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Ga-Rankuwa police heighten alert after carjacking attempt
Ga-Rankuwa police heighten alert after carjacking attempt

The Citizen

time07-08-2025

  • The Citizen

Ga-Rankuwa police heighten alert after carjacking attempt

A recent attempted carjacking in Ga-Rankuwa has prompted local police to warn residents about crime hotspots in the area. In shared CCTV footage, a car is seen being blocked on its path by armed suspects wearing balaclavas, who then shoot at it. According to Ga-Rankuwa SAPS spokesperson, Shimi Tsheole, the incident happened on the afternoon of August 5. 'The carjacking attempt occurred at around 16:34 near the Ga-Rankuwa Cemetery,' he said. He said the victim was driving from work when she allegedly encountered a car with armed occupants wearing balaclavas. 'It is alleged that [the] complainant was driving from work to home when encountering a silver KIA with occupants wearing balaclavas and with firearms,' he said. He added the suspects tried to block the victim's path before she could reverse her vehicle and flee the scene. 'The said suspects fired two shots at the victim as per the complaint received by the police.' He said no suspect has been arrested, however, police are investigating a case of attempted carjacking and attempted murder. 'No suspects have been identified, therefore no arrests have been made so far. Investigation in this matter is still at an early stage,' he said. Following the incident, Tsheole raised concern over increasing in crime in parts of Ga-Rankuwa. 'SAPS Ga-Rankuwa is however concerned with the increase in crime at a mountain along the M17 Road opposite Sefako Makgatho University,' he said. He said crimes such as carjacking and armed robberies are more prevalent in that area. 'The place is a hunting ground for criminals. Police appeal to members of the community to refrain from using the mountain as a praying area,' he cautioned. He added that Zone 14 is also a hotspot for crime, and the precinct usually experiences an increase in crime from Thursday to Sunday. 'The station usually experiences [a] slight increase from Thursday 20:00 to Sunday 02:00,' he said. Was this going to he a hijacking or kidnapping?? Because this going to be an accident. — TAC50 (@sniper_elite__) August 6, 2025 However, he also said the station's crime prevention tactics have resulted in the decrease of crime overall. 'Station commander Brigadier [Paballo] Nkosi increased her crime prevention operations around those areas, resulting in a significant decline in cases reported,' he said. He added that intervention by the Tshwane District Commissioner, Major-General Samuel Thine, through Operation Shanela is also playing a role in the decrease of crime in the areas. The police urges community members to organise neighbourhood watches. Tsheole said residents can report crime or suspicious activity by contacting the police on: -Crime stop: 0860010111 -Any network: dial 112 -SAPS Ga-Rankuwa landline: 012 7978855 -SAPS Ga-Rankuwa cell: 082 416 0832 WATCH: Do you have more information about the story? Please send us an email to [email protected] or phone us on 083 625 4114. For free breaking and community news, visit Rekord's websites: Rekord East For more news and interesting articles, like Rekord on Facebook, follow us on Twitter or Instagram or TikTok.

China's Trump card: using rare earth elements as geopolitical bargaining chips
China's Trump card: using rare earth elements as geopolitical bargaining chips

