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Kambo: What is the frog poison ‘spiritual ritual’ killing detoxers? | Government News

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A number of people around the world have died after taking part in an ancient healing practice known as kambo, which involves ingesting frog poison.

The spiritual ritual of kambo, which is promoted among Western “wellness communities” as a one‑stop cure for a spectrum of physical and mental ailments, from anxiety to arthritis, is not backed by any scientific evidence.

In April this year, 40-year-old United Kingdom wellness coach and cancer survivor Kristian Trend was the latest to die after reportedly taking part in a “cleansing ceremony” which involved kambo, local media reported.

Trend’s mother told the UK national newspaper, The Telegraph, that she wanted the practice to be banned. While it is legal to buy frog poison for kambo in the UK, it is not considered a licensed medicine.

The practice has also been banned by other countries.

What is kambo?

Kambo is an ancient shamanic healing ritual with its roots in traditional South American medicine. It was practised by Amazonian Indigenous tribes centuries ago. The term “kambo” refers to the secretions of the giant monkey frog (Phyllomedusa bicolor), which are applied to small burns on the skin during the ritual.

Experts say it is hard to pin down the exact origins of kambo since knowledge of the ritual was generally passed down orally, rather than being written down.

The earliest known written documentation of the practice was made in 1925, when French missionary Constant Tastevin wrote about kambo being practised in the border regions between Peru and Brazil.

The monkey frog actually secretes kambo to kill or harm predators that try to attack it. The secretions are also called sapo, which translates to “toad” in Spanish.

Many amphibians release such toxins. In February this year, European countries accused Russia of using a toxin made from the secretions of South American dart frogs to kill Kremlin critic Alexey Navalny.

How does kambo work?

Kambo is an ancient spiritual and healing practice traditionally carried out by a specialised practitioner called a shaman.

The frog’s secretions are collected and dried before the animal is released back into the wild. A heated rod is then used to make a series of small, superficial burns on the skin, and the dried secretion is applied to these points by the shaman, who recites hymns while waiting for the kambo to take effect.

A bucket is usually placed in front of the person receiving the treatment in anticipation of vomiting – a common reaction to the ritual. Then, the kambo is wiped off the burns.

kambo
Frog poison is dabbed onto superficial burns on the skin in the kambo ritual [Shutterstock]

What is the kambo poison?

Kambo is considered poisonous because it contains a complex mix of bioactive peptides – short chains of amino acids – including some that violently stimulate the digestive tract, causing intense nausea and vomiting, and others that act directly on the cardiovascular system, leading to rapid drops in blood pressure and fainting.

Some peptides have opioid‑like effects, altering breathing patterns and affecting the central nervous system. In extreme cases, this combination can trigger sudden cardiac problems or severe organ toxicity, which can be fatal.

Before the ritual, the person receiving kambo is often advised to drink large amounts of water. Combined with heavy vomiting and fluid shifts, this can lead to hyponatremia – dangerously low sodium levels in the blood, sometimes referred to as water intoxication. Severe hyponatremia can cause brain swelling, seizures, coma and, in the worst cases, brain death.

Kambo also causes the gastrointestinal tract to contract violently, which can cause the oesophagus to rupture, also resulting in death.

What is the kambo ritual for?

Kambo is known as a “cleansing” ritual, believed to detox the body and, in some traditions, to enhance fertility, virility and even bring good luck.

It is also used to treat diseases and disorders including addiction, Alzheimer’s disease, anxiety, cancer, chronic pain, depression, diabetes, hepatitis, HIV and AIDS, infections, rheumatism and vascular conditions, according to the US health information website, Healthline.

But doctors say there is no scientific evidence that kambo is effective at treating any of these conditions, and modern medical case reports have instead linked kambo to severe illness and death.

Healthline lists the possible side effects of kambo as nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, dizziness, heart palpitations, a sensation of a lump in the throat, difficulty swallowing, swelling of the lips, eyelids or face and even loss of bladder control.

Kambo
A man prepares frog poison for a kambo ceremony [Shutterstock]

Who has been using it?

Over the past two decades, kambo has become popular in Western and Latin American countries. It has been adopted in “wellness” circles and alternative medicine communities in Brazil, Australia, the UK and the United States.

Indigenous experts have warned against the use of kambo by non-Indigenous practitioners, however. UK media recently reported that Yamanawa leader Joaquim Luz has criticised the online sale of kambo and warned that using it without the preparation or permission of Indigenous communities puts people at risk. The Yamanawa people originate in the Brazilian Amazon state of Acre, with communities extending into Peru and Bolivia.

Who has died from kambo?

There have been at least six known deaths associated with the use of kambo worldwide in recent years.

In 2008, a 52-year-old man died in Brazil after receiving the kambo treatment.

In 2018, a man in Italy died from an abnormal heart rate while experiencing kambo. The man had obesity and ventricular hypertrophy, a condition which causes the heart’s main pumping chambers to thicken.

In 2019, Australian woman Natasha Lechner, 39, died while taking part in a kambo ceremony to cure her chronic back pain.

In October 2021, Australian man Jarrad Antonovich died after kambo was performed on him. It was suspected that he died from a perforated oesophagus after he had vomited excessively.

In 2024, Mexican actress Marcela Alcazar Rodríguez died aged 33 when she ingested kambo during a cleansing ceremony.

Then, in March this year, 40-year-old UK wellness coach Kristian Trend died after taking part in the ceremony.

How have authorities responded?

A recent review published in the medical journal Cureus concluded that the practice of kambo should be more tightly regulated, after it identified several cases of severe reactions and death linked to the ritual.

