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Iran releases on bail Japan national jailed amid antigovernment protests | US-Israel war on Iran News

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The person released is believed to be Japanese broadcaster NHK’s Tehran bureau chief, Shinnosuke Kawashima.

A Japanese citizen has been released on bail in Iran, according to Japan’s top government spokesperson, months after their detention amid the country’s antigovernment protests.

The Embassy of Japan in Iran confirmed on Tuesday that “a Japanese national who was detained by Iranian authorities on January 20 was released on April 6 local time,” said government spokesman Minoru Kihara.

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In February, United States-funded Radio Free Europe reported that public broadcaster NHK’s Tehran bureau chief, Shinnosuke Kawashima, had been arrested in Iran and transferred to a local prison. The person released on Tuesday is believed to be Shinnosuke.

The individual appeared to have no health issues, Kihara told a press briefing, without providing further details or revealing their identity or what charges they faced.

Japan’s Kyodo News reported that the individual is not allowed to leave Iran. The wire also reported that the person has been charged with security-related offences and is expected to stand trial.

At the time of the Japanese national’s arrest, NHK said “there is nothing we can answer at this stage” and that staff safety was a top priority.

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) in February quoted a source as saying that another NHK journalist had dealt with Iranian authorities. The broadcaster’s longtime videographer, Mehdi Mohammedi, had his passport confiscated along with his personal devices.

Another NHK staff member – whose identity CPJ said it was withholding for safety reasons – fled Iran in early February after being summoned several times, the journalist rights organisation said.

Last month, Iran released another Japanese citizen who was being held, and who also was not named, with Tokyo saying on March 22 that the person would return to Japan.

The Japanese national released on bail on Tuesday had been arrested shortly after demonstrations erupted over the high cost of living in Iran, triggered by the worsening economic situation following decades of US sanctions, which ultimately led to large antigovernment protests.

The rallies were held before the US and Israeli militaries began “Operation Epic Fury” on February 28 and killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, triggering the current regional war.

Japan and Iran have historically had relatively friendly relations. But more recently, close US ally Tokyo has drastically reduced its once-substantial imports of Iranian oil as part of international pressure over Tehran’s nuclear activities.

On Monday, Japanese Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi and his Iranian counterpart, Abbas Araghchi, held a call to discuss the war.



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Georgia runoff to fill Marjorie Taylor Greene’s seat tests GOP majority

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ROME, GA — Republican congressional candidate Clay Fuller says that Tuesday’s special election runoff in Georgia is “extremely crucial.”

Fuller is facing off against Democrat Shawn Harris in the race to fill the seat in Georgia’s solidly red 14th Congressional District — in the northwest part of the state — left vacant when MAGA firebrand Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene stepped down at the beginning of January. Greene quit Congress with a year left in her term, after a bitter falling out with President Donald Trump.

The special election, held on the same day as a state Supreme Court contest in battleground Wisconsin, comes as Republicans cling to a razor-thin 218–214 majority in the House. The GOP cannot afford any surprises and allow the Democrats to pull an upset in the special election, in a district Trump carried by a whopping 37 points in his 2024 presidential victory.

“We need the reinforcements,” Fuller, a local district attorney and a lieutenant colonel in the Air National Guard who’s served in the Air Force since 2009, emphasized in a Fox News Digital interview on the eve of the runoff election, as he pointed to the GOP’s fragile majority. “I think the voters in Georgia 14 understand that, and they’re looking forward to sending a MAGA America first fighter up on Capitol Hill to support that agenda.”

PRIMARY PAUSE, POLITICAL FIRESTORM: HIGH-STAKES ELECTIONS THIS MONTH TAKE CENTER STAGE

Republican congressional candidate Clay Fuller speaking next to President Donald Trump at Coosa Steel Corporation in Rome, Georgia

Republican congressional candidate Clay Fuller, left, speaks next to President Donald Trump, during a visit to the Coosa Steel Corporation in Rome, Georgia, Feb. 19, 2026. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)

Asked if he was concerned that MAGA supporters would sit out what may be a low turnout election since the president is not on the ballot, Fuller said voters “would crawl through glass to make sure they have a representative up there that fight for them and fight for President Trump, and that’s why we’re going to have the votes pouring out on April 7.”

