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Falling price of cocaine forces drug traffickers to reuse narco-submarines, say Spanish police

The plummeting price of cocaine is forcing drug-traffickers to reuse the “narco-submarines” they would previously have scuttled once the custom-built vessels had completed their cargo runs from South America to Europe, according to a senior Spanish police officer. While semi-submersible vehicles have been used regularly in Colombia and other parts of South and Central America since the 1980s, they were not detected in European waters until 2006, when an abandoned sub was found in an estuary in the north-west Spanish region of Galicia. Since then, 10 such subs have been spotted or seized by Spanish police. Until recently, the boats, which cost about €600,000 (£524,000) to build, were used for one-way trips. But with massive cocaine production leading to market saturation – wholesale prices have halved to €15,000 (£13,000) a kilo over the past few years – drug-traffickers can no longer afford to consign their vehicles to a “narco-sub graveyard” between the Azores and the Canary Islands. “These semi-submersibles used to head to the area around the Canaries on one-way voyages and they’d then be sunk,” said Alberto Morales, the head of the central narcotics brigade of the Spanish Policía Nacional. “Back then, the cost of the merchandise in comparison with the cost of the vessel still made doing that very worthwhile – they’d be carrying three or four tonnes minimum, so operating that way was very profitable. But what’s happened lately is that the price of the merchandise is really, really low, so the organisations have, logically, had a rethink. “Rather than sink them, what they do now is unload the merchandise and set up a refuelling platform at sea so that the semi-submersibles can head back to the countries they came from and make as many journeys as possible.” Spanish police and customs officers seized 123 tonnes of cocaine last year, up from 118 tonnes in 2023 and 58 tonnes in 2022. In September this year, the Policía Nacional arrested 14 people and seized 3.65 tonnes of cocaine allegedly brought to Galicia by narco-sub. Morales said police had noticed an uptick in narco-sub activity over the past two years and a decrease in the use of sailboats to bring drugs to Spain. “Right now, [the organisations] have two basic methods which are merchant ships and semi-submersibles, which allow them to do their transporting at any time of year.” He added that while 10 narco-subs had been logged over the past two decades, the true number in operation was likely to be higher. “Obviously there will have been more than 10,” said Morales. “Logically speaking, we can’t detect everything that reaches the Spanish coast as we have 8,000km of coastline.” He also said although multiple people had confirmed the existence of the “narco-sub graveyard” in the eastern Atlantic, details were scarce. “We don’t have a location; we don’t even have any numbers,” he said. “And even if we did, it would be almost impossible to recover the [subs] because of the depth of the waters. It’s something for the fish to enjoy.” The increasing use and reuse of narco-subs is not the only recent trend to have attracted the attention of Morales and his colleagues. Officers from the brigade’s synthetic drugs and precursors department say they have dismantled more amphetamine, methamphetamine and MDMA laboratories in Spain over the past two years than in the previous 18. Two labs were raided and put out of business in 2023, followed by six in 2024 and another three so far this year. Drug seizures from those facilities have included more than five tonnes of MDMA, 450kg of amphetamine sulphate and 27kg of methamphetamine. Although the overwhelming majority of synthetic drug manufacture has historically taken place in the Netherlands – where police dismantle about 100 clandestine labs a year – gangs are continuing to branch out across Europe. Officers in the department believe production has outgrown the cramped geographical confines of the Netherlands and spread to countries such as Spain, France and Germany where there is more room to make the drugs and dispose of the waste materials, and where ingredients and drugs are easier to move around. “There are laboratories all over the place – especially in rural areas where there aren’t many people and where things are better from a security point of view,” said one senior officer. He added that as well as paying some locals to keep an eye out for strangers and police, the drug gangs also used drones to watch over their operations. “We’ve been pretty surprised by the synthetic drugs phenomenon because of the numbers of the laboratories we’re dismantling and because of the nature of some of these laboratories,” he said. “These are large-scale production laboratories.”

