Monday, April 13, 2026

Justin Bieber reconnects with fans in Coachella headline comeback set

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The set by rising indie star Sombr featured Billy Corgan of Smashing Pumpkins, and together they performed the rock band’s 1990s hit 1979.

With nine stages, the festival hosted a wide range of genres, including Brazil’s Luisa Sonza, influencer-turned-singer Addison Rae, Britain’s PinkPantheress, K-pop star Taemin and David Byrne, the legendary co-founder of the band Talking Heads.

Coachella kicked off Friday with performances from headliner Sabrina Carpenter, Moby, Devo and surprise appearances from Lizzo, David Lee Roth and Huntr/x, who performed their Oscar-winning Golden alongside Katseye.

Carpenter’s performance of hits like Manchild, Espresso and Please, Please, Please was helped by big-screen stars Sam Elliott, Susan Sarandon and Will Ferrell, who rounded out her 90-minute set.

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‘15-20 men came on bikes, intercepted us 60 metres from police station’: BCCL officials ‘assaulted’ in Dhanbad

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4 min readRanchiApr 13, 2026 05:55 AM IST

Two senior officials of Bharat Coking Coal Limited (BCCL), who had been inspecting CCTV cameras that were purportedly being repeatedly damaged, were allegedly chased and assaulted by a group of men led by a suspected illegal mining operative in Jharkhand’s Dhanbad on April 10.

According to an FIR filed on the basis of a complaint by Hafizul Qureshi, BCCL general manager (security), the incident took place when a team of BCCL officials and Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) personnel visited the Block-2 mine area around 12.30 pm to probe repeated vandalism of surveillance cameras installed to detect illegal coal mining.

Qureshi told The Indian Express that the cameras were being regularly damaged by persons whose activities were being recorded, prompting a joint inspection with CISF officials. “We were assessing why the cameras were being damaged and how to prevent it when a group of around 15 to 20 men approached us on their bikes,” he said.

Qureshi said one of these men identified him by name and accused him of disrupting their work before grabbing and attempting to drag him towards a nearby village. “They started pushing and pulling me, saying, ‘You are Qureshi, you are the problem.’ They wanted to take me with them,” he said.

The officials managed to reach their vehicle, but the group allegedly chased them on motorcycles. Sensing danger, the driver attempted to head towards the Baghmara police station. However, just 50 to 60 metres before the station, the attackers intercepted the vehicle and forced it to stop, he said.

“They blocked our car, pulled me out, held my collar and hands, and tried to force me into their vehicle. They were threatening to kill me,” Qureshi said, adding that the assault continued for several minutes outside the police station.

He alleged that despite the incident unfolding near the police station, there was no immediate intervention. “This was happening right outside the police station. We were overpowered for a few minutes before CISF personnel reached and rescued me,” he said.

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Another senior BCCL official, Kumar Ranjeev, who was present during the inspection, said he managed to run inside the police station during the chase. “Our driver tried to escape at full speed, but they blocked us before the station. My security personnel helped me get inside, while others were left behind and later rescued by CISF,” he said.

The FIR named local resident Pintu Mahto and his associates, alleging their involvement in illegal mining and repeated damage to surveillance infrastructure. Qureshi has sought action under provisions related to assault on a public servant, criminal intimidation, obstruction of government duty and unlawful entry into a mining area.

He also alleged that the attackers appeared to have prior information about the inspection. “Very few people knew about my visit. It seems someone leaked the information,” he said.

Officials linked the attack to ongoing efforts to curb illegal coal mining in the area. Ranjeev said enforcement action has continued despite the incident. “We have been acting against illegal mining and will not stop, no matter the threats,” he said, adding that CISF and local police conducted a flag march in the area following the attack.

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A Baghmara police officer said a case has been registered, and that the accused, Pintu Mahato, allegedly has links with the illegal coal mafia. Police said the investigation is underway.

Shubham Tigga is a Correspondent at The Indian Express, presently based in Pune, where he covers the intersections of infrastructure, labor, and the modern economy. His reporting focuses on civil aviation, urban mobility, the gig economy, and workers’ unions, providing critical insights into how transit and commercial sectors impact the daily lives of citizens.

