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Former general Prabowo takes helm in Indonesia

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Former general Prabowo takes helm in Indonesia

Former military general Prabowo Subianto has been sworn in as Indonesia’s president with ambitious plans to boost growth while claiming a bigger international role for south-east Asia’s largest economy.

Prabowo, 73, takes over from Joko Widodo eight months after a landslide victory in February’s presidential election. Gibran Rakabuming Raka, his predecessor’s eldest son, was sworn in as his deputy.

“We will do our roles as the nation’s leaders truthfully, prioritising the interest of all Indonesians, including those who did not vote for us,” Prabowo said in a speech after taking his oath of office in Jakarta on Sunday.

The inauguration caps a remarkable turnaround for Prabowo, a former commander of the country’s feared special forces who was dismissed from the military and once banned by the US for the alleged kidnapping of democracy activists. Prabowo has always denied the accusations.

The former general won over millions of Indonesians with the backing of the highly popular Widodo, and by promising policy continuity as well as free school lunches, a massive programme expected to cost $28bn. He has also vowed to boost economic growth to 8 per cent a year, up from the 5 per cent rate that Indonesia has maintained for more than a decade.

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But Prabowo has already indicated a departure from his predecessor in everything from government spending to foreign policy. He is open to taking on more debt to fund social assistance programmes and plans to expand the cabinet by a third to accommodate political allies.

He also wants Indonesia to play a more active role internationally. Widodo shunned international events. In his 10 years in power, he never attended the annual UN General Assembly in New York in person. Prabowo, on the other hand, has made more than a dozen international trips between the election and inauguration day.

“The most significant break of Prabowo’s policies from his predecessor would be on the focus of its foreign policies,” said Kennedy Muslim, a political analyst at Indikator Politik Indonesia. “While Jokowi single-mindedly focused his pragmatic foreign diplomacy on attracting business investments from abroad, Prabowo’s are more strategic in nature since he’s by nature much more interested in geopolitics than his predecessor.”

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Prabowo is expected to maintain Indonesia’s historically neutral foreign policy stance but will seek to play a bigger role and increase engagement in global issues. As defence minister in Widodo’s government, Prabowo last year proposed a demilitarised zone and a UN referendum to end the conflict between Ukraine and Russia, a plan that was rejected by Ukraine. This year, Prabowo said Indonesia was willing to send peacekeeping forces to Gaza.

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His first overseas trip since winning the election was to China, where he met Xi Jinping. Beijing is Indonesia’s largest trading partner and the second-biggest source of foreign direct investment, putting money into economically significant industries such as metals, mining and infrastructure. Prabowo has also met Russian President Vladimir Putin and leaders of Japan, France and south-east Asian neighbours.

In his inauguration speech, Prabowo said Indonesia would be “free and active . . . and non-aligned”. His swearing-in ceremony was attended by leaders and senior officials from more than 30 countries, including Singapore’s Prime Minister Lawrence Wong, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr and Chinese vice-president Han Zheng.

At home, social assistance programs are a priority. While Widodo focused on building roads, ports and other infrastructure, Prabowo wants to ensure food and energy security, eradicate poverty and provide free meals and health check-ups.

“One of his immediate priorities is to tackle the social aspect of his agenda,” said Brian Lee, an analyst with Maybank. “Jokowi was about hard infrastructure. Prabowo is looking at initiatives that don’t just target the national economy as a whole but also target the households.”

However, Prabowo will also have to attract investment to meet his growth targets. “Eight per cent is going to be very difficult,” said Lee. “He needs to basically attract a lot more investment, both domestic and foreign direct investment.”

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Prabowo takes over an economy that has transformed during Widodo’s 10 years in power into a central player in the global energy transition effort, thanks to Indonesia’s vast nickel reserves. In his speech, Prabowo said the country should implement “downstreaming” across all of its natural resources, referring to the process of value-adding to commodities.

Widodo banned the export of nickel ore as part of his downstreaming policy, in a bid to attract foreign investors to set up smelters in the country. The move boosted Indonesia’s economy and exports, but GDP growth failed to meet Widodo’s initial target of 7 per cent.

Widodo has also eased rules to attract foreign investors, with metals and mining in particular drawing in record funds. While Prabowo has said he would be investor-friendly, he is yet to lay out detailed plans.

