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Prince William sends letter to UK’s Chief Rabbi after monstrous Hamas attacks | Royal | News

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Prince William has expressed his solidarity with the Jewish community after the monstrous attack carried out by Hamas in Israel last weekend which claimed the lives of thousands of people.

The Prince of Wales sent a letter to Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis on 10 October, days before he and his wife, Princess Kate issued an official statement condemning the attack.

William told Sir Ephraim that it was “truly a traumatic time for the Jewish community.”

He added that he condemned the attacks “unreservedly” as he reflected on his 2018 visit to the country.

The heir to the throne wrote that even though peace between Israel and Palestine “in present circumstances” seems “unobtainable”, he hopes that in the future “voices calling for peace” would “come into the fore”.

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The letter was shared on X (formerly known as Twitter) by the Chief Rabbi.

The following day, William and Kate released a joint statement.

A spokesperson for Kensington Palace said: “The Prince and Princess of Wales are profoundly distressed by the devastating events that have unfolded in the past days.

“The horrors inflicted by Hamas’s terrorist attack upon Israel are appalling; they utterly condemn them.”

Earlier, King Charles spoke on the phone with Israeli President Herzog and King Abdullah of Jordan.

During the conversation, he expressed his sympathies to all those suffering and in particular to those who have lost loved ones.

The monarch is said to be “appalled” by the attacks and “condemns the barbaric acts of terrorism in Israel,” a Buckingham Palace spokesperson said at the time.

They added: “This is a situation His Majesty is extremely concerned about, and he has asked to be kept actively updated.

“His thoughts and prayers are with all of those suffering, particularly those who have lost loved ones, but also those actively involved as we speak.”



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India’s regional political forces face decline amid rise of BJP-Congress dominance

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Across India’s political landscape from north to south and east to west, several regional outfits, once dominant in their respective states and frequently decisive in national coalitions, now stand decimated in elections, yielding space either to BJP or Congress

11 May, 2026, 11:40 am

Last modified: 11 May, 2026, 11:47 am

FILE PHOTO: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi gestures, at the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) headquarters in New Delhi, India, June 4, 2024. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/File Photo

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FILE PHOTO: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi gestures, at the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) headquarters in New Delhi, India, June 4, 2024. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/File Photo

FILE PHOTO: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi gestures, at the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) headquarters in New Delhi, India, June 4, 2024. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/File Photo

The defeat of two major regional parties Trinamool Congress and Dravida Munnetra Kazagham in recent assembly elections has forced them to the strategy drawing board to remain relevant as BJP and Congress, with pan-India presence, are expanding their footprints across the country.

In the opposition bloc INDIA, formed in mid-2023 to jointly take on BJP in parliamentary elections of 2024, Congress is the only party with a pan-India presence. While opposition parties could not prevent BJP from returning to power in the general elections two years ago, they succeeded in keeping the Modi-led party from securing a majority on its own.

Congress is now in power in three Himachal Pradesh, Telangana and Karnataka and is set to form a government in Kerala. With Congress and other opposition parties competing with each other to position themselves as the leader of the anti-BJP combine, it has the potential to set off fresh equations in INDIA.

Across India’s political landscape from north to south and east to west, several regional outfits, once dominant in their respective states and frequently decisive in national coalitions, now stand decimated in elections, yielding space either to BJP or Congress.

The emergence of caste-based regional parties, for which regional flavour is more important than national issues, has come at the expense of weakened pan-India parties like Congress and BJP since late 1980s. Since the start of coalition politics and governance at the Centre, the national parties’ dependence on regional parties is critical for survival particularly when the lead party lacks majority on its own like the incumbent Modi government is.

Over the last few years, BJP has expanded its hold across 21 states in India as the regional parties fell into decline.

Today, major regional outfits across India’s political canvas from north south to and east like SP, DMK, TMC, BSP, BJD, Shiromani Akali Dal, Shiv Sena (Uddhav Thackeray faction), RJD, Telangana Rashtra Samiti and Left parties are out of power. In most cases, the vacuum is now dominated by BJP. Only South India has been largely elusive for BJP, barring for a brief period in Karnataka.

The states where regional parties are still holding on to power are Andhra Pradesh (Telugu Desam Party, an ally of BJP), Sikkim, Mizoram, Nagaland and Meghalaya.

The crucial question is: are these transient phases in Indian politics or will be here to stay at least for the foreseeable future?

The recent poll setbacks for TMC and DMK has sparked a rethink among the regional parties over their future political strategy and the shape of the INDIA alliance.

What has complicated matters for INDIA is that Congress and DMK, steadfast allies against BJP, have parted ways after the recent Tamil Nadu elections.

The collapse of the alliance between Congress and DMK came when Congress extended support to actor-politician C Joseph Vijay-led TVK forming a coalition government in Tamil Nadu after walking out of the DMK-led alliance. DMK hit back by accusing Congress of “stabbing in the back” and writing to the Speaker of Lok Sabha seeking not to sit with Congress MPs in the House.