Expertise & Background
Before moving to Pune, he reported extensively from his home state of Chhattisgarh, where he focused on Indigenous (Adivasi) issues, environmental justice, and grassroots struggles in mainland India. This experience gives him a unique lens through which he analyzes the impact of large-scale infrastructure projects on local communities.

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He is an alumnus of the prestigious Asian College of Journalism (ACJ), where he honed his skills in investigative reporting and ethical journalism. His academic training, combined with his field experience in Central India, allows him to navigate complex socio-economic landscapes with nuance and accuracy.
You can reach out to him on LinkedIn … Read More

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Russia–Ukraine Easter truce expires amid mutual accusations of violations

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A truce between Russia and Ukraine to mark the Orthodox Easter formally expired Monday, both sides having accused each other of thousands of violations, despite a lull in Russian air raids.

The truce lasted 32 hours, from 4:00 pm (1300 GMT) on Saturday until the end of the day on Sunday.

Both sides had agreed to observe the ceasefire, which Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered on Thursday and which Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky proposed more than a week earlier.

But as with a similar agreement last year, only relative calm reigned along the 1,200-kilometre (745-mile) front line.

As of 10:00 pm (1900 GMT) on Sunday, “7,696 violations by the enemy have been recorded”, the Ukrainian army said on Facebook.

Russia had adhered to the ceasefire to some extent, while continuing “combat operations in certain sectors, including the use of FPV drones and kamikaze drones“, it added.

Russia’s defence ministry accused Kyiv of nearly 2,000 breaches of the truce.

Read moreRussia refuses to extend Easter truce unless Zelensky ‘accepts its terms’

“A total of 1,971 ceasefire violations by units of the Ukrainian armed forces were recorded between 4:00 pm Moscow time on April 12 and 8:00 am on April 12,” the ministry said on the state-pushed MAX messenger service.

Kyiv had fired 258 times using artillery or tanks, carried out 1,329 FPV drone strikes, and dropped “various types of munitions” on 375 occasions, notably via drones, Russia said.

Moscow also accused the Ukrainian military of launching “three nighttime attacks” against Russian positions and also “four attempts to advance” along the front line, adding that it had thwarted each one.

Zelensky had called for a longer ceasefire in his evening address Saturday, saying Ukraine had put the proposal to Russia.

But in comments aired Sunday, the Kremlin‘s spokesman Dmitry Peskov rejected any extension unless the Ukrainian leader accepted Russia’s “well-known” terms.

“Until Zelensky musters the courage to assume this responsibility, the special military operation will continue after the truce expires,” Peskov added, referring to the war in Ukraine.

‘Holiday joy’

In a sign that the truce had some effect, the Ukrainian army said it had recorded no long-range Shahed drone attacks, guided aerial bombings or missile strikes.

Ukraine has had to deal with barrages of hundreds of Russian drones on a near-nightly basis, prompting retaliation from Kyiv.

In northeastern Ukraine’s Kharkiv region, Lieutenant Colonel Vasyl Kobziak told AFP on Sunday morning that things were “rather calm” in his sector.

While the 32-year-old officer said the truce had not been “fully” observed, the lull had allowed his soldiers of the 33rd Mechanised Brigade to attend an Easter Sunday mass outside in the freezing forest chill.

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© France 24

“Our comrades have the chance, as you can see, to have their Easter baskets blessed and to feel the warmth and joy of this holiday,” he told AFP, referring to the religious tradition of priests blessing food and eggs.

In Russia’s Kursk region, which borders Ukraine, Governor Alexander Khinshtein also accused Kyiv of breaking the ceasefire by attacking a gas station in the town of Lgov with a drone, injuring three people, including a baby.

Residents in Ukraine’s southern city of Zaporizhzhia were sceptical about Russia’s intentions.

“I think they’re using this as a cover to reconvene,” said 28-year-old manager Vladyslav.

“If we’re going to declare a ceasefire, it shouldn’t be for just one day,” said 58-year-old economist Maryna.

Frontline freeze

Recent months have seen several rounds of US-brokered negotiations fail to bring the warring parties closer to an agreement to stop the fighting, triggered by Russia’s February 2022 invasion.

