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Middle East crisis live: Trump threatens to ‘blow up’ entire South Pars gasfield if Iran strikes Qatar

The UK Maritime Trade Operations centre has reported another vessel being hit by an unknown projectile, this time in the Persian Gulf. All crew were reported to be “safe and well” after the incident east of Ras Laffan, Qatar, the agency said. It received the report at 01.30 GMT on Thursday and authorities were continuing to investigate. UKMTO said earlier that another vessel was hit east of the UAE port of Khawr Fakkan in the Gulf of Oman by an unknown projectile that caused a fire onboard. That report came at 23.00 GMT on Wednesday. Iran launched overnight strikes on Qatar’s huge liquefied natural gas facility at Ras Laffan after Israel struck the giant South Pars gasfield on Wednesday in a major escalation of the war. Qatari officials are saying now that all fires at the Ras Laffan hub have been contained.

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Jihadist violence in Nigeria and DRC rose sharply last year even as global deaths from terror fell

Jihadist violence rose sharply in Nigeria and Democratic Republic of Congo last year, even as global deaths from terrorism dropped to their lowest level in a decade, according to a new report. Nigeria recorded the largest increase in terrorism deaths globally in 2025, with fatalities rising by 46% from 513 in 2024 to 750, placing it fourth in the Global Terrorism Index, behind Pakistan, Burkina Faso and Niger. Africa’s most populous nation is grappling with a multifaceted security crisis as extremist groups such as Boko Haram and its offshoots attempt to carve out control of swathes of territory. Various ethnic militia and other criminal elements, including “bandit” groups, are also active, mostly in north and central Nigeria. Newer threats like terrorists from the Lakurawa group are also emerging. In February, 162 people were massacred in Kwara state near the border with the Benin Republic, one of the deadliest single attacks in the country’s recent history. On Wednesday the army said troops backed by air support had repelled a coordinated assault by Islamist insurgents on a military base in the north-eastern state of Borno, killing at least 80 fighters including senior commanders. The assault comes after multiple suicide bombings on Monday in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno, that killed at least 23 and left more than 100 wounded. In the DRC, terrorism-related deaths rose by nearly 28% in 2025, increasing from 365 to 467 and pushing the central African state to eighth place on the index, its worst ranking. The rise was primarily driven by the IS-affiliated Allied Democratic Forces (ADF). The rise in Nigeria and the DRC contrasts with the rest of the world. The index, produced by the Australian thinktank Institute for Economics & Peace (IEP), recorded a global decline in deaths of 28% to 5,582, while total attacks fell by nearly 22%. There was a 280% increase in deaths from terrorism in the west, with 57 deaths recorded in 2025. Twenty-eight people died in the US from terrorist attacks, the highest figure in the country since 2019. The rise, the index reveals, is increasingly driven by youth radicalisation and lone-wolf actors. “Viewed in totality, these trends point to one sobering conclusion: a fracturing world order risks erasing the hard-fought gains made against terrorism over the past decade,” said Steve Killelea, IEP’s founder. More than half of all deaths from terrorism worldwide in 2025 occurred in the Sahel, seen as the centre of global terrorism, despite a drop from the previous year. Burkina Faso, where the junta only controls about a third of the territory, recorded the largest decrease in terrorism deaths worldwide, with fatalities dropping by half in 2025. Civilian casualties fell by 84%. Experts said the change suggests the al-Qaida affiliate Jamaat Nusrat al-Islam wal Muslimeen (JNIM) is deliberately reducing attacks on civilians to win “hearts and minds” and consolidate its territorial gains with increasing sophistication. Killelea said: “For JNIM, the change in tactics can perhaps best be explained by the ‘value v vulnerability’ trade-off. Military forces and political figures are considered high-value targets. As JNIM now controls more territory, it is better able to carry out attacks on higher value targets.” The tactical shift fits into a pattern of jihadists launching coordinated and sophisticated assaults on military bases across the region, as counterinsurgency missions ramp up. JNIM, which launches drones frequently, has used them in more than 100 cases of drone violence in the last three years across the Sahel. According to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data (ACLED), there have also been 16 drone incidents involving the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) since 2014. “Ten [of the ISWAP incidents] involved drone attacks and the remainder were intelligence‑gathering or surveillance missions used to prepare ground offensives against military targets,” said Ladd Serwat, ACLED’s senior analyst for Africa. The report also reveals a growing concentration of attacks in border regions, including the Central Sahel tri-border area, and the Lake Chad Basin.

