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    Artificial glaciers boost water supply in northern Pakistan

    This photograph taken on March 19, 2025 shows a general view of Hussainabad village in Skardu district, in Pakistan’s mountainous Gilgit-Baltistan region. (Photo by Manzoor BALTI / AFP)

    HUSSAINABAD, Pakistan (AFP) – At the foot of Pakistan’s impossibly high mountains whitened by frost all year round, farmers grappling with a lack of water have created their own ice towers.

    Warmer winters as a result of climate change has reduced the snow fall and subsequent seasonal snowmelt that feeds the valleys of Gilgit-Baltistan, a remote region home to K2, the world’s second-highest peak.

    Farmers in the Skardu valley, at an altitude of up to 2,600 metres (8,200 feet) in the shadow of the Karakoram mountain range, searched online for help in how to irrigate their apple and apricot orchards.

    “We discovered artificial glaciers on YouTube,” Ghulam Haider Hashmi told AFP.

    They watched the videos of Sonam Wangchuk, an environmental activist and engineer in the Indian region of Ladakh, less than 200 kilometres away across a heavily patrolled border, who developed the technique about 10 years ago.

    Water is piped from streams into the village, and sprayed into the air during the freezing winter temperatures.

    “The water must be propelled so that it freezes in the air when temperatures drop below zero, creating ice towers,” said Zakir Hussain Zakir, a professor at the University of Baltistan.

    The ice forms in the shape of cones that resemble Buddhist stupas, and act as a storage system – steadily melting throughout spring when temperatures rise.

    This photograph taken on March 18, 2025 shows an artificial glacier built by local residents during winters to conserve water for the summers at Pari village in Kharmang district, in Pakistan’s mountainous Gilgit-Baltistan region.  (Photo by Manzoor BALTI / AFP)

    Ice stupas

    Gilgit-Baltistan has 13,000 glaciers – more than any other country on Earth outside the polar regions.

    Their beauty has made the region one of the country’s top tourist destinations – towering peaks loom over the Old Silk Road, still visible from a highway transporting tourists between cherry orchards, glaciers and ice-blue lakes.

    Sher Muhammad, a specialist in the Hindu Kush-Himalayan mountain range that stretches from Afghanistan to Myanmar, however said most of the region’s water supply comes from snow melt in spring, with a fraction from annual glacial melt in summers.

    “From late October until early April, we were receiving heavy snowfall. But in the past few years, it’s quite dry,” Muhammad, a researcher at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), told AFP.

    The first “ice stupas” in Gilgit-Baltistan were created in 2018.

    Now, more than 20 villages make them every winter, and “more than 16,000 residents have access to water without having to build reservoirs or tanks”, said Rashid-ud-Din, provincial head of GLOF-2, a UN-Pakistan plan to adapt to the effects of climate change.

    Farmer Muhammad Raza told AFP that eight stupas were built in his village of Hussainabad this winter, trapping approximately 20 million litres of water in the ice.

    “We no longer have water shortages during planting,” he said, since the open-air reservoirs appeared on the slopes of the valley.

    “Before, we had to wait for the glaciers to melt in June to get water, but the stupas saved our fields,” said Ali Kazim, also a farmer in the valley.

    This photograph taken on March 19, 2025 shows local residents ploughing a farm at Hussainabad village in Skardu district, in Pakistan’s mountainous Gilgit-Baltistan region.  (Photo by Manzoor BALTI / AFP)

    Harvest seasons multiply

    Before the stupas, “we planted our crops in May”, said 26-year-old Bashir Ahmed who grows potatoes, wheat and barley in nearby Pari village which has also adopted the method.

    And “we only had one growing season, whereas now we can plant two or three times” a year.

    Temperatures in Pakistan rose twice as fast between 1981 and 2005 compared to the global average, putting the country on the front line of climate change impacts, including water scarcity.

    Its 240 million inhabitants live in a territory that is 80 percent arid or semi-arid and depends on rivers and streams originating in neighbouring countries for more than three-quarters of its water.