The process has stalled further since the outbreak of the war in the Middle East, with Washington’s attention having shifted towards Iran.

But even before the Iran war, progress towards a peace deal in Ukraine had been slow, due to differences over the issue of territory.

Ukraine has proposed freezing the conflict along the current front lines.

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© France 24

But Russia has rejected this, saying it wants the whole of the Donetsk region despite it being partly controlled by Ukraine – a demand Kyiv says is unacceptable.

The war has cost hundreds of thousands of lives and forced millions to flee their homes, making it Europe’s deadliest conflict since World War II.

Russia, whose battlefield advances have slowed since last year, has paid a high price in manpower for relatively small territorial gains.

Moscow occupies just over 19 percent of Ukraine, most of which was seized during the first weeks of the conflict.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)

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US oil benchmark jumps 8%, surpasses US$100 after failed US-Iran talks

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TOKYO: The US oil benchmark rebounded above US$100 a barrel on Monday (Apr 13) after peace talks between the United States and Iran failed to make a breakthrough, and with US President Donald Trump ordering a blockade of Iranian ports.

Shortly after trading began, a barrel of West Texas Intermediate for May delivery rose around 8 per cent to US$104.50, while June delivery of international benchmark Brent rose 7 per cent to US$102.

In early trade in Asia, South Korea’s benchmark Kospi index fell 2 per cent, before recovering slightly, while Japan’s Nikkei was down 0.3 per cent.

Oil prices had sunk and stocks soared last week after Trump agreed to a two-week ceasefire mediated by Pakistan, despite its tenuousness becoming quickly apparent as Israel continued to strike Lebanon and the Strait of Hormuz remained effectively closed.

The dollar also strengthened to the highest level in a week in a broad rally against most of its peers in early Asian trade on Monday.

The US dollar index, which measures the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, was up as much as 0.5 per cent at US$99.187, its highest level since Apr 7. 

The euro was down 0.5 per cent at US$1.1667 as the British pound fell 0.6 per cent to US$1.3383, while the Australian dollar was 0.8 per cent lower at US$0.7014 and the New Zealand dollar was off 0.7 per cent at US$0.5798.

US President Donald Trump said on Sunday that the US Navy would start blockading the Strait of Hormuz after marathon talks with Iran failed to reach a deal to end the war, jeopardising a fragile two-week ceasefire.

The US Central Command said US forces would begin implementing the blockade of all maritime traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports from 10am ET (10pm, Singapore time) on Monday.

“Early and thin FX trading this morning is showcasing a risk-off mood, with the broad-based rally in the USD in response,” analysts from Westpac wrote in a research note.

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Dollar strengthens as peace talks falter, US blockade of Iran’s ports to begin

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SINGAPORE: The dollar strengthened to the highest level in a week in a broad rally against most of its peers in early Asian trade on Monday (Apr 13) as peace talks between the United States and Iran broke down and the US Navy prepared a blockade of Iranian ports.

The US dollar index, which measures the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, was up as much as 0.5 per cent at US$99.187, its highest level since Apr 7. 

The euro was down 0.5 per cent at US$1.1667 as the British pound fell 0.6 per cent to US$1.3383, while the Australian dollar was 0.8 per cent lower at US$0.7014 and the New Zealand dollar was off 0.7 per cent at US$0.5798.

US President Donald Trump said on Sunday that the US Navy would start blockading the Strait of Hormuz after marathon talks with Iran failed to reach a deal to end the war, jeopardising a fragile two-week ceasefire.

The US Central Command said US forces would begin implementing the blockade of all maritime traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports from 10am ET (10pm, Singapore time) on Monday.

“Early and thin FX trading this morning is showcasing a risk-off mood, with the broad-based rally in the USD in response,” analysts from Westpac wrote in a research note.

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3 Kashmir universities cancel MoU with US-based NGO

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2 min readSrinagarApr 13, 2026 05:40 AM IST

Three universities in the Kashmir Valley have simultaneously cancelled their MoUs with the US-based Kashmir Care Foundation (KCF), saying a “review by competent authorities” determined that the MoUs were against “larger institutional interest”.

