Wednesday, May 6, 2026


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Ramil papalapit sa Silangang Luzon, Signal No. 1 itinaas sa 6 na lugar

MAYNILA— Patuloy na lumalapit sa Silangang Luzon ang Tropical Depression Ramil, na inaasahang magla-landfall sa umaga ng Linggo, Oktubre 19, ayon sa PAGASA.

Sa 5 a.m. Tropical Cyclone Bulletin nitong Biyernes, sinabi ng weather bureau na ang sentro ng bagyong Ramil ay tinatayang nasa 1,145 kilometro silangan ng Southeastern Luzon (14.4°N, 132.3°E).

Itinaas ang Signal No. 1 sa mga sumusunod na lugar:

  • Silangang bahagi ng Quezon (Tagkawayan)
  • Camarines Norte
  • Catanduanes
  • Camarines Sur
  • Albay
  • Hilagang at silangang bahagi ng Sorsogon (Donsol, Pilar, Castilla, Lungsod ng Sorsogon, Gubat, Prieto Diaz, Casiguran, Barcelona, Bulusan)

Taglay ng bagyo ang maximum sustained winds na 45 km/h malapit sa gitna, gustiness na umaabot sa 55 km/h, at central pressure na 1004 hPa.

Ayon sa PAGASA, ang kasalukuyang galaw ng bagyo ay “west northwest slowly.”
May malalakas na hangin ang Ramil na umaabot hanggang 350 kilometro mula sa sentro.

Nauna nang sinabi ng PAGASA na magdadala ng maulap na kalangitan at mga pag-ulan ang Ramil at ng Easterlies sa iba’t ibang bahagi ng Luzon at Visayas.

Ang trough ng Ramil ay magpapaulan sa Catanduanes, Albay, Sorsogon, Northern Samar, at Eastern Samar, na inaasahang makararanas ng cloudy skies with scattered rains and thunderstorms.

Samantala, apektado rin ng Easterlies ang Central Luzon, Southern Luzon, at Visayas, na posibleng makaranas ng maulap na kalangitan, kalat-kalat na pag-ulan, at pagkulog-pagkidlat.

Kabilang sa mga lugar na apektado ang Metro Manila, CALABARZON, mainland Cagayan, Isabela, Bulacan, Aurora, Oriental Mindoro, Marinduque, Romblon, ang natitirang bahagi ng Bicol Region, at buong Visayas.

Batay sa 12-hour forecast, inaasahang nasa 565 kilometro silangan ng Virac, Catanduanes ang sentro ng bagyo pagsapit ng 2 p.m. ngayong Biyernes.

U.S. prosecutors accuse Smartmatic of $1M bribery scheme in the Philippines

MIAMI — Federal prosecutors in Miami have charged voting technology company Smartmatic with money laundering and other offenses over more than $1 million in alleged bribes paid to election officials in the Philippines.

According to a superseding indictment filed Thursday in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida, the payments were made between 2015 and 2018 to secure a government contract for the 2016 Philippine presidential election and to ensure prompt payment for the company’s services.

Three former Smartmatic executives, including co-founder Roger Piñate, had been charged earlier in 2024, though the company itself was not named as a defendant at the time. Piñate, who no longer works for Smartmatic but remains a shareholder, has pleaded not guilty.

The case unfolds as Smartmatic pursues a $2.7 billion defamation lawsuit against Fox News, which the company accuses of spreading false claims that it helped rig the 2020 U.S. presidential election.

In a statement, Smartmatic denied the new criminal allegations, asserting that the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami had been “misled and politically influenced by unnamed powerful interests.”

“This is again, targeted, political, and unjust,” the company said. “Smartmatic will continue to stand by its people and principles. We will not be intimidated by those pulling the strings of power.”

Prosecutors earlier sought permission to present evidence suggesting that revenue from a $300 million contract with Los Angeles County—to modernize its voting systems—was diverted to a “slush fund” allegedly controlled by Piñate. The fund was reportedly operated through offshore shell companies and fake invoices.

