China’s Fingerprints on the Battlefield: How Beijing is Fueling Pakistani attacks on India
India must respond with clarity, not just military strength but diplomatic will. And the global powers must hold Beijing accountable—not just for the arms it sells, but for the wars it kindles from behind the scenes.
Hydropower Repression and Resistance: Tibet at the United Nations
The 59th session of the United Nations Human Rights Council (UN HRC59), held between 16 June and 9 July, brought renewed attention to the...
EU Lawmakers Warn China: Hands Off the Dalai Lama Succession
In a forceful rebuke to Beijing’s ongoing attempts to interfere in Tibetan religious matters, 38 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) from 15 EU nations have issued a unified call urging China to refrain from meddling in the selection of the next Dalai Lama. The op-ed, published in EUobserver on Friday, also calls for potential sanctions against Chinese officials involved in undermining the religious rights of Tibetans.
Legal Action Filed Against France’s Musée Guimet Over Erasure of Tibetan Identity
Paris, July 2025 —In a bold stand against cultural erasure, a coalition of Tibetan advocacy organisations in France has filed a legal complaint against...
Two Earthquakes, One Mega-Dam, and Zero Common Sense: China’s Ticking Time Bomb in Tibet
Tibet was hit by two earthquakes in quick succession on Wednesday, raising fresh alarms over the safety and long-term viability of China's massive Yarlung...
Burning Skies, Silenced Voices: The Human Cost of China’s Fireworks Obsession
On October 2, in Liuyang, Hunan Province—the so-called “hometown of fireworks”—a spectacle meant to inspire awe at the Sky Theatre dissolved into terror. Flames cascaded onto spectators as misfired pyrotechnics rained down, igniting small fires and sending families fleeing for their lives. Social media branded the scene “apocalyptic.” Within hours, state media minimized the event, stressing that “no serious injuries” occurred and praising swift emergency responses.
China vs Nvidia: When You Can’t Innovate, Regulate
China wants to become a global AI superpower. Xi Jinping has said as much. But instead of nurturing real innovation, the Communist Party spends its time either stealing tech, copy-pasting IP, or punishing those who succeed where Chinese firms fail.














