Author: rb809rb

  • Amazon MGM Studios’ Heads of Originals in Europe on Courting Young Adults With Romance Series: ‘We’re Not Limited to High School Shows’

    Amazon MGM Studios’ Heads of Originals in Europe on Courting Young Adults With Romance Series: ‘We’re Not Limited to High School Shows’

    Amazon MGM Studios’ Nicole Morganti, head of originals for Southern Europe, and Thomas Dubois, head of originals in France, took the stage at Series Mania Festival in Lille to discuss Prime Video’s ongoing strategy to lure more women and younger demos on the heels of the “Culpables” trilogy.

    “We are much more female-centric. We are looking for women audience, all ages, and we are looking after women young adults,” said Morganti. The executive pointed out the company kicked off this strategy in Spain a while ago with the “Culpables” trilogy which was watched by 100 million people globally and was remade in in the U.K. as “My Fault.”

    “We started to create a big pipeline in Spain about young adults, and we expanded to the rest of my region (in Southern Europe),” she said, adding that Prime Video recently successfully launched “Love Me Love Me” – based on Stefania S.’s Wattpad book that garnered 24 million reads — in Italy and has announced a second movie is on the way.

    Morganti said collaborating with “Wattpad authors” has marked a turning point for the streamer as she noted, “Reading is getting back to be a huge trend.”

    “Wattpad is a platform where a lot of young adults go and read (…) and there are fanbases over there, and those fanbases are very entitled about their book,” she said, adding that these partnerships have helped Prime Video to “understand the communities that are behind these IPs.”

    After unveiling the first teaser for its upcoming teen series “Campus Drivers, ” Dubois said Prime Video was “open up to new genres” in the field of romances. Citing Sarah Rivens’ “Lakestone,” Dubois said, “It’s a dark romance book that has 26 million viewers on Wattpad that we’re going to adapt in France.”

    “We want to try not to replicate the same show all the time because there’s also a limit at some point within this space. We want each show to have its own singularity, and to do so, we are getting into dark romance,” Dubois continued. He mentioned upcoming originals, such as a movie called “Tempête,” which he described as “a survivalist with a touch of romance out of our two main characters.”

    “We’re not limited to high school shows that we do love and we have a few in the pipeline, but we also think that we need to be ahead of what our customers are going to expect from us, which is innovate also in that field,” he said.

    Beyond romances, Morganti also talked about recent genre film hits on the streamer’s Southern Europe slate, such as “Apocalypse Z: The Beginning of the End,” a Spanish thriller movie directed by Carles Torrens which she said “went incredibly well around the world as 90% of the audience was outside of Spain.”

    “Who would have thought that an apocalyptic zombie story coming from Spain could actually conquer the U.S. and the rest of the world,” she said.

    Dubois, meanwhile, talked about leveling up Prime Video’s film output in France with “Masterplan,” a international heist movie directed by Thomas Vincent (“Reacher”), starring Stanley Tucci and Simona Tabasco (“The White Lotus“). The English-language production will mark Prime Video’s first French-Italian Original film and is produced by Gaumont, the French studio behind “Lupin.”

  • Celine Sciamma, Robin Campillo, Zackary Drucker Set For Rome’s Frocinema Queer Film Festival

    Celine Sciamma, Robin Campillo, Zackary Drucker Set For Rome’s Frocinema Queer Film Festival

    Rome’s emerging Frocinema film festival dedicated to queer cinema is raising its international profile having secured several big names for its upcoming third edition that will feature an extended program of film screenings, workshops and talks.

    The event – touted by organizers as Rome’s first queer film festival – will kick off March 30 with Robin Campillo introducing his AIDS activist drama “BPM (Beats Per Minute)”; Céline Sciamma will be on hand for the Italian premiere of newly re-edited version of her celebrated feature “Tomboy” that premiered at Berlin, where she received an honorary Teddy Award; and Zackary Drucker will present the European premiere of her HBO doc “Enigma” about 1970s disco diva and trans icon Amanda Lear.

    Bartholomew Sammut, senior programmer for the Berlinale’s Panorama section and the fest’s Teddy Award Coordinator, is also among expected guests.

