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India seizes three ‘Iranian’ oil tankers on smuggling charges: report

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India seizes three ‘Iranian' oil tankers on smuggling charges: report

This image shows one of three tankers intercepted by India’s Coast Guard. X/@IndiaCoastGuard

The Indian coast guard has reportedly seized three Iranian oil tankers in the Arabian Sea in what it called a “coordinated operation against an international oil smuggling network, according to Iranian media.

The development came weeks after the Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led government withdrew from the Chabahar port agreement with Iran. New Delhi was forced to abandon its involvement in the port after the United States imposed a 25% tariff on countries doing business with Tehran, The Economic Times reported last week.

Taking to X, the Indian Coast Guard, without naming Iran, claimed that it intercepted the vessels around 100 nautical miles west of Mumbai on Friday following what it called “tech-enabled surveillance and data-pattern analysis.”

However, tanker-tracking analysts and Iranian media claimed the vessels were linked to Iran.

“The syndicate exploited mid-sea transfers in international waters to move cheap oil from conflict-ridden regions to motor tankers, evading duties owed to coastal states,” the coast guard said.

However, tanker-tracking firm TankerTrackers identified the vessels as AL JAFZIA, ASPHALT STAR, and STELLAR RUBY, saying all three were under US sanctions. The firm added that STELLAR RUBY was operating under the Iranian flag.

Iranian media separately reported that the seized tankers were linked to Iran and were detained on allegations of oil smuggling.

The Indian Coast Guard said the ships were known for frequently changing their identities, adding that the operation demonstrated India’s role as “a net provider of maritime security and guardian of the rules-based international order.”

Neither Indian authorities nor Iranian officials have publicly commented on the reports linking the seized vessels to Iran.

The 10-Hour Desk Job Danger: How Prolonged Sitting, Poor Posture And Stress Impact Young Brains

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The 10-Hour Desk Job Danger: How Prolonged Sitting, Poor Posture And Stress Impact Young Brains

Last Updated:

A neurologist explains how prolonged sitting, poor posture, and workplace stress may impair cognition, blood flow, and long-term neurological health in young adults.

Long hours of uninterrupted sitting and poor posture at the desk can quietly strain brain health, focus, and long-term cognitive performance in young professionals.

Long hours of uninterrupted sitting and poor posture at the desk can quietly strain brain health, focus, and long-term cognitive performance in young professionals.

The modern workplace has quietly replaced the factory floor with a swivel chair and for many young professionals, the workday now unfolds almost entirely in front of a screen. What appears efficient on the surface may be biologically expensive beneath it.

Dr Sachin Adukia, Senior Consultant Neurologist, Dr. L. H. Hiranandani Hospital, Powai, shares what young professionals need to know.

Research suggests that prolonged, uninterrupted sitting is not merely a musculoskeletal concern; it may influence brain physiology itself. In young adults, even three hours of continuous sitting has been associated with reduced blood flow to the prefrontal cortex, the region responsible for decision-making and executive control. The implication is not dramatic cognitive collapse, but a subtle, cumulative erosion of mental sharpness across long workdays.

Broader evidence links sedentary behaviour to declines in attention, memory, and executive function, skills that define productivity in the knowledge economy. These changes appear to arise through metabolic and vascular pathways, including impaired glucose regulation, chronic inflammation, and restricted cerebral blood flow. In other words, the brain is not simply “idling” during prolonged sitting; it may be operating under suboptimal physiological conditions.

Posture adds another layer of risk. Habitual slouching, with the neck craned toward a laptop, places sustained mechanical stress on spinal structures, weakens stabilising muscles, and reduces flexibility. Large-scale analyses have found that sedentary screen use increases the likelihood of neck pain by as much as 46%, with risk rising dramatically after several hours of uninterrupted sitting. This is not cosmetic discomfort, it represents a chronic physical load that can drive fatigue, distraction, and long-term disability.

The psychological environment compounds the physical strain. Sedentary work has been associated with adverse hormonal and autonomic changes biological markers of stress that can further impair cognition and mood. Even when short-term cognitive testing appears unaffected, repeated vascular strain and elevated blood pressure during prolonged sitting may still carry long-term neurological consequences.

This convergence of reduced movement, compromised posture, and sustained cognitive demand creates a paradox of modern employment: high mental workload delivered through a physiologically low-activity lifestyle.

The solution, however, is neither dramatic nor technologically complex. Evidence consistently shows that interrupting sitting with brief movement preserves vascular and metabolic function and may help maintain cognitive performance over time.