    Glaciers are melting rapidly in Pakistan and across the world, with a few exceptions including the Karakoram mountain range, increasing the risk of flooding and reducing water supply over the long term.

    “Faced with climate change, there are neither rich nor poor, neither urban nor rural; the whole world has become vulnerable,” said 24-year-old Yasir Parvi.

    “In our village, with the ice stupas, we decided to take a chance.”

    Jaguar and Land Rover maker pauses shipments to US as it develops post-tariff plans

    LONDON (AP) — The maker of Jaguar and Land Rover cars is pausing shipments to the US as Britain’s struggling auto industry begins to respond to the 25 per cent tax on vehicle imports imposed by President Donald Trump.

    Jaguar Land Rover Automotive, one of Britain’s biggest carmakers, said Saturday that the pause would take place this month.

    “The USA is an important market for JLR’s luxury brands,” the company said in a statement. “As we work to address the new trading terms without business partners, we are taking some short-term actions including a shipment pause in April, as we develop our mid- to longer-term plans.”

    Analysts said they expect other British carmakers to follow suit as the increased tariffs heap more pressure on an industry that is already struggling with declining demand at home and the need to retool their plants for the transition to electric vehicles.

    “I expect similar stoppages from other producers as firms take stock of what is unfolding,” said David Bailey, an automotive industry expert and professor of business economics at the University of Birmingham.

    The number of cars made in the UK dropped 13.9 per cent to 779,584 vehicles last year, according to the SMMT. More than 77 per cent of those vehicles were destined for the export market. UK factories export cars such as Nissan’s Qashqai and Juke, BMW Mini, and Toyota Corolla, as well as Land Rover and Jaguar models.

    “The industry is already facing multiple headwinds and this announcement comes at the worst possible time,” Mike Hawes, chief executive of the UK’s Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, said last week. “SMMT is in constant contact with the government and will be looking for trade discussions to accelerate as we need to secure a way forward that supports jobs and economic growth on both sides of the Atlantic.”

    UK carmakers have already taken steps to lessen the immediate impact of the tariffs by building stockpiles in the US before the increase took effect. SMMT figures show that exports to the US jumped 38.5 per cent from a year earlier in December, 12.4 per cent in January and 34.6 per cent in February.

    “This was manufacturers like JLR trying to get ahead of the game in terms of getting inventory to the US before the tariffs were implemented,” Bailey said.

    British car makers shipped GBP8.3 billion (USD10.7 billion) worth of vehicles to the US in the 12 months through September, making cars the single biggest goods export to the US, according to government statistics.

    But cars make up a relatively small part of overall trade between Britain and the US, which is heavily weighted toward services.

    Britain exported GBP179.4 billion (USD231.2 billion) of goods and services to the US in the year through September, with services making up 68.2 per cent of that figure.

    New cars are parked at Royal Portbury Docks, North Somerset, England, Friday April 4, 2025. (Ben Birchall/PA via AP)

    Tom Hardy and Guy Ritchie reunite for gritty crime series ‘MobLand’

    NEW YORK (AP) — Tom Hardy has collected troves of knowledge and skill throughout his journey as an actor, forming a megastar career. But any education he received from director Guy Ritchie during their time on the 2008 “RocknRolla” film was gained from afar.

    “I didn’t have very much to do with him … the first time I worked with him. Gerard (Butler) was leading that film and in many elements, we were support staff,” said Hardy. “So, I got to experience being on the Guy Ritchie set, and it was a bit from a position of not being a lead, and that’s a different responsibility.”

    But time can bring people and experiences back around, especially in Hollywood. Since that film 17 years ago, Ritchie has transitioned into esteemed directorial status. And Hardy has morphed into a box office superstar with films like “The Dark Night Rises” as the imposing villain Bane, and the titular role for Marvel’s “Venom” franchise. Now, the two have reunited for Ritchie’s gritty, yet sophisticated series “MobLand.”

    “I was really keen to go back and work with him because he’s a fellow Brit and he’s done quite incredible work,” explained Hardy. “I wanted to go and play with him, actually, and see what that was like now I’m older, and it was good fun.”