What has further roiled INDIA is Rahul Gandhi’s claim made on Friday last that no other party can defeat BJP and Narendra Modi and only Congress can do that. The leader of the opposition in Lok Sabha described the current political climate in India as an ideological battle between RSS and Congress.

By contrast, on several occasions in the past, Mamata Banerjee had said Congress cannot fight BJP effectively.

Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav and RJD chief appear to disagree with Rahul and maintain that only regional parties can stop BJP. In fact, Akhilesh had a jibe at Congress snapping alliance with DMK saying “we do not abandon ally in its trying time.”

Prime Minister Narendra Modi used the Congress-DMK rift to attack Congress. Terming Congress as “parasite,” he said at an event in Bengaluru on 10 May that Congress has survived politically for years because of DMK’s support but now “stabbed” the Dravidian party in its back when power equations changed.





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How Bangladesh’s local NGOs are surviving the foreign aid collapse

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The organisations with deep roots in Bangladesh’s communities that had spent decades building trust—now face a new reality—they are competing with large international organisations for the same small grants that had once been their exclusive lifeblood

11 May, 2026, 08:30 am

Last modified: 11 May, 2026, 08:30 am

Illustration: TBS

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Illustration: TBS

Illustration: TBS

On the night of 31 January 2025, AKM Tariful Islam Khan, senior manager of communications at the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh (icddr,b), sent a statement to reporters that marked the start of an unravelling in the country’s development sector.

“As per the directive of the US government, we have suspended projects and research funded by them until further notice,” Khan said. “We express our sympathy and regret for any inconvenience caused to our service recipients, various stakeholders, and colleagues.”

But behind the apology were more than 1,000 termination letters — becoming the single largest casualty of the USAID shutdown in Bangladesh. But it was only the beginning.

Gradually, more than 100 development projects worth $550 million were suspended in Bangladesh. Over 20,000 people lost their jobs almost overnight. And beneath those numbers, a quieter, slower process began — one that is reshaping who gets to do development work in this country, and who gets crowded out.

One year past, the question is: how are those who survived managing to stay afloat?

Survival in many forms

Md Maksudur Rahman, the Chief Executive of the Bangladesh Environment and Development Society (BEDS), a local NGO in Khulna, never received USAID funding directly for his organisation. But when the international aid stopped in early 2025, the shock wave came anyway, through the donors his donors relied on.

“A sudden decision is like a heart attack,” he said.

For BEDS, the shock was immediate but not terminal. The organisation did not collapse; it adapted. However, for BEDS, the adaptation has been longer in the making. Rahman has spent a decade building a social business model — branding and marketing community agricultural products to generate revenue that does not depend on foreign grants. 

“When a project is dependent,” he says, “everything ends when the project ends.” It has given BEDS a floor that many organisations do not have. But he is clear about the limits. “The large sectors that have become established will stay; the rest will fall away.”

To be honest, it happened. Many organisations failed to survive.

Some have quietly shut field offices, stopped hiring, and are waiting to see if anything comes through. The ones still running are doing it differently than before. The most common shift: replacing permanent staff with consultants. 

Organisations that once employed programme officers and field coordinators on long-term contracts now bring them in project by project, paying per deliverable, carrying no liability when the funding ends. The work still gets done — sometimes — but institutional knowledge does not accumulate. Each engagement starts from near zero.

Localisation as a lifeline

A path some organisations are betting on is localisation. Donors cutting overall aid are increasingly insisting that what remains goes directly to local organisations, not international intermediaries. 

When a local NGO competes directly with an international organisation, donor preference now often goes to the local one. Some consortiums have flipped the old hierarchy entirely, with a small national organisation holding the grant and sub-contracting work to a large international NGO.

For the right organisation — one with existing donor relationships, a credible track record, and the administrative capacity to manage a grant directly — localisation is a genuine lifeline. 

“Eventually, a time will come when this funding will decrease. This is a reality. Maybe this trend will last another 20 years. But what after 20 years? Will this sector sustain then? We need to build a self-sustaining model that can withstand such fund shortages.”

Maksudur Rahman, Development Professional

The problem is that the organisations most likely to meet those criteria are the larger, more established national NGOs. The twelve-person women’s cooperative in Satkhira, or the community-based environmental group in Khulna that never needed to think about compliance frameworks, does not have the same access to that door.

Asif Saleh, Executive Director of BRAC, made the point clear in the context of climate finance, “Only 10% have reached the intended, most vulnerable communities, and only 6% have supported locally-led approaches.” 

Even BRAC, despite three years of trying, had been unable to access the climate funding it needed. If BRAC cannot get through, the implication for the smaller ones is obvious.

A new reality for local NGOs

The organisations with deep roots in Bangladesh’s communities that had spent decades building trust—now face a new reality. They are competing with large international organisations for the small grants that had once been their exclusive lifeblood.