    The fest’s name, Frocinema, reflects the event’s “concept of [cultural] re-appropriation,” according to a statement that explained how the term ‘frocio’ (which can be translated in english as ‘faggot’) “has been used as an insult and which, through irony, is now being emptied of its discriminatory meaning and re-semantized, becoming a [queer] banner,” the statement said.

    The Frocinema fest is organised by Italian actor, writer, and LGBTQIA+ activist Pietro Turano who serves as artistic director, working in tandem with Arcigay Roma the local branch of Europe’s LGBTQIA+ association Arcigay, and the Piccolo America nonprofit association, a feisty group of young film buffs who operate a state-of the-art movie theatre called Cinema Troisi in central Rome and run outdoor summer arenas in Rome’s Piazza San Cosimato and other spots. The event is supported by Italy’s Soka Gakkai Buddhist Institute. 

    The fest also features a shorts’ film projects competition that this year is introducing a double prize: a €15,000 ($17,000) grant for production of a short fiction film and a €10,000 ($11,000) prize for the best short documentary project.

    The extended event will have a grand finale on June 12, 2026 with a special outdoor event held in Piazza di San Cosimato featuring surprise guests to be announced in the coming weeks.

  • Epic is laying off more than 1,000 workers, citing a downturn in Fortnite engagement

    Epic Games has announced sweeping layoffs of more than 1,000 employees. “The downturn in Fortnite engagement that started in 2025 means we’re spending significantly more than we’re making, and we have to make major cuts to keep the company funded,” CEO Tim Sweeney said in a memo to workers on Tuesday.

    Sweeney wrote that, combined with “over $500 million of identified cost savings in contracting, marketing, and closing some open roles,” the layoffs will give Epic more stability. He added that the layoffs are not related to AI.

    Back in 2023, Epic laid off 830 employees. At the time, that was 16 percent of its workforce, suggesting around 4,000 employees remained at the company. If those numbers haven’t changed too much in the meantime, that means Epic is culling around a quarter of its headcount this week.

    Along with a dip in Fortnite engagement, Sweeney pointed out that Epic isn’t immune from systemic issues the games industry is contending with, such as a slowdown in growth, reduced spending, “tougher cost economics” and a battle with other types of media for consumer’s attention.

    However, Epic has some issues of its own to deal with. “Despite Fortnite remaining one of the most successful games in the world, we’ve had challenges delivering consistent Fortnite magic with every season; we’re only in the early stages of returning to mobile and optimizing Fortnite for the world’s billions of smartphones; and in being the industry’s vanguard we have taken a lot of bullets in a battle which is only in the early days of paying off for ourselves and all developers,” Sweeney wrote. (He previously said Epic spent over $100 million in legal fees alone on its App Store battle with Apple.)

    The path forward for the company, per its CEO, is to create “awesome Fortnite experiences with fresh seasonal content, gameplay, story and live events,” perhaps in an attempt to recapture some of that “magic” he’s referring to. Speeding up work on developer tools amid the transition to Unreal Engine 6 is important as well, Sweeney indicated.

    He said that the workers Epic is laying off will receive at least four months of their base pay, though they’ll get more depending on the length of their tenure at the company. Epic will pay for extended healthcare coverage, including for six months for affected workers in the US. The company — which is not publicly traded — will speed up the vesting of stock options through next January and “extend equity exercise options for up to two years,” Sweeney said.

    Epic announced the layoffs days after it increased the price of Fortnite’s V-bucks currency. “The cost of running Fortnite has gone up a lot and we’re raising prices to help pay the bills,” it said.

    As part of the changes at the company, Epic is killing off three Fortnite modes. Rocket Racing (which was built by Rocket League developer Psyonix) will shut down in October. Fortnite Ballistic — a 5v5 tactical shooter mode — and Festival Battle Stage, which is a competitive version of the Fortnite Festival rhythm game, will vanish on April 16. “We’ve built a lot of Fortnite modes, and in some cases we failed to build something awesome enough to attract and retain a large player base,” Epic said on X.