    The Paramount+ original series follows Harry Da Souza (Hardy), an intimidating, yet calm fixer for a London-based crime family hoping to find the missing son of a rival faction to prevent a catastrophic gang war.

    This image released by Paramount+ shows Tom Hardy, left, and Paddy Considine in a scene from “Mobland.” (Luke Varley/Paramount+ via AP)

    How did Hardy prepare to play such a menacing, yet even-keeled character?

    “No acting required” he said with a big laugh. “Just turn up and, ‘Oh, yeah, that makes sense’ and say the lines. Don’t bump into the furniture.”

    The second episode of the 10-part “MobLand” series airs Sunday on Paramount+.

    The series was created by Ronan Bennett, known for popular crime shows like “The Day of the Jackal” and “Top Boy,” and written with playwright Jez Butterworth. Ritchie serves as executive producer and directed the first two episodes. The “MobLand” idea began as a spinoff from Showtime’s popular “Ray Donovan” series, before becoming a stand-alone show.

    Two-time Oscar-winner Helen Mirren stars as the devious Maeve, matriarch and manipulator of the crime family, while Pierce Brosnan plays her husband and mob leader, marking a reunion for the pair who worked on the 1980 film “The Long Good Friday.”

    It may be hard to think of a role that Dame Mirren hasn’t played, but she found one with “MobLand.”

    “There are always characters out there that are going to take you by surprise and … I think, ‘Oh my god, I’ve never done anything like that before,” said the “1923” star who believes the line between shooting film and TV is now nearly nonexistent. “That’s one of the sort of beauties of my job, actually, is to constantly be entering into such very, very different worlds.”

    Mirren said the opportunity to work with Hardy was intriguing.

    “Tom’s involvement in it was one of the reasons I signed up because I’ve admired his work over many years,” Mirren said. “Different actors, you can see, ‘Oh, they’re a great actor’ … they can perform. But certain actors like Tom, it’s an interior power that just communicates with the camera. And Tom’s got that. You know what? It’s called star power.”

    The “MobLand” cast features Paddy Considine of “House of the Dragon” fame, Joanne Froggatt, Lara Pulver, Anson Boon and Mandeep Dhillon. While this show technically reunites Mirren and Brosnan, they also shot the upcoming “The Thursday Murder Club” film prior to this project.

    While much was unknown when Brosnan signed on, “MobLand” had all the right ingredients for the former James Bond to dive in, starting with Ritchie, who released his Netflix series “The Gentlemen” last year.

    “He’s naughty. He’s cheeky. He’s bold,” said Brosnan. “I love his work. His movies. The way he’s acquitted himself on the landscape of cinema. He’s a unique talent all his own … so I said yes. I wanted to go back to London. I wanted to work.”

    Next for Hardy is the crime drama film “Havoc” premiering later this month, and there’s chatter of a potential sequel to his 2015 “Mad Max: Fury Road.” A second season of “Taboo” is on the way — nearly a decade after its debut. What about a “Spider-Man” and “Venom” crossover? Hardy addressed the rumors that an alleged project fell apart, clarifying it was never in the works.

    “People embellish a story. I just said I would have loved to work with ‘Spider-Man,’ but it never happened, which is a fact. It hasn’t happened. And I’m no longer working with ‘Venom’ … it is a shame because my kids would love to watch Venom and Spider-Man together,” said Hardy. “I would have liked that.”

    Paste to power

    AFP – In a northern Tunisian olive grove, Yassine Khelifi’s small workshop hums as a large machine turns olive waste into a valuable energy source in a country heavily reliant on imported fuel.

    Holding a handful of compacted olive residue – a thick paste left over from oil extraction – Khelifi said, “This is what we need today. How can we turn something worthless into wealth?”

    For generations, rural households in Tunisia have burned olive waste for cooking and heating, or used it as animal feed.

    The International Olive Council estimated Tunisia will be the world’s third-largest olive oil producer in 2024-2025, with an expected yield of 340,000 tonnes.