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Ukrainian refugee leaves UK sixth-form college that urged her ‘to study Russian’

A Ukrainian refugee has been forced to drop out of sixth-form college after she said she was put under pressure to study Russian. Kateryna Endeberia moved to Stoke-on-Trent after fleeing Ukraine in 2022, after the start of Russia’s invasion. She took her GCSEs at The Excel Academy in 2023 before completing a foundation year at City of Stoke-on-Trent Sixth Form College (SFC) and then studying economics, politics and statistics for one year. But the 19-year-old said that when she ran into difficulty with her subjects, teachers tried to persuade her to study Russian instead. As her father is a Ukrainian soldier, she felt this would be a traumatising experience, and that the request was “hurtful and insensitive” and akin to “discrimination and racism”. Endeberia has since dropped out of SFC, and is instead studying at home using notes shared by friends. She has applied to sit A-level exams as a private candidate in 2026, at a cost of £1,400. She told the Guardian that studying Russian was “against my personal principle because I was born [in Donetsk] where the war started in 2014. It’s not a language I want to speak or study because my father became a soldier last year”. She added: “I am truly grateful for the opportunity to study in the United Kingdom – it feels like my third home [after Ukraine and the Czech Republic, where she initially moved]. But not everyone realises how challenging it can be for Ukrainian students to adapt to a new education system, culture and language after everything our country has gone through.” Endeberia said she struggled on her A-level courses and felt she was being bullied because of her accent. She claims the college did not provide her with extra support but instead tried to persuade her to take up A-level Russian. “Rather than offering empathy or help, they continued to insist that I change subjects. No one tried to understand how painful this experience was for me,” she said. She said she had struggled to obtain “clear answers” about why she has been prevented from pursuing politics, economics and statistics, and is pursuing a complaints process through Potteries Educational Trust, which oversees SFC. She plans to escalate the case to Ofsted once this is completed. A spokesperson for City of Stoke-on-Trent Sixth Form College said: “The college cares deeply about our students and every effort is made to resolve issues and complaints in accordance with our complaints and resolution process. We do not comment on individuals for reasons of confidentiality.” Ukraine has previously lobbied the UK government to give teenage refugees the chance to study a GCSE in Ukrainian, amid reports they are instead being pressed to study Russian because many can already speak some of the language. Ukraine’s education minister, Oksen Lisovyi, met the UK education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, in December 2024 to warn that being taught Russian could retraumatise about 27,000 displaced Ukrainian children in the UK who have fled Vladimir Putin’s invasion. The children’s commissioner, Rachel de Souza, has also urged the government to reintroduce a GCSE in Ukrainian. AQA has said it is considering developing a GCSE in the Ukrainian language, however it is understood that this could take a couple of years.

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Hundreds of thousands newly displaced as Islamic State insurgency expands in Mozambique