    The company noted in its Year in Review recap last month that although the hours that players spent in third-party titles on the Epic Games Store increased by four percent in 2025, “overall gameplay hours declined year over year,” hinting at a dip in Fortnite numbers. The company said PC players spent $1.16 billion on the store in 2025, an increase of six percent from the previous year. Of that, $400 million was spent on third-party PC games. However, Epic Games Store vice president and general manager Steve Allison told Polygon in February that, factoring in first-party revenue and the 12 percent cut the company takes from third-party games, “the store is already — even with all this stuff — marginally profitable now.”

    Here is the full memo Sweeney shared with Epic’s employees on Tuesday:

    Today we’re laying off over 1000 Epic employees. I’m sorry we’re here again. The downturn in Fortnite engagement that started in 2025 means we’re spending significantly more than we’re making, and we have to make major cuts to keep the company funded. This layoff, together with over $500 million of identified cost savings in contracting, marketing, and closing some open roles puts us in a more stable place.

    Some of the challenges we’re facing are industry-wide challenges: slower growth, weaker spending, and tougher cost economics; current consoles selling less than last generation’s; and games competing for time against other increasingly-engaging forms of entertainment.

    And some of our challenges are unique to Epic. Despite Fortnite remaining one of the most successful games in the world, we’ve had challenges delivering consistent Fortnite magic with every season; we’re only in the early stages of returning to mobile and optimizing Fortnite for the world’s billions of smartphones; and in being the industry’s vanguard we have taken a lot of bullets in a battle which is only in the early days of paying off for ourselves and all developers.

    Since it’s a thing now, I should note that the layoffs aren’t related to AI. To the extent it improves productivity, we want to have as many awesome developers developing great content and tech as we can.

    What we now need to do is clear: build awesome Fortnite experiences with fresh seasonal content, gameplay, story, and live events; accelerate developer tools with greater stability and capability as we evolve from Unreal Engine 5 and UEFN to Unreal Engine 6. And we’ll be kicking off the next generation of Epic with huge launch plans towards the end of the year.

    This isn’t our first time being here. Epic survived upheavals in 1990’s with the move from 2D to 3D with Unreal 1; in the 2000’s building console games with Gears of War; and in 2012 moving to online gaming with Paragon and Fortnite. Each time, we rebuilt our foundations and earned a renewed leadership position.

    Market conditions today are the most extreme we’ve seen since those early days, with massive upheaval in the industry accompanied by massive opportunity for the companies that come out as winners on the other side. That’s what we’re aiming to do for our players, and we aim to bring other like-minded developers in the industry along on the journey to build an increasingly open and vibrant future of entertainment together.

    At Epic, we pride ourselves in only hiring the industry’s best, so it is very painful to part with so many talented people. The folks impacted by the layoffs will receive a severance package that includes at least four months of base pay, with more based on tenure. We’re also extending Epic-paid healthcare coverage.

    For example, in the U.S., they’ll receive paid coverage for 6 months. We’ll also accelerate their stock options vesting through January 2027 and extend equity exercise options for up to two years.

    We’ll have a company meeting Thursday to talk about the roadmap in more detail.

    -Tim

  • Geopolitical Developments Continue to Influence Bitcoin Price! Here Are the Latest Analyses

    Geopolitical Developments Continue to Influence Bitcoin Price! Here Are the Latest Analyses

    Recent analyses published regarding cryptocurrency markets have once again brought the impact of geopolitical developments on Bitcoin’s price to the forefront. According to a report shared by liquidity provider and market maker Wintermute, developments in the Middle East and volatility in energy markets, in particular, could be decisive for Bitcoin.

    The report predicted that if maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz returns to normal and oil prices stabilize at around $100 per barrel, Bitcoin could test the resistance zone between $74,000 and $76,000. Analysts note that this scenario could contribute to a renewed increase in risk appetite in the markets.

    Conversely, it was stated that Bitcoin prices could retreat if restrictions on shipping in the region continue or if a new conflict risk emerges. In this case, it is estimated that BTC could fall back to the mid-$60,000 level.

    According to experts, energy prices and geopolitical risks are increasingly impacting not only traditional markets but also crypto assets. Especially during periods of global uncertainty, investors’ approach to risky assets plays a decisive role in price movements.