One of Prabowo’s economic advisers told the Financial Times that focus on minerals processing alone would not be enough to reach the GDP target. “We need new engines of growth,” he said, pointing to the digital sector, the energy transition and higher-quality manufacturing as possible growth areas.

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Fiscally, Prabowo is planning to be a lot more liberal than Widodo, primarily to fund his social assistance programs. His brother and close adviser, Hashim Djojohadikusumo, has said Prabowo plans to increase the country’s debt-to-GDP ratio to 50 per cent from the current 39 per cent. To support higher debt, Prabowo hopes to increase tax revenue and sell state assets.

While Indonesia’s debt levels are lower than regional peers’, economists warn a sharp rise in borrowings over the short term could affect the currency, risk Indonesia’s credit rating and have a ripple effect on the economy.

Prabowo’s team has reassured investors of their fiscal caution in recent months, but concerns remain. “Potential fiscal strains could grow over time as [Prabowo’s] new programmes burgeon,” Citi’s chief Indonesia economist Helmi Arman said in a recent research note. He also expressed concerns that Prabowo’s key programmes appeared to be domestic market-oriented and not on exports.

Prabowo will also have to deftly handle his political allies, most importantly his former rival Widodo. Analysts said the former president had for months been trying to retain influence to protect his legacy.

“Prabowo knows that people still love Jokowi . . . however, Prabowo wants to control power in his own hands without any interference from Jokowi,” said Arya Fernandes, a political analyst at the Jakarta-based Centre for Strategic and International Studies, adding that Widodo could be given an advisory role.

Several of Widodo’s ministers are expected to get positions in Prabowo’s government. One indication of the outgoing president’s influence could be how big a role his son Gibran gets as vice-president, traditionally not a prominent position.

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Prabowo also plans to install a bigger government, expanding the cabinet from 34 to up to 46, adding to worries over fiscal spending. His advisers have said the bigger government is primarily to appease partners in the ruling coalition.

Trade-offs are inevitable, said Indikator Politik’s Muslim, not least “between political stability and internal cohesion, as well as ruling effectiveness within his big-tent coalition”.

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In pictures: Winter storm slams the east coast

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In pictures: Winter storm slams the east coast

A collection of snow sport enthusiasts brave blowing snow and 20-degree temperatures to ski Horsebarn Hill in Mansfield, Ct. on Monday afternoon as the snow squalls pass from a storm that dropped more than a foot of snow across the state on Feb. 23.

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Mark Mirko/Connecticut Public

A powerful winter storm hit the northeast U.S. on Monday, leaving millions stranded at home, prompting travel bans — which were lifted by midday— and flight cancellations throughout New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Connecticut.

According to Connecticut Public, some parts of the state got as much as two feet of snow, while some neighborhoods throughout New York recorded as much as 24 inches of snow. Thousands of residents in New York and New Jersey also reported power outages, with nearly 40,000 customers in New Jersey still without power as of early this evening.

Here are images of the areas affected by the winter storm:

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A plow clears Silver Lane between East Hartford and Manchester on Feb. 23.

A plow clears Silver Lane between East Hartford and Manchester, Ct. on Feb. 23.

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A man makes a recording while laying in the snow in lower Manhattan during a snow storm on Feb. 23 in New York.

A person makes a recording while laying in the snow in lower Manhattan during a snow storm on Feb. 23 in New York.

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A trio of yard decorations in Willington, Conn. are coated with snow on Feb. 23, during a nor'easter that pounded the state with up to two feet of snow in some areas.

A trio of yard decorations in Willington, Conn. are coated with snow on Feb. 23, during a nor’easter that pounded the state with up to two feet of snow in some areas.

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Residents shovel snow in East Boston, Mass., on Feb. 23.

Residents shovel snow in East Boston, Mass., on Feb. 23.

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A man skis through the streets of Brooklyn as blizzard conditions continue on Feb. 23 in New York City.

A person skis through the streets of Brooklyn as blizzard conditions continue on Feb. 23 in New York City.

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Ducks swim in The Pond during snowfall in Central Park on Feb. 23 in New York City. A major winter storm has hit the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions bringing heavy snowfall and blizzard conditions with the potential of up to 23 inches of snow in New York City. A blizzard warning has been issued for large areas of the East Coast, including New York City.