Yahoo

time06-08-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

China's Trump card: using rare earth elements as geopolitical bargaining chips

When camouflage-clad, rifle-carrying rebels from the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) led an offensive to seize the northern town of Pangwa near the Myanmar-China border last October, few recognised the international implications. It marked the latest escalation in a seven-decade-long civil conflict between Myanmar's brutal military regime and hundreds of armed groups like the KIA, rooted in the resource-rich provinces spanning China, Thailand, India and Myanmar. More significantly, the KIA's offensive consolidated its control over Kachin State, home to nearly all of Myanmar's rare earth mines – and nearly half of the world's supply of the heavy rare earths used in magnets for car motors, electric vehicles (EVs), wind turbines, semiconductors and defence technology. Over the following months, high-ranking politicians and business executives in Beijing, Washington and boardrooms across Europe sat up and took notice. Ford Motors' CEO Jim Farley said in June that the auto giant had been forced to close one of its plants due to the rare earth shortage. Days later, executives from Toyota and General Motors told the White House their suppliers faced acute shortages that could shut production lines. Even as KIA spokesperson Colonel Naw Bu said the rebel group had policies in place to continue rare earth mining and negotiate with businessmen, the KIA raised taxes on miners and stifled production of dysprosium and terbium, sending the price of the latter skyrocketing. The KIA does not have the capability to process the rare earth elements (REEs) mined under its supervision. For that, Myanmar needs China to process the elements into magnets that power EVs and wind turbines around the world. Instead, China has closed trading posts between the two countries. Beijing's ultimatum Soon after seizing Pangwa, the KIA turned to Bhamo, another strategically vital town in Kachin State where rebels and the military junta continue to wrestle for control. Beijing's response was to threaten to halt buying the REEs mined in the territory. In July, Reuters reported that Chinese foreign ministry officials issued an ultimatum to the KIA: abandon the offensive into Bhamo and Beijing would establish cross-border trade, or else face full economic isolation. Such a move would be a significant blow to Myanmar's already bleak economic outlook, amid a 'polycrisis' of intensifying conflict, natural disasters and deepening poverty. It could also inflict wider turmoil on global heavy REE supply chains. Not only does China hold the largest reserves of rare earths in the world, estimated at some 44 million tonnes, the country also processes nearly 90% of global REEs, according to GlobalData's Global Rare Earths Mining Review, published in January. 'The cessation of imports could jeopardise not only global supply chains but also the stability of China's domestic industries,' Isabel Al-Dhahir, principal analyst at GlobalData, tells Mining Technology. 'Considering the historic scale of imports from the Kachin State, China's threat of stopping purchases of REEs from KIA-controlled territories is an intriguing negotiation tactic.' The significance of Myanmar's civil war and China's looming presence will be felt hardest in heavy rare earths, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA). 'Today, China and Myanmar together account for around two-thirds of global mined supply of heavy rare earths', an IEA spokesperson tells Mining Technology. '[But] China represents around 90% of global refined heavy rare earths supply.' While the China-Myanmar border remains strictly controlled, a gradual flow of existing inventories to China restarted in March. Despite China's inventories of raw materials at refining plants, which come from domestic mines and imports from Laos and Brazil, there are likely to be shortages for heavy rare earth feedstocks at Chinese processors if the border conflict continues, according to the IEA's Global Critical Minerals Outlook. 'Therefore, if the conflict in Myanmar continues, it could lead to a price increase for the medium and heavy rare earths, while the impact on light rare earths would be relatively limited,' the IEA's report predicts. A Trump card In many ways, the China-KIA saga is a microcosm of Beijing's willingness to wield its dominance over the processing and refinement stages of the REE supply chain to further its geopolitical aims on the global stage. However, while pulling the plug on trade can leave beleaguered economies like Myanmar's on the brink of collapse, does China have the same leverage over multi-trillion-dollar economies like the US? The prevalence of REEs across numerous key industries indicates that Beijing's leverage remains impactfully high, above all on the auto industry. As China and the US continue to verbally and economically spar, REE supply has become an ever more sought-after bargaining chip, as seen with the previous economic conflict around mining exports between Australia and China. Reciprocal tariffs were Beijing's go-to response when US President Trump imposed universal tariffs on his so-called 'Liberation Day' (2 April), which included a total of 54% total tariffs on Chinese goods. China's President Xi Jinping retaliated with a 34% tariff on all US imports on 4 April. On the same day, China's Ministry of Commerce announced it would require companies to apply for a licence before exporting seven types of rare earths: dysprosium, gadolinium, lutetium, samarium, scandium, terbium and yttrium. Both nations spent the following week escalating tariffs tit-for-tat, with the US raising tariffs to 104%, then 145%, and China to 84%, then 125%. It took until 12 May for Chinese and US officials to agree a temporary reduction in reciprocal tariffs – but the Trump administration would later reveal that China did not ease restrictions on REE exports, which was supposedly part of the deal. On 26 June, Trump announced that the US and China had signed an agreement on trade, although he did not mention any specifics. US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told Bloomberg that 'they are going to deliver rare earths to us', adding that the US would 'take down our countermeasures' once Beijing did. 'The sporadic nature of Trump's trade policies and resulting retaliations adds an extra layer of uncertainty to US manufacturers, with some planning month to month,' Al-Dhahir says. 'The restrictions could incentivise the US to expand its domestic production of REEs.' Could the US bolster rare earth production to compete with China? Domestic REE reserves are a chink in the US' geopolitical armour when compared to China. Currently, the only operational mine in the US is Mountain Pass in California. Its production has been 'steadily expanding to account for approximately 15% of global rare earth mining', Al-Dhahir adds. Companies not traditionally active in the mining industry have identified this potential and begun investing. In July, Apple announced a $500m investment in MP Materials, the Las Vegas-headquartered REE company that owns and operates the Mountain Pass mine. This investment will secure the fabrication of US-made rare earth magnets from MP Materials' factory in Fort Worth, Texas, as well as the development of a rare earth recycling facility in Mountain Pass. While deals like the MP Materials-Apple partnership bolster the US' REE supplies, China's dominance looks set to remain undisputed – and Beijing's geopolitical sword-brandishing is likely to continue, with Myanmar and the KIA the latest in the line of fire. 'The prevalence of REEs across so many industries makes them indispensable. Rare earths therefore constitute a significant component of China's geopolitical toolkit,' Al-Dhahir concludes. 'The country's emphasis on REEs can be traced back to the 1980s when the then-President Deng Xiaoping likened the importance of rare earths to China to the significance of oil to the Middle East.' It seems unlikely that China's current president, Xi Jinping, will play anything but hardball with Myanmar, the US, or any other geopolitical entity as he seeks to quash the unrest and capitalise on the importance of REEs over the decade to come. "China's Trump card: using rare earth elements as geopolitical bargaining chips" was originally created and published by Mining Technology, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site.