    Wintermute analysts emphasize that Bitcoin’s direction in the coming period will be shaped by a combination of macroeconomic data, energy market dynamics, and geopolitical developments. Therefore, investors should closely monitor not only technical indicators but also global developments.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • Resolv Offers Hacker 10% Bounty to Return Funds After USR Exploit

    Resolv Offers Hacker 10% Bounty to Return Funds After USR Exploit

    Resolv offered the attacker behind its $80mn stablecoin exploit a 10% settlement incentive to return stolen funds following the collapse of its native token, company representatives announced.

    The decentralized finance protocol said it would allow the exploiter to retain roughly 10% of the extracted funds if 90%, estimated at $25mn in Ether, is returned within 72 hours. The offer comes as the protocol continues to stabilize after the attack triggered a sharp depeg in the stablecoin and forced a halt to operations, according to a public message.

    The incident involved a smart contract vulnerability, but the exploit was executed with clear malicious intent resulting in the creation of unbacked assets and potential secondary market impact, the protocol team noted.

    Negotiation window opens

    The attacker must cease all activity involving the exploited funds and transfer remaining assets to a designated recovery address within the strict deadline. Failure to comply would trigger severe escalation measures including coordination with exchanges and infrastructure providers to freeze assets, public disclosure of wallet activity and direct engagement with law enforcement and blockchain analytics firms, Resolv warned.

    The team also left open the possibility of treating the incident as a white hat event if the attacker engages in good faith. This signals a willingness to resolve the situation without legal action if the extracted funds are returned promptly.

    Private key compromised

    The settlement offer follows an exploit in which an attacker gained control of a privileged private key that allowed the minting of unbacked tokens and flooded the market with excess supply. The token plunged as low as $0.05 before partially recovering to around $0.28, remaining well below its intended $1 peg as liquidity pools were completely overwhelmed by the sudden surge in supply.

    Resolv has since paused core protocol functions, burned a portion of attacker-linked tokens and begun coordinating intensive recovery efforts while emphasizing that its underlying collateral was not directly compromised.

  • Texas man’s Maryland visit leads to $2M lottery prize

    Texas man’s Maryland visit leads to $2M lottery prize

    Odd News // 1 month ago

    Ohio man buys lottery ticket for wrong drawing, wins $50,000

    Feb. 20 (UPI) — An Ohio man attempting to play Mega Millions accidentally bought a ticket for the wrong lottery drawing — and ended up winning a $50,000 prize.

  • Khloé Kardashian Says E! Series ‘Khloé & Lamar’ Was All Lamar Odom’s Idea

    Khloé Kardashian Says E! Series ‘Khloé & Lamar’ Was All Lamar Odom’s Idea

    When a Kardashian thinks there are too many cameras around you, it might be time to reevaluate your thirst for fame.

    On Tuesday, March 31, Volume 4 of sports documentary series Untold, created by Wild, Wild Country brothers Chapman and Maclain Way, premieres on Netflix with The Death & Life of Lamar Odom.

    The Death & Life of Lamar Odom, directed Ryan Duffy, brings viewers back to 2015, when the recently retired NBA star and the husband of Khloé Kardashian was found unresponsive at the Love Ranch, a brothel outside Las Vegas. The doc features (separate) interviews with Khloé & Lamar, partially in which the now-divorced couple discuss, well, Khloé & Lamar.

    Kardashian says the 2011-12 E! reality show was completely Odom’s doing.

    Khloé & Lamar was not my idea. Khloé & Lamar was led very much by Lamar. I was spread really thin,” Khloé says. “I also didn’t really  want it to jeopardize the family brand, which was [Keeping Up with the Kardashians] at the time. I thought there were so many Kardashian shows.”

    Odom, meanwhile, wanted (at least) one Odom show.

    “This is how I wanna live,” Odom says in the doc of witnessing the Kardashian celebrity and lifestyle up close. At the time, Odom was well known in Hollywood as a two-time NBA Champion with the Los Angeles Lakers (2009, 2010) and the NBA’s Sixth Man of the Year (2011) — but he wasn’t Kardashian-famous. Not yet.

    Odom had a plan, one he relayed to childhood buddy Shannon “Pumpkin” Brown, who occasionally appeared on Khloé & Lamar, at his actual wedding to Kardashian.

    “He was explaining the moves he was doing,” Brown says in the doc, recalling a conversation he and Odom had at the very-Hollywood affair. “He was doing it to better his future.”

