Pacific Islands Reject Missile Test in 'Blue Continent'

Monitors and Pacific officials say the Chinese ballistic missile test landed in the heart of their shared 'blue continent'. TORSTEN BLACKWOOD / AFP
Monitors and Pacific officials say the Chinese ballistic missile test landed in the heart of their shared 'blue continent'. TORSTEN BLACKWOOD / AFP
TT

Pacific Islands Reject Missile Test in 'Blue Continent'

Monitors and Pacific officials say the Chinese ballistic missile test landed in the heart of their shared 'blue continent'. TORSTEN BLACKWOOD / AFP
Monitors and Pacific officials say the Chinese ballistic missile test landed in the heart of their shared 'blue continent'. TORSTEN BLACKWOOD / AFP

Pacific Islands denounced China's ballistic missile test because they say it landed in the heart of their shared "blue continent", politicians and analysts told AFP.

Even Pacific nations indebted to Beijing joined criticism of Monday's submarine-launched ballistic missile test, which reached far into the Pacific Ocean.

The term "Blue continent" is used by Pacific Islands to describe a joint home and shared stewardship of the ocean, said AFP.

The nuclear-capable missile fitted with a dummy warhead landed somewhere between Nauru, Tuvalu and the Solomon Islands, according to monitors and Pacific officials.

The reported landing spot lies amidst the Pacific islands, but in one of the few patches between them that is not part of an exclusive economic zone (EEZ).

China said the missile test "was not directed at any country" and breached no international law.

But Palau President Surangel Whipps, who will host an annual meeting of Pacific leaders next month, said the missile landed "right between our EEZs".

"We have missiles going right into the heart of the Pacific, unannounced," he said in an interview with AFP.

China's Pacific envoy had days earlier met with the Pacific Islands Forum, after Beijing donated $1 million to the regional bloc, but made no mention of a looming test.

The forum's 18 members see themselves as custodians of 20 percent of the earth's surface, jointly managing fisheries and fighting climate change, within combined EEZs spanning 25 million square kilometers (10 million square miles).

The missile appeared to have landed in a "narrow corridor of international waters" between the surrounding islands' EEZs, said the director of the Pacific Islands program at the Lowy Institute, Oliver Nobetau.

"It begs the question, why couldn't it have been tested to the north of the Pacific Ocean, where there is an expanse of international waters?" he said.

- 'Living fabric' -

A dozen Pacific countries have protested the missile test, including small nations that borrowed from China for their infrastructure, and its closest Pacific security partner, the Solomon Islands.

International maritime law expert Donald Rothwell said while vast EEZs give island states control over ocean resources and coast guard patrols, they don't prohibit missile tests.

Ruth Cross Kwansing, a government minister in Kiribati, said the concept of a "Blue Pacific continent" is fundamental to the region, and is driving the indignation.

"What happens in any part of this ocean vibrates through all of us," she told AFP.

"You have to shift your perspective from a map of dispersed and isolated islands to one where the ocean itself is the living fabric that binds us all together," she said.

"Our seas are not an empty void or a buffer zone between global powers -- they are our estate, our livelihood, and our identity as stewards of the sea."

Anna Naupa, a Pacific security expert at the Australian National University, said despite colonial history fragmenting the map, the idea of a contiguous Pacific continent had re-emerged as island states amplified their collective voice on climate change.

"The Pacific upset is consistent with defending the Ocean of Peace principles," Naupa said, referring to a declaration made by leaders last year that the region stay free of nuclear weapons testing.

The short notice of the test China gave only a handful of countries was seen as disrespectful, she added.

- 'Still haunted' -

Papua New Guinea's Prime Minister James Marape said Monday it should be the "last such missile test conducted in Pacific waters", a message extended not only to China, but all military powers.

The United States conducted 67 nuclear detonations between 1946 and 1958 in the Marshall Islands, and continues to conduct ballistic missile tests there under a defense compact. The Marshall Islands' President Hilda Heine cited the weight of these historical nuclear scars in criticizing China's missile.

France and Britain also conducted Pacific nuclear tests prior to 1996.

All missile testing in the region, including China's, will be discussed at next month's Pacific leaders meeting, said Kiribati's Kwansing.

Many Pacific islands are "still haunted by the legacy of World War II fought in the region, as well as the long term effects of nuclear testing", said Nobetau.

"What strikes the fear in Pacific leaders is that it's a clear demonstration of the reach of Chinese capabilities, but also a preview to what kinetic warfare would look like," he said.



