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  • ✇The Rio Times
  • Haiti and DR Reopen Airspace on May 1 After Two Years Juan Martinez
    Key Points —Haiti and the Dominican Republic agreed on April 17 to reopen shared airspace starting May 1, 2026, ending a suspension that began in March 2024. —Flights will connect Cap-Haitien in northern Haiti with three Dominican airports, but Port-au-Prince remains excluded due to ongoing gang control. —The United Nations welcomed the agreement as a […] The post Haiti and DR Reopen Airspace on May 1 After Two Years appeared first on The Rio Times.
     

Haiti and DR Reopen Airspace on May 1 After Two Years

29 April 2026 at 18:42

Key Points —Haiti and the Dominican Republic agreed on April 17 to reopen shared airspace starting May 1, 2026, ending a suspension that began in March 2024. —Flights will connect Cap-Haitien in northern Haiti with three Dominican airports, but Port-au-Prince remains excluded due to ongoing gang control. —The United Nations welcomed the agreement as a […]

The post Haiti and DR Reopen Airspace on May 1 After Two Years appeared first on The Rio Times.

  • ✇Malay Mail - All
  • Iran hijab rules loosen in public view, but restrictions still firmly in place
    PARIS, April 29 — Images of bareheaded women sipping coffee in cafes in Tehran, in apparent defiance of the Islamic republic’s strict dress rule, have stirred interest outside Iran — but for Elnaz, 32, it is no breakthrough.“It is not at all a sign of any change in the government in my opinion. Because no achievement has been made regarding women’s rights,” said Elnaz, a painter in Tehran, who like other women in the capital and elsewhere contacted by AFP in Pari
     

Iran hijab rules loosen in public view, but restrictions still firmly in place

29 April 2026 at 13:00

Malay Mail

PARIS, April 29 — Images of bareheaded women sipping coffee in cafes in Tehran, in apparent defiance of the Islamic republic’s strict dress rule, have stirred interest outside Iran — but for Elnaz, 32, it is no breakthrough.

“It is not at all a sign of any change in the government in my opinion. Because no achievement has been made regarding women’s rights,” said Elnaz, a painter in Tehran, who like other women in the capital and elsewhere contacted by AFP in Paris asked that her full name not be published.

“Under the surface, in reality, no real change has taken place in people’s freedom, especially when it comes to women’s basic rights,” she said.

Wearing the headscarf in public has been mandatory for women since shortly after the Islamic Revolution of 1979 in what was long seen as an ideological pillar of the clerical leadership.

But enforcement of the rule appears to have slackened, at least in parts of Tehran and other cities.

The trend began following the 2022-2023 protests sparked by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, who had been arrested in Tehran for allegedly ignoring the dress code.

It continued through the June 2025 war with Israel, January protests sparked by the cost of living and now the war against the US and Israel that is on hold with a ceasefire.

There is little sign of the dreaded white patrol vans of the so-called morality police that used to lurk in squares and on street corners to haul in women deemed to have violated the rules.

But the picture remains mixed and the situation evolving, with wearing hijab still a matter of choice for some women. It is not uncommon even in more liberal areas of Tehran to see women with and without the headscarf walking together.

Years ago ‘only a dream’ 

Iranian women walk at the Revolution Square in Tehran on April 28, 2026. — AFP pic
Iranian women walk at the Revolution Square in Tehran on April 28, 2026. — AFP pic

In some areas the change has been startling, with scenes of women casually strolling without a headscarf that would have been unthinkable half a decade ago.

“I’m happy for all of them, because until just three years ago this was only a dream,” said Zahra, 57, a housewife from Isfahan in central Iran.

“My youth has passed and I didn’t get to have this experience; now I don’t wear it anymore, but I wish I could have experienced these days when I was young.”

But women can still be summoned by authorities for not wearing hijab, and cafes shut down for failing to enforce the rule, while often women must wear the garment to enter banks, educational establishments and official buildings.

Moreover, the rights of women are still restricted and they live under a system that arrested tens of thousands of people following the January protests and thousands more, including women, in the current war, according to rights groups.