TRUMP HITS CAMPAIGN TRAIL IN KEY BATTLEGROUND AS RACE TO REPLACE MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE HEATS UP

Harris, a cattle farmer who spent four decades in the military and retired as an Army brigadier general, needs the support of crossover Republicans in order to pull off an upset.

“I am a Democrat, but I’m not tied to the party,” Harris highlighted as he spoke with Fox News Digital. And Harris argued, “My opponent, Clay, cannot say that. He actually sold his soul to President Trump.”

Harris, pointing to surging gas prices fueled by Trump’s military attack on Iran, said when voters “go to the polls, they will have to stop at the pump, and that’ll be the last thing they think about before they go and vote. And they’re going to say, ‘You know what, Shawn Harris is the only one that’s talking about bringing down costs, Shawn Harris is the only one is saying, ‘I’m going to stand up for the people here in Northwest Georgia, period.”

“We will win this war militarily. However, if we don’t watch it and be clear with the American people, based on these gas prices and diesel prices, we could actually lose this war politically.”

Harris said he “will support President Trump on things like the…southern border.” But he added “when it comes to things like…a forever war. Send me. I will push back.”

Fuller said that “the voters in Georgia-14 support the president in this endeavor. They understand that the Iranian regime was a long term threat to our national security…they understand that President Trump is making the world safer, and they understand that there may be short term pain at the gas pump, and they’ll expect those prices to drop as soon as this conflict is over.”

Harris grabbed 37% of the vote, with Fuller at 35% amid a field of 17 candidates, including 12 Republicans, in the first round of voting in early March. Since no candidate topped 50%, Harris and Fuller advanced to Tuesday’s runoff.

The congressional seat — which stretches from Atlanta’s outer suburbs to the state’s northwest borders with Alabama and Tennessee — was left vacant when Greene quit Congress with a year left in her term, after a very public falling out with Trump mostly over her push to release the Jeffrey Epstein files.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene speaking at a news conference outside the U.S. Capitol with alleged victims of Jeffrey Epstein

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., speaks during a news conference with 10 of the alleged victims of disgraced financier and sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein outside the U.S. Capitol on Sept. 3, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

While Greene remains popular among Republicans in the district, Fuller said the voters he’s talked with on the campaign trail “are focused on the fights of the future, not anything that had happened in the past.”

Asked if he’s talked with Greene, Fuller said he “reached out to Rep. Greene, had conversations with her and got advice on the district, and I’ll keep those conversations confidential.”

Harris, who as a first-time candidate lost to Greene by nearly 29 points in her 2024 re-election, emphasized that “I’m not running against Marjorie Taylor Greene anymore,” and that his name “carries more weight than any other name in this district.”

If Harris loses but holds Fuller’s margin to the mid-teens or less, national Democrats will argue the election is the latest in nearly 15 months since Trump returned to the White House in which they’ve overperformed.

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The ballot box brawl in Northwest Georgia isn’t the only electoral showdown on Tuesday. There’s also a state Supreme Court election in battleground Wisconsin.

While officially a non-partisan contest, state Supreme Court elections in Wisconsin have become extremely partisan in recent years.

With the court’s majority on the line in last year’s contest, outside money poured in and out-of-state door knockers blanketed Wisconsin. One of the biggest spenders was Trump ally Elon Musk, who headlined a rally days before the election and donned a cheesehead hat worn by fans of the Green Bay Packers.

Elon Musk speaking at a town hall meeting in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

Then-Trump adviser Elon Musk appears at a town hall meeting Green Bay, Wisconsin, in March. Musk and his super PACs spent more than $2 million to support conservative Supreme Court candidate Brad Schimel’s campaign.  (Scott Olson/Getty)

Democrats won that election by a larger-than-expected margin and currently hold a 4-3 majority on Wisconsin’s highest court.

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With a conservative justice retiring, the majority isn’t at stake in this year’s election, although if state Appeals Court Judge Chris Taylor, a former democratic state representative, wins, liberals would expand their majority on the high court to 5-2.