Piñate was also accused of bribing Venezuela’s former election chief by transferring to her a luxury home with a swimming pool in Caracas, allegedly to restore ties after Smartmatic withdrew from Venezuela in 2017, when it accused President Nicolás Maduro’s government of manipulating election results.

A hearing on the evidence related to the Los Angeles and Venezuela allegations is scheduled for next month. However, those details do not appear in the latest indictment signed by Jason Reding Quiñones, the newly appointed U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida.

Founded over two decades ago by Venezuelan entrepreneurs, Smartmatic grew rapidly under the late Hugo Chávez, who promoted the use of electronic voting. The company went on to provide election technology in 25 countries across Latin America, Europe, Africa, and Asia.

Smartmatic has since claimed that its business declined sharply after Fox News broadcast claims linking it to alleged election fraud in 2020. Fox has defended its reporting as legitimate coverage of newsworthy events, though it later aired a correction. The network continues to fight the defamation case, arguing that Smartmatic’s financial troubles stemmed from its own internal issues rather than media coverage.

Intensity 6.2 lindol, umatake sa General Luna, Surigao del Norte

GEN. LUNA, Surigao del Norte – Niyanig ang bayan ng General Luna, Surigao del Norte nitong Biyernes ng umaga ng magnitude 6.2 na lindol, ayon sa Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS), iniulat ng ABS-CBN News at Manila Bulletin.

Batay sa Earthquake Information No. 1 na inilabas ng PHIVOLCS, ang lindol ay naganap alas 7:03 a.m., at ang epicenter nito ay tinatayang 13 kilometro timog-silangan ng General Luna. Ang lalim ng lindol ay inulat na humigit-kumulang 10 kilometro, na itinuturing na mababaw.

Inaasahan ng PHIVOLCS ang posibilidad ng mga aftershocks at pagkapinsala sa ilang lugar.

Sa talaan ng instrumental intensities, naitala ang Intensity IV sa mga sumusunod na lugar:

  • Cabadbaran City, Agusan del Norte
  • Hinunangan, San Francisco, Hinundayan, at Silago sa Southern Leyte
  • Surigao City, Surigao del Norte

Hindi pa agad nakumpirma ang kabuuang pinsala o bilang ng mga nasaktan, ngunit nananawagan ang PHIVOLCS sa publiko na maging alerto sa mga posibleng aftershocks at umiwas sa mga istrukturang may basag o sira.

Patuloy na magbibigay ng update ang PHIVOLCS hinggil sa mga kahihinatnan ng lindol at ang mga susunod na hakbang para sa kaligtasan ng mamamayan. Manatiling naka-antabay sa mga susunod na update.

Ramil, posibleng pumasok sa PAR

MAYNILA — Nagbabantang pumasok sa Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) ngayong linggo ang isang Low Pressure Area (LPA) na, kapag nag-develop, tatawagin ito ng PAGASA bilang bagyong “Ramil.”

Ayon sa ulat ng PAGASA, namataan ang nasabing LPA dakong alas tres ng kahapon sa layong humigit-kumulang 1,765 kilometro silangan ng northeastern Mindanao.

Sinabi ni Chenel Dominguez, weather specialist ng PAGASA, na mataas ang tsansa na ang LPA ay maging isang tropikal system sa loob ng 24 hanggang 48 oras, at maaaring pumasok sa PAR bandang Oktubre 16 o 17 kung magpapatuloy ang pag-unlad nito.

Inihahanda ng mga eksperto ang posibilidad ng mga pag-ulan sa ilang bahagi ng bansa kapag pumasok ang bagyo, ngunit may ilang ulat na nagsasabing hindi naman malalawak ang inaasahang epekto kung hindi lito alakas nang husto. Pinapayuhan ang publiko na mamalaging updated sa mga pahayag ng PAGASA at maghanda laban sa posibleng pag-ulan at pagtaas ng tubig.