“Beautiful photos of cafes and girls are being shared everywhere, but as cafe owners, we’ve been paying a lot for that,” said Negin, 34, who owns a cafe in Tehran.

“We’ve been treated very harshly over these years, continuing until this day. We’ve been shut down multiple times, fined and had to pay bribes... What makes me even angrier is when they call this ‘freedom’ and they say women are being freer,” she added.

‘More widespread’ 

Amnesty International said this month that “widespread resistance” to the obligatory hijab “forced authorities to retreat from the violent mass arrests and assaults of previous years”.

“However, authorities continued to use existing laws and regulations to enforce compulsory veiling in workplaces, universities and other public sector institutions, leaving women and girls who resisted facing harassment, assault, arbitrary arrest, fines and expulsion from employment and education,” it added.

One noticeable change has been state television broadcasting images of Iranian women not wearing hijab — but only so long as they back the Islamic republic and denounce Iran’s enemies in what critics see as a cynical ploy.

“More women are putting their fear aside each day and trying out what it’s like to go out without hijab, and it’s gradually becoming more widespread,” said Shahrzad, 39, a Tehran housewife.

An Iranian woman carrying a child walks at the Revolution Square in Tehran on April 28, 2026. — AFP pic
An Iranian woman carrying a child walks at the Revolution Square in Tehran on April 28, 2026. — AFP pic

“But I don’t see any change in the government system. It’s the same as before, aside from those videos of girls going in front of state news cameras without hijab and saying ‘my leader, my leader, I will sacrifice myself for him’.”

‘Don’t see any significant change’ 

The situation is far from uniform across Iran.

Mahsa, a 32-year-old student, said rules and observance are tighter in the major eastern city of Mashhad, home to one of the holiest shrines in Shia Islam.

“Before the 12-day war (against Israel in June), in Mashhad they wouldn’t let us in anywhere without hijab,” she said.

“Now they do let people in, but unfortunately, we haven’t had the same level of change that people in Tehran have seen over the past three years.”

Farnaz, 41 from Isfahan, which is generally seen as one of Iran’s more conservative big cities, said she had been summoned to appear in court over hijab observance later this month.

“In Isfahan, for the past few days they’ve started sealing cafes again over hijab issues. They didn’t even wait for the situation with the war to be clarified.

“Here, you’re dealing both with the government and with people. Like before in some neighbourhoods, religious people sometimes warn you and harass you. It’s not just about the morality police.”

“I don’t see any significant change,” she added.

Maryam, 35, also from Isfahan, said women without hijab would not be served in some banks and shopworkers have to wear it.

“If you are involved in social or economic activity, you are expected to observe hijab.”

Zahra, the housewife from Isfahan, said “we paid a very high price to get here”, after the crackdown on the Mahsa Amini protests killed hundreds of people according to rights groups.

“Right now, they (the authorities) are just distracted by the war. But after that, who knows what they will do about it,” she said. — AFP 

  • ✇Malay Mail - All
  • ‘We paid a very high price’: Iranian women fear rollback after softer dress code policing
    PARIS, April 28 — Images of bareheaded women sipping coffee in cafes in Tehran, in apparent defiance of the Islamic republic’s strict dress rule, have stirred interest outside Iran — but for Elnaz, 32, it is no breakthrough.“It is not at all a sign of any change in the government in my opinion. Because no achievement has been made regarding women’s rights,” said Elnaz, a painter in Tehran, who like other women in the capital and elsewhere contacted by AFP in Pari
     

‘We paid a very high price’: Iranian women fear rollback after softer dress code policing

27 April 2026 at 23:00

Malay Mail

PARIS, April 28 — Images of bareheaded women sipping coffee in cafes in Tehran, in apparent defiance of the Islamic republic’s strict dress rule, have stirred interest outside Iran — but for Elnaz, 32, it is no breakthrough.

“It is not at all a sign of any change in the government in my opinion. Because no achievement has been made regarding women’s rights,” said Elnaz, a painter in Tehran, who like other women in the capital and elsewhere contacted by AFP in Paris asked that her full name not be published.

“Under the surface, in reality, no real change has taken place in people’s freedom, especially when it comes to women’s basic rights,” she said.