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Hungary’s Orbán to face pressure over Ukraine loan veto at EU summit

Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, will face pressure from other EU leaders to stop blocking a vital €90bn loan for Ukraine over a political dispute about an oil pipeline. Ahead of an EU summit on Thursday, Orbán, who faces elections next month, showed no sign of backing down in his veto of the loan. He said he would not allow it until the damaged Soviet-era Druzhba pipeline supplying Hungary with Russian oil via Ukraine was repaired. “If there is no oil, there is no money,” Orbán said in a video message on Tuesday posted after the publication of a letter from Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, saying “all possible efforts” to repair the Druzbha pipeline were under way. Orbán said he had made it clear to the European Council president, António Costa, that Hungary’s position was unchanged. “If President Zelenskyy wants to receive his money from Brussels then he must reopen the Friendship [Druzhba] oil pipeline,” he said. Zelenskyy said on Wednesday he hoped EU leaders would stand by their promise to lend Ukraine €90bn for urgently needed military supplies and general budget support. “We are really counting on the countries and the EU to find ways to resolve this issue,” he said on a visit to Madrid. Zelenskyy told EU leaders earlier this week that Ukraine was “undertaking all possible efforts to repair the damage and restore operations” to the pipeline, which Kyiv says was damaged by a Russian airstrike. Hungary and Slovakia are the only two EU countries that benefit from Druzbha, having secured a temporary exemption from the EU’s import ban on Russian oil, which was introduced after the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Hungary’s last-minute blockade of the €90bn loan has infuriated other EU leaders as Orbán agreed to the funding deal last December as long as Budapest did not have to take part. Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic pledged they would not block a decision by 24 EU member states to take out the loan. The loan offer was a hard-fought plan B agreement after an initial proposal to tap Russian assets as the basis of a loan was rejected by Belgium and a handful of other countries. EU diplomats insisted there was no alternative to what Hungary had already agreed to. “A deal is a deal,” a senior EU diplomat said. “So no plan B, no plan C, no plan D. This [€90bn loan] is what needs to happen.” A second senior diplomat said: “We cannot talk about plan B, because if we talk about plan B we give in to blackmail.” Criticism of the Hungarian government was becoming more and more open, the person said. “The fact that the €90bn loan is blocked after Prime Minister Orbán had explicitly approved it with his colleagues is a turning point and that [criticism] it is clearly expressed now in a way I had not heard or seen before.” An EU official said Costa, who will chair the EU summit, held a long phone call with Orbán on Tuesday morning. “The message was very clear: ‘I expect from you that you respect the commitments you have taken at the European Council and that this decision on the €90bn loan is respected,’” the official said, reporting Costa’s words. While some diplomats voiced scepticism that Orbán would back down before elections, a leaked draft of the post-summit communique states that EU leaders look forward “to the first disbursement [of the €90bn loan] by the beginning of April”. Hungary, along with Slovakia, is also blocking the EU’s 20th round of sanctions against Russia, which were meant to be passed last month to mark the fourth anniversary of the full-scale invasion. In Hungary’s elections on 12 April, Orbán faces the most serious political challenge of his 16 years in power. Polls show his main rival, Péter Magyar, up to 20 points ahead, while Orbán is seeking to capitalise on the dispute with Ukraine. The European Commission announced on Tuesday that EU funds and technical support would be available to restore the flow of Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia. While the move is aimed at overturning the Hungarian veto, the offer has raised eyebrows at a time when the bloc is committed to phasing out Russian oil imports by the end of 2027. “We are preparing to repair a pipeline Russia itself bombed – to restart the flow of Russian oil we claim to be phasing out – for Hungary which is blocking €90bn for Ukraine that we’re funding – sans Hungary,” wrote Rihards Kols, a Latvian nationalist conservative MEP, who described the policy as “delusional”. The summit in Brussels on Thursday is meant to be dedicated to revitalising Europe’s waning competitiveness against the US and China. That agenda is likely to be overshadowed by the dispute with Hungary and the war in the Middle East. On the Middle East, EU leaders are expected to call for “de-escalation and maximum restraint” and to condemn “Iran’s indiscriminate military strikes in the region”. The European Council will say it is “deeply concerned about the increase in hostilities in Lebanon”. While the statement also condemns Hezbollah, there is not direct reference to the US or Israel in terms of their role in starting the Iran war. Speaking alongside Zelenskyy on Wednesday, Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, said the Middle East war would not dim his government’s support for Ukraine. “We cannot deny that the crisis in the Middle East is monopolising conversation, and precisely for that reason I want to say to the government of Ukraine that nothing and no one will make us forget what is happening in Ukraine,” Sanchez said.