If Appeals Court Judge Maria Lazar, a conservative, wins or keeps the margins close, the GOP may claim a moral victory.



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Oil prices top $110 after Trump says Iran can be ‘taken out’ in one night | Oil

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Oil traded at more than $110 a barrel on Tuesday after Donald Trump said all of Iran could be “taken out” in one night.

Brent crude, the international benchmark for oil prices, rose by 1% to $111 a barrel. New York light crude rose 2.6% to $115.3 a barrel.

Investors are growing increasingly anxious as Trump escalates his threats against Iran, demanding it reopen the strait of Hormuz as part of any deal to stop the war.

The president, speaking to reporters at the White House on Monday, set a deadline of Tuesday 8pm ET (1am BST Wednesday) for Iran to agree a deal with Washington or face fresh attacks on civil infrastructure, including power plants.

“The entire country can be taken out in one night, and that night might be tomorrow night,” he said.

Trump said that passage through the strait – a vital shipping channel through which a fifth of the world’s oil and gas supplies normally passes – was a “very big priority” and should be part of any ceasefire deal.

Stock markets in Asia were mixed on Tuesday, with Japan’s Nikkei flat and South Korea’s Kospi rising by 1.1%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dropped by 0.7%.

In Europe, the UK’s blue-chip FTSE 100 index dipped in early trading before turning positive, up 33 points or 0.3% by mid-morning to 10,467 points. France’s Cac 40 rose by 1.2%, with Germany’s Dax 30 up 0.7% after an early drop. The Stoxx Europe 600, which tracks the biggest companies on the continent, gained 0.6%.

Markets have been choppy since the US-Israel attack on Iran in February, as the effective closure of the strait of Hormuz has fed fears around inflation and rattled investor confidence.

On Monday, Kristalina Georgieva, the head of the International Monetary Fund, warned the war is likely to lead to higher inflation and slower global growth.

Georgieva told Reuters that before the war began the IMF had expected a small upgrade in its expectation for global growth of 3.3% in 2026 and 3.2% in 2027.

Instead, she said, “all roads now lead to higher prices and slower growth”. The IMF is expected to publish its report on the world economic outlook next week.

“We are in a world of elevated uncertainty,” she said, citing geopolitical tensions, climate shocks, demographic shifts and advancements in technology. “All of this means that after we recover from this shock, we need to keep our eyes open for the next one.”



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Brits are falling out of love with the internet • The Register

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British adults are now less active on social media, according to Ofcom, with just half of users actively posting, and fewer now believe the benefits outweigh the risks of being online.

The UK’s telecoms regulator examined the media use and attitudes of a sample of adults, and found that the proportion who actively post, share, or comment on social media fell to 49 percent from 61 percent in 2024.

The remainder tend to simply “like” things that others have posted, or read things without interacting much.

Along with the finding that fewer adults are exploring the web and engaging with new websites, Ofcom says this indicates that users are becoming more passive and disengaged.

Potential reasons behind this shift in behavior include the possibility that people are taking a more “one-stop shop” approach online and using applications such as generative AI chatbots for various purposes like work, learning, and getting recommendations.

But nine out of ten internet users are still using at least one social media platform, rising to 97 percent among those aged 16 to 34. Messaging and calling remain the most common activities, although younger adults are far more likely to watch videos than older people.

Only 59 percent of respondents now believe that the benefits of being outweigh the risks, down from 72 percent last year. Just 36 percent of social media users say these services are good for their mental health, and 67 percent report spending too long online most days.

Trust in online information is mixed, with 85 percent indicating they use “mainstream” media for news, but only 19 percent always trust it, while a similar proportion (21 percent) always question its accuracy, according to Ofcom.

Perhaps the least surprising finding is that more than half of social media users say they have seen false or misleading news during the past year. To gauge the accuracy of news, 43 percent compare information with other sources, while a similar proportion say they check with the original source. About 40 percent check the comments section for indications of credibility, suggesting other users’ reactions may shape trust in a post or article.