The universities are Kashmir University, the Islamic University of Science and Technology (IUST) and the Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Science and Technology (SKUAST) Srinagar.

KCF, an NGO based in Atlanta in the US state of Georgia, describes itself as having been founded with a “vision to empower the youth of Kashmir”.

A letter by Kashmir University’s Registrar, Dr Naseer Iqbal, said the MoU was executed on December 15, 2025, “with the objective of furthering educational initiative through workshops, seminars and other academic engagements in STEM, Humanities and related fields”. The letter adds that the MoU “has been reviewed by the competent authorities of the university, and it has been determined that continuation of the MoU is not in the larger institutional interest of the university”.

“Now, therefore, in exercise of powers conferred under Class D, Sub Class IV of the MoU and applicable rules, the University of Kashmir hereby terminates the aforesaid MoU with immediate effect,” the letter reads.

Islamic University of Science and Technology’s Registrar, Prof Abdul Wahid Makhdoomi, also wrote to KCF, saying the MoU executed for “collaborative initiatives in the field of emerging technologies has been reviewed by the competent authorities of the university”, and that “upon such review, it has been decided to cancel the said Memorandum of Understanding”.

The Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Science and Technology, Srinagar, issued a shorter memo, saying, “Letter of Agreement signed between SKUAST-K and Kashmir Care Foundation (KCF), Atlanta, USA, on 15th of April 2025 is hereby cancelled with immediate effect.”

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KCF president Altaf Lal told The Indian Express that he has responded to the universities. “I am as ignorant about the development as anyone else. However, I have responded to the respective universities and the honourable Chancellor,” he said. J&K Lt Governor Manoj Sinha is the Chancellor of all three universities.

Bashaarat Masood is a Special Correspondent with The Indian Express. He has been covering Jammu and Kashmir, especially the conflict-ridden Kashmir valley, for two decades. Bashaarat joined The Indian Express after completing his Masters in Mass Communication and Journalism from the University in Kashmir. He has been writing on politics, conflict and development. Bashaarat was awarded with the Ramnath Goenka Excellence in Journalism Awards in 2012 for his stories on the Pathribal fake encounter.
Expertise and Experience
Two Decades of Frontline Reporting: Bashaarat has spent 20 years documenting the evolution of Kashmir, from high-intensity conflict and political shifts to socio-economic development.



Award-Winning Investigative Journalism: He is a recipient of the prestigious Ramnath Goenka Excellence in Journalism Award (2012). This honor was bestowed for his reporting on the Pathribal fake encounter, a series of stories that highlighted his ability to handle sensitive human rights and security issues with investigative rigor.


Specialized Beats: His authoritative coverage spans:



Political Transitions: Tracking the shift from statehood to Union Territory, electoral dynamics, and the pulse of local governance.


Security & Conflict: Providing nuanced reporting on counter-insurgency, civil liberties, and the impact of the conflict on the civilian population.


Development: Documenting the infrastructure, healthcare, and educational landscape within the Valley.




Academic Background: He holds a Masters in Mass Communication and Journalism from the University of Kashmir, providing him with a localized academic and professional foundation that is rare in regional reporting. … Read More

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Japan to welcome 30 Nato envoys as Trump rattles US allies

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Japan and Nato are drawing closer together, with 30 representatives from the transatlantic security alliance’s member states set to visit Tokyo this month amid mounting concern over Washington’s reliability as a security partner.

The Nato envoys will reportedly hold talks on China’s expanding regional influence, Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine and the implications of a more volatile global security order, according to Japanese public broadcaster NHK.

“A delegation of this size underlines just how important this is to both sides,” said Ben Ascione, an assistant professor of politics and international relations at Waseda University in Tokyo, adding that the visit reflected “a long-term trend”.

Japan opened a permanent mission to Nato in Brussels in January last year as it and the rest of the so-called Indo-Pacific Four – South Korea, Australia and New Zealand – have been steadily deepening cooperation with the alliance.

It cannot have been lost on Tokyo that the US is no longer a reliable ally under Trump

Ben Ascione, political analyst
Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s predecessor Fumio Kishida, in particular, put “a lot of effort into building links with the alliance”, Ascione said.

