Politics
Loose wire led to power outage before March 2024 Baltimore ship crash, NTSB says

The NTSB said on Tuesday a loose wire caused a power failure on the 984-foot cargo ship Dali, leading to its March 2024 collision with Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge that killed six construction workers and destroyed the span.
The investigation found a single loose wire in the electrical system caused a breaker to unexpectedly open, launching a sequence of events that led to two vessel blackouts and a loss of propulsion and steering.
The National Transportation Safety Board in its final conclusions on the cause of the accident found wire-label banding prevented the wire from being fully inserted, causing an inadequate connection.
NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy compared the painstaking search for the wire to finding a single loose rivet on the Eiffel Tower. The NTSB and the ship’s manufacturer HD Hyundai Heavy 329180.KS had to test thousands of wires to find the problem, she added. “It’s like finding a needle in the haystack.”
The board also said contributing to the collapse was the lack of countermeasures to reduce the bridge’s vulnerability from impacts by ocean-going vessels, which could have been implemented if a vulnerability assessment had been conducted by the Maryland Transportation Authority.
A replacement bridge was initially estimated to cost $1.7 billion to $1.9 billion and be completed by late 2028. On Monday, state officials said they now expect the bridge will cost $4.3 billion to $5.2 billion and open to traffic only in late 2030. They cited a new pier protection system and a new longer, higher design as reasons for the increased costs.
The board staff said they recommended operators complete periodic inspections of high-voltage switchboards and proposed changes that would allow ships to more quickly recover from a loss of power.
The NTSB has said previously the Dali lost electrical power several times before the crash into the Key Bridge, including experiencing a blackout during in-port maintenance and shortly before the crash.
Power outages can happen on the water and the NTSB made numerous new recommendations to prevent catastrophic collisions, including to the US Coast Guard. It also called on Hyundai Heavy to incorporate “proper wire-label banding installation methods.”
In response to questions on the NTSB findings, HD Hyundai said in a statement it delivered a safe, seaworthy vessel in 2015 with automated systems and critical redundancies to swiftly respond to blackouts but “unfortunately, the owner and operator circumvented these safeguards.”
The company added that when it delivered the ship “there was no indication that any wire was loose” and said if any wire were to come loose “over the course of a decade, through vibrations or otherwise, the owner and operator should have detected that in a routine inspection and through normal maintenance.”
The Key Bridge, like many other bridges, was not equipped with a warning system to prevent motorists from driving onto the bridge in the event of a hazard.
Assessing bridge safety
In March, the board called for urgent safety assessments of 68 bridges in 19 states including crossings like the Golden Gate Bridge, Chesapeake Bay Bridge, Brooklyn Bridge and George Washington Bridge. The NTSB recommended on Tuesday major bridge owners consider adopting motorist warning systems capable of activating when a threat is identified to immediately stop motorists from entering the bridge in an emergency.
The review focused on bridges built before 1991 and frequented by ocean-going vessels that have not undergone vulnerability assessments.
The NTSB said last year the Dali lost power about four minutes before the crash when electrical breakers unexpectedly tripped, causing a loss of power to all shipboard lighting and most equipment when it was 0.6 mile (1km) from the bridge.
The FBI is conducting a criminal probe into the collapse.
Homendy said some of the ship personnel are still in the United States.
Politics
EU Diplomat Supports Pakistan’s Call for Taliban to Stop Backing TTP

The European Union’s ambassador to Pakistan has expressed support for Islamabad’s position that militants based in Afghanistan are behind recent attacks in the country, while emphasizing that Pakistan must align its security expectations with tangible progress on human rights and democratic norms.
Newly appointed Ambassador Raimundas Karoblis said Pakistan’s call for the Taliban to prevent the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) from operating on Afghan soil is “legitimate” and linked to genuine security concerns.
“We condemn terrorism in all its forms,” he noted, adding that Pakistan’s expectations from Afghanistan regarding action against the TTP are justified.
At the same time, Karoblis stressed that the EU is urging Islamabad to maintain diplomatic channels, highlighting Turkiye’s ongoing mediation efforts between the two sides.
When asked whether the Taliban were honoring their Doha pledge not to allow Afghan soil to be used against neighboring countries, he said he lacked independent intelligence to make a judgment. “It is too early to reach a definitive conclusion,” he added.
The ambassador confirmed that a high-level Pakistan-EU Strategic Dialogue will take place in the coming weeks, led by EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas and Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar.
The discussions will cover Afghanistan, the Russia-Ukraine war, regional security, and Pakistan’s role at the UN, while other issues such as trade, migration, and counterterrorism will be addressed in separate forums.
The dialogue comes as Pakistan seeks to maintain its preferential trade status under the GSP Plus programme, which grants duty-free access to European markets in exchange for compliance with international human rights treaties.
Enforced disappearances, long reported in Balochistan but now increasingly documented in Punjab and Sindh, will also be among the EU’s “top priorities” in its monitoring review.
The envoy noted that the EU will evaluate the performance of Pakistan’s Commission of Inquiry on Enforced Disappearances during the upcoming assessments.
When asked about Pakistan’s last two elections, both widely criticized by opposition parties, Karoblis did not label them illegitimate but acknowledged that significant issues had occurred.
“No system is perfect, but irregularities must be addressed so they are not repeated”, he said. The EU recognised the current parliament and government, he added, but concerns about electoral transparency remain on its radar.
Karoblis similarly declined to endorse or condemn recent constitutional amendments affecting judicial powers, though he noted that Brussels was listening to critics. Compliance with UN conventions, he said, was the key test the EU would apply.
Replying to a query on Imran Khan’s detention, Karoblis refused to enter the debate. “I may have personal views, but this is a matter for Pakistan’s judicial authorities”, he said. “Political pluralism is important, but it must be discussed through the rule of law”.
Karoblis said the EU and its member states have mobilised nearly one billion euros in assistance following Pakistan’s devastating 2022 floods, including an initial one million euro tranche for emergency relief.
Under the EU’s Global Gateway strategy, climate adaptation will remain a priority sector for future cooperation.
Politics
Air India lobbying to use Chinese airspace amid mounting financial woes due to Pakistan ban