Actionable Steps

Break sitting every 20–30 minutes with brief standing or light movement

Position screens at eye level to reduce forward-head posture

Aim for at least 150 minutes of moderate physical activity per week

Alternate postures, sitting, standing, and walking rather than holding a single position for hours

Treat posture and movement as productivity tools, not optional wellness add-ons

The modern desk is not inherently dangerous. Remaining motionless within it is.

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Ipbes report: Nature loss could spell extinction for businesses

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Ipbes report: Nature loss could spell extinction for businesses

Experts call for urgent action by businesses to restore the natural systems that keep them running.

Meta starts big week in court, with opening arguments beginning in New Mexico, LA trials

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Meta starts big week in court, with opening arguments beginning in New Mexico, LA trials

This photo illustration created on Jan. 7, 2025, in Washington, D.C., shows an image of Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta, and an image of the Meta logo.

Drew Angerer | AFP | Getty Images

Meta is back in court, but this time it’s a lone defendant.

Opening arguments begin on Monday in a high-profile trial brought by the state of New Mexico against Meta, which allegedly failed to safeguard apps like Facebook and Instagram from online predators who targeted child users, according to Raúl Torrez, the state’s attorney general.

Originally filed in 2023, the suit claims that Meta “steered and connected users — including children — to sexually explicit, exploitative and child sex abuse materials and facilitated human trafficking” within the state.  

The trial is one of several significant cases involving Meta this year that could have major repercussions on the company and the broader social media industry. Experts have said the lawsuits resemble those brought against “Big Tobacco” in the 1990s, due to the alleged harm the products can have on users, and the efforts by tobacco companies to mislead the public about the negative effects.

In January, a trial kicked off in Los Angeles stemming from plaintiffs’ allegations that Meta, YouTube, TikTok and Snap failed to tell the public about the safety of their social and video-streaming apps, despite knowing that the designs and certain features were harmful to the mental health of young users. TikTok and Snap settled with a plaintiff involved in the case before the trial commenced.

Opening statements in the L.A. trial were supposed to begin last week, but were delayed following the unexpected illness of a lead attorney. A Meta spokesperson said 18 jury members were impaneled Friday afternoon and that opening arguments begin on Monday. Instagram head Adam Mosseri is scheduled to testify on Wednesday, followed a week later by Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

Many of New Mexico’s allegations against Meta were derived from an undercover operation conducted by the attorney general that involved the creation of a fake social media profile modeled after a 13-year-old girl. Torres previously told CNBC that the dummy social media profile, “was simply inundated with images and targeted solicitations, which, frankly, I found to be shocking.”

Meta has denied the allegations and said in various statements to the media that the company is “focused on demonstrating our longstanding commitment to supporting young people.”

Although social media businesses have argued that content shared on their apps is protected under the Section 230 provision of the Communications Decency Act, the overall theme among the various lawsuits is that tech companies have allegedly endangered young users through the design and features of their apps.

Later this year, another trial is slated to start in the Northern District of California. That federal case involves Meta, TikTok, YouTube and Snap, and centers on allegations that the companies built defective apps that resulted in teens and children developing unhealthy and addictive behaviors.

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King Charles heckled by public again over Andrew’s Epstein links

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King Charles heckled by public again over Andrew’s Epstein links

King Charles was heckled again over his brother Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s association with convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein during a royal visit to Lancashire on Monday morning.

As he met well-wishers at Clitheroe train station in Lancashire, a man shouted at Charles: “How long have you known about Andrew and Epstein?” Most of the crowd booed the question and Charles appeared to not react.

Last Thursday, the King and Queen were heckled during a royal walkabout in the Essex village of Dedham. One person shouted: “Charles, Charles, have you pressurised the police to start investigating Andrew?”

The royal family remain engulfed in the scandal following the latest tranche of Epstein files released by the US Department of Justice last month, resulting in a string of allegations against Andrew and his relationship with Epstein.

Among the claims are that a second woman was sent to the UK by Epstein for a sexual encounter with Andrew, and also that the former prince and Epstein asked an exotic dancer for a threesome in Epstein’s Florida home. There was also a picture in the files that appeared to show Andrew on the floor with a woman.

A heckler asked King Charles how long he had known about Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s association with Epstein during his visit to Clitheroe on Monday morning

A heckler asked King Charles how long he had known about Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s association with Epstein during his visit to Clitheroe on Monday morning (The Independent)

The latest allegation is that Andrew shared confidential reports of official visits to Hong Kong, Vietnam, and Singapore in his role as the UK’s trade envoy. The former duke has always denied any wrongdoing.

