Foreign News
Russia Orders Block on WhatsApp Messaging App Crackdown
Russia has ordered a block on WhatsApp, as the Kremlin continues to tighten restrictions on messaging apps. Meta-owned WhatsApp said the move aimed to push more than 100 million of its app users in Russia to a “state-owned surveillance app”.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that the decision had been made “due to Meta’s unwillingness to comply with the norms and the letter of Russian law”.
He has said Meta could resume operations if it “complies with the law and enters into dialogue”.Asked whether authorities were trying to force Russians to use the state-developed Max app, Peskov said the “national messenger is an available alternative” for Russians.
Russian internet regulator Roskomnadzor said this week it was further curbing access to messaging app Telegram as well, citing a lack of security. Telegram is highly popular in Russia and said to be widely used by its forces in Ukraine.
Pro-war bloggers have complained that the move was hampering communications on the ground.
Even before the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Russian authorities had begun work on creating a domestic alternative to the global internet. Those moves gathered pace during the war, along with a push towards a state-backed platform called Max.
Critics have alleged Max could be used for surveillance by the Russian authorities, though state media have denied that. Max is now being promoted widely inside Russia, through TV advertisements and billboards, by local officials and by the media.
Russia has argued that both WhatsApp and Telegram have refused to store Russian users’ data in the country as required by law. Authorities in Moscow also allege that WhatsApp is one of the main services used to defraud and extort money from Russians – a reason they cite for people to migrate to the Max app.
WhatsApp said it was doing everything it could to keep people connected. “Trying to isolate over 100 million users from private and secure communication is a backwards step and can only lead to less safety for people in Russia,” it said in a statement.
State-run news agency Tass reported earlier this year that WhatsApp was expected to be permanently blocked in the country in 2026.
“Such harsh measures” are “absolutely justified” since Russia has designated Meta as an extremist organisation, Andrei Svintsov, a Russian official, was quoted as saying.
WhatsApp was previously Russia’s most popular messaging service, but since Meta was labelled as extremist in 2022, its apps such as Instagram and Facebook have been blocked in Russia and are only accessible through virtual private networks (VPNs). Russians are not banned from using its products.
Digital rights project Na Svyazi (In Touch) has reported that Russia has increasingly been removing websites from the state-run internet address directory, which is controlled by Roskomnadzor.
It said that 13 popular resources were now missing from the National System of Domain Names (NSDI), including YouTube, Facebook, and WhatsApp web, Instagram, the BBC and Deutsche Welle. Once an entry is removed, the site does not open without a virtual private network (VPN).
Moscow has made extensive efforts to push Russians to its state-developed Max app, which critics say lacks end-to-end encryption and could therefore be penetrated by authorities.
The app has been likened to China’s WeChat – a so-called “super app” that combines messaging and government services.
Since 2025, the authorities have mandated that the Max app be pre-installed on all new devices sold in the country. There have been reports of public sector employees, teachers and students being increasingly required to use the platform.
Telegram’s chief executive, Russian-born businessman Pavel Durov, said the state was restricting access to its service in an attempt to force its people to use its own app for surveillance and political censorship.
Iran has tried a similar strategy to ban Telegram and push its people to a state-run alternative, but citizens have found ways to work around this, he wrote online. “Restricting citizens’ freedom is never the right answer,” said Durov.
Foreign News
Ethiopia Experiments Smart Police Stations without Officers
The vision is for Ethiopia’s smart police stations to be unmanned – but giving more people access to police services. Computer tablet screens glow inside a row of partitioned booths at a new-style Ethiopian police station. There is no commotion. There is no front desk, no bench of anxiously waiting civilians, no officer calling out names.
It is a pilot project of what is being called a “smart” – or unmanned – police station in the Bole district of the capital, Addis Ababa, is the latest chapter in Ethiopia’s bid to catch up with the digital revolution.
A large monitor on the wall cycles through welcome messages as well as images of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed.
But at the moment there are uniformed officers standing by to demonstrate how the system works, which makes it feel more like a tech showroom.
Recently opened, the staff “is here to help people get used to it”, the police’s head of technology expansion department Demissie Yilma said.
Inside a booth, he taps a screen and goes through the steps to make a report.
Demissie selects the type of incident – a crime, a traffic report or a general concern – enters the details and presses a button to submit the comment.
Then, an officer – who is a real person in a remote location rather than a chatbot – pops up on the screen and begins to ask questions and take down information.