    “Part of the deal was that, if I marry you, fuck it, I want in on it too,” Odom says of his and Khloé’s very public high-speed romance.

    Who says romance is a lost art?

    “Lamar loves a camera,” Khloé says.

    OK, so maybe her — and probably you when you watch The Death & Life of Lamar Odom.

    The Death & Life of Lamar Odom is executive produced by the Ways, Duffy, Ben Silverman, Howard Owens, Isabel San Vargas, Jeff Jenkins and Shondrella Avery. Jake Graham-Felsen and Carolyn Craddock are co-executive producers of the film, which hails from Propagate and Stardust Frames Productions.

    Untold: The Death & Life of Lamar Odom premieres one week from today on Netflix. Untold: Vol. 4 continues the following week with the excellent Chess Mates (April 7), ahead of Untold: Jail Blazers (April 14) and season finale Untold: The Shooting at Hawthorne Hill (April 21).

  • Epic Games Slashes 1,000 Jobs, Citing “Downturn in ‘Fortnite’ Engagement”

    Epic Games Slashes 1,000 Jobs, Citing “Downturn in ‘Fortnite’ Engagement”

    Epic Games, the studio behind Fortnite, is slashing more than 1,000 jobs as it deals with a “downturn” in engagement with its flagship game.

    Epic CEO Tim Sweeney announced the cuts to staff Tuesday.

    “The downturn in Fortnite engagement that started in 2025 means we’re spending significantly more than we’re making, and we have to make major cuts to keep the company funded. This layoff, together with over $500 million of identified cost savings in contracting, marketing, and closing some open roles puts us in a more stable place,” Sweeney wrote. “Some of the challenges we’re facing are industry-wide challenges: slower growth, weaker spending, and tougher cost economics; current consoles selling less than last generation’s; and games competing for time against other increasingly-engaging forms of entertainment.”

    Epic, of course, is a close partner of The Walt Disney Co., which invested $1.5 billion in the company two years ago, with plans to create a Fortnite-connected universe filled with Disney IP and characters. Disney characters have also made frequent appearances in limited edition Fortnite seasons.

    Sweeney is also close to new Disney CEO Josh D’Amaro, who championed the Epic Games deal. Sources close to D’Amaro said that interactivity will be a centerpiece of his strategy for the company.

    Sweeney told The Hollywood Reporter after D’Amaro got the job that the exec understood how gaming and entertainment can work together harmoniously.

    “Josh and Disney really get it and have a crisp understanding of how the future of their film and TV IP, Disney+ and games fit together into a digital ecosystem and tie into parks and other things,” he says.

    In his memo, Sweeney compared the current moment to the 1990s, when technological disruption similarly changed the course of the gaming industry. Epic was a player then thanks to its Unreal Engine.

    “Market conditions today are the most extreme we’ve seen since those early days, with massive upheaval in the industry accompanied by massive opportunity for the companies that come out as winners on the other side,” Sweeney wrote.

    He also took pain to note that “since it’s a thing now, I should note that the layoffs aren’t related to AI. To the extent it improves productivity, we want to have as many awesome developers developing great content and tech as we can.”

  • Why has India arrested US, Ukrainian nationals under ‘anti-terror’ laws?

    Why has India arrested US, Ukrainian nationals under ‘anti-terror’ laws?

    India has arrested six Ukrainian nationals and an American citizen for allegedly entering India’s northeast region without permits and crossing to neighbouring Myanmar to train armed groups in drone warfare.

    The foreign nationals were arrested by Indian police on March 13 at three different airports across the country. According to Indian media reports, the US national was detained by the Bureau of Immigration at Kolkata airport, three Ukrainians were detained in Lucknow, and three more in Delhi. It is not clear if they were on their way to Myanmar or returning from the country.

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    India’s National Investigation Agency (NIA) has charged them with violating the country’s “anti-terror” laws, and they will be held in custody until March 27.

    Local police also arrested two more American tourists on Saturday for flying drones near Coast Guard headquarters in the southern city of Kochi – where India is harbouring sailors from an Iranian ship that it hosted in military exercises in February. Another Iranian ship that India had hosted was torpedoed by the US early in the war, embarrassing New Delhi and killing dozens of Iranian sailors.

