German Archive Helps Survivors Of Nazi Attack Come Back To Life

Half-sisters Helen Schaller and Sula Miller would never have met if it were not for the Arolsen Archives.

Only recently did German Schaller and American Miller learn that they had a father, a Holocaust survivor who immigrated to the United States.

Floriane Azoulay, director of the Arolsen Archives, the largest collection of data on Nazi victims and survivors worldwide, stated that Miller “contacted us because she was looking for information on her father.”

Born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Mendel Mueller was a Jew who was imprisoned in two Nazi concentration camps: Auschwitz in what was then occupied Poland and Buchenwald in northern Germany.

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He had another daughter, Helen, who was still alive and residing in Germany, according to an examination of the records.

“The two women came to know each other because of us,” Azoulay stated.

People throughout the world are still learning what happened to their family members who were taken to Adolf Hitler’s Nazi execution camps, eight decades after World War II ended.

Millions of records and artifacts can be found at the enormous Arolsen Archives, which are situated in the charming spa town of Bad Arolsen in central Germany.

Researchers discovered a 1951 letter from Miller’s father’s wife asking where he was when she phoned the archive to inquire about her father.

Mueller married a German shortly after the war, and the two had a daughter, Helen, who was born in 1947.

However, a while later, he moved to the United States without her, married an Austrian, and they had a child together, Sula, in 1960.

The two sisters first met last year after Bad Arolsen investigators were able to locate Helen four years after Miller’s original inquiry.

According to Azoulay, “their physical likeness was startling.”

Despite having divergent and complex opinions on their father, she claimed that “their meeting helped them make peace with the past.”

Rings, wallets, and watches

The Arolsen Archive still holds almost 30 million original papers on nearly 17.5 million people, despite the fact that 90% of its holdings have now been digitized.

Additionally, thousands of objects, including wallets, rings, and watches, have been gathered from the former Nazi camps.

In order to assist people in locating family members who had vanished during the war, the Allies established the International Tracing Service in early 1946.

In addition to Roma, homosexuals, political dissidents, and “racially pure” youngsters abducted by the Nazis as part of a program to combat the declining birth rate, it primarily dealt with Jews.

Bad Arolsen was selected due to its location in the middle of Germany’s four occupation zones (French, American, British, and Soviet), its ability to withstand Allied bombing, and its operational telephone network.

The ceremony was initially conducted by a peculiar combination of Germans, including former Nazi party members, Holocaust survivors from all around Europe, and members of the Allied forces.

However, as more of the survivors departed the nation, the number of German employees rose starting in the 1950s.

With the help of over 50 volunteers worldwide, the archive currently employs about 200 people.

According to Azoulay, it continues to receive about 20,000 inquiries annually, most of which are from survivors’ or victims’ children or grandchildren who are curious about their fate.

similar to Abraham Ben, who was born in May 1947 at a camp for displaced people in Bamberg, southern Germany, to Polish-Jewish parents.

No grandparents

Ben, who is now nearly 80, is still trying to find out what happened to his father’s family, who were abandoned when he fled the Warsaw Ghetto.

According to him, “there is a great possibility that they died in the camps.”

We never questioned Ben’s father about the Holocaust, and he never discussed it. We thought it hurt too much for him.

In the Jewish refugee center where Ben was born, almost no one had grandparents since the elderly, who were too frail to work, were the first to perish in the camps.

“When I was ten years old, I realized that other kids had grandparents since I attended a German school and my classmates would talk about the Christmas presents they received.”

Ben stated that he hopes to locate “cousins who may have survived” among his father’s five siblings’ offspring.

Nazi party records, including Gestapo arrest warrants, lists of individuals to be sent to the camps, and camp registers, are kept in the archives in Bad Arolsen.

Considering the slim odds of survival for the individuals included, the documents are frequently remarkably thorough.

Every prisoner’s height, eye and hair color, facial features, marital status, children, religion, and languages spoken, together with their name, date of birth, and deportation number, were recorded in the camp register in Buchenwald.

“The most amazing day of her life”

Because different languages can have different spellings of the same name, the records were initially arranged using a phonetic alphabet.