Ang pangalang Ramil ay bahagi ng regular na listahan ng lokal na pangalan para sa mga tropical cyclone ng PAGASA ito ang magiging ika-18 na bagyo ng taon kung tuluyang maitatala sa loob ng PAR.

Para sa pinakabagong ulat at posibleng advisory, sundan ang opisyal na pahayag ng PAGASA at lokal na pamahalaan.

San Pablo City naglabas ng earthquake advisory; Gov. Aragones ipinagtanggol ang class suspension sa Laguna

LAGUNA — Naglabas ang Pamahalaang Lungsod ng San Pablo, sa pangunguna ni Mayor Najie Gapangada at ng City Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office (CDRRMO) sa pamumuno ni Arvin Carandang, ng Earthquake Safety Advisory bilang bahagi ng kampanya para sa kaligtasan at kahandaan sa lindol, kasunod ng malalakas na pagyanig na naranasan sa Cebu City, Davao, Baguio, at ilang bayan sa hilagang Luzon.

Sa advisory, pinaalalahanan ang mga residente na manatiling kalmado, sumunod sa tamang earthquake protocol, at ihanda ang kani-kanilang emergency go bags bilang bahagi ng personal na kahandaan.

Ayon sa CDRRMO, narito ang mga paalala kapag may lindol: Duck, Cover, and Hold – yumuko, magtago sa ilalim ng matibay na mesa o upuan, at humawak hanggang sa tumigil ang pagyanig; iwasang lumabas habang malakas pa ang lindol; lumayo sa mga bintana at estante; at matapos ang pagyanig, mag-ingat sa aftershocks at sumunod sa mga abiso ng lokal na pamahalaan.

Binibigyang-diin din ng CDRRMO ang kahalagahan ng pagkakaroon ng go bag o emergency kit, na dapat laging nakahanda at madaling makuha sa oras ng kalamidad. Kabilang sa mga mahahalagang laman nito ang inuming tubig, ready-to-eat food, first aid kit, flashlight at baterya o power bank, identification cards at mahahalagang dokumento, damit at kumot, at personal hygiene items gaya ng face mask, alcohol, tissue, at sabon.

Pinayuhan din ang mga paaralan, opisina, at barangay na magsagawa ng regular earthquake drills at siguraduhing ligtas at matatag ang mga gusali.

Ayon sa Phivolcs, wala pang naiulat na malawakang pinsala sa San Pablo, ngunit nananatiling naka-alerto ang mga rescue team at emergency response unit ng lungsod bilang bahagi ng kanilang preparedness mission.

Samantala, ipinagtanggol ni Governor Sol Aragones ang kanyang desisyon na suspindihin ang mga klase sa buong Laguna at ipatupad muna ang online learning kasunod ng mga pagyanig at banta ng aftershocks.

Sa kabila ng mga puna at batikos sa social media, iginiit ng gobernador na ang kaligtasan ng mga estudyante at guro ang dapat unahin.

“Mas mahalaga ang buhay kaysa anumang aralin. Ang mga naantalang klase ay maaaring mapunan, pero ang buhay, hindi,” pahayag ni Aragones.

Ayon sa gobernador, layunin ng preventive suspension na mabigyan ng panahon ang mga paaralan upang masuri ang kaligtasan ng mga gusali bago ipagpatuloy ang face-to-face classes.

Nagpaalala rin si Aragones sa mga lokal na opisyal at paaralan na manatiling alerto at makipag-ugnayan sa kanilang Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Offices para sa anumang abiso o koordinasyon sa oras ng emerhensiya.

“Mas mabuti nang sobra ang paghahanda kaysa kulang sa aksyon. Ang buhay ng bawat Lagunense ang ating pangunahing responsibilidad,” dagdag ng gobernador.