Wearing the headscarf in public has been mandatory for women since shortly after the Islamic Revolution of 1979 in what was long seen as an ideological pillar of the clerical leadership.

But enforcement of the rule appears to have slackened, at least in parts of Tehran and other cities.

Iranians enjoy the waterfront at Chitgar Lake, an artificial recreational lake and park officially known as the Lake of the Martyrs of the Persian Gulf, in northwestern Tehran on April 26, 2026. — AFP pic
Iranians enjoy the waterfront at Chitgar Lake, an artificial recreational lake and park officially known as the Lake of the Martyrs of the Persian Gulf, in northwestern Tehran on April 26, 2026. — AFP pic

The trend began following the 2022-2023 protests sparked by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, who had been arrested in Tehran for allegedly ignoring the dress code.

It continued through the June 2025 war with Israel, January protests sparked by the cost of living and now the war against the US and Israel that is on hold with a ceasefire.

There is little sign of the dreaded white patrol vans of the so-called morality police that used to lurk in squares and on street corners to haul in women deemed to have violated the rules.

But the picture remains mixed and the situation evolving, with wearing hijab still a matter of choice for some women. It is not uncommon even in more liberal areas of Tehran to see women with and without the headscarf walking together.

A banner reading ‘Martyr Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’ is displayed along the walkway at Chitgar Lake, an artificial recreational lake and park officially known as the Lake of the Martyrs of the Persian Gulf, in northwestern Tehran on April 26, 2026. — AFP pic
A banner reading ‘Martyr Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’ is displayed along the walkway at Chitgar Lake, an artificial recreational lake and park officially known as the Lake of the Martyrs of the Persian Gulf, in northwestern Tehran on April 26, 2026. — AFP pic

Years ago ‘only a dream’ 

In some areas the change has been startling, with scenes of women casually strolling without a headscarf that would have been unthinkable half a decade ago.

“I’m happy for all of them, because until just three years ago this was only a dream,” said Zahra, 57, a housewife from Isfahan in central Iran.

“My youth has passed and I didn’t get to have this experience; now I don’t wear it anymore, but I wish I could have experienced these days when I was young.”

But women can still be summoned by authorities for not wearing hijab, and cafes shut down for failing to enforce the rule, while often women must wear the garment to enter banks, educational establishments and official buildings.

Moreover, the rights of women are still restricted and they live under a system that arrested tens of thousands of people following the January protests and thousands more, including women, in the current war, according to rights groups.

“Beautiful photos of cafes and girls are being shared everywhere, but as cafe owners, we’ve been paying a lot for that,” said Negin, 34, who owns a cafe in Tehran.

“We’ve been treated very harshly over these years, continuing until this day. We’ve been shut down multiple times, fined and had to pay bribes... What makes me even angrier is when they call this ‘freedom’ and they say women are being freer,” she added.

Iranians enjoy an amusement ride at Game City at Chitgar Lake, an artificial recreational lake and park officially known as the Lake of the Martyrs of the Persian Gulf, in northwestern Tehran on April 26, 2026. — AFP pic
Iranians enjoy an amusement ride at Game City at Chitgar Lake, an artificial recreational lake and park officially known as the Lake of the Martyrs of the Persian Gulf, in northwestern Tehran on April 26, 2026. — AFP pic

‘More widespread’ 

Amnesty International said this month that “widespread resistance” to the obligatory hijab “forced authorities to retreat from the violent mass arrests and assaults of previous years”.

“However, authorities continued to use existing laws and regulations to enforce compulsory veiling in workplaces, universities and other public sector institutions, leaving women and girls who resisted facing harassment, assault, arbitrary arrest, fines and expulsion from employment and education,” it added.

One noticeable change has been state television broadcasting images of Iranian women not wearing hijab — but only so long as they back the Islamic republic and denounce Iran’s enemies in what critics see as a cynical ploy.

“More women are putting their fear aside each day and trying out what it’s like to go out without hijab, and it’s gradually becoming more widespread,” said Shahrzad, 39, a Tehran housewife.

“But I don’t see any change in the government system. It’s the same as before, aside from those videos of girls going in front of state news cameras without hijab and saying ‘my leader, my leader, I will sacrifice myself for him’.”