According to Nicole Dominicus, head of archive administration, “‘Abrahamovicz’ can be written in almost 800 different ways.”

Later, the archives were enlarged to contain correspondence between the Red Cross and the Nazi government as well as information acquired by the Allies.

Letters from persons looking for missing family members are also included in the folders.

A mother who survived Auschwitz writes to the International Tracing Service in 1948 to inquire about her daughter, whom she lost while in the camp.

In other countries, volunteers who work for the archives outside of Germany also assist with searching through records.

A volunteer in Poland named Manuela Golc recently met with a 93-year-old woman to give her a watch and a pair of earrings that had belonged to her mother, who was deported in 1944 following the Warsaw Uprising.

Golc stated, “She told me it was the finest day of her life,” as she shed tears.

Achim Werner, a 58-year-old German, was “shocked” to get a call from the archives informing him that his grandfather’s wedding ring had been removed from him upon his arrival in the Dachau concentration camp.

Unaware that his grandfather had been detained there, Werner had made multiple trips to the camp outside of Munich as a child and as an adult.

His statement was, “We knew that he was arrested in 1940, but nothing after that.”

Werner has no idea why his grandfather was put in jail, and he probably never will because there is no further information on him in the archives.

However, he has given his daughter the wedding ring in an effort to preserve the man’s memories.

He stated, “She will pass it on to her offspring after wearing it as a pendant.”

“These Lunatics…”: US Says Over 300 Visas Likely Revoked Amid Crackdown

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Thursday that the Trump administration was searching daily for “these lunatics” after Washington arrested and revoked the visa of a Turkish student at Tufts University, and suggested that the State Department may have revoked over 300 visas.

Rubio’s remarks came in response to a query concerning Rumeysa Ozturk, a Turkish student who was arrested by plainclothes and masked agents on Tuesday night in Somerville, Massachusetts, outside of Boston. The Trump administration’s most recent move against a foreign student who had expressed support for Palestinians in Israel’s conflict in Gaza was her arrest.

“At this time, it may be over 300. Every day, we do it. At a press appearance in Guyana, Rubio declared, “I take away their visas every time I locate one of these lunatics,” without specifying which individuals’ visas had been canceled.

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Rubio told reporters on the plane returning to Washington that the 300 visas that were revoked were a mix of visiting and student permits. He claimed to have signed each and every action.

“We are searching daily for these crazy people who are causing chaos, but I hope we run out eventually because we have eliminated them all.”

When asked what particular acts Ozturk had taken that warranted the State Department’s decision to revoke his visa, the top US diplomat acknowledged the decision but did not elaborate.

According to Rubio, Washington would revoke any previously granted visas if students engaged in activities like “vandalizing colleges, harassing students, taking over buildings, creating a ruckus.”

Rubio stated that the information submitted to him on Ozturk’s case satisfied the criterion of “those that are supportive of movements that go opposite to the foreign policy of the United States,” but he did not specify whether Ozturk had engaged in such activities.

Ozturk had entered the nation on an F-1 visa to study as a Fulbright Scholar in Tufts’ PhD program in Child Study and Human Development.

One year prior to her detention, Ozturk co-authored an opinion piece in the Tufts Daily, the student newspaper, criticizing the university’s response to student calls to “acknowledge the Palestinian genocide” and withdraw from firms with ties to Israel.
Ozturk’s attorney filed a lawsuit after her arrest, claiming that her detention was illegal.

In a filing on Thursday, the US Department of Justice stated that Ozturk was now in Louisiana and had been detained outside of Massachusetts at the time the lawsuit was filed, despite a federal judge in Boston on Tuesday night ordering US Immigration and Customs Enforcement to refrain from removing her from Massachusetts without 48 hours’ notice.

In a statement released late Wednesday, her attorney, Mahsa Khanbabai, described the allegations against her client as “baseless” and pointed out that she had not been charged with any crimes.

Khanbabai stated, “It seems the only thing she is being persecuted for is her right to free expression.”

Supporters of Ozturk claim that her detention is the first known immigration arrest of a student involved in such activism in the Boston area. The Trump administration has detained or attempted to detain a number of foreign-born students who are lawfully in the US and have participated in pro-Palestinian demonstrations.