On Monday, the Prince and Princess of Wales spoke out publicly for the first time on the scandal, saying they were “deeply concerned”, and their thoughts are with the victims. Last week, Prince Edward also commented, stating it was “really important always to remember the victims” when questioned over the latest release of files.

Charles and Queen Camilla have not spoken publically on Andrew since the last release of files last year, when they shared their “thoughts and utmost sympathies” with “the victims and survivors of any and all forms of abuse”.

The statement came as part of an announcement stripping Andrew of his last remaining titles.

A photograph appearing to show Andrewcrouched over an unidentified woman released in the latest disclosure of files linked to Jeffrey Epstein

A photograph appearing to show Andrewcrouched over an unidentified woman released in the latest disclosure of files linked to Jeffrey Epstein (PA)

On Monday, when appearing outside Clitheroe railway station, Charles was met with people wearing Union flag hats when the heckler shouted at him. Charles continued to shake people’s hands while some in the crowd booed the heckler.

Soon after, Charles waved goodbye before getting into a car.

The huge tranche of millions of documents associated with Epstein has also led to police launching a investigation into Lord Peter Mandelson over alleged misconduct in public office. On Sunday, Sir Keir Starmer’s Downing Street chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, resigned over his role in the appointment of Lord Mandelson as US ambassador.

Pressure remains on the prime minister over Lord Mandelson, as ministers await the publication of files relating to his appointment.

Novo Nordisk sues Hims & Hers over cheaper copycat versions of Wegovy pill, injections

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Novo Nordisk sues Hims & Hers over cheaper copycat versions of Wegovy pill, injections

The logo of pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk is displayed in front of its offices in Bagsvaerd, Copenhagen, Denmark, February 4, 2026.

Tom Little | Reuters

Novo Nordisk on Monday said it is suing online telehealth provider Hims & Hers for mass marketing cheaper, unapproved copies of the drugmaker’s new Wegovy obesity pill and injections in the U.S. 

Novo is asking the court to permanently ban Hims from selling compounded versions of its drugs that infringe on the company’s patents, and is seeking to recover damages. In a release, Novo accused Hims of “deceiving patients and putting their health at risk,” as the safety, efficacy and quality of those copies are not verified by U.S. regulators.

The move escalates the feud between Novo and Hims, which said on Saturday it will stop offering its new obesity pill copycat after facing scrutiny from federal regulators and legal threats from the Danish drugmaker. Hims had planned to offer the oral drug for as little as $49 for the first month, roughly $100 less than Novo’s approved Wegovy pill. 

Novo Nordisk’s Copenhagen-listed shares were up 7.1% while Hims’ NYSE-listed stock was down 19% in premarket as of 7 a.m. ET.

The lawsuit comes as Novo works to reclaim market share in the booming obesity drug market and fend off competition from both Eli Lilly and a wave of compounded alternatives. Those copycats have proliferated under a regulatory loophole that allows companies like Hims to sell compounded versions of patent-protected drugs when branded treatments are in short supply.

Semaglutide — the active ingredient in Novo’s pill and its blockbuster injections — is no longer in shortage in the U.S., thanks to the company’s efforts to ramp up manufacturing capacity. There are no shortages reported for the Wegovy pill, which has had an explosive launch since it entered the U.S. market in early January. 

Even so, Novo estimated in January that as many as 1.5 million Americans are using compounded GLP-1 drugs.

Hims has said its compounded pill and other GLP-1 products contain semaglutide, despite the ingredient being protected by U.S. patents through 2032. Hims has said that its versions are legal because they are “personalized” in dosage.

But Novo said it does not directly or indirectly sell semaglutide for copycats, and accused Hims of engaging in illegal mass compounding. 

Hims is “mass marketing unapproved knock-off versions of [Wegovy and Ozempic] that evade the FDA’s gold standard review process – that’s dangerous and deceptive to patients, and undermines the scientific innovation and regulatory rigor in place to ensure these treatments are safe and effective,” said John Kuckelman, Novo’s senior vice president of general counsel, global legal, IP and security, in a release. 

On Friday, the Food and Drug Administration announced it planned to take legal action against Hims for the pill, including restricting access to the ingredients and referring the company to the Department of Justice over potential violations.

Novo and Lilly have aggressively cracked down on compounding pharmacies over the last two years as they benefit from the soaring popularity of their weight-loss and diabetes drugs. Lilly has gone through a similar legal process with tirzepatide, the active ingredient in its weight loss drug Zepbound and diabetes treatment Mounjaro, which is no longer in short supply in the U.S.