SpaceX’s 11th Starship test flight advances moon and mars plans

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BOCA CHICA, South Texas — SpaceX successfully launched its 11th full-scale Starship rocket on Monday, sending mock satellites into orbit before executing a controlled descent into the Indian Ocean. The Super Heavy booster separated as planned and reentered over the Gulf of Mexico, though no hardware was recovered.

“Hey, welcome back to Earth, Starship,” SpaceX’s Dan Huot declared amid cheers from company staff. “What a day.”

According to SpaceX, the flight path took the spacecraft halfway around the world. More advanced maneuvering was built into this mission, particularly during reentry, as engineers test techniques intended for future return-to-launch-site landings.

The spacecraft carried eight mock satellites modeled after Starlink units, simulating deployment operations in space. The flight lasted just over one hour and originated from SpaceX’s Starbase facility in southern Texas.

This milestone arrives amid growing anticipation over Starship’s role in NASA’s Artemis program. NASA leaders have emphasized that the 403-foot (123-meter) Starship will be critical to ferrying astronauts between lunar orbit and the Moon’s surface in upcoming missions.

Sean Duffy, NASA’s acting administrator, praised the launch: “Another major step toward landing Americans on the moon’s south pole.”

SpaceX founder Elon Musk, unusually, watched the launch outside of control rooms, calling the experience “much more visceral.”

Beyond lunar ambitions, the broader mission of these test flights is to support SpaceX’s long-term goal of making humanity multiplanetary. Starship is intended not just to service the Moon but eventually to transport crews and cargo to Mars.

To achieve this, SpaceX is refining key technologies such as full reusability, orbital refueling, and precise landing maneuvers, each critical for deep-space missions.

Meanwhile, SpaceX is modifying its Cape Canaveral facilities to accommodate Starship launches in addition to the existing Falcon rocket operations.

As SpaceX prepares to usher in a new era of spaceflight, each test flight contributes valuable data and lessons on the path toward returning humans to the Moon and reaching Mars.

Israel receives remains of 2 hostages, confirms earlier body was misidentified

JERUSALEM — Israel on Wednesday received the remains of two more hostages from Hamas, hours after the Israeli military announced that one of the bodies handed over earlier was not that of a hostage. The development added confusion and tension to the fragile truce that has temporarily halted the two-year conflict.

The Red Cross transferred the two coffins from Hamas to Israel, where the remains were brought to a forensic laboratory in Tel Aviv for identification. The Israeli military said the identities of the hostages have yet to be verified.

Meanwhile, Gaza’s Health Ministry said it received 45 additional bodies of Palestinians from Israel, bringing the total to 90 since the ceasefire began. Forensic experts in Gaza reported that many of the bodies showed signs of mistreatment.

Under the terms of the ceasefire, Hamas has so far returned eight bodies of hostages four on Monday and four on Tuesday, after releasing 20 living captives. Israel is still awaiting the return of the bodies of 28 hostages.

The Israeli military said forensic tests revealed that “the fourth body handed over to Israel by Hamas does not match any of the hostages.” Authorities have not confirmed the identity of the remains.

In exchange for the release of the hostages, Israel freed around 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees earlier this week. Officials said more bodies are expected to be transferred, though it remains unclear how many are in Israeli custody or whether they include Palestinians who died in detention or during the fighting in Gaza.

As forensic teams worked to identify the returned remains, Gaza’s Health Ministry released images of 32 unidentified bodies in hopes of helping families locate missing relatives. Many of the bodies appeared decomposed, burned, or disfigured, with some missing limbs or teeth. Health officials said Israeli restrictions on DNA testing equipment in Gaza have forced morgues to rely on physical features and clothing for identification.

A Gaza forensics team reported that some bodies arrived still shackled or showing signs of torture. “There are signs of torture and executions,” said Sameh Hamad, a member of the commission receiving the bodies at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis. He said most were men aged 25 to 70, some wearing civilian clothes and others in military uniforms.