Critics have denounced the acts as an attack on free expression. The administration of Republican President Donald Trump contends that some protests can jeopardize US foreign policy and are antisemitic.

“Those we are expelling from our nation are not demonstrators; they are vandalizing. College campuses are being overtaken by them. Students are being harassed by them. “They are going beyond demonstration,” Rubio stated during a press appearance in Suriname later on Thursday.

“We desire their departure. We will expel each and every one of them that I come across.

US Bases Will Be Struck If Trump Attacks Iran: Iranian Parliament Speaker

The speaker of the Iranian parliament warned Friday that if Washington carries out its threat of military repercussions for Iran in the absence of a new nuclear agreement, Tehran would attack US bases in the region.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran, received a letter from US President Donald Trump earlier this month warning that “there are two ways Iran can be handled: militarily, or you make a deal.”

According to Parliament Speaker Mohammad Qalibaf, “the entire region will blow up like a spark in an ammunition dump if the Americans strike the sanctity of Iran.”

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“Their bases and those of their friends will not be safe,” Qalibaf stated live during the yearly Jerusalem Day, also known as Al-Quds Day, which falls on the final Friday of the blessed month of Ramadan.

Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi stated on Thursday that negotiations were not feasible until Washington modified its “maximum pressure” stance, and Khamenei has referred to Trump’s message as misleading. Iran delivered “an acceptable answer” through Oman after carefully reviewing Trump’s letter, according to Araqchi.

According to state media, Araqchi said Friday that although Trump’s letter included threats, it also allowed for diplomacy. He did not go into detail.

Trump pulled out of a 2015 agreement between Iran and other powers that imposed stringent restrictions on Tehran’s disputed nuclear program in exchange for the lifting of sanctions during his first term in office, which extended from 2017 to 21.

Subsequently, Iran violated the agreement by exceeding uranium enrichment restrictions, particularly after Trump reinstated broad U.S. sanctions.

Iran is accused by Western nations of having a covert plan to acquire nuclear weapons. According to Tehran, its program is only for the production of civilian energy.

Video: Police Clash With Pro-Monarchy Demonstrators In Nepal’s Kathmandu

Authorities in Kathmandu imposed a curfew after Nepal police used tear gas and water cannon to scatter thousands of protesters calling for the restoration of the monarchy.

After parliament dissolved the monarchy as part of a peace agreement that concluded a ten-year civil war that claimed over 16,000 lives, the Himalayan nation adopted a federal and republican political system in 2008.
“The nation ought to have advanced considerably. Good administration, peace and security, and greater employment possibilities should have been available to everyone. “We ought to have been free from corruption,” Mina Subedi, 55, who attended the protest, told AFP.

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“However, things have only gotten worse.”

Cryants who said that the king and the nation were “dearer to us than life” assembled in front of the national parliament.

After the protesters broke into a restricted area and damaged structures, police used water cannon and tear gas to drive them out, police spokesperson Dinesh Kumar Acharya said AFP.

Popular discontent with political instability, corruption, and unimpressive economic growth has coincided with an increase in support for the return of the monarchy and the reinstatement of Hinduism as the official state religion.

Following the altercation, local officials declared a curfew in the region.

To “protect the republican system,” opposition parties organized a counter-demonstration in the capital that drew thousands more participants.

Pushpa Kamal Dahal, a former guerrilla leader who commanded the Maoist insurgency for ten years before entering politics and going on to become prime minister three times, declared that “Nepalis would not revert to the past.”

“Perhaps because we republicans have failed to meet the needs and desires of the people, they have the audacity to raise their heads.”

Gyanendra Shah, the 77-year-old abdicated king, has mostly avoided discussing Nepal’s contentious politics, but he recently appeared in public with some of his supporters.

Following the death of his older brother, King Birendra Bir Bikram Shah, and his family in a palace massacre that killed the majority of the royal family, Shah was crowned in 2001.

The Maoist insurgency was raging in remote parts of Nepal at the time of his coronation.