“If there is a problem, officers respond immediately and patrol the area mentioned by the reporter,” Demissie says.
In its first week last month, the smart police station (SPS) received just three reports – a lost passport, a financial fraud case and a routine complaint.
But Demissie believes the number of reports will grow as locals become more aware of it.
“The future police service should be near the citizens,” he says.
The use of a computer tablet to communicate with officials may mean less human-to-human contact but the authorities believe that the SPS could increase access to the police in places where there may not be enough personnel to man a fully fledged station.
At the project’s launch on 9 February, the prime minister was quoted in state media as saying that it was aimed at making “law enforcement institutions competent and competitive” and he framed it as part of a wider digital reform drive.
Users of the smart police station enter details on a tablet before a real person appears on the screen
The smart police station is part of a broader move to change how citizens interact with the state.
The national strategy launched last year – known as Digital Ethiopia 2030 – is the government’s blueprint for digitising public services, from identity systems and payments to courts and public administration.
The proportion of Ethiopians who have access to the internet remains quite low, meaning that the country has lagged behind others on the continent in terms of digital transformation.
Also, conflict and political upheavals in recent years have led to internet blackouts.
But as the telecoms sector has opened up, the country is embracing mobile phone digital payments in birr, the local currency.
The government has also introduced a national digital ID system and put several government services online.
Supporters of the moves argue that these changes are long overdue in a country with rapid urban growth and a young population.
Birhan Nega Cheru, a senior software engineer in Addis Ababa, is pleased with the shift.
“When they work well, they reduce paperwork and visits to offices,” he tells the BBC.
But he also recognises security and privacy issues and the dangers that those “who are not digitally literate can easily be scammed”.
“Urban users, younger people, businesses, those with smartphones and skills, benefit most,” the software engineer says.
“Older people, rural communities and low-income groups are at risk of being left out.”
And the numbers support his assertions.
In a report last year, the UN’s educational organisation, Unesco, found that 79% of its citizens were not connected to the internet.
But Zelalem Gizachew, a technology policy analyst, argues that the government’s strategy has been chipping away at the digital divide.
“Digital literacy remains a challenge,” he says. “That is why the Digital Ethiopia 2030 strategy puts emphasis on training and skills, not just technology.”
He points to measurable changes over the past five years.
“Digital payments have boomed with trillions of birr now moving through electronic transactions. Broadband access has expanded sharply, and more than 130 government services have been digitised.
“These are foundational investments,” Zelalem says. “You cannot modernise public services without infrastructure, policy and skills.”
For now, the smart police station remains a pilot.
It is in a controlled environment where officers guide users through a system which is still finding its footing. Traditional stations continue to operate, and most citizens still rely on in-person reporting.
Whether the model expands will depend less on how sleek the technology looks, and more on whether people choose to use it when no-one is there to explain the screens.
In that sense, the quiet room in Bole is not a finished product. It is an experiment, and a small window into how Ethiopia’s broader digital ambitions may play out in everyday life.
Foreign News
UK Cancels Cameroun, South Sudan, Afghanistan, Myanmar Study Visas Due to Abuse
The UK government will stop issuing study visas to people from Afghanistan, Cameroon, Myanmar and Sudan from this month, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood has said, as well as stopping skilled work visas to Afghans.
The Home Office said the action was being taken due to what it said was widespread visa abuse.
According to official figures, people from the four countries were the most likely to make an asylum claim after originally coming to the UK to study.
“The government is clamping down on visa abuse so the UK can maintain its ability and proud tradition of helping those genuinely in need,” a government spokesperson added.
In its release, the government said asylum claims from people who had originally travelled to the UK legally – to do something like studying – had more than tripled between 2021 and 2025.
Home Office figures showed that people claiming asylum off the back of a study visa make up 13% of all claims currently in the system.
Mahmood said she was “taking the unprecedented decision to refuse visas for those nationals seeking to exploit our generosity”.
“I will restore order and control to our borders.”
The Home Office said a higher proportion of people than average from the four specified countries cited destitution as part of their asylum claim, and there were 16,000 people from the four countries currently being supported.
About 95% of Afghans who arrived in the UK on a study visa then applied for asylum since 2021, while applications by students from Myanmar increased 16-fold and claims by students from Cameroon and Sudan more than quadrupled.
In its reasoning for ending work visas for Afghans, the Home Office also cited the large numbers claiming asylum in the UK once their visas expired.