    Why have these Americans and Ukrainians been arrested? What does this mean for India’s relations with Myanmar, Ukraine and the US?

    Here’s what we know:

    Who has been arrested?

    According to Indian media reports, the seven foreign nationals arrested by the NIA have been identified as Matthew Aaron VanDyke from the US, and Hurba Petro, Slyviak Taras, Ivan Sukmanovskyi, Stefankiv Marian, Honcharuk Maksim and Kaminskyi Viktor, who are all Ukrainian citizens.

    According to VanDyke’s personal website, he participated in the Iraq War and Libya’s civil war. He is the founder of a Washington, DC-based consulting firm called Sons of Liberty International. The organisation’s website says it “provides free security consulting and training services to vulnerable populations to enable them to defend themselves against terrorist and insurgent groups”. The company also ran operations in Ukraine between 2022 and 2023, when it provided training and advice to Ukraine’s military in using non-lethal equipment.

    Not much is known about the Ukrainian citizens who have been arrested.

    The NIA did not specify when the foreign nationals entered India nor when they crossed into Myanmar.

    The two American tourists arrested in Kochi have been identified as 32-year-old Katie Michelle Phelps and 35-year-old Christopher Ross Harvey, both from California.

    Why has India arrested the suspects in the Myanmar case?

    The seven men were initially detained by the NIA for entering India’s northeastern state of Mizoram without valid permits and then illegally crossing into Myanmar.

    This is not the first time foreign nationals have been arrested by India for entering northeastern states bordering the subcontinent’s approximately 1,640km (1,020-mile) border with Myanmar. In April 2025, a Belgian photojournalist was arrested by police in Mizoram for allegedly entering the state without valid travel documents and then crossing into Myanmar.

    On March 16, the NIA told a court in New Delhi that the seven foreign nationals had crossed to Myanmar to train armed groups fighting the military government in drone warfare.

    According to The Indian Express daily newspaper, the NIA said the accused were involved in illegally “importing huge consignments of drones from Europe to Myanmar via India” for the use of “ethnic armed groups”. The agency added that these groups also allegedly supported “Indian insurgent groups” by supplying weapons and training them in “terrorist” activities.

    India’s northeastern states like Mizoram and Manipur, which border Chin state in northern Myanmar, have a troubled history marred with ethnic tensions. Ethnic groups from the states, like Manipur’s Kuki National Army (KNA), also operate in Myanmar and have been actively fighting against the military government.

    India, therefore, requires foreigners to obtain special permits before entering some northeastern states bordering Myanmar, particularly since the 2021 military coup there.

    Angshuman Choudhury, a researcher and writer who specialises in political and security issues in the India-Myanmar borderland, told Al Jazeera that the Indian government views the India-Myanmar border as a major vulnerability, especially because it remains unfenced.

    “Technically, anyone crossing the border without a valid visa or permit under the Free Movement Regime (FMR) is liable for prosecution. The surveillance tends to be higher when it concerns foreign journalists,” he said.

    Foreigners who cross over into Myanmar from India to report on the conflict or support resistance forces there are not, in themselves, viewed as security concerns for India, he explained.

    “These forces have little to do with India and are fighting their own war against the Myanmar military government,” Choudhury noted. “But the Indian state still views their act of using Indian territory to cross into resistance-held territory as a violation of its own sovereignty and a security risk. This threat perception is aggravated by concerns that their support for Myanmar’s resistance forces may indirectly strengthen anti-India insurgents, although evidence for that remains sparse.”

    Why is Ukraine involved in this?

    In recent years, Ukraine has deepened its ties with India but has also been accused by rights groups of supporting Myanmar’s military government. The six Ukrainians, by contrast, have been arrested for allegedly providing support to armed groups resisting the government.

    In September 2021, months after the military coup, Justice For Myanmar, a group focusing on human rights violations in the country, accused Ukraine of supporting Myanmar’s military with arms exports and technology transfers.

    But in a statement on March 19, Ukraine firmly rejected “any insinuations regarding the possible involvement of the Ukrainian State in supporting terrorist activities” and also asked India to release its nationals.