In 2005, Shah dissolved parliament and suspended the constitution, sparking a democratic uprising in which the Maoists joined forces with Nepal’s political establishment to plan massive demonstrations in the streets.

In 2008, parliament voted to dissolve Nepal’s 240-year-old Hindu monarchy, which ultimately led to the conflict’s end.

Opinion | Is It Payback Time For Pakistan Army?

It is quite ironic. Two days ago, on March 23, the Pakistan Army celebrated Pakistan Day by demonstrating its strength and marching precisely on the parade ground, but the realities show that it is divided on a never-before-seen scale. The army has become a brutal force, with its “counter-terrorism” operations failing to distinguish even women and children from terrorists, aside from almost daily attacks on itself. That is extremely damaging to the forces that carry out such acts as well as awful for the individuals who are affected. What thus accounts for the claims of intense discontent among the lower ranks and, if accurate, demands for the resignation of the Army Chief?

A War of Blood

President Zardari gave the ceremonial speech, and the parade itself was staged with much hoopla, featuring a rather uneasy-looking Prime Minister in the lead. The Army Chief and his associates were behind him. The Army Chief was clearly in authority because the entire seating arrangement could have been switched, and no one would have objected.

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Recent assaults on his soldiers, including the Jaffar express hijacking and a string of subsequent strikes in the extremely unstable Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province as well as Balochistan, have raised doubts about the Army’s waning hold. The graph is expected to continue rising this year, with reports from Pakistani think tanks already highlighting 2024 as the worst year on record in a decade for terror attacks. The Army, Frontier Corps, Levies, Constabulary, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), and Police personnel are among the 255 people who have been killed in 179 instances reported up to March 11.

In a fit of wrath, the Pakistani army followed the same pattern. It turned on the poor people, shooting at groups of people, including children, and capturing people who had peacefully protested for Baloch rights. This includes the gregarious Mehrang Baloch, who is quickly becoming a well-known leader—ironically, as a result of the army’s own actions. She has been accused of terrorism and sedition for organizing a sit-in at a university. However, resentment is rising in Balochistan. Following her arrest, protests broke out in Quetta, and hundreds of people attended the funerals of the deceased. The situation will worsen as the numbers increase.

Absence of Counter-Strategy

Surprisingly, the Pakistani army, which is possibly the most seasoned “terrorist” sponsoring army in the world, appears to have no idea how to combat terrorism within its own borders. In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, it has bombed, strafed, and used artillery on its own people. Journalists were even flown to witness the devastation, as hundreds and hundreds of homes had roofs missing while some 72,000 people left the region. That was in 2016. Any reasonable person would have predicted that, in around three or four years, things would probably get considerably worse. That is the amount of time it takes for resistance groups to reorganize and for an enraged populace to turn against its oppressors.

And it did. Pakistani military can no longer move freely in many regions. Balochistan, which has been treated with colonial disdain, is no exception. However, the true drawback is that these kinds of operations against one’s own people have made the army fighting it less cohesive. In combat against a “enemy,” armies are taught and refined on “honour,” and for their bravery, they are rewarded and revered, especially by their home towns. However, there are no such advantages to fighting civilians and children, and no army man—Pakistani or Indian—will put up with this. This is the main reason the Indian army has the wisdom to fight “one hand behind its back” and has organized outreach programs like “Sadhbhavana,” which consists of a number of projects meant to help people in areas affected by insurgency. It is an operational need as well as a matter of morality.

Absent from Action

The leadership of the Pakistani army is “missing in action.” According to recent reports, the lack of a power source and even basic drinking water has left even a star project like the Gwadar deep sea port in limbo. It is not that the necessary equipment has not come from China. In addition to many other things, Federal Minister for Planning Ahsan Iqbal recently reported that 10,000 Chinese solar panels were delivered in May 2024 and another 5,000 in September as part of a grant-in-aid program. In an attempt to win over the Baloch, China, rather sensibly, also gave money for a large hospital and a desalination plant. That is not working at all. The state itself suffers from a serious power outage even though it supplies Pakistan with natural gas to support its economy.

