pressure on producers.

"Streamers have now become sharp and careful about the film they are choosing," said Wadhwa.

Despite the backlash, few expect the trend to end anytime soon.

"This practice will continue" Wadhwa said, until producers and studios lose their "appetite to buy tickets."

16
 
 

Riyadh (Saudi Arabia) (AFP) – Draft beer, peanuts and big-screen sports... the scene is reminiscent of pubs worldwide, but in Saudi Arabia's capital, customers in white robes or black veils sip alcohol-free pints with no expectation of a hangover.

"The idea is to offer customers an original experience they can share on social media," Abdallah Islam, manager of the A12 cafe in Riyadh, told AFP.

At the cafe, Saudi women lift their black face veils to sip ice-cold beer.

"Is there alcohol in this?" one customer asked, nervously eyeing his pint.

The incongruous scene, with veiled women clinking glasses, signals the changes under way and in the conservative kingdom, home to Islam's holiest sites, as deep-seated taboos are gently prodded.

The A12 cafe, on one of the busiest avenues in the capital, displays a large picture of a foaming pint on its window.

Its managers say the cafe has been packed since April when it began serving draft beer -- a German Warsteiner with 0.0 percent alcohol, poured into large mugs and served with peanuts, pub-style.

Around the tables, young men in white thobes -- the traditional Saudi garment -- film themselves sipping their drinks, while a waiter pulls pints behind a shiny black bar.

Some watch football on a television screen while enjoying a cold brew.

Since the rise to power of Saudi crown prince and de facto ruler Mohammed bin Salman, cinemas have reopened, women are allowed to drive and foreign tourists are being welcomed.

Alcohol, however, remains a red line.

Booze has been banned in Saudi Arabia since 1952, shortly after the son of then-King Abdulaziz got drunk and, in a rage, shot dead a British diplomat.

For years, some residents of the city have been known to make their own bootleg wine. Others turn to the black market, where a bottle of whisky can fetch several hundred dollars.

In January 2024, the country opened its first liquor store in Riyadh, catering exclusively to non-Muslim diplomats.

But alcohol will not be served during the 2034 World Cup, the Saudi ambassador in London told a British broadcaster this year.

"The kingdom must tread carefully with any potential legalisation of alcohol, as it would contradict its image as a credible leader of the Islamic world," Sebastian Sons of the German think tank CARPO told AFP.

Saudi Arabia and Kuwait are the only Gulf countries that still ban alcohol.

Back at the A12 cafe, curious Saudis are coming to see what the fuss is about.

"The look of it is scary -- it looks like alcohol," said Sheikha, 18, who asked to be identified by her first name only.

"The word 'beer' alone is scary," she laughed. "But I got over my fear, and honestly it's refreshing."

The young woman, accompanied by a friend, decided to try the experience after seeing videos on TikTok.

For the cafe's manager, the point is to be able to offer the bar experience "but within the limits of local values".

It is a delicate balance in a youthful country where many are keen to experiment -- but without crossing the line.

"In our country, there are no alcoholic drinks," said Ahmed Mohammed, 18, as he set down his empty mug.

"And we don't want there to be any."

17
 
 

Saint Petersburg (AFP) – Russian bookseller Lyubov Belyatskaya sighed as she lamented the "climate of widespread anxiety" that has taken hold in her native Saint Petersburg amid the war in Ukraine.

Once dubbed Russia's "window to Europe", the city has long been the country's cultural capital, a hotbed of independent thinking, artistic expression and underground dissent.

But as authorities ratchet up repression, trying to stamp out any sign, no matter how small or subtle, of public opposition to the Kremlin or the Ukraine offensive, Belyatskaya said she senses the city retreating inwards.

"We can no longer write the way we used to, joke about certain things," she told AFP.

"Both our words and actions are severely restricted."

The effect is being seen on the shelves of her bookshop -- called "Vse Svobodny" or "Everyone is free" -- in the city centre.

"Every week we literally have to remove books for one reason or another," Belyatskaya said.