More than 300,000 people have been displaced by an Islamic State insurgency in Mozambique since July, amid growing fears that authorities lack a workable plan to end the fighting. With wars in Ukraine, Gaza and Sudan attracting more attention and foreign aid falling, the grinding conflict in Mozambique has been largely ignored or forgotten. More than 1 million people have been displaced, many of them two, three or even four times. Neither the Mozambican army nor a Rwandan intervention have managed to quell the insurgency, which has ravaged northern Mozambique since October 2017, when militants from Islamic State-Mozambique, an affiliate of the main IS group in the Middle East, carried out their first attacks, in Mocímboa da Praia in Cabo Delgado province in the north-east. The group drew global attention in March 2021 with an attack on the town of Palma. More than 600 people were killed in the assault and the military’s subsequent recapturing of the town, according to Armed Conflict Location and Event Data, a non-profit conflict monitor, including foreign workers on a multibillion-dollar Total liquefied natural gas (LNG) project. Rwanda, whose military is better equipped and trained than Mozambique’s, deployed 1,000 troops to Cabo Delgado in July 2021, initially pushing back the militants. Rwanda now has an estimated 4,000 to 5,000 military personnel in the country. However, violence against civilians has never fully abated and has increased this year, according to Acled. More than 100,000 people were displaced in November alone, according to the International Organization for Migration, after Mozambican and Rwandan operations pushed IS fighters south, where the insurgents made their furthest incursion yet into Nampula province. At the end of November, more than 350,000 people had been displaced, up from to 240,000 a year earlier. Tomás Queface, a researcher for the independent conflict monitor Acled, said the insurgents had been “very audacious”, adding that Rwandan and Mozambican forces were not as “effective as they used to be … The Rwandans are not doing patrols like they used to do. “And more importantly, the government wants the Mozambican forces to take the lead in the conflict and then Rwanda stays in the back,” he said. So far this year, Acled has recorded 549 deaths in 302 attacks, more than half of them civilians. The civilian death toll, at 290, is already 56% higher than last year. Since 2017, almost 2,800 civilians have been killed, 80% by IS and more than 9% by Mozambican forces. Mozambique’s president, Daniel Chapo, who took office in January after hundreds of people were killed by security forces following disputed elections, told Al Jazeera in September that he wanted dialogue with the insurgents. Borges Nhamirre, a researcher at the Institute for Security Studies, a South African thinktank, said dialogue – including with communities in the underdeveloped region – was the key to resolving the conflict. But he was sceptical: “Most important is not what politicians say but what politicians do. After eight years … there are no effective initiatives of dialogue.” He said much of the military effort was focused on securing the estimated $20bn LNG project, which Total said in October it would resume once it received government approval. Nhamirre said: “First you need to ask what [objective] the Rwandan and Mozambican forces had. If it is to guarantee human security, then we can say that they have failed … But if the objective is to secure the LNG project, then they have achieved some success … The LNG project is definitely more secure than in 2021.” Meanwhile, IS has been abducting children for forced labour, marriage, or to fight. In June, Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported that there had been sharp increase in such kidnappings. Sheila Nhancale, a researcher for HRW, said: “The displacement that is happening now is also increasing the risk of sexual violence, exploitation and abuse, particularly for women and children. Of the 100,000 displaced [in November], 70,000 are children.” People forced to flee are also facing shrinking support. Donors have given $195m to the humanitarian response this year – only 55% of the estimated need – compared with $246m last year, according to the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Sebastián Traficante, the head of operations for Médecins Sans Frontières in Mozambique, said displaced people “have to stay in places with very poor conditions, with very poor access to basic services … that are already affected by eight years of conflict. “They just want this to end. They just want to be able to go back to their homes, to do their farming – they want to have a normal life.”

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Thursday briefing: A short quiz on a very long year – how many questions can you answer about 2025?