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The important thing to remember is that the Pakistani army is in charge of the Balochistan province. The security forces, in this case the X11 Corps with its two Infantry Divisions and an unspecified number of Pakistani Rangers, a paramilitary group directly under the army’s command in times of crisis, are literally necessary for everything to move. Next are the Frontier Corps’ several thousand soldiers, whose numbers have only grown in the last few months. Despite all of this, MPs claim that Balochistan is not under state control. The statement that “Pakistan’s physical frontiers might be adjusted sooner rather than later” was made on the floor of the house by more than simply Maulana Fazlur Rehman. Former Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah, a dependable government counsel, too shared the viewpoint. To put it another way, the Pakistani army, which not only conducts counterterrorism operations but also controls practically every aspect of the state, including the Strategic Investment Facilitation Council, which is the main organization tasked with “driving” investment into a state that is in decline and a $100 billion economic empire, appears to have failed at every task. The Pakistan Army’s shortcomings are demonstrated by the widespread insurgency, the deteriorating economy, and, if rumors are to be accepted, a sizable contingent of junior officers firing off a letter seeking the resignation of the Army Chief. By the way, the “secret” letter charges the Army Chief with sabotaging the organization and using it for personal gain.

Gone Are the Glory Days
Once praised for its professionalism, this army occasionally made its “enemy” envious of its unwavering discipline and high social standing. That is history. The army is now viewed as a bandit force and an oppressor (also in mind that the ISI has been charged with extorting money from companies). Most importantly, the world has taken notice of its horrific violence. The “forgotten war” that has been Balochistan over the past forty years is currently being covered by all of the major press, including the New York Times. While her countrymen are expected to receive the coveted Nelson Mandela Prize, Mehran Baloch is nominated for the Nobel Prize. The world is taking note, and not in a positive way. The irony is that throughout the years, this has only been made possible by the Pakistani army, or more specifically, its leadership. Payback time might be approaching.

Last Surviving Battle Of Britain Pilot, John Hemingway, Dies Aged 105

According to the UK’s Royal Air Force, the last British pilot to survive World War II’s Battle of Britain passed away at the age of 105.

In a statement, the RAF claimed that John “Paddy” Hemingway “died away peacefully” on Monday, calling his passing “the end of an era”.

Hemingway, who was born in 1919 in Dublin, joined the RAF in 1938, just one year before the European War started.

According to the air force, Hemingway had to make a forced landing after his Hurricane fighter was struck by anti-aircraft fire in 1940 after he shot down a German Luftwaffe aircraft.

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Then, during what became known as the Battle of Britain, he joined the front-line pilots defending against German aircraft’s daily onslaught.

Hemingway had to bail out of his Hurricanes twice during fierce dogfights in August 1940, landing in marshes and the sea, respectively.

Later, for his valor, Hemingway was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC) medal.
He was one of the pilots referred to as “The Few” because of his participation in the historic air combat in 1940 that protected Britain from significant Luftwaffe strikes by Nazi Germany.

The phrase was first used by Winston Churchill, the prime minister of Britain during the war.

The men’s sacrifice was described as “never in the realm of human strife was so much due by so many to so few,” he remarked.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer stated in a statement that “like so many others of his generation, he never considered himself a hero and often referred to himself as the ‘Lucky Irishman’, a man simply doing his job.”

“We will always remember them for securing our freedom with their sense of duty and dedication.”

“Lot Of Stuff”: Trump To Share 80,000 Pages on John F. Kennedy Assassination

In an effort to fulfill his campaign pledge to increase transparency regarding the shocking incident in Texas, President Donald Trump intends to make available on Tuesday over 80,000 pages of material pertaining to the 1963 killing of President John F. Kennedy.

On Monday, Trump told reporters, “It is a lot of things, and you will make your own conclusion,” because of the pages.

The US Federal Bureau of Investigation discovered hundreds of new records pertaining to the Kennedy assassination in Dallas after Trump signed an order pertaining to the release shortly after taking office in January.

Lee Harvey Oswald has been identified as the lone shooter responsible for Kennedy’s murder. In the decades that followed, the Justice Department and other federal government agencies reiterated that finding. However, according to studies, a large number of Americans think there was a conspiracy behind his killing.

