Key National & Global Stories

As of Thursday, April 2, 2026 (morning, U.S. Eastern time)

Top points

Middle East & Human Rights

Executions and internet blackout in Iran

Opposition sources report that Iran has executed at least four members of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI) in the past 48 hours. They say the regime is using executions to intimidate amid war with the United States and Israel and fears of renewed uprisings.

The same brief highlights an unprecedented, weeks‑long internet blackout in Iran, with over 744 hours of severe restrictions. Observers warn this could both damage the economy and conceal human‑rights abuses.

Source: ncr-iran.org

US Foreign Policy

Trump says Iran conflict “nearing end”

President Donald Trump characterizes the ongoing conflict with Iran as approaching a “decisive, overwhelming victory” and indicates that broader attacks remain an option.

He also argues that Israel’s survival would have been at risk if the 2015 nuclear deal had stayed in place.

Source: dawn.com

US Domestic

Record‑length 2026 U.S. federal shutdown

The 2026 federal government shutdown, which began earlier this year, has surpassed the 2025 shutdown to become the longest in U.S. history as of March 29, 2026.

The shutdown has strained FEMA’s disaster relief fund and other agencies, though a short‑term Department of Homeland Security funding bill has recently been signed.

Source: en.wikipedia.org

US Elections

Mail‑in voting rules tightened ahead of midterms

President Trump has signed an executive order to tighten rules on mail‑in voting before the 2026 midterm elections. Republicans currently hold a narrow majority in Congress and face the risk of losing control.

Source: dawn.com

Global Diplomacy

UK to host talks on reopening Strait of Hormuz

The United Kingdom is preparing a 35‑nation conference focused on reopening the Strait of Hormuz, a key chokepoint in the Iran crisis and global oil supply.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer presents the initiative as part of a broader effort to repair ties with Europe after Brexit.

Source: dawn.com

Asia–Pacific Security

China–Japan military tensions rise

Japan has completed deployment of new Type 25 long‑range missiles in Kumamoto and Shizuoka. Almost at the same time, five Chinese navy ships entered the Sea of Japan via the Tsushima Strait.

Beijing labels Japan’s moves “offensive and expansionist.” Tokyo reports tracking a new Chinese Y‑9 patrol aircraft and scrambling fighters in response.

Source: theasiacable.com

Tech & Economy

Chinese firms gain in AI‑chip market

Chinese GPU and AI‑chip makers took roughly 41% of China’s AI accelerator server market in 2025, reducing Nvidia’s earlier dominance.

The trend reflects efforts inside China to lessen dependence on U.S. technology amid export controls.

Source: theasiacable.com

Health & Business

Weight‑loss “pill wars” intensify

The U.S. FDA has cleared Eli Lilly’s oral version of a GLP‑1 weight‑loss drug, setting up direct competition with Novo Nordisk, whose Wegovy pill has already posted one of the strongest launches in pharmaceutical history.

Analysts anticipate a fierce contest in a GLP‑1 market now estimated above $70 billion.

Source: golocalprov.com

Africa

Nigerian president shifts trip after attacks

Nigerian President Bola Tinubu has cancelled a planned visit to Ogun State and will instead travel to Jos, Plateau State, following lethal gun attacks there.

The visit is intended to address security concerns in discussions with local leaders and residents.

Source: naijanews.com

Europe

Malta: corporate liquidation and rights concerns

An asset freeze of up to €51.2 million tied to a French investigation has driven Maltese gaming company River Tech into liquidation, costing dozens of jobs.

Separately, Malta’s Ombudsman reports that citizens have lacked full human‑rights protection for a decade because an international treaty has not been fully implemented in domestic law.

Source: timesofmalta.com