WHO Official: Congo Ebola Outbreak Still Spreading Largely Undetected

FILE PHOTO: Congolese health workers receive a patient at the Rwampara General Hospital as authorities intensify efforts to contain a new Ebola outbreak involving the Bundibugyo strain outbreak in Rwampara outside Bunia, Ituri province, Democratic Republic of Congo, May 21, 2026. REUTERS/Stringer//File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Congolese health workers receive a patient at the Rwampara General Hospital as authorities intensify efforts to contain a new Ebola outbreak involving the Bundibugyo strain outbreak in Rwampara outside Bunia, Ituri province, Democratic Republic of Congo, May 21, 2026. REUTERS/Stringer//File Photo
TT

WHO Official: Congo Ebola Outbreak Still Spreading Largely Undetected

FILE PHOTO: Congolese health workers receive a patient at the Rwampara General Hospital as authorities intensify efforts to contain a new Ebola outbreak involving the Bundibugyo strain outbreak in Rwampara outside Bunia, Ituri province, Democratic Republic of Congo, May 21, 2026. REUTERS/Stringer//File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Congolese health workers receive a patient at the Rwampara General Hospital as authorities intensify efforts to contain a new Ebola outbreak involving the Bundibugyo strain outbreak in Rwampara outside Bunia, Ituri province, Democratic Republic of Congo, May 21, 2026. REUTERS/Stringer//File Photo

Four out of every five new Ebola cases in parts of Democratic Republic of Congo have no known link to existing patients, a senior World Health Organization official said, warning that the true scale of the outbreak could be two to four times larger than official data suggest.

The figures underscore the challenges facing health workers as they battle to contain the outbreak in the country's northeast, which has so far infected 1,792 people and killed 625, according to government data released on Thursday.

"Eighty percent of the... new patients confirmed are coming outside of known contact lists” in ⁠the heart of ⁠the outbreak in Bunia, Ituri province, WHO Emergencies Director Chikwe Ihekweazu told Reuters in an interview late on Thursday.

In areas with fewer cases, like North Kivu province, almost all new cases are coming from the contact lists, he added, a sign of some progress.

WHO estimates based on modelling and test positivity rates suggest the outbreak, which was declared in mid-May, may be between ⁠two and four times larger than the number of confirmed cases, he said.

About 90% of all reported cases remain concentrated in Ituri province, particularly in the health zones of Bunia, Rwampara, Mongbwalu and Nyakunde, where transmission remains intense. But the virus has also spread beyond the epicenter to North Kivu province, South Kivu province and, more recently, Tshopo province.

In Bunia, Ituri's capital and a city of one million, roughly one in two patients tested for Ebola turns out to be positive, a sign of intense, ongoing community transmission, Ihekweazu said.

Preliminary evidence suggests the Bundibugyo strain of the Ebola virus may cause milder symptoms than other types, reducing ⁠risk perceptions among affected ⁠communities and leading some families to care for sick relatives at home before seeking treatment.

While that appears to improve survival rates among patients who reach treatment centers, it also means infected people may remain in the community longer and continue transmitting the virus.

"Patients are out there much longer than we would like," Ihekweazu said. "The longer patients are outside of care, the more likely they are to transmit this illness."

Community deaths also remain a major concern. An analysis of the first 400 Ebola deaths in the outbreak found that roughly 70% occurred outside treatment centers, he said.

Strengthening surveillance remains the biggest challenge for the response, he said.

Authorities this week began training 21,000 community health workers to conduct house-to-house visits, identify suspected cases and encourage people with symptoms to seek care.


At Least 1 Million Women Have Lost Access to Aid after Funding Cuts, UN Says

FILE -Women and children fetch water at dusk in the Korsi Refugee Camp in Birao, the Central African Republic, March 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Caitlin Kelly, File)
FILE -Women and children fetch water at dusk in the Korsi Refugee Camp in Birao, the Central African Republic, March 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Caitlin Kelly, File)
TT

At Least 1 Million Women Have Lost Access to Aid after Funding Cuts, UN Says

FILE -Women and children fetch water at dusk in the Korsi Refugee Camp in Birao, the Central African Republic, March 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Caitlin Kelly, File)
FILE -Women and children fetch water at dusk in the Korsi Refugee Camp in Birao, the Central African Republic, March 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Caitlin Kelly, File)

At least 1 million women have lost access to humanitarian and other critical support as a result of budget cuts over the last 18 months, the UN agency focusing on women said Friday.