In 2004, Brazil banned the sale and marketing of kambo. It is also illegal to import the frog poison used in the ritual in Chile.

More recently, in 2021, the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), the country’s national medicine regulator, banned the use of kambo and classified it as a poison.

Kambo is also illegal in the US, and in January 2025, the US embassy in Peru released a circular advising US citizens visiting Peru not to use it.



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Artists boycott America’s 250th State Fair on Washington Mall over politics


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Trump Derangement Syndrome struck again this week, as somehow something as pure Americana as the nation’s 250th birthday State Fair, planned for the Washington Mall next month, became mired in controversy and liberal grievance.

On Friday morning, a list of lower-tier musical acts such as Vanilla Ice and Young MC were announced as performers for the two-week event starting June 25. At first, the mocking complaint was that the bipartisan commission running the event had failed to book major acts, as if that was somehow embarrassing for a state fair, when in fact it is standard fare for such events.

One does not see Taylor Swift or Oasis at the state fair, one sees Weird Al Yankovic or the remaining members of the Doobie Brothers between funnel cake and the demolition derby. Of course, the woke coastal liberals who hate Trump know nothing of such things.

Hours later, though, the mockery of these D-listers changed, as several, including Morris Day, The Commodores, Young MC, Milli Vanilli and Martina McBride all announced they were, in fact, not going to perform at the fair.

ROCK THE COUNTRY FESTIVAL DEFENDS PATRIOTIC MESSAGE AFTER ARTISTS EXIT, ‘LOVING AMERICA ISN’T POLITICAL’

Young MC explained his act of abject moral cowardice this way, “The artists were never told about any political involvement with the event. And despite the claims by the organizers that the event is non-partisan, SPIN magazine describes it as Trump-backed.”

Martina McBride

Singer Martina McBride attends the AOL Build Speaker Series to discuss her album “Reckless.”  (Photo by Mike Pont/WireImage) (Photo by Mike Pont/WireImage)

This is almost admirable in how much ignorance and misinformation is bunched into just a few words. Shockingly, Spin magazine has it wrong: This is not a political or a Trump event. It is run by a bipartisan commission who these artists chose to humiliate.

Liberals, of course, are celebrating as they do every time they try to ruin things for normal Americans just living their lives, and McBride and Vanilli get to be brave heroes in their eyes for a few days.

THE LEFT IS CELEBRATING JULY 4 WITH PROTESTS WHILE THE RIGHT SEES A PATRIOTIC REVIVAL

My own attitude toward any American artist who refuses to perform for our nation’s 250th is that they can go to hell, get on a plane to China, perform there and not come back. But unlike China, this is a free country.

What is really going on here is that progressive, urban elites not only do not understand the idea of a state fair, and not only have they never been to one, they basically hate the entire concept of it, hence the initial mockery of the D-listers they now hold as heroes.

UNITED KINGDOM - JANUARY 01:  Photo of Lionel RICHIE and COMMODORES; Lionel Richie  (Photo by Mike Prior/Redferns)

UNITED KINGDOM – JANUARY 01:  Photo of Lionel RICHIE and COMMODORES; Lionel Richie  (Photo by Mike Prior/Redferns) (Mike Prior/Redferns)

For the America-hating socialist Democrats, our 250th anniversary of colonization, racism and oppression should be commemorated by slam poetry about how terrible our nation is, not early 90s pop anthems. One can almost hear Greta Thunberg saying, “How dare you!?”

STAGECOACH FESTIVALGOERS SPLIT ON WHETHER AMERICA IS HEADED IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION AHEAD OF ITS 250TH BIRTHDAY

For millions of Americans outside of our major cities, the state fair is a rite of passage. It is where they had their first kiss or later, handed their newly teenage kid a few bucks and watched them drift into the crowd and the future with their friends.

The idea behind America’s state fair was to give the middle of the country, the people nobody listens to or pays attention to, a couple of weeks in the limelight, a ferris wheel, games of chance and nostalgic music acts. But no, our progressive betters won’t have it.

The good news is that all of these music acts which have dropped out are very easily replaced. Frankly, the lineup was already a little light on country music to begin with, and the committee putting on the fair has enough time to replace them.

PRESIDENT TRUMP SIGNS EXECUTIVE ORDER BRINGING INDYCAR RACE TO DC FOR AMERICA250

But honestly, at this point, have it be an open mic, or book somebody’s cousin’s Skynyrd cover band. It’s a state fair, it really doesn’t matter.

rending of ferris wheel for american state fair

Rending of 110-foot ferris wheel coming to National Mall for “Great American State Fair.” (Freedom250)

As frustrating and stupid as the artists boycotting the fair and those cheering them on are, chasing their dopamine rush as they scroll BlueSky, they really are best ignored. They see these cancelations as some kind of win, but in reality they are just sad people.

For those such as myself who are planning to take part in the festivities at the fair, these yapping morons and their droning opinions are meaningless. Maybe that is why liberal elites hate state fairs so much: They don’t get to control them.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

So go enjoy the fair and don’t let the socialist idiots ruin your day. But if you do get annoyed, and you want some revenge, just remind them that in August, there will be an Indy car race in the nation’s capital. They will despise that as much as they hate a state fair.

Zoom zoom, and God bless America.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM DAVID MARCUS



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Inside the DDoS-as-a- Service Market

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DDoS

You have probably experienced the following scenario yourself. A website suddenly stops loading, a login page times out, or an online service becomes unreachable at the worst possible moment. Sometimes the cause is not an internal outage, but a Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attack designed to overwhelm the service from the outside.