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The core facts of the case—that Lee Harvey Oswald shot Kennedy from a window of a school book deposit warehouse as the presidential procession went by on a Dallas highway—are unlikely to be altered by the new knowledge, according to experts.

Larry Sabato, who wrote a book about the assassination and is the director of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, remarked, “People anticipating major things are practically guaranteed to be disappointed.”

According to him, some of the pages might just be the publication of previously published content with a few words removed.

Additionally, Trump has pledged to make public records pertaining to the 1968 assassinations of Senator Robert Kennedy and civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr.

Trump has given himself additional time to devise a strategy for those releases.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump’s secretary of health and human services, is the nephew of John F. Kennedy and the son of Robert Kennedy. He has stated that he thinks the CIA was involved in his uncle’s killing, a claim the agency has called unfounded.

Kennedy Jr. has also stated, in defiance of official explanations, that he thinks his father was murdered by several gunmen.

The documents may reveal, among other things, that the CIA knew more about Oswald than it has previously revealed. Regarding Oswald’s trips to Mexico City six weeks prior to the killing, there are still unanswered questions. Oswald stopped at the Soviet embassy during the trip.

Trump remarked, “People have been waiting for decades for this.” “It will be incredibly fascinating.”

South Korean Air Force Pilots Charged Over Accidental Bombing Of Village

Due to an unintentional bombing of a hamlet during a training exercise last week that left at least 29 people injured and caused significant property damage, South Korean military authorities accused two Air Force pilots on Thursday with criminal negligence.

According to a statement from the ministry’s Criminal Investigation Command, officials from the defense ministry have verified that pilot mistakes made when entering coordinates into the aircraft systems were “direct factors” in the unintentional bombing.

According to the command, the pilots were accused for criminal carelessness causing bodily harm, and the event is still being investigated.

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During live-fire drills, eight unguided air-to-surface bombs dropped from two fighter jets landed on a Pocheon village close to the North Korean border.

The South Korean and American troops use a number of locations in Pocheon and the surrounding areas as training grounds.

For years, locals have voiced concerns about possible safety hazards and disruptions caused by military forces being mobilized in the region.

According to a ministry official, the two pilots have been removed from flight responsibilities and their flight mission certification will be reviewed.

The chief of staff of the Air Force has expressed regret for the mishap and promised to reassess mission protocols in order to avoid future occurrences.

Citing the likelihood that the bombs could have fallen north of the border, North Korea, which frequently condemns military exercises by the South Korean and American troops, has claimed the accident demonstrated the risk of the exercises leading to armed confrontation.

NDTV Explains Nepal’s ‘Return Of The King’ Movement. A Hindu Monarchy Again?

Nearly seventeen years ago, on May 28, 2008, to be precise, Nepal ended a ten-year civil war that had claimed the lives of over 16,000 people by abolishing a Hindu monarchy that had existed for 239 years, with Gyanendra Shah as its king. It was reconstituted as a federal, secular republic with a Hindu majority.

Amid worries about political instability, corruption, a crisis in the cost of living, unemployment, and a lack of economic development, thousands of people—some estimates put the number at over 10,000—staged a campaign on Sunday to reverse the course of history and urge the return of Shah.

As Shah, who had been traveling the country, maybe to gauge the strength of support, stepped out of the Kathmandu airport, the chant “Come King, save the nation…” echoed.

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“The nation is unstable. There is a shortage of healthcare and education, exorbitant costs, and unemployment,” 43-year-old teacher and pro-monarchy demonstrator Rajindra Kunwar told AFP. “The public is subject to the law, but politicians are exempt. We therefore require the king.

Having had 13 governments since 2008, Nepal’s “instability” is highlighted.

This is not new, to start.

Most people held the Nepalese monarch in high regard prior to its abolition.

Following Shah’s 2005 takeover of power, that declined. When anti-monarchy demonstrations erupted in 2006, Shah was compelled to cede his recently acquired power to the nascent administration.

However, reverence for the Hindu royalty remained.