Since launching its offensive on Ukraine in February 2022, Russia has deployed a full legislative arsenal to silence anyone who criticises the campaign.

Those who breach wartime censorship face decade-long prison sentences.

Some authors -- like late opposition leader Alexei Navalny -- are completely banned.

Others -- those who are disliked by the Kremlin but not yet outlawed -- have to be sold with a giant label naming them as "foreign agents".

The Soviet-era term applies to the likes of Lyudmila Ulitskaya and Boris Akunin, prolific, now exiled, Russian writers.

The crackdown in Saint Petersburg -- President Vladimir Putin's hometown -- has a particular resonance.

The Tsarist-era capital has for decades been at the forefront of free thinking and dissent.

Nobel Prize-winner Joseph Brodsky was forced to emigrate in 1972 after years of persecution for his non-conformist poetry.

It was from Saint Petersburg that the protest rock anthem "Changes" -- by Kino, fronted by Viktor Tsoi -- emerged, encapsulating the pent-up frustration at the end of the Soviet Union.

And since 2022, the city's rock legends Boris Grebenshchikov and Yuri Shevchuk have repeatedly railed against the offensive in Ukraine.

"We consider ourselves to be freer here, more liberated, less subordinate to fear, including the fear of repression," local rights activist Dinar Idrisov told AFP.

"In reality, I don't think that's true."

There are signs that the screws are being tightened.

Known by her stage name Naoko, she has been sentenced to three consecutive short-term prison terms -- for disrupting public order, discrediting the Russian army and organising a mass gathering.

"To prosecute somebody for a song -- seriously?" said Serafim, a 21-year-old music student who had come to court, alongside 20 other young people, to support Loginova at a recent hearing.

Despite sympathy, some criticised her for drawing attention to the underground music scene.

"They knew they were endangering everyone", after they posted the videos online, said one singer from the city who spoke on condition of anonymity.

"The authorities ignored us, but now I know that many people have stopped going out" to perform, they added.

Pavel, a 17-year-old singer, was performing next to one of the city's canals.

"There is now a crackdown on musicians," he told AFP, saying authorities have started placing bureaucratic obstacles to hinder performances.

Platon Romanov, another bookseller who runs the independent Fahrenheit 451 store, said there was no point to trying to protest against the current situation.

"You just need to understand what times we live in. Singing songs by banned musicians on the street. Why? For what purpose? It's pointless, and obvious they will come and shut it down," he told AFP.

In such a climate, what are the prospects for a city that prided itself on its reputation as a counter-cultural hub and bastion of artistic freedom?

"Many many people, many artists, poets and musicians have left," said Romanov.

"Life has changed significantly."

18
 
 

Naivasha (Kenya) (AFP) – Coaxed and tugged by rangers, a blindfolded giraffe totters into the specialised vehicle that will transport it away from an increasingly hostile environment to a new home in Kenya's eastern Rift Valley.

Such relocations are a last resort when human activities or climate change threaten the survival of wildlife or peaceful coexistence with humans, say conservationists.

But the complex operations, overseen by Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS), are becoming more and more frequent in the east African country.

In recent weeks, hundreds of giraffes, zebras, and antelopes have been removed from the Kedong Ranch, on the shores of tourist hotspot Lake Naivasha.

The land had been left in its natural state, but over the years has been sold and subdivided into plots for real estate development, preventing the animals from grazing or using the natural corridor between Mount Longonot and Hells Gate.

"The animals began to suffer. They were stranded, stressed," said KWS's Patrick Wambugu, describing the construction of fences blocking the giraffes' route.

On Sunday, Wambugu's team relocated five giraffes in an operation that required dozens of people, trailers, a plow -- and even a helicopter that tracked the animals across the plains, before shooting them with tranquiliser darts.

KWS veterinarian Dominic Mijele, who was part of the operation, told AFP the giraffe is the most difficult animal to move, the risks "numerous".

The long-limbed creatures face deadly falls after being tranquilised and, despite their gentle appearance, can deliver a fierce kick to those trying to help.