DDoS attacks have long been one of the simplest ways to disrupt an online service:flooding it with enough traffic, exhausting its infrastructure, and making it unreachable without breaking into the target’s systems. Now more than ever DDoS is being packaged, branded, and sold with the language of a mature online service, and the impact is well recorded in the real world.

Cloudflare reported blocking a 7.3 Tbps attack in 2025 and later said it mitigated a 31.4 Tbps attack in its Q4 2025 DDoS report. Microsoft also said Azure mitigated a 15.72 Tbps attack in October 2025, attributing the activity to the Aisuru botnet.

Behind those incidents, underground sellers are competing over the same buyers with an increasingly polished pitch. Recent underground activity analyzed by Flare researchers describe attack panels, API access, monthly plans, reseller options, customer support, botnet-backed capacity, game-server methods, and Cloudflare bypass claims. 

A comparison of two datasets of DDoS-related underground activity from the first five months of 2023 and the first five months of 2026, shows how quickly that offer has changed. What once appeared more frequently as scripts, tutorials, leaked tools, and scattered forum posts is now more often presented as a repeatable product that is easier to buy and operate.

A DDoS attack attempts to overwhelm a website, application, network, or server with traffic from many sources at once. Some attacks target network capacity, while others focus on application layer resources such as login pages and APIs. The objective is usually simple: make the service unavailable, unstable, or expensive to operate.

DDoS-as-a-service lowers the barrier further. Instead of building infrastructure, an attacker can pay for access to a web panel, choose a target, select a duration, and rely on someone else’s botnet, proxy network, or third-party attack infrastructure.

A flow chart that illustrates how DDoS attacks work
A flow chart that illustrates how DDoS attacks work

Flare Researchers Analysis

Flare researchers searched for DDoS-related underground activity from two periods in time. The first was the fivefirst months of 2023 and the second was the first five months of 2026. The team cleaned the data, curated it and found some important insights.

Topic 2023 2026 Change
Volume of records 4,403 4,964 Slight increase
High-signal DDoS service ads 38 364 ~10x increase
Unique ad clusters 31 123 ~4x increase
Unique actors 15 41 ~3x increase
Sources observed 22 43 ~2x increase

An important disclaimer, in this research we focused on distributed DoS. There’s another category, which is denial of service.

Technically it is a bit different in the way a server is targeted, but the goal is the same. In this research we only focused on DDoS offerings and did our best to exclude the DoS offerings.

DDoS-as-a-service platforms are openly advertised across dark web forums and cybercrime communities — the same sources Flare monitors continuously.

Flare tracks underground marketplaces, botnet infrastructure chatter, and threat actor activity across thousands of dark web sources, so your security team sees emerging threats before they impact your operations.

Detect your exposure for free

From scattered tools to packaged services

The topics in the posts from 2023 are more diverse. Many offerings revolved around scripts, leaked tools, tutorials, or generic “botnet service” advertisements.

One repeated type of post from 2023 (as seen in the screenshot below) promoted a “Botnet Service L7 – L4” and claimed Layer 3, Layer 4, and Layer 7 capability, optional API access, automatic payments, high attack slots, game-server targeting, and bypasses for Cloudflare-related protections. The same advertising text appeared across multiple sources and actors, suggesting copying, reselling, or recycling marketing.

A post from 2023 offering Botnet services
A post from 2023 offering Botnet services

While the post from 2023 was focused about the services, more recent posts from 2026 are focused around the price and the offering they give. 

An advertisement of “SatelliteStress” described the service as an IP stresser with a user-friendly panel, API access, game-server support, and monthly plans starting at €20. The same post claimed the service was “100% botnet-powered” and did not rely on downstream APIs, a positioning meant to distinguish it from resellers that depend on another provider’s infrastructure.

As illustrated in the screenshot below, Areshun, which is another post that offers a “Premium DDoS Service” with Layer 4 and Layer 7 attacks, monitoring, API integration, custom plans, 24/7 support, and promotional discount codes is also pinpointed on specific service and its price. 

Screenshot taken from Flare's platform.
Screenshot taken from Flare’s platform.
Sign up for the free trial to access if you aren’t already a customer.

Another similar example is of “RebirthStress”, which is similarly marketed as a botnet-powered IP and web stressing device, a free Layer 7 hub, more than 400 slots, reselling suitability, and plans starting at $15 per month.

If you go over these posts, one-by-one and make the comparison, you see a distinct trend. The post in 2026 is more focused on a product, the sellers are competing one against another on customers. They package everything nicely, offer shiny features: ease of use, fully automated, full support, privacy promised, reselling capacity, and reliability.

The technical details have not disappeared, they became part of the sale pitch. In 2026 ads more commonly bundle Layer 4 and Layer 7 claims (means the service support both network-level attacks and application-layer attacks) words such as “panel,” “API,” “slots,” “bypass,” “monitoring,” “uptime,” and “support.”

One THORCC-related advertisement claimed more than 7,000 active Layer 4 bots and promoted bandwidth analytics and attack-vector statistics. Another Russian and English post presented “professional stress testing” while claiming Cloudflare and DDoS-Guard bypasses, high concurrency, and long attack durations.

Sellers are possibly exaggerating about their capabilities. However, the consistency of their marketing language remains important intelligence.

It shows what buyers are being encouraged to value beyond raw traffic volume, including web panels, automation, bypass claims, and the ability to launch or resell attacks with minimal effort.

The pricing of a DDoS attack in 2026 is very cheap. We’ve seen the following offers:

There are some more expensive offerings. An actor named “SamuraiDD” advertised attacks starting at $100 per day (see in the screenshot below).