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Garcia forced to finish Masters without driver after early outburst

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AUGUSTA, Georgia, April 12 : Former champion Sergio Garcia said he was “not super proud” of his behaviour during Sunday’s final round of the Masters after smashing his driver on the second hole and having to play the rest of the round without it.

The Spaniard, who won the Green Jacket in 2017, began the day 16 shots behind the leaders and was already one over par for his round when his tee shot at the par-five second flew into the right fairway bunker.

Garcia repeatedly struck the turf with his driver before snapping the club when he hit a cooler beside the tee.

Under the rules, Garcia was unable to replace the club because it had been damaged in anger, leaving him without a driver for the remaining 16 holes.

“Through the year,” Garcia said when asked if the frustration had been building. “Yeah. Just obviously not super proud of it, but sometimes it happens.”

Garcia was later seen carrying playing partner Jon Rahm’s bag down the fairway in a bizarre scene.

Garcia declined to say what Masters officials told him when they spoke to him at the fourth hole.

“I’m not going to tell you,” he said.

Despite the incident, Garcia made par at the second but struggled over the rest of the round and finished eight-over par. Asked how much more difficult it was to play without a driver, Garcia was blunt.

“It makes it very easy. I just have to hit 3-wood all the time. I didn’t have to choose another club.”

Garcia, whose results at Augusta National have dipped since his victory nearly a decade ago, gave short answers when asked to explain his record at the year’s first major.

“Bad golf,” he said.

Pressed on whether there was a broader reason, Garcia added: “Bad shots.”

“Well, if you don’t hit good shots, you’re not going to score well here. It’s very simple.”

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“Too many kids prescribed drugs” warns world leading ADHD expert

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MASS prescribing drugs for conditions like Attention Deficit Disorder is a ‘vast experiment’ on the UK’s children and does nothing to address the root causes of the problem, an expert says.

Dr Gabor Maté, author, speaker and leading expert on Attention Deficit Disorder – ADD – says the surge in diagnoses reflects a deeper crisis in childhood – not simply a medical disorder.

Dr Maté, who diagnosed Prince Harry with the condition after exploring his childhood trauma, and his role in the Royal Family, spoke out as an ongoing review ordered by Health Secretary Wes Streeting has suggested the condition may be overdiagnosed and overmedicalised, with too many children being fast-tracked onto medication.

The number of people diagnosed with ADHD has more than doubled since 2021, the review said, highlighting a particularly “unusual” increase for girls and young women.

Now more than 800,000 people in England have been formally diagnosed with ADHD, according to NHS data.

At the same time one in 44 children have the condition on their medical records, as well as one in 125 adults.

Many specialists insist ADD and its sister condition Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder is a well-established neurodevelopmental genetic condition with a strong scientific basis.

They argue medication can be life-changing – improving concentration, reducing impulsivity and helping children function at school and at home.

Some also say rising diagnosis rates reflect better awareness, improved screening and long-overdue recognition of children who were previously missed.

The review commissioned by Wes Streeting is expected to examine both overdiagnosis and underdiagnosis – as well as whether support is reaching the right children at the right time.

But Dr Maté, author of Scattered Minds: The Origins and Healing of Attention Deficit Disorder, says even this debate – overdiagnosed or underdiagnosed – risks missing something more fundamental.

Speaking on the Care Visions: Family Talk podcast, he argues the label explains behaviour – but not its cause.

He said: “All they are is a description of certain patterns. And the question is why? And the diagnosis doesn’t explain anything about the why.”

Dr Maté rejects the idea that ADD and ADHD are inherited disorders.

“I think that’s total nonsense. It’s a complete misreading of the genetic literature,” he said.

He added: “The fact is, nobody’s ever found a single gene that if you have it, you’re going to have ADHD, and if you don’t, you won’t. Nor has anyone found a group of genes that automatically determine the condition, or the absence of which rules it out. There are some genes that make it more likely, but just because a child may be more prone to something doesn’t mean it’s fixed.”

Instead, he says what children may inherit is sensitivity – not a disorder. For example, he said, what many of these children also share is asthma or allergies, which he says are other markers of hypersensitivity.