Hamad said the Red Cross provided names for only three of the deceased, leaving many families in limbo. According to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which is part of the Hamas-run government, nearly 68,000 Palestinians have been killed since the war began. The ministry’s casualty records are regarded as generally credible by United Nations agencies and independent observers. Thousands remain missing, according to the Red Cross and the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics.

Outside Nasser Hospital, 52-year-old Rasmiya Qudeih waited anxiously, hoping her son was among the 45 bodies returned Wednesday. He disappeared on October 7, 2023 — the day of Hamas’ assault on Israel that ignited the conflict.

The ceasefire plan, introduced by U.S. President Donald Trump, required all hostages living and deceased to be returned by a deadline that expired Monday. Under the agreement, if the deadline was not met, Hamas was obligated to provide information about the dead and return them as soon as possible.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insisted Wednesday that Israel “will not compromise” and called on Hamas to meet the terms of the ceasefire regarding the return of hostages’ remains.

In an interview with CNN, Trump warned that Israel could resume military operations if Hamas fails to comply. “Israel will return to those streets as soon as I say the word,” Trump said.

Hamas’ armed wing claimed it had fulfilled its obligations under the truce and handed over the remains of the hostages in its custody. Two senior U.S. advisers, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Hamas had assured the United States via mediators that it is working to locate and return additional bodies. They added that widespread destruction and unexploded ordnance in Gaza have complicated recovery efforts.

This is not the first case of a mistaken return. During a previous ceasefire, Hamas said it had delivered the bodies of Shiri Bibas and her two sons, abducted in the October 7 attacks, but testing later showed one body belonged to a Palestinian woman. Bibas’ remains were returned a day later.

Humanitarian aid deliveries to Gaza resumed Wednesday after a two-day pause. The World Food Program confirmed that its trucks began entering the territory as part of the ceasefire deal. The Egyptian Red Crescent reported that 400 trucks carrying food, fuel, and medical supplies were bound for Gaza. The Israeli agency overseeing humanitarian aid, COGAT, declined to specify how many trucks were expected to cross.

Marcos, tumangging sangkot sa anomalya sa flood control projects: “Gusto nila akong tanggalin”

MAYNILA —Iginiit ni Pangulong Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. na wala siyang kinalaman sa mga iniimbestigahang iregularidad sa mga flood control project ng pamahalaan, at sinabing pulitikal umano ang motibo ng mga batikos laban sa kanya.

Sa isang press conference nitong Miyerkules, tinanong si Marcos hinggil sa mga pahayag na ang imbestigasyon sa mga proyekto sa flood control ay hahantong sa kanya, dahil siya ang lumagda sa pambansang badyet at nagtalaga ng mga opisyal na maaaring sangkot sa mga anomalya.

“On this I’m confident that whatever mud might be slung at the administration, that we will be able to show that these are politically motivated and do not actually have any validation in fact,” ayon sa Pangulo.

Binigyang-diin ni Marcos na wala siyang itinatago at iginiit na ang mga nasa oposisyon ay nagnanais lamang siyang mapatalsik.

“Wala naman tayong tinatago… I know that there are several – the opposition would love to bring me to this – to include me in all of this. But that’s politics,” wika ni Marcos. “That is not to do about corruption. That is to do about politics. Gusto nila akong tanggalin,” dagdag pa niya.

Nauna nang iginiit ng Malacañang na “blameless” si Marcos sa mga isyung may kaugnayan sa mga anomalya sa flood control projects.

Matatandaang sa kanyang ikaapat na State of the Nation Address (SONA) noong Hulyo 28, nangako ang Pangulo na papanagutin ang mga opisyal ng gobyerno na kumita sa mga proyekto ng imprastruktura, kabilang ang mga flood control project.

Sa pamamagitan ng isang executive order, bumuo si Marcos ng Independent Commission for Infrastructure (ICI) upang siyasatin ang mga naturang iregularidad.

“I know what we did or did not do,” aniya. “So… we investigate. We investigate everybody. We follow the evidence. And wherever that leads, it’s not something that we try to direct or influence. That’s why we have the ICI,” dagdag ng Pangulo.