Screenshot taken from Flare's Platform.
Screenshot taken from Flare’s Platform.
Sign up for the free trial to access if you aren’t already a customer.

Another actor named “POWERDDOS” used a tiered model of $5 tests, $100 per day for “weak” target, $200 per day for “medium” target, and $500 per day for “strong” or protected targets. 

Lastly, we’ve also seen some “premium” offerings which included infrastructure-style targeting, including a DDoS botnet attack network advertised for $2,000.

The pattern shows a market segmented by buyer type. Cheap tests and short attacks for low-skill users, daily pricing for one-off disruption, private negotiation for longer campaigns, and higher-value infrastructure or reseller-style offers for more serious customers.

Public reporting on the booter economy (a paid DDoS-for-hire service that lets users launch attacks through someone else’s infrastructure) also aligns with this low-cost access model, with Akamai noting that some DDoS booter services can cost less than $25 per month and may offer limited trials.

Conclusions

DDoS-as-a-service is no longer only about traffic volume. The market is dropping down the entry bar, enabling easier purchase, easier operation, and easier to resell. What matters is not only how powerful an attack is, but how easy it is to launch an attack through a panel, various plans, full support, API access, and rented infrastructure.

This lowers the barrier for several types of actors. Low-skill users can buy short, cheap attacks. More serious customers can negotiate longer or higher-volume campaigns. Resellers can help expand the reach of the original service. As a result, defenders should not assume that disruptive DDoS activity requires a sophisticated attacker behind the keyboard.

In the near future, this market will likely continue moving toward more polished service models. As clearer pricing tiers, more automation, stronger reseller programs, and heavier branding around “bypass” capabilities and attack reliability.

Learn more by signing up for our free trial.

Sponsored and written by Flare.



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Following Syria’s broken tracks from Baniyas to Aleppo | Syria’s War

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Leaving Baniyas

By noon, the tankers are full, and the train is ready to depart. After weighing the wagons one by one, the shipment is handed off to the crew of locomotive number 708. The loco cab is the only place available to sit on the train.

Crammed inside, the three-man crew share just a few square metres of space. The steady rhythm of the rails and the low hum of the engine accompany their conversation.

Like all the locomotives still operating, 708  was built in the Soviet Union and dates back to the 1970s. Everything, from the dashboard to the stained windows, is from another era, and the largely metal interior offers little comfort.

A small circular stove allows the crew to keep cups of tea and traditional mate coming, helping them stay alert. The atmosphere is relaxed, and a small speaker plays the classics of Lebanese singer Fairuz.

At the controls is driver Abu Mahmoud. He will lead the first leg of the journey. He and the train chief, Hussein, are both over 50 and have spent their entire lives working for the SRC. Abu Mahmoud’s assistant, Mohammed, is a newcomer by comparison. At 37, he stands out, wearing a turtleneck sweater and well-polished boots. He is from a small village between Homs and Tartous and spent eight years in the army up to 2018.

He explains why he joined the army.

“At the time, the regime told young people on the coast: ‘You have no choice, there’s only the sea behind you. It’s either the army or death’,” he says.

“That’s why I enlisted, and also to earn a salary,” he adds.

After military service, he joined the SRC.

“I would not have opposed staying longer, but after eight years, you were usually demobilised,” he explains.
All three men are from the coastal region, which is predominantly Alawite. They admit to having felt apprehensive about the new government, particularly after the March 2025 killings targeting the Alawite community. Syria’s new leader, Ahmed al-Sharaa, is Sunni.

But Mohammed says, “Our mission is still the same, and we continue accomplishing it regardless.”

“People need to get used to change; it will inevitably take time to trust politicians again,” he adds.

Hussein and Abu Mahmoud nod, and through the window, a large statue of Hafez al-Assad lying on its side comes into view.

Despite their fears, they also see the train as a way of overcoming social divides.

“I am an Alawite, I could choose to sit at home and do nothing all day because I am scared, but I’d miss the locomotive, not making myself useful and enjoying the landscape,” says Hussein.



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QUAD to build Fiji port: A new US-China flashpoint? | Explainer

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New Delhi, India – The foreign ministers of India, the United States, Australia and Japan have announced plans to jointly develop port infrastructure in Fiji, a strategically important Pacific island nation, following their meeting in New Delhi earlier this week.

Their grouping, called the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue alliance – or Quad, for short – has worked over the past two decades as a counter force to China’s economic and political influence in the Asia Pacific region.

China, in turn, has said groupings should “not target any third party”, and Beijing opposes “engaging in bloc confrontation”.

Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong hailed the initiative in Fiji as the strongest commitment to deliver high-quality infrastructure that the Quad has made in the Pacific region. She said a pilot for port infrastructure in Fiji reflects the group’s ability to deliver high-quality infrastructure in response to Pacific priorities.

As the grouping faces questions about its relevance in today’s world order, and US President Donald Trump has been wooing China, Washington has pivoted away from the region as its top priority in favour of the Western Hemisphere and the Middle East.

So, what is the significance of a port development in Fiji? And could this be the next flashpoint in the up-and-down relationship between the US and China?

Officials from Australia, India and the US arrive for a Quad meeting in Tokyo, Japan, in July 2024
Penny Wong, Australia’s foreign affairs minister, centre, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, India’s external affairs minister, fourth left, and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrive for the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) ministerial meeting on July 29, 2024 in Tokyo, Japan [Kiyoshi Ota/Getty Images]

What are the plans for port development in Fiji?

Fiji’s foreign minister said Suva and Lautoka would be the first ports to be developed on the island under a pilot project by the newly announced “Quad Ports of the Future Partnership”.

This marks the first such joint initiative by the Quad.