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Russian oil tanker heading to Cuba amid US economic blockade

Hundreds of thousands of barrels of Russian oil are heading to Cuba, according to maritime tracking data, as the communist island suffers blackouts under a US economic blockade and Donald Trump threatens to take it over. The sanctioned Russian tanker Anatoly Kolodkin loaded 730,000 barrels of crude in the Russian port of Primorsk on 8 March, and on Wednesday at 1600 GMT was in the eastern Atlantic, bound for Cuba, maritime analytics firm Kpler said. Its data showed the Russian-flagged vessel, owned by the Russian state shipping company Sovcomflot, was scheduled to unload at the Matanzas oil terminal on the north of the island about 23 March. Trump declared on Monday that he expects to have “the honour of taking Cuba”, claiming that he could do “anything I want” amid US negotiations with Havana over the country’s future. The US has sought to intensify pressure on Cuba, its longtime foe, since seizing Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro in January. Trump has since cut off Venezuelan oil shipments to Cuba and threatened to impose tariffs on any country selling oil to the country, stating that Cuba would receive “no more oil or money” as a result of his actions. Another tanker, the Hong Kong-flagged Sea Horse, loaded nearly 200,000 barrels of diesel in late January off Cyprus from another tanker, according to Kpler data. It exited the Mediterranean on 13 February and has since been sailing west across the Atlantic, slowing down between late February and early March and following an erratic course, the tracker indicated. At 1630 GMT on Wednesday it was in the northwestern Caribbean, about 1,500 km (932 miles) from the Cuban coast. The Russian-flagged Anatoly Kolodkin is listed as coming under sanctions against Russia by the United States, European Union and UK. Cuba has imported no oil since 9 January, when Mexico delivered a shipment in the days after Maduro’s ouster. Mexico came under pressure from Trump to end such deliveries. With Agence France-Press

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Ukraine war briefing: Ukraine strikes Russian aircraft sites 800km from border