    The waste generated by the oil extraction is staggering.

    ABOVE & BELOW: A man arranges rolls of olive pomace; and operating a machine to turn olive pomace into heating briquettes. PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP
    ABOVE & BELOW: An employee carrying; and arranging rolls of olive pomace. PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP

    An engineer who grew up in a family of farmers Khelifi founded Bioheat in 2022 to tackle the issue. He recalled watching workers in olive mills use the olive residue as fuel.

    “I always wondered how this material could burn for so long without going out,” he said. 

    “That’s when I asked myself, ‘Why not turn it into energy?'”

    Beyond profit, Khelifi hopes his startup helps “reducing the use of firewood as the country faces deforestation and climate change”.

    At his workshop, employees transport truckloads of olive waste, stacking it high before feeding it into the processing machines.

    The material is then compacted into cylindrical briquettes and left to dry for a month under the sun and in greenhouses before its packaging and sale.

    Khelifi began developing his idea in 2018 after he travelled across Europe searching for a machine to turn the olive paste into long-burning fuel.

    Unable to find the right technology, he returned to Tunisia and spent four years experimenting with various motors and mechanical parts.

    By 2021, he had developed a machine that produced briquettes with just eight per cent moisture.

    He said this amount significantly reduces carbon emissions compared to firewood, which requires months of drying and often retains more than double the amount of moisture.

    Bioheat found a market among Tunisian restaurants, guesthouses, and schools in underdeveloped regions, where winter temperatures at times drop below freezing.

    But the majority of its production – about 60 per cent – is set for exports to France and Canada, Khelifi said.

    The company now employs 10 people and is targeting production of 600 tonnes of briquettes in 2025, he added.

    Selim Sahli, 40, who runs a guesthouse, said he replaced traditional firewood with Khelifi’s briquettes for heating and cooking.

    “It’s an eco-friendly and cost-effective alternative,” he said. “It’s clean, easy to use, and has reduced my heating costs by a third.”

    Owner of a pizza shop on the outskirts of Tunis Mohamed Harrar praised the briquettes for reducing smoke emissions, which he said previously irritated his neighbours.

    “Besides, this waste carries the soul of Tunisian olives and gives the pizza a special flavour,” he added.

    Given Tunisia’s significant olive oil production, waste byproducts pose both a challenge and an opportunity.

    Agricultural and rural development expert Noureddine Nasr said around 600,000 tonnes of olive waste is produced annually.

    “Harnessing this waste can protect the environment, create jobs, and generate wealth,” he said. Nasr believes repurposing olive waste could also help alleviate Tunisia’s heavy dependence on imported fuel.

    The country imports more than 60 per cent of its energy needs, a reliance that widens its trade deficit and strains government subsidies, according to a 2023 World Bank report.

    Fuel and gas shortages are common during winter, particularly in Tunisia’s northwestern provinces, where households struggle to keep warm.

    Redirecting agricultural waste into alternative energy sources could ease this burden.

    UNHCR seeks funding to scale up to Myanmar’s quake survivors

    BERNAMA – UNHCR, the United Nations Refugee Agency, is appealing for USD16 million to assist 1.2 million people who survived last week’s devastating earthquake in Myanmar, Emirates News Agency (WAM) reported.

    ‘’UNHCR will use the funds to expand its emergency relief efforts, manage displacement sites and support vulnerable people in six affected regions until the end of the year,” said UNHCR spokesperson Babar Baloch at a press briefing at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.

    In the week since the earthquake struck central Myanmar, UNHCR has deployed existing in-country stocks, including plastic sheets and kitchen sets, for some 25,000 survivors in Mandalay, Sagaing and Bago regions, as well as the capital, Nay Pyi Taw, and parts of Shan State (South).

    As part of the inter-agency response to the earthquake, UNHCR is co-leading the response on shelter, emergency relief items, camp coordination and protection.

    “The agency is mobilising supplies from its Myanmar warehouses for an additional 25,000 people but will need to replenish stocks urgently to meet the massive needs in areas suffering from the impact of the earthquake on top of four years of conflict and displacement.