Suva, the capital, is already the largest and busiest port of the country. Lautoka, which was historically established around sugar exports, sits in the northwest of Fiji, in the second-largest city.

“It will have to be the two major ones,” Sakiasi Ditoka told the Fijian press, referring to Suva and Lautoka. “And then eventually we’ll probably spread it around – maybe Vanua Levu if you look north, and then maybe Levuka if the project goes that far.”

However, there are as yet very few specific details about plans for the ports.

The Suva port agency, 41 percent of which is owned by Fiji’s government, has discussed $181m of port upgrades, as well as a potential $1.82bn plan to relocate Suva Port, with the US officials, Fijian media reported this week.

Suresh Prasad, the Fiji Ports acting chief executive officer who said he was “rather surprised” by the announcement, told reporters: “If it’s a Quad project, it is going to be a mega project, which is Suva Port most likely.”

In 2023, Fiji’s Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka discussed the redevelopment of the Suva port with China, but plans for that did not materialise.

Rabuka told the Fijian parliament this Monday about an agreement to undertake a study for potential US-backed infrastructure with the US Millennium Challenge Corporation, Washington’s foreign aid agency, adding that any project would be funded by grants, not loans.

What does the Quad do in the Asia Pacific?

The four Quad countries are the most influential powers in the region outside of Russia and China.

The Quad’s area of cooperation has expanded beyond its original security-focused outlook and now stretches to a wide range of Asia Pacific initiatives for maritime security, infrastructure, technology, health and supply chains.

The grouping also operates the Indo-Pacific Partnership for Maritime Domain Awareness (IPMDA), which helps Pacific countries monitor illegal fishing, smuggling and other maritime activity with the use of satellite data. It cooperates on facilitating supply chains for lithium, rare-earth minerals and other strategic minerals to reduce dependence on China, alongside cooperation on quantum computing and cybersecurity.

Fiji has traditionally been aligned with Australia, and the Quad countries have pledged cooperation on disaster relief, climate resilience and humanitarian assistance to smaller Pacific islands.

Quad countries also hold joint military exercises under the annual Malabar Exercise in the region, including anti-submarine warfare, aircraft carrier operations and maritime interoperability.

china
Chinese President Xi Jinping speaks during a meeting with Fiji’s Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, August 20, 2024 [Andres Martinez Casres/Reuters]

Why is China unhappy about the Quad?

“China perceives the Quad as an anti-China coalition, and this new project in Fiji is viewed as the Quad expanding its operations from Indo-Pacific hotspots into the Pacific Island countries,” said Sana Hashmi, a postdoctoral fellow at the Taiwan-Asia Exchange Foundation with a special focus on China.

Over the past few years, Beijing has pumped billions of dollars into the region, and its influence has risen in parallel.

In response to a question from the media this week about the Quad’s initiative in Fiji, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning warned that any cooperation in the region “should not target any third party”.

“China has stated its position on the Quad on multiple occasions. Cooperation between countries should be conducive to regional peace, stability, and prosperity, and not target any third party,” she told reporters. “We oppose forming exclusive groupings or engaging in bloc confrontation.”

In a joint statement following their meeting in New Delhi this week, the Quad countries’ foreign ministers also expressed concern about rising tensions in the East China Sea and the South China Sea, reiterating “strong opposition to any destabilising or unilateral actions, including by force or coercion, that threaten peace and stability in the region”.

The statement did not name China specifically but is seen as referring to China’s claim over Taiwan and the number of military drills it has been conducting around the island. The next day, Chinese spokesperson Ning told reporters: “The situation in the East China Sea and the South China Sea is generally stable.

“Certain countries should stop meddling in maritime affairs in China’s neighbourhood and earnestly respect regional countries’ efforts to safeguard peace and stability,” she replied, apparently in reference to the Quad. “Those who attempt to patch up small groupings, hype up tensions, and stoke confrontation will find no support.”

How powerful is China in the region?

Beijing has transformed in the past decades since the end of World War II into a continental Asian power, now presenting itself as the central economic and increasingly strategic force across the region.

According to the Lowy Institute’s 2025 Asia Power Index, China is the region’s second-ranked comprehensive power after the US, but it dominates in several key areas, especially trade connectivity and economic leverage.

China is also the primary regional trading partner for 22 of the 27 countries measured in the index, underscoring the dependency of Asian and Pacific economies on Chinese markets, manufacturing chains and imports.

Beijing has recognised eight countries in the region as “comprehensive strategic partners”, the highest classification of diplomatic partnership in China’s foreign relations. Top Chinese officials have frequently visited the region, with Xi attending summits over the past decade.

“China’s growing footprint in the [Pacific Island countries] remains a major concern for Australia and other regional actors,” Hashmi told Al Jazeera. “Consequently, the Quad’s willingness to operate more actively in the region is seen by Beijing as a form of strategic encirclement and the emergence of countervailing coalitions that could constrain China’s regional ambitions in the [Pacific Island countries].”

Fiji, meanwhile, owes Chinese state banks more than $100m for road building and other infrastructure projects undertaken a decade ago.

What else have Western powers done to counter China in the region?

The US and Australia have stepped up their strategic engagement across the Pacific Islands in recent years as concerns grow over China’s expanding diplomatic and maritime footprint in the region.

The AUKUS agreement between Australia, the US and the United Kingdom was announced in 2021. Under that, Canberra and London are working with Washington to design nuclear-class submarines ready for delivery to Australia in the 2040s.

The US and Australia have also pursued a series of Pacific initiatives over the past year, including stronger defence agreements with Papua New Guinea. Australia has stepped up aid, policing support and climate financing for Pacific Island states.

