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Sweden pushes hard with Immigration laws; Sudan drone death toll in 2026; Iran executes more protesters
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Sweden Passes Strict New Immigrant Residency Laws
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What happened: Sweden's parliament passed a law on Monday requiring certain public-sector workers to report suspected undocumented migrants to police and reintroducing a conduct-based test that allows authorities to deny or revoke residency permits retroactively. Tax authorities, employment agencies, and social insurance workers must report, while teachers, doctors, and social workers are exempted.
Why it matters: The law applies retroactively to already granted permits and could deter undocumented migrants from accessing essential public services like healthcare and welfare. Migration experts warn it contradicts basic human rights, encourages racial profiling, and creates ethical dilemmas for public servants who must choose between helping vulnerable people and reporting them to authorities.
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76% of sources are Original Reporting
60 Articles •
UN: Sudan Drone Strikes Kill 1,000+ Civilians in 2026
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What happened: More than 1,000 civilians were killed by drone strikes in Sudan between January and May this year, according to UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk. Both the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces have increasingly deployed explosive-laden drones targeting civilian infrastructure including hospitals, markets, cemeteries, and aid convoys across Darfur, Kordofan, and Blue Nile regions.
Why it matters: Sudan's conflict has transformed into a drone-dominated war with armed drones now accounting for over 80 percent of civilian deaths, marking a 600 percent increase in drone-related fatalities from last year. The crisis has created the world's largest humanitarian emergency, with 34 million people needing assistance, 13 million displaced, and concerns mounting about automated weapons systems operating without adequate international regulation.
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19 Articles •
London Launches £7m Campaign Against Global Disinformation
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What happened: Mayor Sadiq Khan announced a £7 million campaign launching in September to counter online disinformation targeting London's reputation across Europe, the US, and Asia. City Hall analysis found posts portraying London as dangerous increased 150-200% between March 2024 and March 2026, with over 15,000 Japanese-language posts monthly spreading false claims and AI-generated content depicting fake events.
Why it matters: The campaign aims to protect London's tourism industry and international reputation amid concerns that false narratives could deter visitors and investment. This comes as 54% of Londoners believe the city is becoming less safe generally, with crime and safety ranking as a top voting issue for 40% of residents ahead of May local elections.
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95% of sources are Original Reporting
19 Articles •
Iran Executes Two Men Linked to January Protests
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What happened: Iranian authorities executed Javad Zamani and Abolfazl Saedi today after convicting them of moharebeh (waging war against God) and corruption on earth for their alleged roles as armed leaders in January 2026 anti-government unrest. The judiciary reported the men were found guilty of deliberately destroying public and private property and committing crimes against national security.
The bigger picture: Iran has executed at least 40 people since the start of 2026, including 18 protesters, according to the UN yesterday, making it one of the world's highest-executing countries after China. The executions have intensified following U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran in late February that triggered wider regional conflict, with authorities linking many cases to alleged foreign instigation.
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84% of sources are Original Reporting
57 Articles •
India Blocks Telegram Nationwide to Prevent NEET Exam Fraud
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What happened: India temporarily blocked Telegram until June 22 and disabled its message-editing feature until June 30 ahead of the NEET medical entrance re-exam on June 21. Authorities invoked emergency IT Act powers after cheating syndicates used the platform to sell fake papers and fabricate leak evidence by editing old messages with real questions after exams concluded.
Why it matters: Over 2.28 million NEET candidates face disruption as the nationwide Telegram block affects legitimate users of India's fastest-growing messaging app. The restriction follows May's exam cancellation after paper leak allegations, with authorities arresting over a dozen people including alleged kingpins who demanded hundreds of thousands of rupees from desperate students and families.
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89% of sources are Original Reporting
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