EPFO May Introduce Performance-Linked Incentives for Fund Managers to Boost PF Returns

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EPFO May Introduce Performance-Linked Incentives for Fund Managers to Boost PF Returns

New Delhi: The Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) is working on a proposal to introduce performance-based incentives for its fund managers as part of efforts to improve returns on retirement savings.

Under the plan being considered, fund managers who deliver better investment performance could receive larger allocations of funds, encouraging stronger results in portfolio management. The move is aimed at aligning fund-management rewards with the returns generated for EPFO subscribers.

The proposal is linked to EPFO’s broader effort to develop a new benchmarking system for investments, particularly for debt portfolios, which form a major part of provident-fund investments.

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Officials are also reviewing the creation of separate performance benchmarks for the Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) and the Employees’ Pension Scheme (EPS). Special attention is being given to the pension scheme because it involves long-term investments with different return expectations.

If implemented, the incentive framework could help improve investment efficiency and strengthen accountability in fund management, ultimately benefiting millions of EPFO subscribers through potentially better returns on their savings.

 

53 migrants dead or missing in shipwreck off Libya: UN

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53 migrants dead or missing in shipwreck off Libya: UN

A representational image shows a ship capsizing in the sea. — Reuters
  • Boat capsizes in Mediterranean Sea off the Libyan coast.
  • Rescue teams provide emergency medical care to survivors.
  • Ship taking migrants, refugees to Al-Zawiya from Africa.

The UN migration agency on Monday said 53 people were dead or missing after a boat capsized in the Mediterranean Sea off the Libyan coast. Only two survivors were rescued.

The International Organisation for Migration said the boat overturned north of Zuwara on Friday.

“Only two Nigerian women were rescued during a search-and-rescue operation by Libyan authorities,” the IOM said in a statement, adding that one of the survivors said she lost her husband and the other said “she lost her two babies in the tragedy”.

The IOM said its teams provided the two survivors with emergency medical care upon disembarkation.

“According to survivor accounts, the boat, carrying migrants and refugees of African nationalities, departed from Al-Zawiya, Libya, at around 11:00 pm on February 5. Approximately six hours later, it capsized after taking on water,” the agency said.

“IOM mourns the loss of life in yet another deadly incident along the Central Mediterranean route.”

The Geneva-based agency said trafficking and smuggling networks were exploiting migrants along the route from north Africa to southern Europe, profiting from dangerous crossings in unseaworthy boats while exposing people to “severe abuse”.

It called for stronger international cooperation to tackle the networks, alongside safe and regular migration pathways to reduce risks and save lives.

Bad Bunny's super bowl performance takes unexpected turn

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Bad Bunny's super bowl performance takes unexpected turn

Bad Bunny appeared to make a symbolic gesture involving his top music honour, briefly fluctuating attention away from choreography and toward a deeper narrative.

‘Doormat Mom’ cut off by daughter amid estrangement trend: ‘Completely blindsided’

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'Doormat Mom' cut off by daughter amid estrangement trend: ‘Completely blindsided’

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While Brooklyn Beckham’s recent social media post about his bitter family feud thrust the topic of parent-child estrangement into the headlines, surveys suggest that these types of rifts have been on the rise for years.

One study from Cornell University found that more than a quarter of Americans — roughly 67 million people — report being estranged from a family member. One of those is Laura Wellington in Connecticut, known on social media as “Doormat Mom.”

While research has shown that many estrangements are gradual, Wellington described hers as sudden and unexpected. After initially being involved in her daughter’s wedding plans, she was abruptly told that she would not be invited to attend. 

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When Wellington pushed back, both her daughter and her daughter’s fiancee blocked her from all contact in 2024, she told Fox News Digital during a recent interview.

“I was literally just completely blindsided by this,” she said. “The pain of being cut off — it’s a pain you can’t describe unless you feel it.” 

The widowed mother of four took to TikTok to share her experience.

“I just said what was on my mind — and I didn’t mention my daughter specifically,” she said. “I just came out with a very heavy hand and said something to the effect of, ‘Were you a really good parent and you raised an ungrateful little b——d?’”

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Wellington was “flooded” by responses from parents, she said — not only in the U.S., but also in Germany, the U.K., Australia and other countries. “They wanted to share their feelings, to share the impact. They needed the support.”

Since posting her first video in August 2024, Wellington has built a large social media following — nearly 150,000 on TikTok and Instagram — that includes other mothers in similar situations, as well as a fair share of critics. 