“What is genetic is the high degree of sensitivity. That means they’re much more affected by the environment. And the real issue is what is the environment like? Modern science tells us that genes are turned on and off by the environment.”

He argues this helps explain why diagnoses appear to be rising so quickly – something genetics alone cannot account for.

“Genes don’t change in a population over 10, 15, 20 or 30 years,” he argued. The change, he argues, is in the conditions children are growing up in.

Rather than a disease, Dr Maté says many symptoms of ADD are coping mechanisms shaped by early experience.

“Let’s take tuning out – the absent-mindedness. What is that? Not a disease. It’s actually a coping mechanism,” he said.

“If I were to stress you, you could fight back or you could hang up. But what if you couldn’t? Your brain would kind of shut down and tune out to protect you from the stress.”

In this view, behaviours often labelled as disordered may instead be adaptive responses – the brain protecting itself in environments it experiences as overwhelming.

Dr Maté says today’s children are growing up in conditions that place families under constant and often invisible strain. “It is extraordinarily difficult these days to be a parent, no matter how loving and well-intentioned parents are.”

Economic pressure, long working hours, unstable housing, and rising anxiety among adults all feed into family life. At the same time, many parents are raising children in relative isolation, without the extended family and community networks that once helped share the load.

ADHD review ordered by Wes Streeting (Image: Getty)

He argues humans did not evolve to raise children in small, stressed, nuclear households, but in wider communities where care was distributed.

In modern life, that support has fractured – leaving parents overwhelmed and children absorbing that stress from the earliest stages of development, even before birth.

He also points to stress during pregnancy, early attachment, and emotional availability in infancy as critical factors shaping how the brain develops.

Dr Maté is critical of the rapid move towards medication – though he is not entirely against it.

“As a person with ADD I’ve taken them myself, and as a physician I have prescribed them. But at the very best, they regulate symptoms in the short term.” he said. The long term studies indicate that the medications don’t help anybody develop anything.”

“There should never be the only answer, and rarely should they be the first answer.”

He says medication may have a place – but warns it is being used too quickly and too broadly.

“It’s a vast experiment,” he said – referring especially to the increasing use of antipsychotic drugs to control children’s behaviour. “Do we know what the effects are going to be 40 years from now on somebody who at age five was given? We don’t. It’s an experiment.”

Dr Maté says the rising numbers of children being diagnosed with ADD and ADHD points to something deeper than overdiagnosis or increased awareness.

“I think those are valid points. But they don’t cover the whole picture,” he said.

“In the United States twenty five percent of adults identified themselves as having ADHD… which is an impossible number.”

But he adds that beyond awareness and misdiagnosis, there is a genuine rise in distress.

“We’re definitely seeing more young people with these traits. I think we’re genuinely seeing more human beings distressed in all kinds of ways.”

ADHD cases rising

ADHD cases rising (Image: Getty)

“ADHD develops under impact of environment” (Image: Getty)

He links this not just to the rise in cases of ADD, but to wider increases in anxiety, depression, addiction and self-harm among young people. All these related problems cannot be ascribed to simple genetics, he said. “Would anyone seriously argue that there is a gene for self-cutting?”

At the heart of his argument is how the brain forms in early life.

“No child is born with impulse regulation. No child is born with emotional self-regulation. No child is born with any attention. Those have to develop,” he said.

And that development depends heavily on the environment.

“It develops under the impact of the environment.”

“So when the parents are stressed, the child is stressed. It’s that simple.”

He stresses this is not about blaming parents – but about recognising the pressures they are under.

“This is a social, political, and economic issue, It’s not bad parents.”

“It’s a question of parents under so much stress that they’re not able to meet the emotional needs of their kids.”

He added: “What we’re talking about here is a culture that fails our children.”

“We’re living in a toxic culture now… that affects children by affecting the capacity of parents to be fully present for those kids.”

Dr Maté has examined these ideas in his bestselling books, including Scattered Minds and The Myth of Normal, where he argues that many modern conditions are rooted in stress and early life experience rather than fixed disease.

The full interview with Gabor Maté is available now on the Care Visions: Family Talk po

Soaring numbers of children on ADD drugs

Soaring numbers of children on ADD drugs (Image: Getty)

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