Good morning, and happy whatever-you’re-celebrating today. There may come a moment later – perhaps shortly after someone has eaten their body weight in roast dinner – when the family begins to drift into nap mode. That is your cue. Produce this quiz from your pocket. Read the questions aloud in your best posh “BBC continuity announcer” voice. Watch as the room divides over how much ice has been lost in the Antarctic, exactly when Donald Trump and Elon Musk fell out, what Archie’s dog got up to, and why we’ve even mentioned Liz Truss at all. There are no prizes, but here is the First Edition quiz of the year. I’m sorry. And you’re welcome. But first, the headlines … Fingers on buzzers, here we go … 1) What was the name of the Chinese AI app that rapidly became the most downloaded free app in the US in January, sparking a tech-stock dive? a) DeepSeek b) DeepMind c) DeepThought d) DeepHeat 2) Who has appeared in the main image of First Edition the most times in 2025? a) Volodymyr Zelenskyy b) Donald Trump c) Keir Starmer d) Mr Blobby 3) In May, Friedrich Merz (pictured, below) became Germany’s chancellor. Which party does he belong to? a) Christlich Demokratische Union Deutschlands (CDU) b) Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands (SPD) c) Freie Demokratische Partei (FDP) d) Bei der Leoparden Gesichter fressen Partei (BLGP) 4) The list of people that Nigel Farage has fallen out with is spectacularly long. Who is the Great Yarmouth MP who got propelled out of the door marked ‘do one’ by the Reform leader in March? a) Jonathan Gullis b) Rupert Lowe c) Ben Habib d) Paddington Bear 5) Also in March, the very best people that Donald Trump employs in the White House accidentally added a journalist to a message group discussing strikes on Yemen using which messaging app? a) Whisper b) Telegram c) Signal d) Threema 6) Earlier this year the papal conclave elected Pope Leo XIV (pictured, below) to lead the Catholic church. What is his pre-papal name? a) Robert Prevost b) James Abbott c) Peter Bailiwick d) Derek Tardis 7) In December, we wrote about the resurgent space race. What is the name of Nasa’s programme to return US astronauts to the moon? a) Horizon b) Artemis c) Intrepid d) Elder One 8) Which city in England has had rubbish piling up in the streets thanks to a protracted industrial dispute? a) Liverpool b) Birmingham c) Sunderland d) Ambridge 9) What was the name of the South Korean president removed from power earlier this year after he was impeached following an attempt to impose martial law? a) Park Geun-hye b) Moon Jae-in c) Yoon Suk Yeol d) Yasaeng Dwaeji 10) France has been chopping and changing prime ministers this year more than a Tory party with Liz Truss involved. How many prime ministers have now served under Emmanuel Macron (pictured, above)? a) Five b) Seven c) Nine d) It might as well have been 1,057, we’ve lost count 11) Angela Rayner’s (pictured, below) abrupt exit from the cabinet left Keir Starmer in a pickle. Why did she resign? a) She had underpaid stamp duty on her seaside flat b) It emerged she had pleaded guilty to a fraud offence involving a work phone a decade ago c) She had been holding unauthorised meetings with foreign government ministers d) She was caught secretly upgrading the Downing Street printer to print everything in Comic Sans 12) Zack Polanski became leader of the Green party of England and Wales (the Scottish Greens are their own separate thing). Who did he beat in the leadership election? a) Adrian Ramsay and Carla Denyer b) Adrian Ramsay and Siân Berry c) Adrian Ramsay and Ellie Chowns d) Lord Buckethead and Count Binface 13) What day does Martin Belam publish his weekly Guardian news quiz that this First Edition quiz of the year is loosely based on? a) Tuesday b) Wednesday c) Thursday d) Friday 14) Aamna Mohdin spoke to the Guardian’s culture correspondent Lanre Bakare for a First Edition that discussed Black History Month in the UK. When is it celebrated each year? a) February b) April c) July d) October 15) In August, Aamna confessed in an edition of this newsletter that she was a Swiftie – as is Martin. What was the name of Taylor Swift’s new album this year? a) The Life of a Showgirl b) Confessions of a Showgirl c) The Making of a Showgirl d) Carry On Showgirls 16) In October, First Edition asked if Kemi Badenoch was leading a Tory party on the brink of extinction. Which constituency does the MP represent? a) North West Sussex b) North West Norfolk c) North West Essex d) North West Bedfordshire 17) Who won the 2025 election in Canada, conducted amid Donald Trump’s tariff sabre-rattling? a) Yves-François Blanchet b) Mark Carney c) Pierre Poilievre d) Alanis Morissette 18) In April, Just Stop Oil (pictured, below) staged a “last day of action” in London. When did the group form? a) 2016 b) 2018 c) 2020 d) 2022 19) The HS2 saga never seems to end. What is the name of the station that may end up being the London terminus instead of Euston? a) Great Elm Junction b) High Beech Parkway c) Old Oak Common d) Upper Broke Street 20) It was fairly predictable that the Donald Trump and Elon Musk love-in would end up in a public ego explosion. When did their big bust-up (this year’s, at least) happen? a) June b) July c) August d) September 21) What did Your Party members vote to call the party after months of deliberation? a) Your Party b) Our Party c) Their Party d) Party McPartyface 22) What was the name of the BBC director general (pictured, above) who abruptly resigned in November? a) Tim Lowe b) Tim Cobb c) Tim Davie d) Tim Idd 23) How long was the 2025 US federal government shutdown, the longest in history? a) 43 days b) 53 days c) 63 days d) 73 days 24) What is the name of the scheme to help disabled people in the UK get access to cars, that got caught in the culture war crosshairs in March? a) Motability b) Motassist c) MobilityPlus d) MotiFlex 25) In March, Nimo Omer reported for First Edition that ice in the Antarctic (pictured, above) was how much below average? a) 6% b) 16% c) 26% d) 36% 26) Labour’s 49th safest seat was lost by just six votes to the Reform candidate Sarah Pochin. Where? a) Croxden and Helsmere b) Runcorn and Helsby c) Bridmore and Ottersby d) Ellesmere Port and Bromborough 27) Which exoplanet do science boffins (the correct technical term) think is showing hints of biological life? a) 01 811 8055 b) L1z 49dyz c) 5PA Rk5 d) K2-18 b 28) What was Archie Bland’s dog Quincy doing in Archie’s final First Edition? a) Sitting stoned on the sofa b) Eating an entire packet of Jaffa Cakes c) Chasing a squirrel through the house d) Fending off 30-50 feral hogs from Archie’s garden This time tomorrow we will send you the answers. Enjoy your day and a Happy Christmas from all of us on the newsletters team. • If you are reading this on the app over the Christmas period, the headlines and sport will not appear. To get the full First Edition experience in your inbox every morning, please sign up here.