They are also highly sensitive to anaesthesia and so cannot be kept sedated for long, a result of their unique build -- "the heart to the brain is quite long," Mijele explained.

As such, the rangers have to physically immobilise the creatures before they can be blindfolded and transported.

Once secured, the convoy travels the roughly 30 kilometres separating the ranch from their new home in the Oserengoni private reserve.

Once in there, a veterinarian will observe them for a week, although they usually establish their territory within two days.

"We hope that in the coming years the numbers will multiply, and they will be able to thrive in this landscape," said Mijele.

Similar operations are carried out almost every month in Kenya, said Mijele, mainly due to environmental destruction.

However, human-wildlife conflicts are also on the rise.

Kenya's population has soared from 30 million in 2000 to roughly 56.4 million in 2024, according to the World Bank.

Land privatisation is common and goes hand-in-hand with rampant speculation.

Humans often settle in areas that are also refuges for wildlife, said Evan Mkala, programme manager in eastern Kenya for the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW).

The area around Lake Naivasha is being "invaded" by people, he said bluntly, leading to costly relocations when a "critical point" is reached.

This is happening with increasing frequency.

In a country with hundreds of national parks and private reserves, which generate significant tourism revenue, the challenge is to "reconcile" population growth, economic development, and wildlife conservation, said Philip Muruthi, vice president of the African Wildlife Foundation.

"Africa doesn't have to choose between wildlife conservation, nature protection, and development," he said, underscoring that the well-being of humans and animals is "inseparable".

19
 
 

Tehran (AFP) – As the referee's whistle signalled the start of the match, two five-year-old Iranian girls faced off, delivering a closely watched karate bout to a captivated audience -- a sign of the changing attitude toward martial arts in the Islamic Republic in recent years.

The two young opponents, clad in crisp white karategi with coloured belts and protective headgear, circled each other on the tatami, the floor covering used for practising Japanese martial arts.

Their movements were sharp and deliberate, each kick and block executed with precision and control to the cheers of an all-female audience.

At the final whistle, three minutes later, the two opponents shook hands and embraced.

The match was part of an annual regional tournament that saw 230 participants of all ages gathered in Tehran, lining up in formation before the competition began.

That AFP was accorded rare access to film and photograph a competition for women and girls was itself a sign of greater official openness.

"This sport is anything but violent" because it "promotes discipline", said Samaneh Parsa, a 44-year-old mother who has been practising karate for five years with her daughter Helma and son Ilya.

"I have observed its positive influence on children's behaviour," she said at a club in southern Tehran, where AFP was granted a rare access to the prelude to the match.

For her, karate is a way to "release emotions" and "bring serenity during stressful times", even though it was long frowned upon for women to practise the sport in Iran.

All martial arts were temporarily banned for women after the 1979 Islamic Revolution but were later reinstated under stricter dress code regulations.

As more women turn to karate, the sport has become a symbol of Iran's changing society, where a young, urban generation is quietly challenging traditional gender roles and societal norms.

Last week, Iranian athlete Atousa Golshadnezhad won another gold medal at the Islamic Solidarity Games in Saudi Arabia.

Women in Iran have, in recent years, been pushing social boundaries more broadly -- defying the Islamic Republic's strict rules, including the mandatory dress code.

The trend has been particularly evident since the September 2022 death in custody of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian Kurd, who had been arrested by the morality police for allegedly violating the dress code.

Afshin Torkpour, head of Kyokushin-Ryu karate in Iran, has similarly noted a shift in recent years, with women turning to sports that "were once considered violent".

Women practising the sport are now as, and often more motivated, said Torkpour, noting that they develop "a strong mindset".

Around 150,000 people practise karate in Iran across all genders, says Torkpour, who estimates that the actual figure could be much higher, up to two million.

At the Asian Championships, the national junior women's under-21 team won 11 medals, including six golds.

In 2020, two Iranian karatekas participated in the Tokyo Olympics in Japan but did not win any medals.