Zinat Ara Afroze, a former convenor of the Association of Unemployed Development Professionals and now an international consultant, watched it happen across professional networks. 

“Due to the current crisis, larger organisations are now moving into the space traditionally occupied by smaller, local NGOs,” she said. “They are starting to compete for the smaller projects that used to be the lifeline for local organisations.”

Syed Aminur Rahman, a development professional, added a quantitative perspective, “Previously, a large organisation wouldn’t look at a project worth less than $2 million. Now, they are aggressively competing for $100,000 projects just to survive.”

Meanwhile, the international consulting firms that had built entire operations in Bangladesh on USAID funding simply left. Chemonics International and Tetra Tech shut their Bangladesh offices entirely. ACDI/VOCA declared dissolution. Their exit was clean and visible; what they left behind — smaller organisations now fighting BRAC and Save the Children for what remained — was neither.

Rahman also mentioned this new phenomenon. He found it unexpected that senior USAID project managers — people who had spent careers leading multi-million-dollar programmes — “even knocked on our small organisation’s door to see if there were any consultancy opportunities or any scope to survive.”

 

What happened to the development workers

Adib Khan, a programme manager at an international NGO, spent five months searching before finding another job — at the same organisation, but demoted to senior officer. He sent his family back to Mymensingh and is now based in Cox’s Bazar on a project.

“I’m constantly anxious about what comes next,” he said. When he applied to the corporate sector, companies saw his NGO background and did not call back.

Samia Alam, a communications lead, lost her job the same night her team heard the project had shut down. Ten months later she was still unemployed, living at her father’s house, raising her daughter alone. 

“It felt like the sky had fallen on my head,” she said. “My life was going well with my job and my daughter, and now it’s all gone.” She is considering leaving her field entirely, though in a sluggish economy that is not straightforward either.

Rayhan Maruf worked for 10 years at a well-known INGO before the shutdown left him jobless. Six months in, with his father undergoing cancer treatment, he used his savings to try importing Pakistani clothes. The market was too saturated. He has not recovered financially, and neither has his father.

Samin Hossain, a former gender specialist, is now freelancing. “For now, I’m doing consultancy work, but I don’t know how long that will sustain me,” she said. “What seems most realistic for me and my family is to leave the country eventually.”

A K M Musha, who served as Country Director of Helen Keller International in Bangladesh, left after leading the organisation through a major downsizing following the closure of three large USAID projects. He announced he would spend his break offering free advisory services to local NGOs — a senior figure with nowhere obvious to go, volunteering his experience to organisations that could not afford to pay for it.

Tony Michel Gomes, former Director of PR and Communications at CARE Bangladesh, told TBS, “the higher your position was, the harder it became to find a new job. Years of experience and hard-earned skills are not paying off.”

The sector did not contract and redistribute. It contracted and disappeared.

A wake-up call 

Dr Fahmida Khatun, Executive Director of the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD), described the structural squeeze on low-income countries as a combination of “shrinking aid budgets and a slowdown in global growth.”

She was also explicit about what happens to civil society when political and funding pressures tighten simultaneously.

“Political polarisation has significantly impacted the regulatory environment for NGOs and CSOs, with a decline in policymakers’ tolerance for objective criticism, leading to the use of new laws as a censorship tool.”

For local NGOs, squeezed on funding from one side and regulatory space from the other, the room to operate independently has rarely been smaller.

Maksudur Rahman is not pessimistic, exactly. He has watched enough funding cycles to know that sectors survive. But he is clear-eyed about what that survival will require.

“Eventually, a time will come when this funding will decrease. This is a reality. Maybe this trend will last another 20 years. But what after 20 years? Will this sector sustain then?” he said. “We need to build a self-sustaining model that can withstand such fund shortages.”

 





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Rare earths deal between US, China still in effect, US official says

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President ‌Donald ⁠Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping ​will ​meet ⁠in Beijing on ​14 and 15 May

Reuters

11 May, 2026, 12:45 am

Last modified: 11 May, 2026, 12:46 am

U.S. President Donald Trump shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping as they hold a bilateral meeting at Gimhae International Airport, on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit, in Busan, South Korea, October 30, 2025. REUTERS

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U.S. President Donald Trump shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping as they hold a bilateral meeting at Gimhae International Airport, on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit, in Busan, South Korea, October 30, 2025. REUTERS

U.S. President Donald Trump shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping as they hold a bilateral meeting at Gimhae International Airport, on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit, in Busan, South Korea, October 30, 2025. REUTERS

A rare earths deal ​between the ‌United States and China is ​still ​in effect and an ⁠extension will ​be announced ​at the appropriate time, a senior ​US official ​told reporters on Sunday.

President ‌Donald ⁠Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping ​will ​meet ⁠in Beijing on ​14 and 15 May.





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