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One Dead and Dozens Injured in Another Train Crash in Spain

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new video loaded: Another Train Crash in Spain Kills 1 and Injures Dozens

A train crash in the Catalonia region of Spain killed one person and injured dozens more, officials said. It was the country’s second deadly rail accident this week.

By Shawn Paik

January 20, 2026

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What is the Jamaat-e-Islami party in Bangladesh and its potential impact on the country’s future elections?

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Dhaka, Bangladesh – For the first time in his life, Abdur Razzak, a 45-year-old banker in Bangladesh’s Faridpur district, believes the political party he supports has a real chance of coming to power as the leader of a governing alliance.

Campaigning for the Jamaat-e-Islami party’s “scales” symbol in his town, Razzak said people he was meeting with were “united in voting” for Jamaat, as the Islamist party is commonly referred to in the world’s eighth-most populous country, home to the fourth-largest Muslim population on the planet.

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Bangladesh is scheduled to hold a general election on February 12, the first vote since a student-led uprising toppled longtime former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s government in August 2024.

The interim government headed by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus, which succeeded Hasina after the uprising, banned her Awami League party. This has made the upcoming election a bipolar contest between the frontrunner, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), and an electoral alliance forged by the Jamaat with the National Citizen Party (NCP), a group formed by student leaders of the 2024 uprising along with other Islamist parties.

Razzak’s confidence is fuelled by recent opinion polls that suggest the Jamaat is closing in on the BNP, its senior coalition partner for decades.

A December survey by the United States-based International Republican Institute put the BNP’s support at 33 percent, with Jamaat close behind at 29 percent. Another poll last week, conducted by leading Bangladeshi agencies – including NarratiV, Projection BD, the International Institute of Law and Diplomacy (IILD) and the Jagoron Foundation – found the BNP leading at 34.7 percent, and Jamaat at 33.6 percent.

If the Jamaat-led alliance is able to emerge victorious, it will be a dramatic turnaround for a party that was subjected to a brutal crackdown during Hasina’s 15-year government. Under Hasina, Jamaat was banned, its top leaders hanged or jailed, and thousands of its members forcibly disappeared or killed in custody.

The crackdown followed convictions by the International Crimes Tribunal – a controversial court that Hasina founded in 2010 – to try suspects for their alleged role in crimes committed during Bangladesh’s war of independence from Pakistan in 1971.

Ironically, the same tribunal in November sentenced 78-year-old Hasina to death for ordering a crackdown on the 2024 protesters, killing more than 1,400 of them. Hasina is in exile in India, her close ally, where she fled after the uprising. Despite several appeals by the Yunus administration, New Delhi has so far refused to hand Hasina over to face the gallows.

Resurgence after decades of repression

Jamaat supported Pakistan during the 1971 war, a move that continues to anger many in Bangladesh today. However, after Hasina’s escape to India during the uprising and the subsequent release of key Jamaat leaders from prison, the Islamist party has grown increasingly assertive.

“Our leaders and activists suffered throughout the Hasina years. Many of our leaders were executed. Jamaat and Shibir activists were killed, and our political rights were taken away,” Razzak told Al Jazeera, referring to Islami Chhatra Shibir, Jamaat’s student wing.

“Now, things have changed. People sympathise with what we went through, and they see us as honest. That is why they will vote for us,” he said.

Founded by Islamist thinker Syed Abul Ala Maududi in 1941, during the British rule on the Indian subcontinent, the Jamaat evolved from a trans-regional Islamist movement into a distinct political force in Bangladesh.

The party opposed Bangladesh’s independence from Pakistan, arguing that such a move could weaken Muslim political unity and alter the power balance in South Asia. During the 1971 war, senior Jamaat figures sided with the Pakistani state and even formed paramilitary groups that killed thousands of civilians demanding an independent Bangladesh.

Shortly after independence, the government of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman – Hasina’s father – banned Jamaat in 1972, until BNP founder Ziaur Rahman lifted the ban in 1979, when he was president. In the next two decades, Jamaat emerged as a significant political force. It supported the BNP-led coalition in 1991, when Rahman’s daughter, Khaleda Zia, became the prime minister for the first time.

It was during Khaleda’s government that the citizenship of prominent Jamaat leader Ghulam Azam, revoked after independence, was reinstated, giving the party a major boost. In 2001, Jamaat formally joined the BNP-led coalition under Khaleda and held two cabinet positions.

Jamaat’s setbacks began afresh when Hasina returned to power in 2009 and ordered war-crimes trials against senior Jamaat leaders at the International Crimes Tribunal, which her government set up. Despite rights groups saying the tribunal’s proceedings violated due process, several Jamaat leaders, including former party chief Motiur Rahman Nizami and former Secretary-General Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mojaheed, were hanged.