As for online AI tools, 54 percent of adults now use them, compared with 31 percent last year. Three-quarters say they read AI-generated search summaries at least sometimes, but 57 percent of respondents say they trust AI-generated content less than that produced by humans.

Ofcom also found that 6 percent of all adults still do not have any form of internet access at home. This offline group is disproportionately older, with 83 percent of them aged 65 or above. At the same time, 19 percent of adults only access the internet via their smartphone.

Ofcom’s Adults’ Media Use and Attitudes Report [PDF] draws its data from a Media Literacy Tracker survey, completed by 7,533 adults aged 16 or over between September and November last year. ®



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Resident doctors begin longest strike yet as Streeting accuses BMA of hypocrisy over pay – UK politics live | Politics

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Wes Streeting says strikes by resident doctors have cost country £3bn over past 3 years as fresh walkout starts

Good morning. Resident doctors in English hospitals started a six-day strike at 7am this morning. Many of them will continue to work, but there will be enough of them joining the strike to have a significant impact on the care hospitals can deliver. It is the 15th resident doctors (who used to be known as junior doctors) have been on stage since they launched a campaign in 2023 to get their pay back to the equivalent level it used to be before austerity kicked in after the financial crash.

This morning Wes Streeting, the health secretary, deployed a new statistic in his PR battle against the BMA, the doctors’ union organised the strikes. He confirmed a figure highlighted in the Daily Mail’s splash saying strikes by resident doctors have now cost the country £3bn.

In an interview with the Today programme, asked if that was an official government figure, Streeting replied:

double quotation markWe think that strikes cost £50m a day. And so that is, an accurate reflection of the cost of these strikes.

But, when it was put to him the BMA is saying that £3bn is about what it would have cost to give the resident doctors the pay rise they are demaning, Streeting would not accept this. He replied:

double quotation markWhat is true is that in order to deliver a full pay restoration back to 2008 levels, using the RPI account of inflation, it would cost in the order of £3bn a year.

Let’s then assume that other NHS staff would understandably demand the same. Then that cost would be more like £30bn a year. That is more than the entire cost of the Ministry of Justice’s entire budget for running the criminal justice system.

Now, this goes to the heart of the intransigence of the BMA. Despite being the biggest winner by a country mile of public sector pay increases – since this government came in, 28.9% is what they got from us – within weeks of taking office, they still went out on strike.

Andrew Gregory and Peter Walker have more from what Streeting has been saying about the strike here.

I will post more from Streeting’s broadcast interviews this morning shortly.

Here is the agenda for the day.

7am: Resident doctors started a six-day strike in England. (Rather, some of them did – in the past, many doctors have chosen to work rather than to join the BMA strike.)

9.15am: John Swinney, SNP leader and Scottish first minister, holds a campaign event focused on fuel prices. Anas Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader, is holding a campaign event focused on pothole policy (at 9.30am), and Russell Findlay, the Scottish Conservative leader, is launching his manifesto (at 2pm).

11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.

Morning: Ed Davey, the Lib Dem leader, is campaigning in Newcastle.

12.30pm: Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, is holding a press conference in Warwickshire.

Afternoon: Military planners from around 35 countries interested in plans to keep the strait of Hormuz open after the Iran war ends meet to discuss options at the UK’s Permanent Joint Headquarters in Northwood, north-west London.

If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line when comments are open (between 10am and 3pm), or message me on social media. I can’t read all the messages BTL, but if you put “Andrew” in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word.

If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. You can reach me on Bluesky at @andrewsparrowgdn.bsky.social. The Guardian has given up posting from its official accounts on X, but individual Guardian journalists are there, I still have my account, and if you message me there at @AndrewSparrow, I will see it and respond if necessary.

I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos. No error is too small to correct. And I find your questions very interesting too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.

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Key events

Streeting accuses BMA of hypocrisy, saying it’s giving its staff pay rise well below what resident doctors offered

In his interviews this morning Wes Streeting, the health secretary, accused the BMA of hypocrisy over pay because the organisation is offering its own staff far less than the resident doctors are demanding.