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Ukraine war briefing: Zelenskyy open to creating demilitarised zone in country’s east

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said he would be willing to withdraw troops from the country’s eastern industrial heartland as part of a plan to end Russia’s war, if Moscow also pulls back and the area becomes a demilitarised zone monitored by international forces. The proposal offered another potential compromise on control of the Donbas region, which has been a major sticking point in peace negotiations. Washington and Kyiv have edged closer to a jointly agreed formula to end the war amid continuing uncertainty over Moscow’s response. Regardless of whether it is accepted by Moscow, it marks a success for Kyiv in rewriting an earlier US draft that had been criticised as a Kremlin wishlist. Zelenskyy said he expected US negotiators to be in contact with the Kremlin on Wednesday. A majority of Russians expect the war in Ukraine to end in 2026, a state pollster said, in a sign that the Kremlin could be testing public reaction to a possible peace settlement as diplomatic efforts to end the conflict intensify. Officials said 70% of the 1,600 respondents saw 2026 as a more “successful” year for Russia than this year, while for 55% that hope was linked to a possible end to what Russia calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine. A sunflower oil spill, caused by Russian aerial bombardments, has contaminated the shoreline around the southern Ukrainian city of Odesa, killing wildlife and triggering warnings from conservationists. Odesa has been targeted with some of the heaviest strikes of the war in recent weeks, in what Ukrainian officials have slammed as an attempt to hobble Ukraine’s maritime network and its vital agricultural exports. The Pivdenny port in the region was temporarily closed on Wednesday to help with the clean-up. Russian air defence units downed 25 Moscow-bound Ukrainian drones on Wednesday, Moscow mayor Sergei Sobyanin said. Emergency crews were examining fragments where they hit the ground, but no damage was reported, he said. Two of the four major airports servicing the capital limited operations for a time, Russia’s civil aviation authority said on Telegram.

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No pain, no game: how South Korea turned itself into a gaming powerhouse