UN Women says 84% of women's organizations surveyed had reported increased needs since January 2025, when the Trump administration in the United States — the biggest UN donor — took office and began cutbacks in foreign aid.

"Every dollar withdrawn from women’s organizations is a dollar withdrawn from survivors of conflict-related sexual violence, displaced mothers, girls forced from school and communities struggling to survive,” said Sofia Calltorp, UN Women’s chief of humanitarian action.

Nearly 90% of the women's groups surveyed said they can't meet current levels of need anymore, and one in five said they expect to shut down temporarily or permanently within the next year.

“UN Women has spoken to 855 women’s organizations working in 52 countries, who have told us that these women and girls have been turned away due to funding cuts that are dismantling their organizations," Calltorp told reporters in Geneva.

"We know that this number, at least 1 million women and girls, is just the tip of the iceberg,” she added.

Conflict-related sexual violence had doubled last year, UN Women said. It noted a recent report by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a group of 38 mostly developed countries, that found that development assistance fell by nearly a quarter last year to $174 billion — the largest yearly contraction on record.

“Without immediate action, the organizations that have kept women and girls alive through the world’s worst crises risk becoming another casualty of war,” Calltorp said.

Many UN organizations have cut thousands of jobs and reduced aid programs around the world over the last 18 months in the wake of funding cuts by the United States and other top donors.

The world body, as part of a reform process known as UN80, has been considering the prospect of merging UN Women with UNFPA, the sexual and reproductive health agency.


Greek Anti-terror Police Arrest 3 After Blast Kills Woman

FILE PHOTO: A woman walks past damaged cars and a building after attackers firebombed three residential buildings linked to Greece's governing party in the northern city of Thessaloniki, Greece, July 1, 2026. REUTERS/Alexandros Avramidis/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A woman walks past damaged cars and a building after attackers firebombed three residential buildings linked to Greece's governing party in the northern city of Thessaloniki, Greece, July 1, 2026. REUTERS/Alexandros Avramidis/File Photo
TT

Greek Anti-terror Police Arrest 3 After Blast Kills Woman

FILE PHOTO: A woman walks past damaged cars and a building after attackers firebombed three residential buildings linked to Greece's governing party in the northern city of Thessaloniki, Greece, July 1, 2026. REUTERS/Alexandros Avramidis/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A woman walks past damaged cars and a building after attackers firebombed three residential buildings linked to Greece's governing party in the northern city of Thessaloniki, Greece, July 1, 2026. REUTERS/Alexandros Avramidis/File Photo

Police in Greece on Friday said they had arrested three people in connection to attacks this month that targeted ruling party politicians, killing a woman in a car explosion.

Hours later, two more people were held over a 2010 deadly firebomb attack that left three dead.

In the recent case, "three individuals have been arrested" by anti-terror police in Thessaloniki and the island of Crete, the police said in a statement.

The July 1 attacks at dawn in the northern city of Thessaloniki targeted the homes and vehicles of three politicians from Greece's ruling New Democracy party with homemade gas canister explosives.

The mother of former party candidate Afroditi Nestora died from injuries caused by an explosion, apparently while trying to put out the fire.

The attack also injured Nestora, her father and two other people.

Four vehicles in the garage of Nestora's home were burnt, police said.

Greek media identified the other two targets as the party's local executive committee chairman Zisis Ioakimovic and former MP Savvas Anastasiades.

Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, the New Democracy leader, expressed "outrage and anger" at what he termed a "cowardly, terrorist and murderous attack".

Leftist and anarchist groups often use improvised explosives to target political figures, banks and companies in Greece -- causing damage but rarely any casualties.

The improvised explosives were made from small butane canisters, police said, and the attacks appear to have been carried out by the same people.

Greek media on Friday identified the detainees as young anti-establishment figures known to police.

Government spokesman Pavlos Marinakis has said that the attacks took place within 15 minutes.

Also Friday, police in Athens said they had arrested two people and were seeking a third over the 2010 bank attack.

On May 5, 2010 an anti-austerity protest saw a firebomb lobbed at the Marfin bank in central Athens, leading to the death of three bank workers, including a pregnant woman.

Three bank officials received manslaughter sentences for negligence but the culprits were never caught.

The attack came just three days after the socialist government of George Papandreou signed the first of three eventual bailouts with the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the IMF that would total 350 billion euros.