- Pakistani airspace closure costing Air India profit $455m annually.
- Passengers shifting to foreign carriers due to shorter flight time.
- India reviewing plea to diplomatically ask China for alternate route.
NEW DELHI/HONG KONG: Air India is lobbying the Indian government to convince China to let it use a sensitive military airspace zone in Xinjiang to shorten routes as the financial toll from a ban on Indian carriers flying over Pakistan mounts, a company document shows.
The unusual request comes just weeks after direct India-China flights resumed after a five-year hiatus following a Himalayan border clash between the nations.
Air India has been seeking to rebuild its reputation and international network after a London-bound Boeing Dreamliner crashed in Gujarat in June, killing 260 people and forcing it to briefly cut flights for safety checks.
But that effort is being complicated by the closure of Pakistan’s airspace to Indian carriers since their diplomatic tensions erupted in late April.
For Air India, the country’s only carrier with a major international network, fuel costs have risen by as much as 29% and journey times by up to three hours on some long-haul routes, according to the previously unreported document submitted to Indian officials in late October and reviewed by Reuters.
The Indian government is reviewing Air India’s plea to diplomatically ask China to allow an alternative routing and emergency access to airports in case of diversions at Hotan, Kashgar and Urumqi in Xinjiang, aiming to reach US, Canada and Europe faster, the document said.
“Air India’s long-haul network is under severe operational and financial strain […] Securing Hotan route will be a strategic option,” it added.
The airline, owned by Tata Group and Singapore Airlines estimated the Pakistan airspace closure’s impact on its profit before tax at $455 million annually — a significant amount given its fiscal 2024-25 loss stood at $439 million.
The Chinese foreign ministry said it was not aware of the situation and referred Reuters to the “relevant authorities”.
Air India and civil aviation authorities in India, China and Pakistan did not respond to Reuters‘ queries.
‘Nonviable routes’
The Chinese airspace Air India is seeking to access is ringed by some of the world’s highest mountains of 20,000 ft (6,100 m) or more, and is avoided by international airlines due to potential safety risks in case of a decompression incident.
More critically, it also falls within People’s Liberation Army’s Western Theatre Command, which is equipped with extensive missile, drone and air-defence assets and shares some airports with civilian aircraft, military analysts say.
The Pentagon’s December report on China’s military said the command’s responsibilities include responding to any conflict with India.
China’s military has much greater control of the country’s airspace than in most other aviation markets, restricting flight paths. Open-source intelligence tracker Damien Symon said China’s military has recently expanded an airbase at Hotan.
China’s defence ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Data from AirNav Radar shows no non-Chinese airlines departed or arrived at Hotan airport in the last 12 months.
Shukor Yusof, founder of aviation consultancy Endau Analytics, said: “Air India can try, but it’s doubtful China will accede” to access given the region’s terrain, lack of emergency airports and possibility of security issues.
Airspace globally has been constricted due to proliferating conflict zones.
US carriers have been banned from flying over Russia since the Ukraine war began in 2022 and pulled out of many US-India routes. That gave Air India a near-monopoly on non-stop flights from India.
But after the Pakistan airspace closure, Air India’s Delhi-Washington route was suspended in August. Now other routes are under review, with the direct Mumbai- and Bengaluru to San Francisco routes “becoming unviable” due to an additional three hours of travel time, including a technical stop in Kolkata, the document said.
A flight from San Francisco to Mumbai on Lufthansa via Munich is now only five minutes longer than on Air India.
“Passengers [are] shifting to foreign carriers due to shorter flight time as they have the benefit of Pakistan overflight,” the document said.
Air India estimates the requested Hotan route in China could substantially cut extra fuel requirements and flight times, help restore passenger and cargo capacity it trimmed by as much as 15% on routes like New York- and Vancouver-Delhi, and reduce losses by an estimated $1.13 million per week.
Deepening financial issues
With no signs of airspace ban easing, Air India also wants “temporary subsidy till Pakistan airspace opens”, the document said.
Air India, which has placed $70 billion of aircraft orders, is seeking help resolving legacy tax issues.
India’s government indemnified the airline against claims payable before selling it to Tata in 2022, but several notices have been received related to old tax liabilities of $725 million, raising legal and reputation risks, the document said.
A confidential government notice from March, seen by Reuters, showed tax authorities warned of “coercive steps” — which can include freezing of assets — to recover dues of $58 million in one case.
Contesting such tax demands has led to “additional cashflow burden […] despite assurances during disinvestment”, the airline said.
Politics
Dubai Airshow showcases first-ever night drone display

DUBAI: The second day of the five-day Dubai Airshow concluded late on Tuesday with a spectacular night-time drone display, marking the first extension of show hours in the event’s history.
Organisers extended the programme until 9pm for one night only to stage the special performance.
Hundreds of illuminated drones lit up the Dubai sky, forming shapes of aircraft, rockets, birds and the city’s iconic skyline, drawing applause from visitors.
The display also projected the words “The future is here”, accompanied by music that added to the show’s atmosphere.
The Dubai Airshow continues until Friday.
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