Laura Wellington of Connecticut, known on social media as “Doormat Mom,” shared her experience of estrangement with her daughter. (Laura Wellington)

Wellington said she has heard from many parents who have experienced profound grief, isolation and even suicidal thoughts after estrangement from their adult children.

“The parents were ashamed to talk about it,” she said. “Because they felt … that if they talked about it, if they spoke about it, then the first question they would get is, ‘Well, what did you do?’”

Estrangement is becoming a more normalized way to address family tensions, even in cases where there is no abuse or neglect, according to Wellington.

“The pain of being cut off — it’s a pain you can’t describe unless you feel it.” 

She blames several factors that drive division, including political and cultural differences and “societal narratives that are destroying families.”

“There’s a lack of foundation and traditional family values … loss of faith, loss of grounded principles, and the education that’s happening in our country,” Wellington said. “The way these things are being skewed today, cutting off your parent is the first go-to, not the last.”

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“We’re at a crossroads in our nation, because what’s the point of saving a nation if you don’t have cohesive families to save it for?”

In December 2024, on the weekend of her daughter’s wedding, Wellington released a self-published book, “Doormat Mom, No More!”

“I married my new life, so to speak,” she said. “It became not my personal story anymore — it became a story of many.”

Wellington has also heard from young adults who are seeking to repair parental relationships.

“There are some wonderful young people out there who really do want answers, they want to solve their problems, they want to have the relationship,” she said.

In some cases, Wellington acknowledged, adult children are warranted in ending the relationship, such as in cases of abuse or neglect.

Causes and impacts

Dr. Jonathan Alpert, a New York City psychotherapist, told Fox News Digital that he is seeing parent-child estrangement becoming more common, with politics often playing a role.

“I regularly work with families where estrangement isn’t driven by abuse or neglect as much as it is by political identity and voting behavior,” he said. “Parents are cut off because of who they voted for, what news they watch or the views they express.”

“What would once have been handled as disagreement is now framed as moral injury.”

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Alpert echoed Wellington’s claim that estrangement is becoming more of an automatic reflex.

“Once a parent’s beliefs are labeled as ‘unsafe’ or ‘toxic,’ disengagement feels justified and necessary,” he said. “Estrangement becomes a form of moral signaling rather than a last-resort response to genuine harm.”

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In cases where adult children go “no-contact,” Alpert said the emotional impact can be “severe.”

“Parents often experience profound grief, confusion and shame,” he said. “Adult children may initially feel empowered, but many later struggle with unresolved anger, rigidity, and a narrowing of emotional tolerance that affects other relationships as well.”

Laura Wellington

After initially being involved in her daughter’s wedding plans, Wellington was abruptly told that she would not be invited to attend, she said. (Laura Wellington)

Alpert’s biggest concern, he said, is that estrangement is increasingly presented as emotional health.

“In reality, emotional health often involves learning how to stay connected across differences,” he said. “When therapy language and political culture reward rupture over repair, families are left divided long after the arguments fade.”

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Alpert emphasized that there’s a difference between boundaries and estrangement.

“Boundaries are meant to allow a continued relationship with limits, while estrangement ends the relationship entirely,” he said. 

Advice for parents

For parents who are struggling with estrangement from adult children, Wellington warns against trying to force reconciliation, as she said that can actually make things worse.

“Estrangement becomes a form of moral signaling rather than a last-resort response to genuine harm.”

“You can’t force them into a relationship with you,” she said. “”Once you start running after them, you give up your autonomy. If they’re choosing to move away from you, you have to just let them go.”

“Let life teach them, and if they’re meant to come back, they will come back.”

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Wellington said it’s important for parents in her situation to focus on moving forward with their own lives.

“Go on and create a life for yourself that you’re proud of, find your happiness,” she advised. “If they do come back, they’ll see that you’re doing well and thriving.”

Mother-daughter estrangement - parental fighting

“Repair requires a shared belief that relationships can survive disagreement,” a psychotherapist said. (iStock)

Looking ahead, Wellington said she thinks there’s “always hope” that she and her daughter may reconnect someday.

“I hope she realizes that the same woman who wants to use every ounce of her strength to keep this family going …. is the same woman who created this platform to help others keep going,” she said. “And I hope she sees her mom as a strong woman.”

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Alpert agreed that reconciliation is possible, but said it’s more challenging when estrangement is “reinforced by social validation, online communities or political identity.”

“Repair requires a shared belief that relationships can survive disagreement,” he added.