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Blaming parents: oversimplification of social deviance

I recently listened to a sermon on parenting in which a religious scholar spoke passionately about the moral decline of society. Disrespect for elders, drug use and other forms of antisocial behaviour, he argued, were largely the result of poor parenting. While there was some truth in his concern, what struck me was the sweeping nature of the claim. It felt intuitively unsatisfying because such a claim overlooks the many other forces that shape who children become. It also seemed that beneath the moral urgency of the message lay a subtle push towards religious schooling as the corrective path. A closer look reveals why such explanations, though persuasive, are incomplete. No serious body of knowledge - whether in Sociology, Psychology or Behavioural Genetics - supports the idea that parenting alone determines behaviour. Human development is shaped by an intricate interplay of factors: biological predispositions, peer influences, schooling systems, media exposure, economic conditions an...

UK will not join US blockade of Strait of Hormuz

The United Kingdom will not participate in a United States blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, according to local media, following US President Donald Trump’s remarks about blockading the critical shipping route. "We continue to support freedom of navigation and the opening of the Strait of Hormuz, which is urgently needed to support the global economy and the cost of living back home," said a government spokesperson, according to Sky News. "The Strait of Hormuz must not be subject to tolling," the official added. BREAKING: The UK will not be involved in a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, Sky News understands. Earlier today, Donald Trump said the U.S. Navy would be blocking the critical shipping route. Sky's political correspondent @LucyJMcDaid has the latesthttps://t.co/aJEtGwKcEW pic.twitter.com/Kf9aqrIL90 — Sky News (@SkyNews) April 12, 2026 The official noted that London is "urgently working" with France and other partners to build a broad coalition...

First Pakistan-bound container vessel reaches Karachi after Strait of Hormuz reopening

The vessel MV SELEN arrived at Karachi Port on Saturday, becoming the first Pakistan-bound vessel to do so following the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz after more than a month of disruption caused by conflict in the Middle East. In a statement, the Karachi Port Trust (KPT) said: “MV SELEN, operated by NLC (AP Line), has berthed at Karachi Port, marking the first Pakistan-bound container vessel arrival following recent disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz.” It added that the vessel, arriving from Jebel Ali, signalled the resumption of containerised trade and reinforced confidence in maritime supply chains. Read: First Pakistani vessel carrying oil shipment arrives via Strait of Hormuz The KPT said the development reflected effective coordination among port, shipping and logistics stakeholders to sustain cargo operations. Although the Strait of Hormuz had remained disrupted since the United States and Israel attacked Iran on February 28, Pakistan continued to receive oil ...

Pakistan sends fighter jets to Saudi Arabia under mutual defence pact

Pakistan has sent fighter jets and other military forces to Saudi Arabia to boost security under a defence pact between the two countries, the kingdom's defence ministry said on Saturday. In September 2025, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia signed a landmark “Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement”, declaring that “any aggression against either country shall be considered an aggression against both”. The pact was signed during Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s visit to Riyadh at the invitation of Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud. Read: KSA assures Pakistan of financial support Saudi Arabia's defence ministry said in a statement today ​that Pakistani fighter jets and support aircraft had arrived at the King ⁠Abdulaziz Air Base in the country's Eastern Province. “The Pakistani force consists of fighter and support aircraft belonging to the Pakistan Air Force, with the aim of enhancing joint military coordination,” the statement said, adding th...

Israel and Lebanon are expected to hold talks. What do we know?

Israeli and Lebanese officials are expected to meet in Washington next week as United States President Donald Trump seeks to calm weeks of Israeli fighting with Hezbollah that has threatened to derail a fragile US-Iran ceasefire. Both sides are under pressure from Trump to bring about an ​end to the fighting, a key demand by Iran in parallel talks due this weekend in Pakistan. Who is fighting and why? Israel intensified its air attacks on Lebanon after Hezbollah ‌fired missiles at Israel on March 2, three days into the US-Israeli war on Iran. It has since widened a ground invasion into Lebanon's south, ordering hundreds of thousands of Lebanese to flee villages it views as Hezbollah strongholds. At least 1,888 people have been killed in Israeli attacks in Lebanon, while at least two Israelis have been killed by Hezbollah rocket fire. The current war followed a round of fighting in 2024 that saw the US broker a deal aimed at disarming Hezbollah. Since then, ​Lebanon's government...

Trump, Netanyahu held 'tense' phone call before Israel sought ceasefire talks with Lebanon: report

United States President Donald Trump held a “tense” phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday, CNN reported on Friday. Citing a US and Israeli source familiar with the matter, CNN reported the conversation came shortly before Israel announced it would seek direct ceasefire talks with Lebanon. The Israeli source told CNN that Netanyahu came to understand that if he did not call for direct talks with Lebanon, Trump might simply declare a ceasefire. The call marked at least the third conversation between the two leaders this week in which Lebanon featured prominently. Earlier in the week, they spoke ahead of Trump announcing a two-week ceasefire with Iran. During that exchange, Netanyahu reportedly urged that Lebanon not be included in the broader framework. According to CNN, a day later, Trump pressed Netanyahu to scale back Israeli strikes against Hezbollah in Lebanon, following reports from Lebanese health authorities that 303 people were killed in Israeli a...

Political recalibrations in South Asia

Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Nepal are experiencing dramatic political transitions, each ushering in genuinely new governing orders rather than the familiar 'old wine in new bottles' reshuffles. These shifts carry consequences not only domestically but across the broader South Asian region. Sri Lanka's transition, the earliest of the three, was driven by systemic economic collapse that persisted despite heavy borrowing from China. The election of a reformist government emerging from the mass protest movement marked a decisive break from the dynastic politics of the Rajapaksa era. While India and multilateral agencies provided crucial financial and humanitarian assistance during the crisis, this goodwill has not translated into policy alignment. Colombo's new leadership emphasises sovereignty, transparency and a break from dependency politics, yet the country still struggles to restore economic stability without imposing further hardship on its population. In Bangladesh, th...