It said that this posed “an unsustainable threat to the UK’s asylum system”.
The security situation is volatile in Afghanistan and recent tensions between the country and Pakistan have resulted in violent clashes in border regions.
There has been a civil war in Sudan since 2023, forcing millions to flee their homes in what the United Nations has called the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.
There is separatist unrest in Cameroon, where militia are fighting for the independence of the country’s two Anglophone regions in what is a mainly French-speaking nation.
In Myanmar, there is a civil war following a military coup in 2021.
Mahmood will introduce new legislation to stop the issuing of visas through an Immigration Rules change on Thursday 5 March.
In November, the home secretary threatened to shut down all UK visas for Angola, Namibia and the Democratic of Congo unless their governments agreed to take deportations, which led to a resumption of return flights with all three countries.
The measures follow the prime minister’s decision to adopt a more hard-edged approach to diplomacy in response to pressure to reduce immigration from those on the political right, including the Conservatives and Reform UK.
Last week, the government announced protection for refugees would be halved to 30 months in an attempt to reduce small boat crossings.
In 2025, a total of 41,472 migrants crossed the Channel in small boats, which was almost 5,000 more than the previous year.
The UK has resettled the sixth largest number of refugees referred by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in the world, which the Home Office said demonstrated the government’s commitment to helping those genuinely in need.
The home secretary will give a speech this week on making the “progressive case” for immigration control.
Last month, about 40 Labour MPs raised concerns about the impact of the proposals to change permanent settlement rights for migrants already living here, describing the retrospective approach as “un-British” and “moving the goalposts”.
They have warned it could worsen the UK’s skills shortage, particularly in the care sector.
Max Wilkinson, Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, said it was “right to say student visas are for students and asylum routes are for refugees”.
“The problem is there are still no controlled, safe routes for refugees to reach the UK and no meaningful returns agreements with other countries for those whose claims are rejected,” Wilkinson said.
Ethiopia Experiments Smart Police Stations without Officers
The vision is for Ethiopia’s smart police stations to be unmanned – but giving more people access to police services. Computer tablet screens glow inside a row of partitioned booths at a new-style Ethiopian police station. There is no commotion. There is no front desk, no bench of anxiously waiting civilians, no officer calling out names.
It is a pilot project of what is being called a “smart” – or unmanned – police station in the Bole district of the capital, Addis Ababa, is the latest chapter in Ethiopia’s bid to catch up with the digital revolution.
A large monitor on the wall cycles through welcome messages as well as images of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed.
But at the moment there are uniformed officers standing by to demonstrate how the system works, which makes it feel more like a tech showroom.
Recently opened, the staff “is here to help people get used to it”, the police’s head of technology expansion department Demissie Yilma said.
Inside a booth, he taps a screen and goes through the steps to make a report.
Demissie selects the type of incident – a crime, a traffic report or a general concern – enters the details and presses a button to submit the comment.
Then, an officer – who is a real person in a remote location rather than a chatbot – pops up on the screen and begins to ask questions and take down information.
“If there is a problem, officers respond immediately and patrol the area mentioned by the reporter,” Demissie says.
In its first week last month, the smart police station (SPS) received just three reports – a lost passport, a financial fraud case and a routine complaint.
But Demissie believes the number of reports will grow as locals become more aware of it.
“The future police service should be near the citizens,” he says.
The use of a computer tablet to communicate with officials may mean less human-to-human contact but the authorities believe that the SPS could increase access to the police in places where there may not be enough personnel to man a fully fledged station.
At the project’s launch on 9 February, the prime minister was quoted in state media as saying that it was aimed at making “law enforcement institutions competent and competitive” and he framed it as part of a wider digital reform drive.
Users of the smart police station enter details on a tablet before a real person appears on the screen
The smart police station is part of a broader move to change how citizens interact with the state.
The national strategy launched last year – known as Digital Ethiopia 2030 – is the government’s blueprint for digitising public services, from identity systems and payments to courts and public administration.
The proportion of Ethiopians who have access to the internet remains quite low, meaning that the country has lagged behind others on the continent in terms of digital transformation.
Also, conflict and political upheavals in recent years have led to internet blackouts.
But as the telecoms sector has opened up, the country is embracing mobile phone digital payments in birr, the local currency.
The government has also introduced a national digital ID system and put several government services online.
Supporters of the moves argue that these changes are long overdue in a country with rapid urban growth and a young population.