For Azam Ahmadi, a woman in her 30s who has practised the sport since she was 12, karate teaches essential life skills: "If you fall, you have to get back up, keep going, and never give up."

Mina Mahadi, vice-head of the women's Kyokushin-Ryu karate section in Iran, says it also allows girls to "gain confidence" instead of them "saying yes to anything".

20
 
 

United Nations (United States) (AFP) – Gangs in Haiti are profiting from a lucrative trade in baby eels caught in the crime-ridden country's rivers and estuaries and sold abroad for thousands of dollars.

Demand for the worm-like creatures with dots for eyes comes largely from Asia and is filling the coffers of the criminal organizations terrorizing Haiti, experts warn.

Known in Haitian creole as "Zangi," the glass eels drift each year from the Sargasso Sea in the North Atlantic to the ocean's coasts -- including along the coasts of the island of Hispaniola, shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

They infiltrate the rivers where they grow until they return to sea to reproduce.

The global trade of European eels has been strictly controlled since 2009 by the CITES convention on endangered species, but the trade of American eels is not.

They are however classed as endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List of Threatened Species -- primarily due to overfishing of the species which commercial fish farms cannot breed in captivity.

They are used to supply farms where they are fattened up for sale in Asia where eels are a highly sought delicacy.

Haiti along with the Dominican Republic has become a key exporter of American eels in recent years, CITES says.

To protect American and European eels, indistinguishable to the naked eye, from continuing to be shipped to Asia under false labels, the EU and Panama want CITES to restrict the trade of all eels.

If their move is adopted at a meeting in Uzbekistan starting on November 24 "it will certainly penalize several stakeholders -- exporters in particular -- as well as poor and vulnerable small-scale fishermen" in Haiti, Natural Resources Minister Vernet Joseph told AFP.

To protect the species Haiti -- which is not a party to CITES -- has implemented a "modest approach," significantly reducing the overall harvest, while acknowledging a lack of reliable data on exploitation of the species.

Haiti's glass eel industry is entirely geared to export, is not "organized" and does not record "clear and reliable data -- whether at the level of fishermen or the government," an environmental activist told AFP on condition of anonymity.

"It's a sector like the Mafia."

Ghada Waly, the outgoing head of the UN's drugs and crime office, warned "there is growing evidence that several Haitian nationals are part of a wider criminal network connected to lucrative eel trafficking, operating in Haiti and beyond."

Evidence showed "powerful political and economic figures in Haiti use the eel industry to launder drug profits," she added.

UN experts charged with enforcing sanctions have stepped up their monitoring of fishermen, intermediaries, customs officers and airlines.

In a report published in October, they criticized how the opaque and unregulated sector had created "an ideal environment for criminals to launder money."

The government is responsible for fishing licenses -- but a lack of controls allows for money laundering, fishermen and couriers to be extorted by gangs, with contraband often added to their outbound shipments, the experts said.

Reliable data is scanty, but experts point to a 2009 government estimate of an export "capacity" of 800 tonnes -- enough to make the trade highly lucrative.

One gram of exported Haitian eels -- seven to 10 actual specimens -- can be sold for between $3.60 and $4.50, with the fishermen paid between 50 cents and $1.50 a kilogram.

Though paid a fraction of the eels' true value, the sums earned by the fishing community are still significant and attractive at a time of deep crisis in Haiti.

Between fall and spring, the fishermen "spend 12 hours in challenging conditions, barefoot in the waters of the river mouths, from 6 pm until sunrise -- all without appropriate kit," said the environmental campaigner.

To catch the minute, translucent fish, fishermen often use mosquito nets in wooden frames.

A fisherman in Bas-Limbe anonymously told the UN sanctions report's authors it was "every man for himself" and that he had seen hundreds of people hospitalized for various ailments including infections.

The campaigner said "it would be better to put an end to eel fishing and help supply fishing communities with equipment to catch other species of seafood."

21
 
 

Laayoune (AFP) – Many people in Western Sahara hope Morocco's long-discussed autonomy plan for the area -- now backed by the UN Security Council -- will accelerate development and end the half-century-long territorial dispute.