In 2022, China signed a landmark agreement with the Solomon Islands to allow Beijing to dispatch police, military, and armed forces to the Pacific nation. That gives Beijing a strong foothold in the waters, less than 2,000km (1,240 miles) from Australia.

In the following months, Washington scrambled to reopen embassies and expand diplomatic outreach across the region. The US reopened its embassy in the Solomon Islands in 2023 after a 30-year absence, opened a new embassy in Tonga the same year, and announced plans for additional diplomatic missions in countries, including Vanuatu and Kiribati.

The White House, under Joe Biden’s presidency, renewed the strategic Compacts of Free Association with three Pacific countries: the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and Palau.

However, China remains ahead of these collective efforts, Hashmi told Al Jazeera.

“For several countries, particularly the US, engagement with the region has been episodic and ad hoc, without sustained attention to core local concerns such as climate change, infrastructure, and economic resilience,” the analyst said.

“Countering China’s influence will, therefore, require sustained commitment and continuity. This is where the Quad’s recent announcement becomes important, although its impact will depend on whether these announcements are followed by implementation.”

Fiji climate crisis
This picture taken on December 21, 2022 shows an aerial view of the shoreline close to a resort on the outskirts of Suva, the capital of Fiji [Andrew Leeson/AFP]

Where does Fiji stand in this tango?

China’s bilateral relations with Fiji have also come a long way.

In 1975, Suva was among the first of the Pacific Island nations to recognise Beijing, rather than Taiwan, and to establish diplomatic relations with the People’s Republic of China.

A real breakthrough in relations came after a military coup ousted the Fijian government in 2006 and faced sanctions from traditional allies, like Australia and New Zealand. The result was that Suva moved closer to China. That has continued even after the democratically elected government led by Sitiveni Rabuka was voted to power.

“Fiji is considered the most influential country in the region and functions as a gateway and regional hub for the wider region,” said Hashmi, explaining the island nation’s importance for Beijing.

“The Pacific Islands occupy vast stretches of oceanic space and sit astride critical sea lanes linking Asia, Australia, and the Americas,” she added. “Influence there provides strategic depth and enables China to gradually expand its maritime presence beyond the first and second island chains. An important function for expanding into a formidable blue water navy.”

But this means that Fiji also has a balancing act on its hands.

Its traditional alliance with Australia, and with the US and other Western allies by extension, has kept its pace of growth, and Suva is seen as a partner in the Pacific as the Quad scrambles for a stronger foothold.

The US market is also the biggest export destination for Fijian goods, accounting for $383m in 2025, followed by Australia, worth $168m.

China is the top exporter for Fiji, billing $531m last year, only after Singapore’s $761m worth of exports. Suva’s exports to Beijing are worth only $49.2m, resulting in its biggest trading deficit with any partner.

Like Fiji, the Pacific Island nations maintain strong economic engagement with China while simultaneously deepening cooperation with Australia, the US, Japan, and India, said Hashmi.

“They have largely adopted a multi-vector foreign policy and hedging strategy, whereby engagement with all major actors is welcomed without formally siding with any one country,” she told Al Jazeera.

“No country wants to become entangled in major-power contestation.”



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Tom Hardy reportedly staying on ‘MobLand’ as creative issues get ‘worked through’


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Tom Hardy is reportedly not being cut from “MobLand” as tensions continue to rise ahead of season three.

Earlier this week, reports surfaced that Hardy was cut from Ronan Bennett and Jez Butterworth’s series, citing issues with Helen Mirren and Pierce Brosnan.

Sources told Variety on Thursday that Hardy is not being cut from the series, and “the door is not closed for Season 3 and things are being worked through creatively.”

‘MOBLAND’ STAR TOM HARDY ACCUSED OF ‘CAREER SUICIDE’ AFTER ALLEGEDLY LEAVING CASTMATES STRANDED ON SET: REPORT 

Tom Hardy standing at the MobLand New York premiere event

Tom Hardy attends the Paramount+ “MobLand” New York premiere. (Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty Images)

A production source told the outlet that Hardy had an issue with Butterworth delivering scripts late, sometimes just a week before filming. “Tom likes to prepare,” a second source added.

Butterworth is not present on the “MobLand” set, according to one production source. However, other sources told the outlet that Hardy was on weekly Zoom calls with Butterworth.

“The door is not closed for Season 3 and things are being worked through creatively.”

— Source to Variety

Multiple sources told Variety that Hardy would request script rewrites on occasion, which were difficult to do without Butterworth on set. 

“Often his ideas are very sound,” one source told the outlet about Hardy. “And he wants them taken seriously. Jez [Butterworth] kind of hasn’t got the time to deal with those notes, so it becomes problematic.”

Another source said that Hardy is not used to working with “jobbing TV directors” and tended to “walk all over” them.

Helen Mirren as Maeve Harrigan, Pierce Brosnan as Conrad Harrigan, and Anson Boon as Eddie Harrigan in a scene from Mobland

Helen Mirren as Maeve Harrigan, Pierce Brosnan as Conrad Harrigan, and Anson Boon as Eddie Harrigan in “Mobland.” (Luke Varley/Paramount+)

“He’s used to dealing with some of the best directors in the world,” the source added. “So when he suddenly has a jobbing TV director, he struggles and, to a certain extent, he can walk all over them because they’re intimidated by him.”

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Fox News Digital reached out to Paramount+ and a representative for Hardy for comment.