He told BBC Breakfast:

double quotation markAnd here’s the real kicker; having rejected this deal because the pay offer apparently wasn’t good enough at 4.9%, the BMA are offering their own staff 2.75% on affordability grounds.

Why does the BMA think they can get away with telling their own staff they only get 2.75% because that’s all they can afford, whilst rejecting a 4.9% offer because that’s all the government can afford.

It seems to me, the BMA aren’t willing to put their hands in their own pockets to pay their own staff, but they’re very happy to try and fleece your viewers, asking them to pay even more in tax than I think this country can afford.

He made the same point in an interview on Today, explaining what the BMA was doing and adding: “There’s a word for that.”

In a separate interview on the Today programme, Jack Fletcher, chair of its resident doctors committee, said that he was not responsible for what the BMA paid its staff and that he supported their right to go on strike.



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Israel threatens Iran’s trains, railways before Trump’s deadline expires | US-Israel war on Iran News

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‌The Israeli ⁠⁠⁠⁠military has told people in Iran not to ⁠⁠⁠⁠use trains or go near railway ⁠⁠⁠⁠lines, indicating it intends to strike the civilian infrastructure before United States President Donald Trump’s deadline to open the Strait of Hormuz expires.

“For the sake of your security, we kindly request that ‌‌‌‌from this moment until 21:00 Iran time [17:30 GMT], you refrain from using and travelling by train throughout Iran,” the ⁠⁠⁠⁠military posted on X.

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“Your presence on trains and ⁠⁠⁠⁠near railway lines endangers your ⁠⁠⁠⁠life,” it added on its Persian-language account.

US President Donald Trump had threatened to bomb Iran’s bridges and power plants unless Iran reopens the Strait of Hormuz on Tuesday at 8pm EST (01:00 GMT Wednesday).

Iran, in turn, has threatened “devastating” retaliation if the country’s civilian infrastructure is hit.

Earlier, the Israeli military said it had recently completed a new wave of air attacks on infrastructure across the country, including Tehran.

According to Iran’s semi-official Mehr news agency, a residential building in central Tehran was hit in one of the latest strikes, and a synagogue adjacent to the residential building was also destroyed.

On Monday, Israeli forces attacked a petrochemical facility on Iran’s side of the South Pars gasfield, which it shares with Qatar.

At least 2,076 people in Iran have been killed by US-Israeli attacks since the war began more than five weeks ago, Iran’s Ministry of Health says.

Saudi-Bahrain bridge temporarily closed

Amid Trump’s threats, an important bridge linking Saudi Arabia and Bahrain has been indefinitely closed to traffic over fears of attacks from Iran, according to reports.

In a post on X, the authority overseeing the King Fahd Causeway said traffic over the bridge had been “suspended as a precautionary measure” over Iranian attacks targeting Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province.

The 25km (16-mile) bridge is the only connection by road for Bahrain, home to the US Navy’s 5th Fleet, to the Arabian Peninsula.

Since the US-Israel war on Iran began on February 28, Iran has retaliated with drone and missile attacks against Israel, Gulf nations hosting US military assets, along with Jordan and Iraq.

“The Gulf has borne the brunt of this conflict, and just today in the morning, we saw numerous alarms being sounded in Bahrain, and in the UAE just a couple of hours ago,” said Al Jazeera’s Malik Traina, reporting from Kuwait City.

“Earlier … we heard from the Saudi Ministry of Defense that they intercepted seven ballistic missiles in the eastern area.”

UN vote on Hormuz expected today

The United Nations Security Council is expected to vote on Tuesday on a watered-down resolution calling for the unblocking of the Strait of Hormuz, far from sponsoring the Gulf countries’ initial goal of obtaining clearance to free it by force.

A draft seen by the AFP news agency on Monday no longer mentions authorisation to use force, even defensively. However, Russia, a longstanding ally of Iran, as well as China, could still veto the text. For this reason, a vote scheduled for last Friday was delayed.

INTERACTIVE - Strait of Hormuz - March 2, 2026-1772714221
(Al Jazeera)

Iran’s blocking of the strait has led to widespread disruption of global energy markets, forcing countries to implement austerity measures to lessen the impact of skyrocketing oil and gas prices.