AI and chatbots pose a threat to the call center industry, human operators

BENGALURU, India — In a bustling startup office in Bengaluru, developers at LimeChat are refining artificial intelligence chatbots designed to converse and message like humans. The company’s bold aim is to make traditional customer-service roles nearly obsolete, claiming its generative AI agents enable clients to cut staffing needs by up to 80% for every 10,000 monthly queries.

India, long regarded as the world’s back office for its low-cost, English-speaking workforce, now faces a technological upheaval as AI-powered systems begin replacing call-center and customer-support jobs. The shift is fueling growth for AI startups that promise reduced costs and greater efficiency, even as many consumers continue to prefer human interaction.

A Reuters investigation based on interviews with 30 executives, workers, recruiters, and government officials found that rather than slowing down AI adoption, India is accelerating it. Policymakers are betting that the transition will create new roles to absorb displaced workers. The stakes are high, as the outcome could determine whether AI-driven disruption becomes a model for development or a cautionary tale for emerging economies.

The global conversational AI market is expanding by 24% annually and is expected to reach $41 billion by 2030, according to consultancy Grand View Research. For India, where the IT sector contributes 7.5% of GDP, the government sees AI as an opportunity. In February, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said, “Work does not disappear due to technology. Its nature changes and new types of jobs are created.”

Still, concerns persist about the country’s readiness. Santosh Mehrotra, a former government official and visiting professor at the University of Bath, warned, “There’s no gameplan,” criticizing the lack of urgency in addressing AI’s potential effects on India’s young workforce.

Business process management — employing 1.65 million people in call centers, payroll, and data handling has seen hiring slow dramatically. Neeti Sharma, CEO of TeamLease Digital, said automation and digitalization have curbed job growth even as demand rises for AI coordinators and process analysts.

Among those affected is Megha S., a 32-year-old customer-service employee who lost her $10,000-a-year job in Bengaluru as her company introduced AI tools to evaluate sales calls. “I was told I am the first one who has been replaced by AI,” she said. “I’ve not told my parents.”

Former labor ministry secretary Sumita Dawra noted that while AI offers productivity gains and new employment avenues, India may need stronger social safety nets, such as unemployment benefits for displaced workers. A senior government official, however, told Reuters that AI would have little long-term effect on total employment.

Analysts remain cautious. Jefferies Investment Bank predicts India’s call centers could face a 50% revenue decline from AI adoption within five years, and a 35% drop for other back-office roles. India currently accounts for 52% of the global outsourcing market.

“The biggest impact is going to be on young students coming out of college,” said Pramod Bhasin, who launched India’s first call center for GE Capital in the 1990s. Yet Bhasin believes India could evolve from the “world’s back office” into its “AI factory” by supplying skilled automation engineers.

LimeChat’s co-founder Gupta said his firm’s technology has already automated 5,000 jobs nationwide, handling 70% of client complaints and targeting 90–95% automation within a year. “If you’re giving us 100,000 rupees per month, you are automating the job of at least 15 agents,” he said. The company’s revenue grew from $79,000 in 2022 to $1.5 million in 2024.

LimeChat’s competitors include Haptik, owned by Reliance, which says its AI agents “deliver human-like customer experiences” for $120 per agent, cutting support costs by 30%. Haptik’s revenue rose to nearly $18 million last year from under $1 million in 2020. “Brands are not investing in human agents and they want to deploy AI agents,” said Suji Ravi, a Haptik product manager.

For companies like Mamaearth, AI’s appeal lies in scalability. “Providing good customer support is make or break for us,” said Vipul Maheshwari, head of product and analytics at parent firm Honasa Consumer. “But can we infinitely scale my customer support team? Absolutely not.”