Ukraine’s military struck two Russian plants producing and repairing military transport and cargo planes in the Ulyanovsk and Novgorod regions, the Ukrainian general staff said on Wednesday. It said in a statement that the attack on the Aviastar plant, part of Russia’s United Aircraft Corporation, in the city of Ulyanovsk, was carried out on 16 March. The plant produces Ilyushin-76MD-90A military transport planes, Ilyushin-78M-90A refueling planes, and provides maintenance for “Ruslan” cargo planes, and is located about 800km (about 500 miles) from the Ukrainian border. Ukraine’s military said the hangars and parking areas were hit and some of the planes were damaged. The attack on the 123rd aircraft maintenance plant in the city of Staraya Russia in the Novgorod region took place one day later, the general staff said. It said the facility provided a full cycle of repairs and modernisation for heavy transport planes, including Ilyushin-76, Ilyushin-78, and L-410. “Striking such targets directly reduces the enemy’s ability to restore and sustain combat-ready aircraft,” Ukrainian drone forces said on X. Ilya Remeslo, for years a reliable pro-Kremlin operator, has abruptly turned on Russia’s president Vladimir Putin. Remeslo on Tuesday posted a manifesto to his 90,000 Telegram followers titled: “Five reasons why I stopped supporting Vladimir Putin.” In it, reports Pjotr Sauer, Remeslo accused the “illegitimate” president of waging a “failing war” in Ukraine that had caused millions of casualties and wrecked the economy. He called on Putin to step aside. Spanish police said they have arrested three people on the holiday island of Mallorca for allegedly helping a Russian national evade EU sanctions over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The man and two women are accused of acting as fronts to manage luxury properties, bank accounts and vehicles to shield assets from seizure, police said on Wednesday. Authorities did not name the Russian national, but Spanish media identified him as Nikolai Kolesov, a businessman linked to the military sector and considered close to Putin. Kolesov heads a major supplier of helicopters to the Russian army. Tens of thousands of Moldovans have been left without water after a Russian strike on a hydroelectric plant in Ukraine resulted in oil polluting a major river that flows through both countries. The Moldovan president, Maia Sandu, has blamed Russia for the pollution on the Dniester River following an attack on Ukraine’s Novodnistrovsk hydropower plant on 7 March, saying it’s “threatening Moldova’s water supply”. The Ukrainian plant is situated about 15km (9 miles) upstream from Moldova’s northern border with Ukraine and supplies water to about 80% of Moldova’s population of about 2.5 million. UK officials are preparing for a possible court case against Roman Abramovich after he missed a deadline to release £2.4bn he raised from selling Chelsea FC. The Russian billionaire failed to hand over the money by the deadline of 17 March, amid a dispute over how it will eventually be used. Government officials said they would now take steps to prepare for a potential court case so the money can be spent for humanitarian purposes in Ukraine. They have written to Abramovich’s lawyers to warn them of this, Kiran Stacey writes. Spokespeople for Abramovich have been contacted for comment. Nikolai Patrushev, an aide to Putin, said Russia considers the attack on a Russian LNG tanker in the Mediterranean Sea to be “an act of international terrorism”, Russia’s state media reported. Russian officials said the Arctic Metagaz, carrying LNG from the Arctic port of Murmansk, was attacked by Ukrainian naval drones and said the weapons were launched from the Libyan coast. The vessel has limped into Libyan waters, writes Angela Giuffrida. Russian defence ministry said on Wednesday its forces had captured the village of Oleksandrivka in Ukraine’s Donetsk region. Russian foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said on Wednesday that a call by the Belgian prime minister, Bart De Wever, to normalise relations with Moscow showed there was still some sanity left in parts of Europe. De Wever’s comments run counter to official EU policies to maintain a hard line against Moscow over the invasion of Ukraine and phase out the use of Russian fossil fuels. De Wever’s comments were criticised by various European leaders. A senior Nato military officer has called on the alliance to extend its cold war-era fuel pipeline network hundreds of kilometres eastwards to ensure sufficient supplies for Nato troops in case of a future conflict with Russia. The 10,000km (6,215-mile) pipeline network, buried 80 centimetres underground (31in), was built during the cold war. The pipeline network currently spans 12 countries but ends in western Germany, where it serves military bases such as the US Ramstein airbase, but also major civilian hubs such as Germany’s biggest airport in Frankfurt.

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Check mates: analysis of medieval chess sets reveal vision of equality and mutual respect

On the chessboard, black and white pieces are lined up against each other for an unrelenting battle. But in the middle ages, the game was not a metaphor for racial tension – but often a vehicle for equality and mutual respect, research has found. Analysis of medieval manuscripts, paintings and chess sets by University of Cambridge historian Dr Krisztina Ilko has revealed a vision of a “just world” where intellectual exchange – and not race or religion – mattered most. Libro de axedrez, an illustrated 13th-century treatise on chess produced for King Alfonso X of Castile, features dozens of depictions of players from Africa, the Middle East and Asia that defy preconceptions of medieval social attitudes. In one scene, a Black player is depicted on a finely decorated bench, a bottle of wine close at hand, about to defeat his white opponent in a friendly game. In another image, one of four Mongol men – often depicted as violent warriors in the medieval imagination – leans casually on his sabre, his weapon more ornament than threat, with combat confined to the checkered board. A Muslim and a Jewish player sit down to a game in another scene from Libro de axedrez, just one text that reveals that while political conflict, religious differences and medieval notions of race were a fact of life, chess offered a way of bridging divides. In her paper, Ilko writes that rather than projecting “some sort of fictitious image of an egalitarian medieval society which could put aside racial prejudices”, chess was “an imaginary space that did not eradicate preconceived social norms and hierarchies but rather empowered players to challenge them”. Ilko said: “When people with non-white skin colour are depicted in medieval images, scholars have tended to see them in either exalted or subdued positions. Chess reveals a different, more complex story. “Chess operated on a different plane where people could engage with each other as equals, irrespective of their skin colour. What mattered was ‘who’s smarter?’, ‘who can win?’, not ‘who’s more powerful or socially superior?’” Ilko’s study Chess and Race in the Global Middle Ages, published in American medieval studies journal, Speculum, has been awarded the Medieval Academy of America’s Article Prize in Critical Race Studies. “Medieval sources repeatedly state that chess is war without bloodshed, and that it represents a just world,” said Ilko, a medieval historian from Queens’ College, Cambridge. “Chess became a representation of the known world, the people in it and how society should function through orderly moves. Chess was a powerful vehicle for people hailing from widely different places to interact with each other. It was an intellectual exchange.” Ilko points out how King Alfonso’s court eagerly acquired and translated Islamic knowledge. Of 103 chess problems depicted in his treatise, 88 follow the Muslim playing style. Ilko says other depictions of chess in medieval works – from a late 14th century altarpiece from the demolished church of San Nicolás in Portopí, Mallorca, to illustrated versions of Persian epic the Shahnama, challenge “value systems that privileged whiteness,” by depicting royalty and intellectuals with darker skin. Chess is believed to derive from Chaturanga, a board game played in 7th century India, whose pieces were inspired by sections of the Indian army – infantry, cavalry, chariots, and elephants. But as chess-style strategy games spread across different civilisations, pieces took on human features. “Chess boards immediately had two contrasting colours and the opposing chess pieces were also differentiated through colour,” Ilko said. “This allowed medieval people to project ideas of skin colour and race on to the game. “Chess was a game of war, which prompted not only an occasion for social interaction but also an active and competitive challenge between two players who each had an equal opportunity to win, regardless of status, wealth, or skin colour. “So much has changed since the middle ages but chess is more global than ever. Chess reveals a more diverse and fun middle ages.”