Anson Boon as Eddie Harrigan and cast members seated in a living room scene from Mobland season 1

“Mobland” season one cast included Anson Boon, Joanne Froggatt, Mandeep Dhillon, Lara Pulver, Paddy Considine, Pierce Brosnan, Helen Mirren, Tom Hardy, and Daniel Betts. (Jason Bell/PLaramount+)

“MobLand” is a gritty crime drama that dives deep into the dangerous world of organized crime, loyalty and power struggles. Set against the backdrop of a ruthless underworld, the story follows characters caught between family ties, betrayal and survival as rival factions battle for control.

Earlier this week, a source told The Hollywood Reporter that Hardy would make Mirren and Brosnan wait on set. “He refused to come out of his trailer for hours at a time,” the source said.

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“He kept the cast waiting, [which is] a power play. Keeping Pierce Brosnan, Helen Mirren and others waiting is career suicide, I would wager.”

Mirren, however, seems to have no hard feelings. She shared a photo of Hardy on her Instagram on Thursday with the text, “Love you now and always helen.”

Helen Mirren, Guy Ritchie, Pierce Brosnan and Tom Hardy attend the premiere of "MobLand"

Hardy stars alongside Pierce Brosnan and Helen Mirren in “MobLand.” Guy Ritchie is an executive producer on the show. (Shane Anthony Sinclair/Getty Images for Paramount Plus)

It’s unclear whether “MobLand” will be renewed for season three. If the Paramount+ show is greenlit for another season, THR reported production will begin in September.

Hardy portrays Harry Da Souza in “MobLand,” a ruthless but sharply intelligent “fixer” working for a powerful crime family in London.

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Fox News Digital’s Lauryn Overhultz contributed to this report.



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Sudan medical group says RSF-affiliated fighters kill 27 civilians | Sudan war News

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The attacks come as nearly 19.5 million Sudanese face severe hunger amid the country’s deepening humanitarian crisis.

A force affiliated with the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has killed at least 27 people, including elderly residents, in an attack on villages west of Bara in Sudan’s North Kordofan state, according to the Sudan Doctors Network.

The Cairo-based medical NGO said the attacks took place on Thursday in the al-Murrah area, describing them as “a new crime targeting unarmed civilians in areas with no military presence”.

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Sudan has been engulfed in civil war since April 2023, when long-running tensions between the Sudanese army and the RSF erupted into a full-scale conflict that has killed hundreds of thousands of people and displaced millions.

The Kordofan region has become one of the war’s main battlegrounds, with fighting intensifying across several fronts, including through drone attacks.

The RSF and allied groups control much of the western Darfur region, as well as parts of Kordofan along the border with South Sudan, areas rich in oil fields and gold mines. The paramilitary force has also repeatedly clashed with the army over the town of Bara.

Thursday’s assault took place during the second day of Eid al-Adha.

In a statement posted on Facebook, the Sudan Doctors Network said that “targeting villages and civilian areas and executing citizens in such a brutal manner constitutes a flagrant violation of international humanitarian law and all norms and conventions that prohibit attacks on civilians, especially amid the catastrophic humanitarian conditions people are enduring because of the ongoing war”.

The group added that the “continued attacks on civilians and safe villages” are worsening the humanitarian crisis and forcing more families into displacement, suffering and the loss of their livelihoods.

The attacks come as more than 40 percent of Sudan’s population faces acute hunger, according to a report released on Thursday by the United Nations-backed Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC).

The report said nearly 19.5 million people across the country are facing severe food insecurity as the conflict drives what aid agencies describe as one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.

The Sudan Doctors Network also called on the “international community and human rights and humanitarian organizations to condemn these violations and act urgently to protect civilians and stop the repeated attacks on residential areas by pressuring RSF leaders to end violations against civilians”.



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‘Obsession’ shatters box office norms, ‘The Mandalorian and Grogu’ struggles


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A low-budget horror flick is defying gravity at the box office while the latest big-budget “Star Wars” movie had a rough launch compared to its predecessors.

Focus Features’ “Obsession” was made with a microbudget of under $1 million. Initial projections showed it making less than $10 million in its opening weekend. It ended up making over $17 million.

This past weekend, it made roughly $24 million — $30 million when including Memorial Day — a whopping 30% increase from its opening weekend, outpacing much bigger films like “The Devil Wears Prada 2” and the Michael Jackson biopic “Michael.” It even outgrossed “The Mandalorian and Grogu” on Wednesday. 

‘OBSESSION’ REVIEW: AN INNOCENT WISH TURNS INTO A NIGHTMARE IN A HORROR FLICK FROM TALENTED UP-AND-COMERS

Obsession still

Inde Navarrette stars as Nikki and Michael Johnston as Bear in “Obsession,” a Focus Features release. (Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2026 Focus Features LLC)

Such a bump for a film in its second weekend is nearly unheard of. It has already grossed over $70 million worldwide and is now projected to make more than $100 million during its theatrical run, making it one of the most profitable films of the year. 

What’s remarkable about the success of “Obsession” is that it proves that Hollywood star power isn’t always needed to get butts in seats. The director is a 26-year-old content creator named Curry Barker, who is part of the sketch comedy duo “That’s a Bad Idea,” which has over 1 million followers on YouTube and TikTok. Jason Blum, creator of BlumHouse Productions and producer of horror hits like “Get Out,” “Paranormal Activity” and “M3GAN,” only boarded “Obsession” as an executive producer after the film debuted at the Toronto International Film Festival last year.

‘THE MANDALORIAN AND GROGU’ REVIEW: AN ENTERTAINING BUT FORGETFUL RETURN TO THE ‘STAR WARS’ UNIVERSE

The cast has no A-listers. The cast is led by up-and-comers Michael Johnston, Inde Navarrette, Megan Lawless and Cooper Tomlinson (Barker’s comedy partner). The most recognizable face is Andy Richter, who has a minor role. 