Ducks swim in The Pond during snowfall in Central Park on Feb. 23 in New York City.

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Birds fly between a tree and a railing amid heavy snow on February 23, 2026 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.

Birds fly between a tree and a railing amid heavy snow on February 23, 2026 in Brooklyn, New York.

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Children sled on Cedar Hill in Central Park in New York on Feb. 23 during a snow storm.

Children sled on Cedar Hill in Central Park in New York on Feb. 23 during a snow storm.

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A person carrying flowers walks through the snow in the Lower East Side on February 23, 2026 in New York City.

A person carrying flowers walks through the snow in the Lower East Side on February 23, 2026 in New York City.

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Video: Why the Supreme Court Struck Down Trump’s Tariffs

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Video: Why the Supreme Court Struck Down Trump’s Tariffs

new video loaded: Why the Supreme Court Struck Down Trump’s Tariffs

Our reporter Ann E. Marimow describes the rationale of the Supreme Court’s 6-to-3 ruling to strike down President Trump’s sweeping tariffs.

By Ann E. Marimow, Sutton Raphael, June Kim and Whitney Shefte

February 23, 2026

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Suspected gunman identified after being shot dead at Mar-a-Lago – US politics live

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Suspected gunman identified after being shot dead at Mar-a-Lago – US politics live

Suspected gunman was ‘very quiet’ and came from a family of ‘big Trump supporters’, cousin says

The New York Times is reporting that Austin Tucker Martin graduated from Union Pines High School in Cameron, North Carolina, in 2023, and started an artwork company last June that specialised in handmade drawings of golf courses.

According to its website, Fresh Sky Illustrations:

double quotation markIs an artwork company that mainly focuses on bringing to life the hopeful feeling of being on a golf course by illustrating golf course scenes and providing framed copies of handmade works in various golf course gift shops while handling personal commissions on the side.

Combining the aesthetics of the sunny outdoors, and old digital aesthetics from the mid 2000s, Fresh Sky Illustrations hopes to awaken a sense of hope and comfort with this handcrafted webpage design.

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Austin Tucker Martin was described by his cousin as quiet, afraid of guns and from a family of avid Trump supporters. Photograph: Social Media

Martin, who lived in a part of North Carolina renowned for its golf courses, was a registered voter, although state voting records indicate he wasn’t affiliated to a particular party.

The 21-year-old was described by his cousin Braeden Fields as “very quiet” and inexperienced with guns.

“He doesn’t even know how to use a gun. He’s never used a gun,” Fields, 19, told ABC station WTVD hours after Martin had been killed.

Fields said the family are “big Trump supporters” and that Martin has an older brother in the military.

Martin “never really talked about … he didn’t want to get into politics,” Fields said, adding that Martin worked at a golf course, preparing it for the season, and liked to send his paychecks to charity.

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“We grew up together, practically,” Fields said. “I never, I wouldn’t believe that he would do something like this. Mind-blowing.”

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Sara Braun

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Major institutions of higher education in the US are reckoning with the latest release of the Epstein files after discovering the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein’s relationships with board members, professors and administrators on campuses across the country.

In some cases, professors have been placed under review, research centers closed or conferences canceled. Students and staff have responded in different ways, including petitions, open letters and campus forums.

The Guardian spoke with students, employees and alumni at some of the universities implicated.

On 9 February, faculty at Barnard College, the private women’s liberal arts’ college affiliated with Columbia University, published an open letter signed by more than 70 faculty members calling on the university to “acknowledge and investigate” recently released correspondence between Epstein and Francine LeFrak, a prominent donor and member of the school’s board of trustees. LeFrak appears in the Epstein files 15 times, according to reporting from the Barnard Bulletin.

In one appearance, LeFrak asked – in 2010 – to join a close friend and Epstein during “the holidays”; in another, later that year, she invited Epstein “as her guest” to a trip to Rwanda, where she founded an initiative that provides occupational training and employment for female survivors of that country’s genocide.

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The letter notes that the connection between Epstein and LeFrak is “repugnant”, particularly since the interaction took place following Epstein’s 2008 conviction of soliciting prostitution from a minor.

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