Its main city of Laayoune, with modern apartment blocks built among sand dunes some 20 kilometres (12 miles) from the Atlantic Ocean, already projects an image of growth and stability.

But the sprawling desert city of around 250,000 people remains at the heart of the conflict that has pitted Rabat against the Algiers-backed Polisario Front, which seeks independence for the mainly tribal native Sahrawi people.

Cafes and restaurants in Laayoune are full, and official portraits of King Mohammed VI and Moroccan flags hang from balconies.

Many Sahrawi tribal leaders interviewed by AFP voiced support for Rabat's plan.

Among them, Abdallah Salhi said the plan would mean "living off our resources and having elected officials, a parliament and a government that manages this region".

While mineral-rich Western Sahara remains on the UN list of non-self-governing territories, the Security Council on October 31 endorsed Morocco's plan.

The Western Sahara is a national cause for Morocco and is central to the kingdom's tensions with its neighbour and regional foe Algeria.

When Spain pulled out of Western Sahara in 1975, both Morocco and the Polisario, which was founded two years earlier, claimed the territory.

Fighting displaced tens of thousands of people, who fled to camps in western Algeria, UN figures show.

Abdelatif Baira, another Sahrawi tribal chief, said the autonomy plan would allow the return of "our brothers and sisters" from the camps near Tindouf, home to roughly 175,000 Sahrawi refugees.

"The separation of families is unbearable," Baira said.

Wearing a traditional daraa gown, the 64-year-old said the territory was "empty" and devoid of infrastructure when the Spanish withdrew.

"Today everything has changed. Morocco built universities, hospitals, an airport, roads, schools..."

The territory is rich in phosphates and home to lucrative fishing grounds.

It has a population of more than 600,000, according to Morocco's 2024 census, which does not distinguish between native Sahrawis and those who moved there from Morocco.

Last month's UN vote, coming at the initiative of US President Donald Trump's administration, said "genuine autonomy could represent a most feasible outcome" under the plan to end the dispute.

Morocco must now update its proposal to reach "a final mutually acceptable solution" according to the resolution.

The Polisario still demands a UN referendum on self-determination -- promised under a 1991 ceasefire but never held.

Moulay Ibrahim Taleb Ali, a 40-year-old who heads a cooperative that produces the daraa, welcomed the UN move.

He said the plan could stimulate the Western Saharan economy and attract foreign investors previously reluctant because of the territory's disputed status.

Hanane Khadiri, a 38-year-old theatre company director, said the autonomy plan would provide women with more opportunities.

She said Sahrawi women "work a lot", especially in traditional crafts, but often lack the "financial backing to prosper".

She said Laayoune was changing, even though it was already "developed, modern and stable".

Some fear the Moroccan plan could restrict freedoms, however.

Ajwad, 45, who is originally from Meknes and asked that his family name be withheld for fear of retribution, said some Sahrawis "don't want autonomy" under Morocco, because that would "impose restrictions" on their freedoms.

He also worried that the political shift could create friction.

"In a future local government, the question of who will hold which position is likely to fuel rivalries," he said, adding that competition within local institutions is also likely.

Since moving to Laayoune in 2005 to start a production company, Ajwad has "not paid taxes", he said, much like other businesses in the territory.

But that could change under the autonomy plan, he believed. "We have already started preparing for taxation, three or four years ago."

"We are not paying yet, but that will come soon," he added. "Some will have difficulty adapting to that."

22
 
 

Katunayake (Sri Lanka) (AFP) – Blind women from India and Pakistan brushed aside political tensions on Sunday, shaking hands in neutral Sri Lanka at a cricket tournament for the visually impaired.

At what organisers describe as the world’s first blind women’s T20 tournament, players from the two South Asian neighbours showed they had sporting vision even if they lacked sight -- unlike their regular national teams.

Tensions off and on the field have been high since a deadly military clash between the nuclear-armed neighbours in May.

India’s men refused to shake hands with their Pakistani opponents at the Asia Cup in September, since when neither side has shown signs of making up.