The transformation is also evident at The Media Ant, a Bengaluru-based advertising agency that cut 40% of its workforce after replacing its sales and call-center teams with AI bots. Founder Samir Chaudhary said a voice agent named Neha now handles client inquiries fluently in Indian-accented English. “Ask her out for a coffee and she will laugh it off,” he joked.

Still, AI deployment has limits. When a Reuters reporter asked a LimeChat-powered bot from Knya to verify claims about its medical products, it replied, “I am sorry, I don’t have enough information to answer your question.”

A recent EY survey of 1,000 Indian consumers found 62% made purchases influenced by AI recommendations, double the global average, but 78% still prefer human-assisted platforms.

As AI reshapes India’s technology landscape, training centers are adapting. In Ameerpet, a Hyderabad hub for IT education, institutes now emphasize AI courses such as data science and prompt engineering. “Recruiters are asking for students with basic AI skills,” said instructor Priyanka Kandulapati.

During a discussion with Indian startup founders last month, venture capitalist Vinod Khosla, co-founder of Sun Microsystems, offered a stark forecast: “All IT services will be replaced in the next five years. It’s going to be pretty chaotic.”

Cyprus struggles with surging cat population, one cat for every resident

NICOSIA, Cyprus — The Mediterranean island nation of Cyprus is facing an unusual problem, a booming cat population estimated to be roughly equal to its one million residents.

Officials and animal welfare groups say the number of feral cats has grown out of control, with sterilization programs too limited to manage the surge. “It’s a good program, but it needs to expand,” said Environment Commissioner Antonia Theodosiou, noting that only about 2,000 sterilizations are conducted each year on a modest budget of 100,000 euros ($117,000).

Responding to mounting pressure, Environment Minister Maria Panayiotou announced on October 4, World Animal Day, that the government would triple sterilization funding to 300,000 euros annually. The move was welcomed by animal rights groups, but lawmakers cautioned that funding alone won’t solve the crisis.

“There has to be a plan,” said Charalambos Theopemptou, chairman of the Parliamentary Environment Committee. “We can’t just go ahead with sterilizations without having a plan.”

Experts warn that the island’s expanding cat population threatens both its ecosystem and the welfare of the animals themselves. Large numbers of feral cats often roam congested streets in search of food and shelter, while conservationists struggle to contain the situation.

Cyprus’s deep-rooted relationship with cats dates back thousands of years. Archaeologists have discovered the remains of a domesticated cat buried alongside a human from a 9,500-year-old Neolithic village, one of the oldest signs of human-feline companionship. A 4th-century legend even tells of Saint Helen bringing cats to Cyprus to combat a snake infestation, a story still commemorated by the monastery of St. Nicholas of the Cats.

Today, the island’s feline residents are part of its cultural and tourist identity, often seen lounging near restaurants and being fed by visitors. But unchecked breeding, particularly in urban areas, has caused the population to explode, said Veterinary Association President Demetris Epaminondas.

The government’s sterilization program, run by the state’s Veterinary Services, funds local municipalities that pay private veterinarians to neuter cats brought in by animal groups. Authorities, however, admit the effort is “lesser than the real need.”

Animal welfare advocates are calling for a more unified approach. “Tripling funds won’t have the desired effect unless groups with the know-how are recruited to round up cats,” said Elias Demetriou of Friends of Larnaca Cats.

Eleni Loizidou of Cat Alert said her group recently trapped 397 feral cats in Nicosia “a mere drop in the ocean.” She added that too few females are being sterilized due to the difficulty of trapping them.

Epaminondas believes Cyprus could control its cat population within four years if authorities simplify procedures and collaborate more closely with private clinics. “People will be more motivated to get cats neutered if we make it easier for them to do so,” he said.

His association has proposed a national strategy that includes a smartphone app to help locate cat colonies, designated clinics for mass sterilization, and a public fund to encourage private and corporate donations.

Theodosiou said her office is working on a long-term plan to unite government agencies, animal advocates, and volunteers to accurately track the cat population and legalize private sanctuaries.

“There are solutions,” Loizidou affirmed.