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Nancy Mace draws White House ire over independent Middle East rescue efforts

White House officials have grown increasingly frustrated with Republican congresswoman Nancy Mace, accusing her of complicating efforts to evacuate Americans stranded in the Middle East by attempting to conduct her own rescue missions, according to people familiar with the matter. The irritation with Mace has been building for days after she traveled to the region to try to transport US citizens across international borders and engaged with foreign governments without informing the state department, which has been coordinating evacuation flights. Trump administration officials have taken particular issue with Mace’s outreach to Saudi Arabia, where she unilaterally engaged with officials to facilitate departures for Americans – and then asked the state department to requisition a Saudi commercial plane to transport 300 people. “Secretary Rubio, I am asking you directly: please authorize this Saudi aircraft mission without delay. I have done the diplomatic work and secured the commitment,” Mace wrote in a 16 March letter, addressed to Marco Rubio, the US secretary of state, reviewed by the Guardian. Separately, officials said, Mace, who is currently running for South Carolina governor, encouraged a group of Americans to relocate from a high-risk region to Jordan without a clear plan for onward travel. That forced the state department to send a plane to pick up the group as it found itself stranded in Jordan. White House officials have complained Mace was complicating an already fraught process where some diplomats and travelers have accused the administration of not evacuating US citizens fast enough. They spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss operational details. “If members of Congress want to be helpful they should work with the administration instead of trying to exploit the situation for political gain,” one of the officials said. A spokesperson for Mace did not immediately provide comment. A state department spokesperson declined to comment. Since the start of the conflict, Iran has fired retaliatory missiles and drone swarms at its neighbors, including Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. Several of those countries closed down their airspace and shut down airports as a result. Travelers calling a state department hotline initially got an automated message saying the federal government could not help them get out of the region, until the state department started evacuating Americans by charter flight four days after the start of the conflict. Mace traveled to the Middle East against that backdrop, saying on social media that she intended to help her constituents from South Carolina to get back to the US, relying on a third party provider called Grey Bull Rescue. Despite Mace’s initial success in evacuating people from Israel, her recent efforts have been mired in controversy. Among other things, Grey Bull Rescue suspended operations on Wednesday after an American mother accused the group of extorting them for $1m to return to the US. It comes as the state department operation has largely been effective in repatriating Americans. An administration official said they had completed 60 flights as of Wednesday evening, in total providing direct or indirect assistance to 42,000 people who had asked for help. The charter flights are continuing but a person familiar with the matter said many of them have increasingly been empty. In some cases, Americans have turned down charters with flight connections, for instance in Greece, which the state department has been using because it has a large consular presence. The state department also struck a deal with Israel’s flag carrier El Al airlines to fly only US citizens or permanent residents from Tel Aviv to John F Kennedy international airport in New York, the person said, although that has required people to get to Tel Aviv first.