That animosity spread to the women's sides who declined any greeting at the recent T20 World Cup and also to Sunday's men's Rising Stars Asia Cup tie in Doha.

India’s blind players were expected to mirror the conduct of their sighted teams when there was no handshake after the toss, but at the end of the match both sides warmly greeted each other.

The two sides, who travelled to the venue together in the same bus, not only shook hands but also exchanged generous compliments.

India won by eight wickets in just 10.2 overs after Pakistan were restricted to 135 for eight in their 20 overs at the Free Trade Zone grounds in Katunayake, 30 kilometres (18 miles) north of Colombo.

Pakistan skipper Nimra Rafique congratulated India on their comprehensive victory, while her Indian counterpart T. C. Deepika said Pakistan had played well.

The teams applauded one another loudly but neither set of players was permitted to talk to the press.

There were hardly any spectators but the match was shown live on Sri Lanka's national television, Rupavahini. Blind Sri Lankan officials hosting the tournament “watched” the match on YouTube by listening to the commentary.

Indian team manager Shika Shetty told AFP before the match that the tournament was opening up opportunities for more women.

“This is the first-ever World Cup for blind women... I think this is one of the biggest opportunities for our entire visually impaired girls,” said Shetty, who is not blind.

“Maybe many girls with disabilities will come out from their villages. Maybe they will come for studies, maybe they will come for the sport. So it is helpful for other girls too."

Blind cricket relies on a sharp ear, as players must detect a white plastic ball -- the size of a tennis ball -- filled with ball bearings that rattle as it moves.

Pakistan coach Tahir Mehmood Butt, also speaking before the game, said the launch of women's blind cricket had created new opportunities for young players in Pakistan.

“For the totally blind, if they have good hearing, they can become good cricketers,” Tahir told AFP.

Each team must field at least four completely blind players, three who can see up to two metres, and four partially sighted players able to see up to about six metres.

Totally blind batters may have a partially sighted runner. Bowling is underarm, unlike in the traditional game.

Four other nations - Australia, Nepal, Sri Lanka and the US -- are competing in the tournament which began in India and moved to Sri Lanka for the final stages. The final is scheduled for next Sunday in Colombo.

23
 
 

Bilbao (Spain) (AFP) – On a "mission" in Spain, Palestinian national team coach Ehab Abu Jazar and his players will play symbolic friendlies against the Basque Country and Catalan national teams in the hopes of working towards safety and freedom for their people.

Dressed in a black tracksuit, whistle in mouth, Palestinian coach Abu Jazar leads the team's training session with authority at Lezama, Athletic Bilbao's training ground on Friday.

On one of the pitches offered by the top-flight club he tries to prepare his players as best he can for what will be much more than just a match at the grand San Mames stadium, in front of 50,000 spectators supporting the Palestinian cause on Saturday.

As seen during the pro-Palestinian protests that heavily affected cycling's Vuelta a Espana Grand Tour this summer, there is heavy support for them in the region as they play their first match in Europe.

They are 98th in the FIFA rankings, and their dream of playing in their first World Cup vanished this summer in the third round of the Asian qualifiers.

Abu Jazar has lost many family members to the Israel-Hamas war and some of his relatives are still at risk, a situation always present in his thoughts.

"I am from the Gaza Strip, from a large family in the Gaza Strip. We have almost 200 martyrs from the family. My own house was destroyed in this war," he tells AFP.

"My relatives, my mother until today is still living in a tent along with my brothers, my sisters, my cousins, my neighbours, my friends, and all of Gaza. So, emotionally and psychologically, it is extremely difficult."

Most of his players have never set foot in Gaza. Some play in Qatar, one in Chile, in Iceland, or in the United States.

They are the last representatives of Palestinian football, devastated at all levels by two years of Israeli bombardment, described as genocide by the Spanish government, [...].

Since then, there has been no league, no functioning clubs, and hundreds of athletes have been injured or killed, including the country's most famous footballer, Suleiman Al-Obeid, 41, nicknamed the "Palestinian Pele".