    “These relief items are critical for people who have lost everything, including the means to buy supplies as some local markets are not yet functioning,” Babar Baloch added.

    “Additional funding will allow UNHCR to procure and distribute emergency shelter kits and relief items and provide assistance to survivors during the initial weeks and months of recovery. Where displacement sites are set up, UNHCR will coordinate work to improve service delivery and mitigate risks.”

    Through the funding, UNHCR will also strengthen protection services, including legal assistance, psychosocial support and interventions for children, women and people with disabilities.

    Efforts will continue to advocate for and facilitate safe humanitarian access to affected areas through local partnerships, the UNHCR spokesperson concluded.

    Patients at a make-shift tent opened for medical care after last week’s earthquake in Naypyitaw, Myanmar. PHOTO: AP

    Malaysian police confirm boy rescued by passersby after falling into monsoon drain

    JOHOR BAHRU (BERNAMA) – Johor police confirmed that a 10-year-old boy, who was swept away by strong currents after falling into a drain at Taman Kota Masai, Pasir Gudang, Malaysia was rescued by passersby.

    Seri Alam police chief ACP Mohd Sohaimi Ishak verified a one-minute-and-36-second viral video on the Facebook page Lanun Selatan, which showed the boy being carried away by the current. “The boy and his friend were heading to his uncle’s house after Friday prayers when he slipped and fell into the drain. He was swept away by the fast-moving current due to heavy rain,” he said in a statement yesterday.

    Mohd Sohaimi said passersby rescued the boy about 100 metres from where he fell. He escaped with minor scrapes to his knee and elbow. He urged parents and guardians to supervise their children, especially during the rainy season, and avoid risky outdoor activities. The video ignited widespread criticism of the individual who filmed the incident without stepping in to help, with many condemning the act as prioritising the wrong things and lacking humanity.

    PHOTO: ENVATO

    The silent mind

    PARIS (AFP) – Mel May only realised she was different while reading a news article one day.

    “Wait, what? Some people hear a voice in their head?” she thought at the time.

    She was stunned to discover that this was not just a figure of speech – her friends were actually chatting to themselves in their minds.

    May, a 30-year-old Australian video producer who lives in New York, remembers trying to explain to her family, “I don’t have a voice in my head.”

    “My dad was like, ‘You are lying’,” she told AFP.

    But her father came around once May started working with psychologists who agreed – she is one of the very rare people who lack inner speech.

    PHOTO: ENVATO
    PHOTO: ENVATO
    PHOTO: ENVATO
    PHOTO: ENVATO

    The idea that some people might not experience this phenomenon is so new that a clinical name, anendophasia, was only proposed for it in a paper last year.

    The inner monologue has proven extremely difficult to study because it relies on people being able to describe how they think – and it turns out we are unreliable narrators.

    “People are ignorant about the characteristics of their own inner experience,” psychology professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas Russell Hurlburt told AFP.

    “And it doesn’t matter how confident you are,” added Hurlburt, a pioneer in the field who has studied people with a range of inner experiences, including May.

    Most people assume their inner voice is speaking all the time but it is actually just one of several phenomena of our inner experience, Hurlburt said.

    Others include visual imagery, ‘unsymbolised thinking’, feelings and sensory awareness.

    To study these phenomena, Hurlburt conducted research that would have a beeper go off at random while study participants were reading Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis and describe what was in their head.

    Rather than speaking the words in their inner voice, they were actually creating visual images – ‘their own video’ – of the book, he said.

    People also have different kinds of inner speech. Some have multiple voices, while bilingual people can switch languages.

    California-based particle physicist Giordon Stark, who was born deaf, has a mix of inner speech and visual images.

    “I don’t think of the word ‘bed’ in my head but I rather visualise the idea of my head hitting the pillow,” which is similar to the sign language gesture for the word, the 34-year-old told AFP.

    Pressed to estimate how often people are hearing an inner voice, Hurlburt emphasised that much more research is needed on the subject.