Iranian families and children ride paddleboats on Chitgar Lake, an artificial recreational lake and park officially known as the Lake of the Martyrs of the Persian Gulf, in northwestern Tehran on April 26, 2026. — AFP pic
Iranian families and children ride paddleboats on Chitgar Lake, an artificial recreational lake and park officially known as the Lake of the Martyrs of the Persian Gulf, in northwestern Tehran on April 26, 2026. — AFP pic

‘Don’t see any significant change’ 

The situation is far from uniform across Iran.

Mahsa, a 32-year-old student, said rules and observance are tighter in the major eastern city of Mashhad, home to one of the holiest shrines in Shia Islam.

“Before the 12-day war (against Israel in June), in Mashhad they wouldn’t let us in anywhere without hijab,” she said.

“Now they do let people in, but unfortunately, we haven’t had the same level of change that people in Tehran have seen over the past three years.”

Farnaz, 41 from Isfahan, which is generally seen as one of Iran’s more conservative big cities, said she had been summoned to appear in court over hijab observance later this month.

“In Isfahan, for the past few days they’ve started sealing cafes again over hijab issues. They didn’t even wait for the situation with the war to be clarified.

“Here, you’re dealing both with the government and with people. Like before in some neighbourhoods, religious people sometimes warn you and harass you. It’s not just about the morality police.”

“I don’t see any significant change,” she added.

Maryam, 35, also from Isfahan, said women without hijab would not be served in some banks and shopworkers have to wear it.

“If you are involved in social or economic activity, you are expected to observe hijab.”

Zahra, the housewife from Isfahan, said “we paid a very high price to get here”, after the crackdown on the Mahsa Amini protests killed hundreds of people according to rights groups.

“Right now, they (the authorities) are just distracted by the war. But after that, who knows what they will do about it,” she said. — AFP

 

  • ✇The Guardian World news
  • Czech journalists threaten to strike over plan to scrap licence fees Anna Koslerova in Prague
    Government aims to move TV and radio funding under state control, which critics say undermines independenceJournalists at the Czech Republic’s public broadcasters have said they are prepared to go on strike unless the government of the billionaire prime minister, Andrej ​Babiš, backs down on its plan to scrap licence fees and move funding under state control.In what the journalists see as a threat to their independence, the government wants to replace the current system, in which households pay
     

Czech journalists threaten to strike over plan to scrap licence fees

23 April 2026 at 04:00

Government aims to move TV and radio funding under state control, which critics say undermines independence

Journalists at the Czech Republic’s public broadcasters have said they are prepared to go on strike unless the government of the billionaire prime minister, Andrej ​Babiš, backs down on its plan to scrap licence fees and move funding under state control.

In what the journalists see as a threat to their independence, the government wants to replace the current system, in which households pay fees directly to public service media, with direct funding from the state budget. “Licence fees are cancelled,” the culture minister, Oto Klempíř, declared last week.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Martin Divíšek/EPA

© Photograph: Martin Divíšek/EPA

© Photograph: Martin Divíšek/EPA

  • ✇The Rio Times
  • Latin America’s Silent 2026 Risk: A Returning El Niño Matias Sebastian Lopez
    Key Points — NOAA’s April 2026 outlook gives a 61% probability of El Niño emergence in the May-July window rising to 62% for June-August, with a 1-in-3 chance the event classifies as “strong” during October-December 2026. — A moderate-to-strong event would cut Andean GDP by 0.6-1.7 percentage points, threaten 50% of LATAM’s hydro-dependent electricity supply, […] The post Latin America’s Silent 2026 Risk: A Returning El Niño appeared first on The Rio Times.
     

Latin America’s Silent 2026 Risk: A Returning El Niño

21 April 2026 at 17:03

Key Points — NOAA’s April 2026 outlook gives a 61% probability of El Niño emergence in the May-July window rising to 62% for June-August, with a 1-in-3 chance the event classifies as “strong” during October-December 2026. — A moderate-to-strong event would cut Andean GDP by 0.6-1.7 percentage points, threaten 50% of LATAM’s hydro-dependent electricity supply, […]

The post Latin America’s Silent 2026 Risk: A Returning El Niño appeared first on The Rio Times.