    A statement from Ukraine’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said: “Ukraine is a state that faces the consequences of Russian terror on a daily basis and, for this very reason, takes a principled and uncompromising stance in combating terrorism in all its forms.

    “We also emphasise that Ukraine has no interest in any activity that could pose a threat to the security of India … Instead, it is Russia, as an aggressor state, that seeks under every circumstance to drive a wedge between friendly countries – Ukraine and India,” the Foreign Ministry added.

    Media reports have suggested that Russia could have been involved in the arrests.

    NIA officials told Germany’s international broadcaster DW News that it was possible that Russian authorities had shared intelligence about the foreign nationals’ movements.

    Choudhury told Al Jazeera that this would be logical, given Russia’s growing ties with the military government in Myanmar.

    “From Moscow’s vantage point, exposing the presence of Ukrainian drone experts in the India-Myanmar borderland also reaffirms the Russian view that Kyiv is contributing to the destabilisation of unstable regions across the world. This may turn global opinion against Ukraine and its Western allies like the US,” he said.

    Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Maria Zakharova accused Ukraine of trying “to conceal the incident and to keep its citizens’ questionable activities, which were clearly designed to destabilise the situation in the region, under wraps”.

    In a statement on March 20, Zakharova said the incident clearly showed that “[Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s neo-Nazi regime has a core exporter of instability worldwide.”

    Meanwhile, the US has not yet commented on its citizen’s arrest.

    A US ⁠Embassy spokesperson told the Reuters news agency that the country’s embassy in India was aware of the arrest but could not comment on the case “for privacy reasons”.

    Why were the American tourists in Kochi arrested?

    Kochi, in the southern Indian state of Kerala, is home to sensitive Indian Navy and Coast Guard facilities.

    The headquarters near which the American tourists were allegedly flying drones falls within what authorities describe as a red zone: drone activity is strictly forbidden there.

    But the arrests also come at a time when Kochi is hosting more than 180 crew members of the Iranian warship IRIS Lavan, which was given emergency docking permission in early March after the US-Israeli war on Iran began.

    The IRIS Dena, another Iranian warship, was attacked by a US submarine in the Indian Ocean, just off Sri Lanka, at the start of the war while it was returning home from naval exercises hosted by India. IRIS Lavan was also a part of those exercises.

    What do the arrests mean for Indian relations with the US, Ukraine and Myanmar?

    Choudhury said the arrests could serve to strengthen trust between New Delhi and the Myanmar government in Naypyidaw, given the growing military challenge that the latter is facing from resistance forces along the border.

    He said in the short term, the arrests could “adversely affect the India-Ukraine relationship”, however.

    “Although I believe both sides will rely on backdoor channels to manage this issue – especially since Ukraine can’t afford to alienate India at this juncture,” he said.

    Choudhury said the incident would not severely affect relations between India and the US, as Matthew VanDyke’s relationship with the current US administration is not clear.

    “Washington, DC might not consider him an important enough figure to damage its bilateral relationship with New Delhi, which is already strained but appears to be steadily returning to normalcy,” he said.

  • Is the US talking to Iran’s Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, and who is he?

    Is the US talking to Iran’s Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, and who is he?

    United States President Donald Trump announced on Monday that he is pausing attacks on Iran’s power infrastructure for five days and claimed that Washington and Tehran had held “very good and productive conversations” aimed at ending their war.

    The same day, Trump told reporters that his envoys were talking to a senior Iranian official.

    While Trump did not name the official, multiple news outlets in Israel and the US have reported that special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, are talking to the Iranian parliament’s speaker, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf.

    Both the Iranian government and Ghalibaf have denied that talks between Washington and Tehran are taking place. And in the Iranian system, any negotiations with the US would need to be approved by new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei and the Supreme National Security Council for them to have any legitimacy.

    Who is Ghalibaf, and what do we know about these supposed negotiations?

    What do we know about the talks Trump claims to be having?

    On Saturday, Trump issued a 48-hour ultimatum to Iran to reopen the critical shipping route through the Strait of Hormuz or risk US attacks on its power plants. In response, Iran said it would attack energy and water facilities in Israel and the Gulf. Ghalibaf also threatened companies that hold US Treasury bonds.