    But a ballpark figure could be that people are “inner speaking” 20 to 25 per cent of the time, he said.

    That average includes people who have far more frequent speech and those with none, such as May.

    “Her inner experience is close to being nothing but she’s the exception rather than the rule,” Hurlburt said.

    Leading inner voice researcher at France’s Universite Grenoble Alpes Helene Loevenbruck has had to change her mind on whether people like May could even exist.

    “I thought everyone had an inner voice until very recently,” she told AFP.

    The idea ran counter to her previous work, which suggested inner speech was an important part of speaking out loud, serving as an “internal simulation”.

    But the work of Hurlburt – and the discovery that some people cannot create mental images, a condition called aphantasia – changed her mind.

    May believes her lack of an inner voice is why she has never been an anxious person – and why meditation is very easy for her.

    Philosopher specialising in inner speech at the University of Barcelona Daniel Gregory said a potential disadvantage of having more inner speech is “a vulnerability to negative thought patterns, to rumination”.

    But we can also “use inner speech to encourage ourselves, to give ourselves positive messages”, he told AFP. May said a common response to hearing that she has no inner monologue is, “Wow, that must be amazing. I’m really quick to push back on that because I think certainly there are pros and cons,” she said.

    “I reflect a lot about what aspects of the lived experience I’m missing out on.”

    May emphasised that lacking an inner voice did not mean she was incapable of thought.

    “I’m not dead inside. I know stuff and I feel stuff,” said May.

    Asked what was running through her head, she responded simply.

    “Well, I’m sitting here, I’m listening to you and then I just automatically respond. And that’s it.“

    Let’s get cubical

    AP – The latest IP to be mined into a Hollywood blockbuster is appropriately a video game that celebrates digging: A Minecraft Movie.

    Like The Super Mario Bros Movie and Jumanji before it, A Minecraft Movie centres on four misfits who enter a mysterious portal that pulls them into a strange land, this time cubic, like Lego only enhanced.

    The Jared Hess-directed action-adventure artfully straddles the line between delighting preteen gamers and keeping their parents awake. It’s an often-bananas adaptation, with bizarre digressions into turquoise blouses and tater tot pizzas. It has Jennifer Coolidge being very Jennifer Coolidge. Need we say more?

    If you’ve never heard of – or its denizens like Creepers, Piglins, Villagers and Endermen – you are in big trouble. Consult with the closest 10-year-old immediately (I have one and he noticed a sweet nod to the late YouTuber Technoblade, an Easter egg of sorts).

    The movie is faithful to the world of the game, while adding some things – orbs and crystals – to aid the plot. But if you come in cold and spot pandas and folks punching through earth, you’ll likely side with one human character who said, “This place makes no sense.”

    ABOVE & BELOW: Photos show scenes from ‘A Minecraft Movie’. PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP

    Our travellers – a sweet brother and sister (Emma Myers and Sebastian Eugene Hansen), their nutty real estate agent (Danielle Brooks) and a deeply dumb, washed-up pro video game player (Jason Momoa) – are guided by Jack Black, playing an expert crafter named Steve stranded in the world.

    If it does anything, A Minecraft Movie marks the comedic coming of age of Momoa, who has shown glimpses of his chops in the Aquaman and Fast X movies. But when he’s not on screen in this one, it leaves the movie slack, which is saying a lot when you have Black being his full-force, over-the-top Black.

    “There’s no ‘i’ in ‘team’ but there are two ‘i’s in ‘winning,'” Momoa said as Garrett ‘The Garbage Man’ Garrison, who is fond of fingerless gloves and a Barbie-pink leather jacket with a fringe. In another scene, he noted, “Paper doesn’t grow on trees.”

    The screenplay written by Chris Bowman, Hubbel Palmer, Neil Widener, Gavin James and Chris Galletta is as loosey-goosey as you’d expect from five different voices, with a traditional Marvel-style battle at the end fuelled by plenty of “Let’s do this!” declarations but with a surprisingly goofball first half.