The Palestine Football Association said he was killed when Israel attacked civilians waiting for humanitarian aid.

"We are here on a mission," says coach Abu Jazar to AFP, adjusting his keffiyeh around his neck.

"Our message to the whole world is this -- put pressure on this occupation to stop this genocide."

Despite the fragile ceasefire which came into place on October 10, the coach highlighted the continuing peril for civilians in Gaza.

"Death continues in Gaza to this day, famine continues in the Gaza Strip, and there is no shelter," said Abu Jazar, after Israel's relentless bombing razed much of the land.

"We are approaching the winter season and the tents do not protect from the cold of winter nor the heat of summer.

"So we are telling the entire world -- apply as much pressure as you can on this occupation, because in Palestine there is a people who deserve a state and a dignified life.

"We want to live with dignity and independence, and this will not happen except with the end of the occupation."

The coach, like his players, hopes this charity match, with proceeds donated to Doctors Without Borders, will help increase the "pressure" on the international community to fight for lasting peace and recognition of a Palestinian state.

"This is the most important thing -- giving a voice to Palestinians who don't have one, and raising funds to help humanitarian organisations," said defender Yasser Hamed, born in Bilbao and trained at Athletic Bilbao.

"This money will help a lot, especially in rebuilding hospitals, delivering medicines, etc."

Hamed, who speaks fluent Basque and Spanish, considers himself "lucky" to be able to continue living his passion, "while some Palestinians are starving."

"It makes you savour every plate, and all the little things people don't notice in daily life," he continued.

"We have this responsibility to bring a bit of joy to our compatriots who are suffering. All of this must stop, and Palestine must finally be free."

His teammate Ahmed Al-Qaq, born in the United States to Palestinian parents, hopes these matches can "open the world's eyes" to the humanitarian situation in Gaza.

"We are not politicians, but as players, we give people something to look forward to. Especially with everything they're going through, it gives them a glimmer of hope," explains the 23-year-old winger.

And if Palestine lose, as they did against Malaysia and Algeria in recent matches?

"We'll recover. It's in our genes to always get back up when we fall."

24
 
 

Tehran (AFP) – When Paniz Faryoussefi mounts the podium and reaches for her baton, she represents more than just the hope of a thrilling orchestral performance.

The eyes turned towards her in Tehran's renowned Vahdat Hall include those of many young women musicians inspired by her taking her place as Iran's first woman philharmonic conductor.

Women's professional and cultural lives are still heavily restricted in the conservative Islamic republic, particularly in terms of public performance before mixed-gender audiences.

Women, for example are not allowed to sing solo in front of men.

But, as exemplified by 42-year-old Faryoussefi, they can now conduct an orchestra.

"When I stepped onto the stage, I noticed that all eyes were on a woman conducting the orchestra, and I felt an immense responsibility," she told AFP after the performance.

Widespread street protests shook Iran for several months following the death in custody in 2022 of a young woman arrested for violating the country's strict dress code for women.

In the wake of the disturbances, the government has relaxed certain restrictions and young women have become more prominent in some areas of social and cultural life.

And since a 12-day war with Israel earlier this year, Iranians have been pushing social boundaries further still.

Analysts say the authorities have shown greater tolerance, while keeping as close an eye as ever for any signals of political dissent.

Several women in the audience at the concert did not wear their scarves. The conductor wore hers, covering her hair as the law demands, but her arrival at the podium was in itself a sign of greater openness.

The crowd shared Faryoussefi's enthusiasm, particularly the young women, who seemed aware that they were witnessing a historic moment.

In some Iranian cities, women musicians are not allowed to perform on stage, and even in the capital Tehran they cannot raise their voices in song in public.

Faryoussefi was born into an artistic family and her mother dreamed of her becoming a cheffe d'orchestre -- but Iranian performing arts academies do not teach conducting.

She briefly attended classes in Armenia before returning to build a trailblazing career.

"Young women need to persevere and follow their dreams," she said.