Discussing whether Trump would go ahead with his threat to obliterate Iran’s civilian infrastructure if the strait were to remain closed, Trita Parsi, vice president of the Quincy Institute, told Al Jazeera the US president still has the option to extend the deadline to reopen without losing face if he sees a diplomatic way out.

“One of the benefits Trump has is that, frankly, he doesn’t have much credibility, so he doesn’t have much to lose,” he added.

“I can definitely see a scenario in which, if he thinks that there is some reason for him to extend the deadline, he would just do so. He’s already done so several times in the last 35 days.”



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Iran war: What is happening on day 39 of US-Israeli attacks? | US-Israel war on Iran News

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Trump has issued a strict deadline, but a defiant Iran says the threats by the US president are ‘delusional’.

United States President Donald Trump has warned of the “complete demolition” of Iran’s key infrastructure if the Strait of Hormuz is not reopened by a looming deadline, signalling a sharp escalation in tensions. He described Tehran’s response to a US ceasefire proposal as “significant” but ultimately “not good enough”.

Iran’s military has dismissed Trump’s threats as “delusional”, saying they cannot mask what it described as US “disgrace and humiliation” in the region, according to the Iranian media.

Meanwhile, US-Israeli attacks across Iran have intensified, with universities and oil facilities among civilian targets. Iranian missiles and drones also continue to target sites across the Gulf region.

In Iran

  • Israel’s military said it had carried out strikes on three airports in Tehran, targeting several Iranian planes and helicopters.
  • It also claimed to have struck Iran’s largest petrochemical complex, which serves the South Pars gasfield, the world’s largest natural gas reserve.
  • The chief of the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, said attacks near Iran’s Bushehr atomic power plant “pose a very real danger to nuclear safety and must stop”.
  • Iran said an Israeli strike at dawn killed the intelligence chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Major-General Majid Khademi.
  • Two units that produce electricity for the South Pars gasfield were targeted in recent strikes. Iranian officials view this as a “huge escalation” and a sign that the US and Israel intend to destroy the survival capabilities of the Iranian people.

War diplomacy

  • US ultimatum: Trump has issued a strict deadline, threatening the “complete demolition” of Iran’s power plants and bridges by Tuesday evening (00:00 GMT, Wednesday) if Tehran does not fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Experts say targeting civilian infrastructure is a war crime.
  • Iran rejects pause offer: Iran has rejected a proposal for a temporary ceasefire, arguing it would give the US and Israel time to regroup and launch further attacks, citing past ceasefire violations in Gaza and Lebanon. Instead, Iranian officials have put forward a 10-point proposal calling for a comprehensive and permanent end to the war.
  • Iran demands: Tehran is also demanding the lifting of longstanding sanctions, a compromise on uranium enrichment, and the establishment of a new order in the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Turkish ship passes through Hormuz: A third Turkish-owned ship passed through the war-torn Strait of Hormuz, Turkiye’s Transport Minister Abdulkadir Uraloglu said.
  • South Korea takes Saudi option: South Korea will send five Korean-flagged ships to the Saudi Red Sea port of Yanbu to establish alternative oil supply routes to the Strait of Hormuz, a governing party parliamentarian said.
  • Energy shocks: Global fuel price shocks have prompted Chinese President Xi Jinping to call for the accelerated construction of a new energy system.

In the Gulf

  • Kuwait: According to a report by CBS, an Iranian drone strike on the Ali al-Salem airbase wounded 15 Americans overnight.
  • Saudi Arabia: A Saudi military spokesperson said the country’s air defences intercepted at least 18 drones over the past few hours. In a post on X, the Ministry of Defence said all drones were destroyed.
  • Earlier, the kingdom’s Defence Ministry reported intercepting up to seven ballistic missiles over its Eastern province, with debris falling near critical energy facilities. The Saudi National Early Warning Platform also issued alerts of potential danger in the region.
  • Bahrain: An important bridge linking the island nation to Saudi Arabia has been indefinitely closed to traffic over fears of attacks from Iran, according to reports. In a post on X, the authority overseeing the King Fahd Causeway said traffic over the bridge had been “suspended as a precautionary measure” over Iranian attacks targeting the Saudi province of Eastern.
  • UAE: The Ministry of Defence of the United Arab Emirates reported that its air defences intercepted incoming missiles and drones originating from Iran.