    Like countless films before it, A Minecraft Movie is all about the quest to go home, which in this case means navigating zombies, skeletons shooting fire-tipped arrows and a place called The Nether, a perpetually dark hell where horrible creatures mine for gold. For some reason, the ruler there, a witch, has glowing eyes and a British accent.

    The writers make some America’s Got Talent jokes, Black has a few songs – including a bizarre Steve’s Lava Chicken – and we spend an inordinate of time focused on Momoa’s body, but it all ends in a dance party.

    The movie has a Dark Crystal-meets-Transformers vibe, a too-subtle message about financial failure and something about friendship. – Mark Kennedy

    New discoveries in Egypt reveal history of Ramesseum Temple

    XINHUA – A joint Egyptian-French archaeological mission uncovered tombs and buildings that reveal more history about the Ramesseum Temple in the southern city of Luxor, the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities said in a statement.

    The mission uncovered a group of tombs dating back to the Third Intermediate Period (about 1069-525 BCE), and storage areas for olive oil and honey in the vicinity of the temple.

    Excavations inside the temple revealed the ‘House of Life’ (a scientific school attached to the major temples), including the architectural layout of the educational institution and a rich archaeological collection that included the remains of school drawings and toys. It is the first evidence of the existence of a school within the Ramesseum Temple.

    The team also found a group of buildings that were likely used as administrative offices on the eastern side of the temple.

    Secretary-general of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities Mohamed Ismail Khaled said that the discoveries indicate a complete hierarchical system of civil servants within this temple, as it was not only a place of worship, but also a centre for the redistribution of stored or manufactured products, which benefited the inhabitants of the area, including the artisans of the city monastery, who were subject to royal authority within the system of provinces.

    Egyptian Minister of Tourism and Antiquities Sherif Fathy commended the mission’s efforts in uncovering new secrets for the history of the Ramesseum temple and the religious and societal role in Ancient Egypt.

    Ramses II, whose reign (1279-1213 BCE) was the second longest in Egyptian history, built the Ramesseum Temple during his reign.

    In 27 BCE, an earthquake hit and damaged the temple.

    Artefacts uncovered from a tomb in Luxor, Egypt. PHOTO: XINHUA

    India’s Modi in Sri Lanka for defence and energy deals

    COLOMBO (AFP) – Sri Lanka’s leader rolled out the red carpet on yesterday for Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

    President Anura Kumara Dissanayake welcomed Modi – the first foreign dignitary to visit Colombo since the leader swept elections last year – with a 19-gun salute.

    Dissanayake and Modi signed agreements on energy, defence and health, but the visit’s highlight was the launch of an Indian-backed 120 megawatt solar power project.

    The solar plant on the island’s northeastern Trincomalee district had been stalled for years, but reinvigorated with New Delhi’s backing as a joint project.

    Modi, who praised his “spectacular welcome” to Sri Lanka after arriving in Colombo late on Friday evening, was given an honour guard parade in the capital’s Independence Square.

    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Sri Lankan President Anura Kumara Dissanayake during an official welcome ceremony in Colombo, Sri Lanka. PHOTO: AP

    Dissanayake’s first foreign visit was to New Delhi in December and a visit to Beijing in January. China has emerged as Sri Lanka’s largest single bilateral creditor, accounting for more than half of its USD14 billion bilateral debt at the time the island defaulted on its sovereign debt in 2022.

    Beijing was also the first to restructure its loans to Sri Lanka, a move that cleared the way for the island to emerge from that year’s worst-ever economic meltdown.

    Colombo also signed an agreement announced in January with a Chinese state-owned company to invest USD3.7 billion on an oil refinery in the island’s south.

    It would be Sri Lanka’s largest single foreign investment and is seen as crucial for the island’s economy.

    Modi’s visit to Sri Lanka comes after a summit in Thailand and a string of meetings with leaders of regional nations as he sought to shore up India’s relations with neighbours.

    On the sidelines of the Bangkok BIMSTEC meeting – the grouping of the seven nations on the Bay of Bengal – Modi held a rare face-to-face meeting with Myanmar’s junta chief Min Aung Hlaing.

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