  • ✇The Rio Times
  • Latin American Pulse for Saturday, April 18, 2026 Richard Mann
    Hormuz Reopened: Iran Declares Strait “Completely Open,” Brent Crashes 9% Below $90, WTI Hits $83 Intraday — Trump: “Deal Is Close,” Claims Iran Will Suspend Nuclear Programme and Ship 441kg Uranium to US — Tehran: “Nothing Is Certain Yet” — Petrobras Crashes ~7%, Ibovespa Falls Third Straight Session to 195,733 (−0.55%), but Real Strengthens to […] The post Latin American Pulse for Saturday, April 18, 2026 appeared first on The Rio Times.
     

Latin American Pulse for Saturday, April 18, 2026

18 April 2026 at 07:24

Hormuz Reopened: Iran Declares Strait “Completely Open,” Brent Crashes 9% Below $90, WTI Hits $83 Intraday — Trump: “Deal Is Close,” Claims Iran Will Suspend Nuclear Programme and Ship 441kg Uranium to US — Tehran: “Nothing Is Certain Yet” — Petrobras Crashes ~7%, Ibovespa Falls Third Straight Session to 195,733 (−0.55%), but Real Strengthens to […]

The post Latin American Pulse for Saturday, April 18, 2026 appeared first on The Rio Times.

  • ✇The Rio Times
  • How Latin America Turned Murder Into a Flourishing Global Industry Florencia Belén Ruiz
    Key Points — At least 108,838 people were murdered across Latin America and the Caribbean in 2025, with contract killings accounting for a growing share in countries from Colombia to Peru — In Bogotá, half of all homicides are now classified as sicariato — professional hits carried out as outsourced services between criminal networks, with […] The post How Latin America Turned Murder Into a Flourishing Global Industry appeared first on The Rio Times.
     

How Latin America Turned Murder Into a Flourishing Global Industry

17 April 2026 at 12:17

Key Points — At least 108,838 people were murdered across Latin America and the Caribbean in 2025, with contract killings accounting for a growing share in countries from Colombia to Peru — In Bogotá, half of all homicides are now classified as sicariato — professional hits carried out as outsourced services between criminal networks, with […]

The post How Latin America Turned Murder Into a Flourishing Global Industry appeared first on The Rio Times.

Brazil Upgraded, Argentina Cut, Bolivia in Freefall: The IMF’s New Latin America Growth Map

15 April 2026 at 10:42

Key Points — The IMF’s April WEO cut global growth to 3.1% (down 0.2pp from January) and raised global inflation to 4.4%, citing the Iran war as the primary risk. Chief Economist Gourinchas said the world is “somewhere between the baseline and the adverse scenario.” — Latin America was raised to 2.3% growth (up 0.1pp), […]

The post Brazil Upgraded, Argentina Cut, Bolivia in Freefall: The IMF’s New Latin America Growth Map appeared first on The Rio Times.

  • ✇The Rio Times
  • War Reshapes Latin America’s Tourism Map Juan Martinez
    Key Points — The Dominican Republic welcomed 223,328 tourists during Holy Week — up 14.8% year-on-year — as European carriers redirected flights from Greece, Turkey, and Egypt toward Caribbean destinations after Middle East airspace closures grounded over 20,000 flights — Brazil recorded 2.6 million international arrivals in January–February 2026 (+22%), Costa Rica hit 653,959 (+10.4%), […] The post War Reshapes Latin America’s Tourism Map appeared first on The Rio Times.
     

War Reshapes Latin America’s Tourism Map

9 April 2026 at 17:57

Key Points — The Dominican Republic welcomed 223,328 tourists during Holy Week — up 14.8% year-on-year — as European carriers redirected flights from Greece, Turkey, and Egypt toward Caribbean destinations after Middle East airspace closures grounded over 20,000 flights — Brazil recorded 2.6 million international arrivals in January–February 2026 (+22%), Costa Rica hit 653,959 (+10.4%), […]

The post War Reshapes Latin America’s Tourism Map appeared first on The Rio Times.

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