The crackdown decimated the Jamaat leadership and left the party politically marginalised for 15 years.

Since the 2024 uprising and the lifting of the ban on it, Jamaat – currently led by chief Shafiqur Rahman, deputy chief Syed Abdullah Mohammed Taher and Secretary-General Mia Golam Porwar – has reorganised itself into a strong contender in next month’s election.

Party leaders say the revival reflects not only public sympathy after years of repression, but a broader disillusionment with the country’s established political order.

“Over the last 55 years, Bangladesh has mainly been ruled by two parties: the Awami League and the BNP,” Jamaat deputy chief Taher told Al Jazeera. “People have long experience with both, and many feel frustrated. They want a new political force to govern.”

In the political vacuum caused by the ban on Hasina’s Awami League, Jamaat moved swiftly to position itself as the BNP’s principal challenger. That momentum has been reinforced by the recent students’ union elections in which Islami Chhatra Shibir, Jamaat’s student wing, secured victories at key campuses.

Taher told Al Jazeera that Jamaat has an estimated 20 million supporters, roughly 250,000 of whom are registered members, known as “rukon”, including women. The numbers reveal the party’s organisational strength, which a nascent political party like the NCP aims to capitalise on in the coming election.

Taher said Jamaat’s appeal across Bangladesh also explains its resilience despite decades of political marginalisation. The “public interest in the Jamaat” is “growing”, he added.

“If this trend continues, we believe we can win a majority.”

Concerns over rise of Islamist party

The Jamaat’s resurgence has however also prompted debates over whether Bangladesh is prepared to be led by an Islamist force that some fear could seek to enforce Sharia law or try to restrict women’s rights and freedoms.

But Jamaat leaders insist they would govern under the country’s secular constitution on a reform agenda, rejecting fears over Sharia law or women’s rights.

“When we come to power, we will accept and implement agreed reforms. Where new laws are needed – for example, to ensure good governance and eliminate corruption – we will examine them at that time,” Taher said.

Taher also rejected the “conservative” label on the Jamaat, instead describing his party as a “moderate Islamist force”, and arguing that it seeks to govern through constitutional reforms rather than ideological enforcement.

He said their alliance with the NCP, the party founded by 2024 uprising leaders, and with the Liberal Democratic Party, led by 1971 war hero Oli Ahmad, are attempts to “unite the spirit of 1971” with that of the 2024 movement and reflect a generational change rather than ideological hardlines.

The Jamaat is also seeking to broaden its appeal beyond its Muslim base. For the first time in its history, the party has fielded a Hindu candidate, Krishna Nandi, from the city of Khulna, where it has highlighted minority rights as part of an effort to attract non-Muslim voters, who make up around 10 percent of Bangladesh’s population, a majority of them Hindus.

Asif Bin Ali, geopolitical analyst and doctoral fellow at Georgia State University in the US, said that while several Bangladeshi voters might be more religious today than they previously were, they are also “politically pragmatic, despite personal piety” and tend to prefer politicians over clerics.

“A sizeable part of the Bangladeshi society is moving in a more Islamist direction, but that is not the same as being ready to hand the state to a conservative Islamist leadership,” Ali told Al Jazeera.

“The centrist and centre-left space is still large, and would resist any attempt to recast the state along strict Islamist lines,” he added.

Thomas Kean, senior consultant on Bangladesh and Myanmar at the International Crisis Group, said that the Jamaat’s best bet would lie in drawing voters less by using its Islamist identity and more by its reputation of being a cleaner and more disciplined political force, particularly for voters disillusioned with the BNP and the Awami League.

At the same time, Kean cautioned that the Jamaat’s past and some of its policy positions – particularly those related to its Islamist ideology – continue to deter many voters, limiting its electoral prospects.

“Clearly, Jamaat is on track to record its best-ever results in the upcoming election,” he said. “However, I am sceptical of Jamaat’s chances of winning. We are talking about a party that has never won even 20 seats previously or much more than 12 percent of the popular vote.”

Will alliance with NCP work?

Analysts say that while rising religious conservatism forms part of Jamaat’s appeal, the party’s recent gains cannot be explained by ideological Islamisation alone. Citing the Jamaat’s alliance with the NCP as key, they argue that the Islamist party’s appeal now extends beyond its core membership.