Flash floods kill 6 in Myanmar-China border town
Flash floods kill 6 in Myanmar-China border town

Free Malaysia Today

time06-08-2025

  • Climate
  • Free Malaysia Today

Flash floods kill 6 in Myanmar-China border town

The northern town of Laiza is a stronghold of the Kachin Independence Army. (EPA Images pic) YANGON : Monsoon floods in a rebel-held Myanmar town on the country's mountainous border with China have killed six people, a spokesman for the armed group controlling the area said today. The northern town of Laiza bordering China's Yunnan province has reported flash flooding since early Monday, when muddy waist-high waters began to stream through the streets. Laiza is a stronghold of the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), which has for decades commanded control of its own ethnic enclave and emerged as one of the most powerful factions in Myanmar's civil war. 'A lot of water flowed down the mountain to the river,' said KIA spokesman Naw Bu. 'The flow of water was too strong and destroyed areas surrounding the river,' he added. 'Six people were killed in the flood and 100 houses were destroyed.' Rescue operation had begun today, he said, but were being hampered by road blockages. 'All of the roads have been damaged and the roads disappeared in some areas,' said one resident, who declined to be named for security reasons. 'The water rose suddenly.' More than 3.5 million people are currently displaced in Myanmar amid the civil war sparked by a 2021 coup, many sheltering in temporary camps, leaving them exposed to the elements. The resident said flooding was 'terrible' around local camps for the displaced where some shelters had been swept away and people had been wounded. Myanmar is in the midst of its monsoon season when daily deluges are common. But scientists say hazardous weather events are becoming more frequent and severe around the world as a result of human-driven climate change.

Flash floods kill 6 in Myanmar-China border town
Flash floods kill 6 in Myanmar-China border town

Arab News

time06-08-2025

  • Climate
  • Arab News

Flash floods kill 6 in Myanmar-China border town

YANGON: Monsoon floods in a rebel-held Myanmar town on the country's mountainous border with China have killed six people, a spokesman for the armed group controlling the area said Wednesday. The northern town of Laiza bordering China's Yunnan province has reported flash flooding since early Monday, when muddy waist-high waters began to stream through the streets. Laiza is a stronghold of the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), which has for decades commanded control of its own ethnic enclave and emerged as one of the most powerful factions in Myanmar's civil war. 'A lot of water flowed down the mountain to the river,' said KIA spokesman Naw Bu. 'The flow of water was too strong and destroyed areas surrounding the river,' he added. 'Six people were killed in the flood and 100 houses were destroyed.' Rescue operation had begun on Wednesday, he said, but were being hampered by road blockages. 'All of the roads have been damaged and the roads disappeared in some areas,' said one resident, who declined to be named for security reasons. 'The water rose suddenly.' More than 3.5 million people are currently displaced in Myanmar amid the civil war sparked by a 2021 coup, many sheltering in temporary camps, leaving them exposed to the elements. The resident said flooding was 'terrible' around local camps for the displaced where some shelters had been swept away and people had been wounded. Myanmar is in the midst of its monsoon season when daily deluges are common. But scientists say hazardous weather events are becoming more frequent and severe around the world as a result of human-driven climate change.

Sheikh Saud elected KIA MD
Sheikh Saud elected KIA MD

Kuwait Times

time06-08-2025

  • Business
  • Kuwait Times

Sheikh Saud elected KIA MD

Sheikh Saud Salem Al-Sabah KUWAIT: The new board of directors of Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA) held its first meeting on Tuesday and unanimously elected new member Sheikh Saud Salem Al-Sabah as the new managing director for the country's agency that runs hundreds of billions of surpluses. Sheikh Saud was among five new members appointed to the board of directors by an Amiri decree on Monday. The meeting was chaired by KIA chairman, Minister of Electricity and Water and acting minister of finance Sabeeh Al-Mukhaizeem. Mukhaizeem said in a statement that the KIA board of directors will continue its policy to develop the Authority, strengthen governance and manage state funds at a high degree of competence. This, he added, will boost KIA's strategic role in supporting the national economy and enhance Kuwait's position at the map of global investments. Mukhaizeem was appointed acting finance minister following the resignation of Noura Al-Fassam as finance minister after one year of office. No reason was given for the resignation of Fassam, an experienced economist and banker. Kuwait does not officially announce the size of its assets run by KIA, but unofficial reports put the investments at around $1 trillion. In the meantime, a three-day donation campaign to raise funds for the Gaza relief collected over KD 5 million on its third and final day, the ministry of social affairs said on Tuesday.

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