    Then on Monday, Trump wrote in a Truth Social post that Washington and Tehran had held “very good and productive conversations regarding a complete and total resolution of our hostilities in the Middle East”. He ordered US forces to hold fire against Iranian power plants for five days.

    Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs has rejected Trump’s claims that negotiations were under way. Iranian officials accused Trump of pausing his threatened attacks only in an attempt to calm energy markets.

    News outlets reported on Monday that Trump said his envoys were in contact with a senior Iranian official.

    “We are dealing with a man that I believe is the most respected – not the supreme leader. We have not heard from him,” Trump said told reporters on Monday.

    Trump said he did not want to name the Iranian leader because he did not want to get him killed, but, the US news websites Axios and Politico and multiple Israeli publications have reported that Witkoff and Kushner had been in touch with Ghalibaf.

    However, on Monday, Ghalibaf wrote in an X post: “No negotiations have been held with the US, and fake news is used to manipulate the financial and oil markets and escape the quagmire in which the US and Israel are trapped.”

    Who is Ghalibaf?

    Ghalibaf, 64, is Iran’s parliamentary speaker.

    He served as the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) air force from 1997 to 2000. After this, he served as the country’s police chief. From 2005 to 2017, he was the mayor of Tehran.

    Ghalibaf stood in elections for president in 2005, 2013, 2017 and 2024. He withdrew his bid for president before the election in 2017.

    In May 2020, Ghalibaf became the parliamentary speaker, replacing Ali Larijani, who had been speaker from 2008. Larijani was a close adviser to former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who was killed on the first day of the US-Israeli war on February 28. Larijani, Iran’s top security official, was also killed on March 17 in an Israeli strike.

    What has Ghalibaf said during the war?

    In his posts online, Ghalibaf has been among the fiercest critics of the US and Israel and has repeatedly issued threats to Israel, the US and the Gulf. Those threats have often echoed the IRGC’s warnings – but at times have gone even beyond what the military itself has threatened to do.

    On March 14, he mocked Trump for claiming that the US had defeated Iran. Three days later, he declared that the Strait of Hormuz would not return to its pre-war state. On Sunday, Ghalibaf posted that financial bodies that fund Washington’s military are legitimate targets for Iran: “US treasury bonds are soaked in Iranians’ blood. Purchase them, and you purchase a strike on your HQ and assets.”

    And on Monday, Ghalibaf posted a thread of posts on X, denying that talks with the US were taking place.

    “Iranian people demand complete and remorseful punishment of the aggressors,” he wrote. “All Iranian officials stand firmly behind their supreme leader and people until this goal is achieved.”

    What is the likelihood of any talks right now?

    Experts think negotiations are plausible as pressure is building on Trump to end the war but are cautious about any predictions over whether they might succeed.

    “I would assess the likelihood of talks at 60 percent for several reasons,” Iranian-American economist Nader Habibi told Al Jazeera.

    Habibi explained that the costs of the war were high for all parties. Trump faces pressure to contain the war and prevent attacks on energy infrastructure. He faces pressure from Gulf countries and major economic partners, such as European countries, Japan and South Korea, who have been harmed by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. He also faces mounting concerns among his fellow Republicans worried about the rising cost of fuel impacting the party’s chances in the midterm elections scheduled for November.

    He added that Iran faces pressure as well. “Iran’s surviving leadership is under considerable stress and is worried about attacks to key energy and power plant infrastructure.”

    Habibi added that several mediating countries, such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and Turkiye, have been able to establish a communication channel with Iranian officials. This paves the way for negotiations.

    Additionally, China is also using its influence to get Iran to negotiate, Habibi said.

    “Israel and the United States were expecting a short war with a path to regime collapse. Now they are revising their expectations and are aware of the high cost of a prolonged war in which Iran is able to hit targets in Israel.”

    What’s next?

    “It is hard to predict whether any talks that take place in the next few days will be successful,” Habibi said.

    He added that there might be a reduction in violence and some confidence-building measures on both sides during the negotiations but there is no guarantee of a comprehensive deal that could end the war.

    “There might be disagreement between Israel and the US on requirements for ending the war. Similarly, some factions among Iran’s ruling elite might resist the concessions that Iran is expected to offer to meet the demands of the United States,” Habibi said.