Periodically, there were demonstrations demanding the king’s return. The most recent was in 2020, when The Record Nepal reported widespread protests by Hindu and royalist parties, notably in the east, the region from where current Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli hails.

Additionally, in 2023, police in Kathmandu used tear gas on a crowd calling for the restoration of the monarchy.

The fifth-largest Hindu nationalist party in the House, the Rastriya Prajatantra Party, was largely responsible for the resurgence of such sentiments on Sunday.

Gyanendra Shah’s popularity has reportedly grown, according to the Kathmandu Post, but political observers there do not anticipate him regaining power.

Why Does Nepal Now Support the Monarchy?

To put it briefly, the people of Nepal are not happy with their nation as a republic.

According to data from the International Monetary Fund, economic growth has slowed recently. Before dropping to less than 5% last year, real GDP reached a peak of 9% in 2015. Last year, the average consumer price inflation rate was 4.6%.

People who greeted Shah at the airport on Sunday expressed their hope that a change will occur to prevent their nation from getting worse. “We are here to support the king wholeheartedly and to stand by him through thick and thin.” Thir Bahadur, 72, said to The Associated Press.

There are also former anti-monarchists involved.

After protesting to overthrow Shah, 30-year-old carpenter Kulraj Shrestha has changed his views and is now in favor of the monarchy. “The worst issue is that lawmakers are doing nothing because of widespread corruption. I participated in the demonstrations that overthrew the monarchy, but I was wrong, and the country has since fallen much worse. Thus, I have had a change of heart,” he informed AP.

DeepSeek Founder’s Village Turns Into Tourist Hotspot, Undergoes Rapid Transformation

Because of its affiliation with the prosperous Chinese artificial intelligence business DeepSeek, a little rural town in southern China has become a bustling tourist destination. The village is famous because Liang Wenfeng, the founder of DeepSeek, was born there. Liang’s modest upbringing in Milling village has inspired residents and drawn tourists from far and wide. According to the Southern Countryside Newspaper, the village has a new look thanks to modifications made by local officials as a result of its increased popularity.

Mr. Wenfeng, 40, hails from a family of educators, according to the South China Morning Post. Both of his parents teach at the local elementary school in Milling village, which is situated in Wuchuan, a tiny city in the Guangdong province’s Zhanjiang prefecture.

Following his elementary schooling in the hamlet, Mr. Wenfeng enrolled in Wuchuan No. 1 Middle School, a well-known establishment in the area. After achieving remarkable results in the fiercely demanding Gaokao University entrance exam, he was accepted to the esteemed Zhejiang University in 2002 as a result of his academic ability.

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When his business, DeepSeek, debuted its state-of-the-art AI product in late January, competing with well-known American rivals, his incredible journey garnered international attention. Consequently, a large number of people who were impressed by Liang’s accomplishments came to see his modest beginnings in Milling Village.

According to Liang Wenfen, the village committee’s representative, Milling Village, which has a population of over 700, is a close-knit community where older members labor in agriculture and younger generations usually work in local shoe factories.

The village has changed dramatically as a result of Mr. Wenfeng. The community had no industrial development before then, and its only source of income was the 10,000 yuan (US$1,400) annual rent for fish ponds.

Since then, the town has grown in popularity as a travel destination, drawing groups of people such as families and business workers. An incredible 10,000 guests visited the area every day during the Spring Festival holiday.

The village’s infrastructure was initially unable to meet the demand despite the surge of tourists. Due to visitor complaints about the unsatisfactory conditions, a renovation project was started in the middle of February. The community has greatly improved as a result of the repairs, even if the source of funds is still unknown.

Roads have been enlarged, sewage systems installed, trees planted, decaying structures removed, and the exterior walls of 29 homes renovated. But despite the excitement, Liang Wenfeng’s grandfather has had to spend the majority of the day with his front door closed out of concern for being harassed by the steady flow of tourists that come to his four-story family home.

According to a local, “some tourists took away a pile of earth, some stones, or fragments of leaves.”

The locals have thanked Mr. Wenfeng from the bottom of their hearts, attributing life-changing changes to him. The residents have also set up a foundation to assist high-achieving students, motivated by his extraordinary achievement.