Son Si-woo remembers the moment his mother turned off his computer. He was midway through an interview to become a professional gamer. “She said when I played computer games, my personality got worse, that I was addicted to games,” the 27-year-old recalls. Then Son won an amateur tournament. The prize money was 2m won (£1,000). He handed all of it to his parents. “From then on, they believed in me,” he says. Almost a decade later, Son, known professionally as Lehends, is a multiple champion in League of Legends, a competitive strategy game. He plays for Nongshim RedForce, a professional team backed by one of South Korea’s largest food companies. The trajectory of his career mirrors a wider reversal in how South Korea views gaming itself. In October this year, President Lee Jae Myung declared that “games are not addictive substances”, a sharp break from 2013, when there was a legislative push to classify gaming as one of four major social addictions alongside drugs, gambling and alcohol. That shift has been accompanied by rapid growth. Between 2019 and 2023, the domestic gaming market expanded by 47% to be worth 22.96tn won (£11.7bn), with industry exports rising 41% in that time to 10.96tn won (£5.6bn). The market accounted for nearly two-thirds of all Korean content exports, far exceeding any other cultural sector, including K-pop. Part of that ecosystem is esports: organised competitive gaming centred on professional leagues and teams. In 2023, the sector was worth about 257bn won (£128m), a small share of the wider industry, but one that carries an outsized role as a showcase and marketing engine, shaping how games are promoted, sponsored and consumed. Korea now ranks fourth globally in gaming market share, behind the United States, China and Japan. From curfews to cultural keystone For a country that once forced teenagers offline at midnight, the change is dramatic. Gaming is now treated as legitimate work and a strategic industry. The transformation has its roots in the late 1990s, when South Korea emerged from the Asian financial crisis and invested heavily in broadband infrastructure. Internet cafés, known as PC bangs, spread rapidly as informal social spaces. Around 7,800 operate nationwide today. By the late 2000s, professional matches of StarCraft, another strategy game, were filling stadiums. Broadcasting channels established formal leagues, and major corporations including Samsung, SK Telecom and KT began sponsoring teams. Today, esports-focused programmes exist at a dozen schools and universities, and many more institutions offer degrees related to gaming. The final stages of a major tournament were recently broadcast on terrestrial television, with fans following players much like pop idols. A 1% chance of making it At Nongshim Esports academy in Guro district, western Seoul, the training rooms are compact and starkly white. Teenagers and young adults hunch over their screens in near silence as coaches hover between desks offering quiet instructions. This is where the dreams are built, albeit for a select few. Along one corridor, rows of trophies and awards are displayed. There’s also a dormitory for professional players and a canteen overseen by a nutritionist. Twenty-two-year-old Roh Hyun-jun is on leave from his mechanical engineering degree. University, he says, is a backup plan. For now, he trains in hopes of becoming a professional League of Legends player. “When you play team games with five people, you really feel that sense of unity,” Roh says. “It’s not just me winning alone, but everyone moving in the same direction to achieve victory.” The academy, run by the same conglomerate that sponsors Lehends’ team, charges about 500,000 won (£253) for 20 hours of training a month. Evans Oh, CEO of Nongshim Esports, which operates the academy, says only about 1–2% of trainees go on to become professional players or secure related esports jobs, a conversion rate he says is “not that low, but not that high”. Since opening in 2018, it has produced 42 professionals. Training at such academies can resemble elite sport, with long days devoted to gameplay, video analysis and team strategy, alongside psychological coaching. Top-tier players can earn well into six figures in US dollar terms through a mix of salaries, prize money and sponsorships. In a recent education ministry survey of students, professional gamer ranked fifth among desired jobs for elementary school boys. Careers, however, are short, often ending before 30 – a timeline further compressed for Korean men by mandatory military service. Lehends’ teammate Hwang Sung-hoon, who is 25 and known as Kingen, describes a profession that leaves little room for doubt. “If you’re not good enough, you have to give up quickly. It’s that kind of market.” Aiden Lee, secretary-general of League of Legends Champions Korea (LCK), the country’s top esports league, says South Korea’s dominance, evidenced by LCK teams winning 10 out of the 15 world championships, reflects the intensity of the competitive environment Koreans grow up in. “What makes the difference is competition and concentration,” he says. “Korean pro players can practise more than 16 hours a day. The amount of practice and focus is very different.” The government now frames its role as balancing growth with protection. Seven state-supported “healing centres” operate nationwide for young people considered overly immersed in gaming, offering consultations in partnership with hospitals. Standard contracts for youth players cap official training hours, in what officials describe as an effort to ensure healthy competition. Back at the academy, Roh, the trainee, remains focused. “I want to leave my name as the most famous pro gamer,” he says. “Since I’ve chosen this path, I want to do my best.”

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Trump-backed candidate Asfura declared new president of Honduras

