
-
England strike back against India in first Test
-
Netanyahu's other battle: swinging Trump and US behind Iran war
-
French champagne makers face prison in human trafficking trial
-
Europe to offer Iran 'diplomatic solution' to war with Israel
-
Oil drops, European stocks climb as Trump delays Iran move
-
Kiwi sailing legend Burling joins Italy's America's Cup team
-
US singer Chris Brown pleads not guilty in UK assault case
-
UK MPs debate assisted dying law ahead of key vote
-
Second woman accuses French senator of drugging her
-
Russian government, central bank spar over economic downturn
-
Thai PM meets army commander in attempt to defuse political crisis
-
More microplastics in glass bottles than plastic: study
-
Top Iran, EU diplomats to hold nuclear talks
-
Armenia PM arrives in Turkey for 'historic' visit
-
Salah among nominees for PFA Player of the Year award
-
EU bars Chinese firms from major state medical equipment contracts
-
Three-time world champion figure skater Sakamoto to retire
-
Crude sinks as Trump delays decision on Iran strike
-
Two dead in Mexico as Hurricane Erick moves on from Mexican coast
-
US appeals court allows Trump control of National Guard in LA
-
Monsters and memes: Labubu dolls ride China soft-power wave
-
Chad hopes 'green charcoal' can save vanishing forests
-
'Turkish salmon': the Black Sea's new rose-coloured gold
-
Rays pitcher Bigge hospitalized after being struck by foul ball
-
PSG stunned by Botafogo after Messi lights up Club World Cup
-
Thunder ready to play for all the marbles - Gilgeous-Alexander
-
Europe's lithium quest hampered by China and lack of cash
-
Japan-US-Philippines hold coast guard drills with eye on China
-
Richards strike gives USA spot in Gold Cup quarters
-
Pacers thrash Thunder to stay alive in NBA Finals
-
Cheap alms bowls imports hit Sri Lanka makers, monks
-
Pacers demolish Thunder to stay alive in NBA Finals
-
PSG stunned by Botafogo in Club World Cup upset
-
Peru gas workers find thousand-year-old mummy
-
UK MPs to hold crunch vote on assisted dying
-
Australian trial says tech for social media teen ban can work
-
Thai PM to meet army commander to defuse political crisis
-
Rice prices double in Japan as inflation accelerates
-
Summoning golden Olympic memories, Paris parties like it's 2024
-
Peru's Maido named world's top restaurant on 50 Best list
-
US singer Chris Brown in London court on assault case
-
Thailand credits prey releases for 'extraordinary' tiger recovery
-
Can NATO keep Trump on-message about Russia threat?
-
Australia drop struggling Labuschagne for first West Indies Test
-
European, Iranian diplomats to meet as US mulls joining Israel campaign
-
Paris makes clean water bet for River Seine bathers
-
Jeeno Thitikul edges clear as heat takes toll at Women's PGA
-
Critic of Nicaragua's Ortega shot dead in exile in Costa Rica
-
Barrios double gets Atletico back on track
-
World No. 1 Scheffler shares lead at PGA Travelers Championship

Seismic demographic shift as India overtakes China: Q&A
India will overtake China to become the world's most populous nation by the middle of this year, the United Nations projected Wednesday, the culmination of decades-long trends and a position the South Asian country is likely to retain for centuries to come.
It is a momentous change: China has generally been regarded as the world's most populous country since the fall of the Roman Empire, although pre-Partition British India may have overtaken it for a period.
AFP looks at the causes and effects.
- How has this happened? -
China moved decisively to curtail its population growth in the 1980s, imposing a sometimes brutally enforced one-child policy on its people.
It has become increasingly prosperous in recent decades -- a phenomenon consistently linked to smaller family sizes -- but is now reaping the demographic whirlwind with an ageing, shrinking population.
India has mounted sterilisation and family planning campaigns of its own, including a notoriously unpopular effort to target men in the 1970s.
It now focuses on women, with female sterilisation by far the most popular method of contraception, despite the associated health risks.
But India's fertility rates are consistently higher than its northern neighbour, giving it a much younger -- and now larger -- population: some 650 million Indians are under 25.
- What are the implications? -
New Delhi and Beijing are vying for geopolitical influence and the shift in the "most populous" title will bolster India's status as a rising power -- one being courted by the West as an alternative to Beijing.
It will also strengthen New Delhi's case for a long-sought permanent seat on the UN Security Council. As well as overtaking China, India has a larger population than the other four veto-holding member states combined.
Catering to so many people poses major environmental and infrastructure challenges.
But a large and young workforce also has economic benefits: India is the world's fastest-growing major economy and last year displaced former colonial power Britain to take fifth place in the global GDP rankings.
- How many people do India and China have? -
The UN estimates that India will have 1.429 billion people by July 1, with China three million behind on 1.426 billion.
But calculating actual numbers for such giant countries is fraught with difficulty.
China's National Bureau of Statistics issues a population figure every year and said in January that the mainland had 1.412 billion people at the end of 2022.
This marked the first fall in population since the disaster of Mao Zedong's Great Leap Forward in the early 1960s.
But India has not issued an official population statistic since the last census in 2011, when it recorded 1.21 billion people.
- Why doesn't India know its population? -
Birth certificates only became compulsory in India in 1969, and the once-a-decade census due in 2021 was delayed by the coronavirus pandemic before becoming bogged down by logistical problems.
It is a gargantuan exercise involving an army of data enumerators who go door-to-door to collect information, including religion, mother tongue and literacy status.
Critics accuse authorities of shying away from the issue to play down contentious questions, such as unemployment rates, ahead of elections next year.
- What does New Delhi say? -
The Hindu nationalist BJP government is normally keen to promote India's achievements -- but it has been uncharacteristically reticent about the prospect of displacing China as the world's most populous nation.
The health ministry did not comment Wednesday on the figures released by the UN, and several officially backed population clocks have been removed from public view in recent years.
In his Independence Day speech last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi still referred to India as a country of 1.3 billion people, a milestone experts say it passed several years ago.
P.AbuBaker--SF-PST