At the podium, she led the 50-strong orchestra through works by Austria's Franz Schubert, Finland's Jean Sibelius and the Soviet-Armenian composer Aram Khachaturian.

"I hope this marks a new era for young Iranian women and that they will understand that... they should not be afraid," she said. "It is the only gateway to emancipation.

"A friend saw a little girl in the audience mimicking my movements. He thought a dream was already taking root in her, that she was thinking she too could one day achieve the same thing."

The concerts took place over two days and attracted large crowds.

Said Shourabi, 53, works in metal fabrication and wasn't a big concertgoer until his daughter, who was out of town, bought him the tickets and insisted he go along.

"In Iran," he said, "women have always been held back and haven't been able to fully express their talents, even if I'm sure they're just as capable as men."

Hairdresser Fariba Aghai, 44, was delighted to see a woman take up the baton at the orchestra, lamenting that women singers still can't perform at concerts or publish their own songs.

"They shouldn't have to sell themselves short and should know that they're capable of anything," she said.

25
 
 

Tokyo (AFP) – The world of sumo could be rocked this month if Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi presents a trophy in the ring, where women have traditionally been banned.

AFP looks at the ancient sport, at previous attempts by women to challenge the taboo, and at why the situation is so delicately poised.

What is the issue?

Sumo grew out of ancient Shinto religious rituals and its origins can be traced back over 2,000 years, according to some historians.

The practice of banning women from the ring stems from the Shinto notion that menstrual blood would defile its "purity".

The champion wrestler at each of the six professional sumo tournaments held annually is presented with a large silver trophy called the Prime Minister's Cup.

The trophy is usually presented by a member of Japan's cabinet, but occasionally the prime minister will step into the ring to hand it over themselves.

In 2019, US President Donald Trump even entered the ring to present a special trophy during his state visit to Japan.

Takaichi became Japan's first woman prime minister last month.

Questions are being asked over whether she will present the trophy at the ongoing Kyushu Grand Sumo Tournament, which concludes on November 23.

Has it been done before?

Women and girls can compete in amateur sumo worldwide but they are traditionally barred from the professional version, which only takes place in Japan.

Japan's first woman Chief Cabinet Secretary Mayumi Moriyama expressed a desire to present the trophy in 1990, but her request was turned down by the Japan Sumo Association.

A decade later the then Osaka governor, Fusae Ota, was also denied.

In 2018, a city mayor collapsed while he was giving a speech in the ring.

At least two women sitting nearby rushed in to give him first aid but they were ordered by a sumo official to leave the ring.

The sumo association's chairman apologised afterwards, saying it was "an inappropriate response in a life-threatening situation".

Just days later, a woman mayor from the western city of Takarazuka was barred from delivering a speech inside the ring.

Who is Takaichi?

Japan's first woman prime minister is a social conservative and China hawk who admires Margaret Thatcher.

The 64-year-old has been a regular visitor to the Yasukuni shrine, which honours convicted war criminals along with 2.5 million war dead and is seen by Asian nations as a symbol of Japan's militarist past.

Takaichi has said she hopes to raise awareness about women's health struggles and has spoken candidly about her own experience with menopause.

But her views on gender place her on the right of her already conservative party, and she opposes revising a 19th-century law requiring married couples to share the same surname.

She also wants the imperial family to stick to male-only succession.

She promised a cabinet with "Nordic" levels of women, but then named only two other than herself.

What has been said?

So far, Takaichi hasn't expressed an opinion on presenting the trophy.

When asked this week if she planned to make a request, Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara said no decision had been made.

"Prime Minister Takaichi wishes to preserve the traditions of sumo culture," he added.

The Japan Sumo Association has also remained tight-lipped.

Asked how they would respond if Takaichi were to express a wish to present the trophy, the association said: "We consider it our mission to preserve the traditional culture of sumo".

The Kyushu Grand Sumo Tournament is taking place in Fukuoka, on the other side of the country to Tokyo.

The New Year Grand Sumo Tournament will be in January at Ryogoku Kokugikan, the home of sumo in the capital.

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