“Obsession” follows Bear (Johnston), who uses a novelty toy to make a wish that his friend Nikki (Navarrette) falls in love with him — only to realize that his wish quickly backfires.

Obsession still

Inde Navarrette stars as Nikki and Michael Johnston as Bear in “Obsession,” a Focus Features release. (Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2026 Focus Features LLC)

While it lacks stars, it should make a star out of Inde Navarrette, who gives a terrifyingly good performance that rivals Kathy Bates in “Misery.”

Erik Childress, a box office columnist for Rotten Tomatoes and host of the “Movie Madness” podcast, credits the impressive debut to “good marketing” by Focus Features. Its word-of-mouth carried it the week after. 

“It’s incredibly rare,” Childress tells Fox News Digital. “Usually those types of bumps you normally only see during the holidays… During the summer months, it almost never happens.”

‘THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA 2’ REVIEW: MERYL STREEP, ANNE HATHAWAY RETURN FOR A CHIC BUT BLAND SEQUEL

Meanwhile, in a galaxy far, far away, the new Star Wars film “The Mandalorian and Grogu” made $98 million domestically during Memorial Day weekend, marking the weakest opening weekend for any “Star Wars” film, an honor (or dishonor, in this case) previously held by 2018’s “Solo: a Star Wars Story,” which grossed $103 million during its debut Memorial Day weekend.

It marked the first “Star Wars” movie to hit theaters in seven years — the last one being 2019’s “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker,” which made $177 million domestically in its opening weekend.

The Mandalorian and Grogu still

Pedro Pascal as The Mandalorian and Grogu in Lucasfilm’s “The Mandalorian and Grogu.” (Courtesy of Lucasfilm. © 2026 Lucasfilm Ltd™. All Rights Reserved.)

Unlike “Obsession,” “The Mandalorian and Grogu” has A-list talent behind it between Jon Favreau in the director’s chair and a cast that includes Pedro Pascal, Jeremy Allen White and Sigourney Weaver, not to mention the iconic IP and the Disney machine behind it. But this isn’t a typical sequel or spin-off; it’s essentially an adapted continuation of “The Mandalorian” TV series from Disney+. It follows a bounty hunter working on behalf of the New Republic who tracks down Empire loyalists.

‘THE SHEEP DETECTIVES’ REVIEW: HUGH JACKMAN LEADS ALL-STAR CAST IN DELIGHTFUL WHODUNIT FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY

In recent years, Disney has leaned into Star Wars on its streaming service, perhaps changing the perception of audiences increasingly associating the franchise with television rather than film.

With all that being said, “The Mandalorian and Grogu” will still be profitable since its budget was reportedly only $165 million, a more modest price tag compared to many summer blockbusters.

Childress says it’s “slightly premature” for Disney execs to be hitting the panic button on the future prospects of the “Star Wars” franchise, particularly as one is slated for 2027 starring Ryan Gosling. 

“‘Solo’ dropped 65% in its second weekend. And as long as ‘Mandalorian’ doesn’t have a drop like that… it could still have enough juice in it to get in the like vicinity of like $250 million domestic, and if that’s the case with international sales, it could end up being not a big hit, but still a success,” Childress tells Fox News Digital. 

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London tube strikes to go ahead on Tuesday and Thursday, RMT says | London Underground

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Strikes by drivers on London Underground next week will go ahead, the RMT union has announced, paving the way for more days of transport disruption.

Two 24-hour stoppages are to take place, from 00.01 to 23.59 on Tuesday 2 June and Thursday 4 June, because of differences over a planned four-day week.

An RMT spokesperson said: “Strike action by London Underground drivers next week is scheduled to go ahead following TfL’s continued refusal to engage meaningfully with the union’s concerns over the proposed compressed four-day working arrangements.

“Our members have raised serious concerns around fatigue, longer shifts, reduced flexibility and the impact these proposals could have in a safety-critical role.”

Transport for London said it expected services on most tube lines during the strike, but has told commuters to expect disruption. It added that other services including the Elizabeth line, London Overground, DLR and tram would run as scheduled, but would be busier than normal.

TfL has said its proposals for a four-day week would be trialled on a voluntary basis. Its proposal has been endorsed by the Aslef union, which represents a slight majority of tube drivers.

Claire Mann, the chief operating officer at TfL, said it was disappointed that the RMT was continuing its industrial action.

“We still believe that the points they have raised can be worked out in time, through more detailed discussions and we are continuing to talk to the union’s representatives to find a way to avoid disruption to London,” she said.

She urged the RMT to work with TfL to resolve the dispute, adding: “A significant number of drivers have indicated that they want us to progress plans for the pilot of this new working pattern on the Bakerloo line, bringing benefits both for our colleagues and our customers.”

The RMT’s opposition to London Underground plans for a voluntary four-day week has already led to industrial action, most recently in April.

Hopes were raised that differences between the two sides might soon be resolved when the RMT called off at the last minute a two-day strike planned for mid-May.

However, at the same time the union also moved forward further strikes planned for 16 and 18 June to 2 and 4 June, saying the dispute was not over and that it was prepared to take more industrial action if the two sides failed to make sufficient progress.

The RMT said it remained “available for meaningful talks” with TfL, but cautioned London Underground against carrying out what it called a change to drivers’ working conditions “while refusing to properly address legitimate safety and workplace concerns”.

Previous waves of industrial action by the RMT over the four-day week proposals had found little public sympathy and had also mystified Aslef, which felt the proposal presented a significant improvement in working conditions for tube drivers.



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