Birhan Nega Cheru, a senior software engineer in Addis Ababa, is pleased with the shift.
“When they work well, they reduce paperwork and visits to offices,” he tells the BBC.
But he also recognises security and privacy issues and the dangers that those “who are not digitally literate can easily be scammed”.
“Urban users, younger people, businesses, those with smartphones and skills, benefit most,” the software engineer says.
“Older people, rural communities and low-income groups are at risk of being left out.”
And the numbers support his assertions.
In a report last year, the UN’s educational organisation, Unesco, found that 79% of its citizens were not connected to the internet.
But Zelalem Gizachew, a technology policy analyst, argues that the government’s strategy has been chipping away at the digital divide.
“Digital literacy remains a challenge,” he says. “That is why the Digital Ethiopia 2030 strategy puts emphasis on training and skills, not just technology.”
He points to measurable changes over the past five years.
“Digital payments have boomed with trillions of birr now moving through electronic transactions. Broadband access has expanded sharply, and more than 130 government services have been digitised.
“These are foundational investments,” Zelalem says. “You cannot modernise public services without infrastructure, policy and skills.”
For now, the smart police station remains a pilot.
It is in a controlled environment where officers guide users through a system which is still finding its footing. Traditional stations continue to operate, and most citizens still rely on in-person reporting.
Whether the model expands will depend less on how sleek the technology looks, and more on whether people choose to use it when no-one is there to explain the screens.
In that sense, the quiet room in Bole is not a finished product. It is an experiment, and a small window into how Ethiopia’s broader digital ambitions may play out in everyday life.
Foreign News
India, Canada Reset Ties with Landmark Nuclear Energy Deal
India and Canada have announced a host of agreements, including a 10-year nuclear energy deal, after their prime ministers met in Delhi to reset ties that plummeted due to diplomatic tensions.
Narendra Modi and Mark Carney also struck agreement in areas such as technology, critical minerals, space, defence and education.
Carney said they agreed to conclude a free trade deal, years in the making, by the end of 2026.
Both countries want to reduce exposure to punitive US trade tariffs.Under Carney, the two governments are trying to repair ties that were strained when his predecessor accused Delhi of a link to the 2023 assassination of Sikh separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar on Canadian soil.
India vociferously rejected the allegation by Justin Trudeau. Trade and diplomatic relations almost came to a standstill as both sides expelled each other’s diplomats and cancelled visa services. Canada hosts a huge expatriate Indian community.
But since Carney took office last year, the relationship has been cautiously rebuilt, helped by the fact that his government has said it believes India is not currently linked to violent crimes or threats on Canadian soil.
The case of four men charged over Nijjar’s killing is still before the courts. At talks in Delhi, both Carney and Modi underscored India and Canada’s long-standing relationship, mutual goals and close people-to-people ties.
“In civil nuclear energy, we have reached a landmark deal for long-term uranium supply. We will also work together on small modular reactors and advanced reactors,” Modi told reporters after their meeting at Hyderabad House in Delhi.
He described the two countries as “natural partners in technology and innovation” and said they would enhance co-operation in AI, supercomputing and semiconductors, as well as jointly host a renewable energy summit.
Carney said Canada was well positioned to contribute to energy-hungry India’s nuclear fuel needs and added that the two countries were launching a strategic energy partnership.
He hailed the progress made in rebuilding relations. “There has been more engagement between the Canadian and Indian governments in the last year than there has been in more than two decades combined,” he said.
On trade, Modi said: “Our target is to reach $50bn in bilateral trade. This is why we have decided to finalise a comprehensive economic partnership soon.”
Carney said he wanted to reach a deal on the “ambitious agreement” by the end of the year. It’s been discussed on-and-off for the past 15 years so concluding it would be a significant achievement.
Analysts say that Carney’s decision to put diplomatic tensions behind him and extend an olive branch to India is a pragmatic one, based on present day geopolitical shifts.
The same holds true for India, which is looking to forge new trade partnerships to diversify its imports and also reduce its reliance on Russia for its energy needs.
Carney met India’s Foreign Minister S Jaishankar where the two discussed charting a “forward-looking partnership”.
Carney’s four-day trip began with a visit to the financial capital, Mumbai, where he met business leaders and ministers on 28 February with a view to boost trade and investment in India.
After concluding his trip in Delhi, Carney is set to travel to Australia and then Japan as part of his strategy to diversify Canada’s trade and invite new investments.