Live tracker

In the US

  • Trump and other senior US officials gave details of the high-risk mission to rescue two airmen whose fighter was shot down over Iran, saying more than 170 aircraft and hundreds of soldiers were involved in the operation.
  • The president lashed out at a journalist who reported on a US rescue operation for a downed airman in Iran, demanding the source be revealed and threatening jail time.
  • Trita Parsi, a foreign policy expert, told Al Jazeera that Trump could again extend military deadlines if diplomacy emerges, noting he has already done so several times in recent weeks. Parsi argues Trump has little credibility to lose, and may ultimately accept a new status quo in the Strait of Hormuz, including Iranian transit fees.
  • The Central Command (CENTCOM), which is responsible for US military operations in the Middle East and is leading the attacks on Iran, said its forces have attacked more than 13,000 Iranian targets.

In Israel

  • An Iranian missile attack on a residential building in the port city of Haifa killed at least four people.

In Iraq, Lebanon

  • Widening campaign in Lebanon: Israel’s ongoing bombardment and invasion of Lebanon are deepening fissures within the country, with recent attacks striking beyond predominantly Shia Muslim areas to hit Ain Saadeh, a Christian suburb east of Beirut.
  • Two separate Israeli air attacks on southern Lebanon have killed five people and injured several, according to the country’s National News Agency.
  • Two US-made GBU-39 bombs struck a residential building in Beirut, killing three people.
  • The United Nations said more than 1.1 million people have now been registered as displaced in Lebanon as Israel continues its ground invasion in the country’s south.
  • Two killed in Iraq: A drone “coming from Iran” killed a couple in the Kurdish region of northern Iraq after crashing into their home, local authorities reported. Separately, two blasts were heard near Erbil airport.


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Sensex, Nifty recover from early losses: IT stocks lift benchmarks amid oil price concerns

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Businessman use tablet and smart phone for Stock Market istock photo for BL

Businessman use tablet and smart phone for Stock Market istock photo for BL | Photo Credit: Orientfootage

Domestic equities staged a recovery in the afternoon session on Tuesday after opening sharply lower, as gains in IT and select metal stocks helped offset early pressure triggered by rising crude oil prices and global uncertainties.

Benchmark indices had witnessed a steep fall at the open, tracking weak global cues and a spike in energy prices. Brent crude surged 1.51 per cent in early trade, raising concerns over inflationary pressures and India’s import bill.

Investor sentiment remained cautious after renewed geopolitical tensions, with US President Donald Trump reiterating threats against Iran over the Strait of Hormuz, fueling fears of supply disruptions in global oil markets.

Benchmarks trim losses in mid-session

After a weak start, markets clawed back into positive territory by mid-session. The BSE Sensex rose 108.49 points or 0.15 per cent to 74,215.34 at 1.32 pm, while the Nifty 50 gained 52.50 points or 0.23 per cent to trade at 23,020.75.

Earlier in the day, the Sensex had plunged 824 points and the Nifty 50 dropped 249 points from their previous close, reflecting the intensity of the initial sell-off.

IT, metals support; PSU banks lag

Sectoral performance remained mixed during the session. IT and realty stocks saw buying interest, rising 1–2 per cent, while PSU bank stocks came under pressure, declining around 1.5 per cent.

Among Nifty 50 constituents, IT majors including Wipro, HCL Technologies, Tata Consultancy Services and Tech Mahindra led the gains with 2–3 per cent uptick. Metal Major Hindalco Industries also featured among the top performers.

On the downside, stocks such as Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories, Adani Enterprises, InterGlobe Aviation, Mahindra & Mahindra and Eicher Motors declined the most.

Broader markets displayed resilience, with smallcap stocks outperforming, while the midcap index remained under pressure in mid-session trade. Market breadth was positive, with 1,870 stocks advancing, 1,249 declining and 86 remaining unchanged out of 3,205 traded stocks on the National Stock Exchange at the time of writing.