Donald Trump-backed candidate Nasry “Tito” Asfura has been declared the winner of Honduras’s presidential election after a vote count that dragged on for almost a month and was marred by fraud allegations and criticism of interference by the US president. The rightwing Asfura, 67, a construction magnate and former mayor of the capital, Tegucigalpa, secured 40.27% of the vote, against 39.53% for the centre-right Salvador Nasralla, a margin of just 28,000 votes. The electoral council proclaimed a winner before completing the review of all tally sheets under a “special scrutiny” launched last week earlier to recount votes flagged as “inconsistent”. The decision was criticised by defeated candidates and lamented by the Organization of American States, which sent an observation mission to the election held on 30 November but whose vote count had remained unresolved since then. Asfura has already declared himself president-elect. “Honduras, we now have the official declaration from the CNE [electoral council]. I recognise the great work carried out by the councillors and the entire team that ran the election. Honduras: I am ready to govern. I will not let you down. God bless Honduras,” he wrote. Nasralla refused to concede and posted a series of statements alleging fraud in the counting process, including “forgery of public documents”, claiming that “the data from the original tally sheets were altered”. Nasralla urged his supporters to remain calm and refrain from any acts of disruption or violence, adding this was “the saddest Christmas for the Honduran people.” The head of the Honduran Congress also rejected the results. “This is completely outside the law. It has no value,” Congress president Luis Redondo, of the ruling Libre party, wrote on X. The electoral council is made up of three councillors: one aligned with Asfura’s party, one with Nasralla’s, and one with the party of the leftist president, Xiomara Castro, whose candidate finished third. Asfura’s victory was declared only by the first two councillors. The representative linked to the president’s party refused to recognise the result, alleged that an “electoral coup” was under way and filed a complaint with the public prosecutor’s office, raising the prospect that the outcome will be challenged in court. In its statement, the council said: “By the majority will of the Honduran people, expressed sovereignly at the ballot box, the full council of the CNE declares Nasry Juan Asfura Zablah constitutional president of the Republic of Honduras for the four-year term beginning on 27 January 2026 and ending on 27 January 2030.” The declaration before the end of the recount was the latest in a string of controversies that marked the Central American country’s presidential race, starting with what many saw as open interference by the US president. Days before the vote, Trump publicly backed Asfura, said the US would support the next government only if he won, and attacked the other leading candidates, calling them communists or allies of Venezuela’s dictator, Nicolás Maduro. On the eve of the election, the US president also announced a pardon for the former Honduran president and Asfura ally Juan Orlando Hernández, who had been sentenced to 45 years in prison for allegedly creating “a cocaine superhighway to the United States”. The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, congratulated Asfura on social media. “The people of Honduras have spoken: Nasry Asfura is Honduras’ next president,” said Rubio. “The United States congratulates president-elect Asfura and looks forward to working with his administration to advance prosperity and security in our hemisphere.”

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UK, Canada and Germany condemn Israel for 19 new West Bank settlements

Fourteen countries, including Britain, Canada and Germany, have condemned the Israeli security cabinet’s approval of 19 new settlements in the occupied West Bank, saying they violate international law and risk fuelling instability. Israel approved a proposal last Sunday for the new Jewish settlements, which brings the recent total to 69, according to the far-right finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich. “We call on Israel to reverse this decision, as well as the expansion of settlements,” said a joint statement released by Britain, which also included Belgium, Denmark, France, Italy, Iceland, Ireland, Japan, Malta, the Netherlands, Norway and Spain. The statement continued: “Such unilateral actions, as part of a wider intensification of the settlement policies in the West Bank, not only violate international law but also risk fuelling instability. “They risk undermining the implementation of the comprehensive plan for Gaza amid efforts to progress to phase 2 and harming prospects for long-term peace and security across the region. “We recall our clear opposition to any form of annexation and to the expansion of settlement policies, including the approval of the E1 settlement and thousands of new housing units. “We call on Israel to reverse this decision, as well as the expansion of settlements, in line with UN security council resolution 2334.” Israel’s latest expansion plan includes two settlements that were previously evacuated during a 2005 disengagement plan. The approval by the security cabinet increases the number of settlements in the West Bank by nearly 50% during the current government’s tenure. In 2022, there were 141 settlements in the West Bank. After the latest approval there are 210, according to Peace Now, an anti-settlement watchdog group. Settlements are considered illegal under international law. The 14 countries’ statement added: “We are resolute in our support of Palestinians’ right of self-determination. We reaffirm our unwavering commitment to a comprehensive, just and lasting peace based on the two-state solution in accordance with relevant UN security council resolutions where two democratic states, Israel and Palestine, live side by side in peace and security within secure and recognized borders. We reaffirm that there is no alternative to a negotiated two-state solution.” Israel’s foreign minister, Gideon Sa’ar, rejected the statement, saying the decision aimed to help address security threats the country faced. He wrote on X: “Foreign governments will not restrict the right of Jews to live in the Land of Israel, and any such call is morally wrong and discriminatory against Jews.” Reuters contributed to this report