Around 22 stocks touched their 52-week highs, while 20 hit fresh lows. Additionally, 155 stocks were locked in upper circuits, compared with 22 in lower circuits.

Stock-specific action

In the midcap space, Jubilant FoodWorks weighed on the index, while Coromandel International, Mphasis, Supreme Industries, Prestige Estates Projects and Fortis Healthcare gained between 3–5 per cent.

Smallcap names such as FirstCry, Tenneco Clean Air, CreditAccess Grameen, Natco Pharma and Five-Star Business Finance rallied 3–11 per cent. On the flip side, Force Motors, Power Grid, KFin Technologies, Bandhan Bank and RBL Bank declined 3–4 per cent.

On the BSE, Titagarh Rail Systems, FirstCry and Kesoram Industries surged 10–11 per cent, while Bank of India, Jubilant FoodWorks, Force Motors and Biocon fell between 4–10 per cent.

Published on April 7, 2026

What is driving the Houthis’ decision-making on joining the Iran war | US-Israel war on Iran

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During the first month of the US-Israel war on Iran, the Houthis adopted a cautious approach, even though many expected them to move faster based on the nature of their close relationship with Tehran. This assessment is not wrong — the relationship is indeed strong — but what this view misses is that decision-making within the Yemeni group has increasingly become the product of an extended internal debate.

This debate goes back to the Houthis’ decision to launch military action in support of Gaza after Operation Al-Aqsa Flood on October 7, 2023. After the United States and Israel launched retaliatory strikes in March 2025, which lasted for two months, an agreement was brokered by Oman in May, bringing the fighting to a halt. This experience had a deep impact on the group.

Some Houthi leaders believe that the cost of that involvement over the past two years was high, not only in terms of military and leadership losses and civilian casualties, but also in terms of draining resources, damaging infrastructure and complicating the political track, especially with Saudi Arabia, which had put forward a roadmap for peace in Yemen in 2022.

This assessment did not remain at the level of abstract analysis; it became the basis for an internal discussion that produced two clear currents.

The first current leans towards caution. It seems that the previous experience proved that direct involvement does not yield strategic gains, but it does open costly fronts. This camp pushes for avoiding open confrontation, preserving existing understandings — especially with Saudi Arabia — and limiting action to political support or small, contained operations that do not drag the group into a large-scale escalation.

In contrast, there is another current that believes the present moment is crucial for the so-called “axis of resistance” created by Iran, and that absence or hesitation could cost the group its place in the post-war equation. For this current, this is a decisive moment to assert the Houthis’ presence, especially amid an expanding conflict and the likelihood of a reshuffling of the regional balance of power.

Two currents have shaped the Houthis’ decision-making over recent weeks. As a result, today the group has embraced neither full-scale engagement nor total absence. This was evident first in the escalation of political rhetoric during the first month of the war, then in the execution of limited, carefully calculated operations that began on March 27. There was a clear declaration of gradual intervention, close monitoring of developments, and a deliberate effort not to cross the red lines identified by the group’s military spokesperson, particularly those related to the Bab al-Mandeb Strait.

However, the balance between the two currents may become unstable at some point as the war escalates and widens regionally, and as Iranian and Houthi talk of a “unity of fronts” intensifies. The longer the conflict lasts, the less able the group will be to remain in this grey zone, and the stronger the pressure will be for deeper involvement.

With each new development on the ground, this internal debate may edge closer to a moment of decision: either entrenching caution as a long-term strategic choice, or shifting to broader involvement that may not be as gradual as was declared in Houthi statements.

What remains constant, however, is that the group has entered this phase with the accumulated experience of past years — a record that has taught it the cost of involvement and made it aware that entering a war is not merely a military decision, but an open-ended political, security, and economic trajectory. It has already paid that price in its previous confrontations with the US and Israel.

Thus, the question is no longer whether the Houthis will enter the war, but how they will enter and at what cost. Will they be able to set and maintain limits on their involvement? Will their calibrated entry avoid paying the full price? The answers to these questions will be made clear in the weeks to come.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.



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