“It is wrong to interpret the rise in support for Jamaat as a growth of Islamic politics,” Mushtaq Khan, professor of economics at London’s SOAS University, told Al Jazeera. “It represents a search for clean candidates and an end to corruption and extortion. The swing towards Jamaat likely reflects this demand much more than it reflects Islamic values.”

The perception that Jamaat is relatively cleaner has been reinforced in recent months by allegations of extortion involving BNP activists, making corruption a central plank of the Jamaat-led alliance’s campaign.

Khan said the Jamaat–NCP coalition could further strengthen this momentum by positioning itself as a vehicle for change, though its prospects will depend on how clearly they articulate that change.

However, doubts remain over the extent of the Jamaat’s surge in support among Bangladeshi voters.

Ali, the analyst from Georgia State University, said that while the Jamaat may register its strongest electoral performance to date in the February polls, “I don’t see it as a credible path to overtake the BNP”.

ASM Suza Uddin, joint secretary of the NCP, said the alliance with Jamaat and other Islamist groups was a “strategic decision” shaped by the political climate following the 2024 uprising and to counter what he called the rise of “Indian hegemonic politics” in the region.

“To resist hegemonism, a broad and powerful alliance is necessary,” Suza Uddin said. “This is about ensuring the next generation sees a Bangladesh free from fascism.”

Litmus test for foreign ties

It is for these reasons that the forthcoming election – and how the Jamaat performs in it – could also prove to be a litmus test for Bangladesh’s relations with neighbouring countries, mainly India and Pakistan.

Kean of the International Crisis Group warned that a Jamaat-led government would face greater difficulty in resetting relations with India than an administration headed by the BNP following Hasina’s fall, which has strained Dhaka–New Delhi ties.

“India is looking for a reset after the election, but that will be more challenging with Jamaat in power than the BNP. Domestic politics in both countries would make it very difficult for Jamaat and the BJP to work together,” Kean said, referring to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu majoritarian Bharatiya Janata Party.

Kean said a number of “perennial issues” will continue to cause tensions with India, regardless of which party is in power in Dhaka, including issues related to immigration, border security, and the sharing of water.

Since Hasina’s fall in August 2024, Bangladesh has also taken steps to rebuild ties with Pakistan, including a renewed diplomatic engagement, discussions on expanding trade and transport links, and high-level official visits after years of limited contact.

Jamaat supporters say the February 12 vote is more than an electoral test. It is a referendum on whether a party, long defined by exclusion and controversies, can convert organisational resilience into national legitimacy as a ruling force.

Khan, the professor at SOAS University, argues the contest will be decided less by ideology and more by promises of governance.

“This election will not be about Islam versus secularism, nor about left versus right,” he said. “It will be about reform versus the status quo. The coalition that provides a more convincing agenda for reform while keeping stability will have an advantage.”

Kyiv plunged into cold and nuclear threat by Russian attack

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Russian attack plunges Kyiv into cold, threatens nuclear-linked facilities

Approval of US trade deal in Europe to be suspended due to market decline

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Jonathan Josephs,

Nick Edserand

Adam Hancock,Business reporters

Bloomberg via Getty Images Cranes hover over a container ship with lights at dusk at the HHLA Container Terminal Tollerort (CTT) at the Port of Hamburg in Hamburg, Germany, on Monday, Feb. 3, 2025. Bloomberg via Getty Images

The European Parliament is planning to suspend approval of the US trade deal agreed in July, according to sources close to its international trade committee.

The suspension is set to be announced in Strasbourg, France on Wednesday.

The move would mark another escalation in tensions between the US and Europe, as Donald Trump ratchets up his efforts to acquire Greenland, threatening new tariffs over the issue on the weekend.

The stand-off has rattled financial markets, reviving talk of a trade war and the possibility of retaliation against the US for its trade measures.

Shares on both sides of the Atlantic were lower on Tuesday, with European stock markets seeing a second day of losses. In the US, the Dow Jones slid more than 1.7%, while the S&P 500 dropped more than 2% and the Nasdaq closed about 2.4% lower.

Stock markets in the Asia-Pacific region were mixed on Wednesday, with major indexes in Japan and Australia a little lower, while shares in mainland China were higher.

The price of gold continued to make gains as it rose above $4,800 (£3,570) an ounce for the first time. The price of silver dipped from a record high above $94 an ounce.

Precious metals are seen as safer assets to hold in times of uncertainty, and the prices of both gold and silver have soared over the past year.

On the currency markets, the US dollar held steady against its major peers, having dropped 0.5% overnight – the biggest daily fall since early December.

Trade tensions between the US and Europe had eased since the two sides struck a deal at Trump’s Turnberry golf course in Scotland in July.

That agreement set US levies on most European goods at 15%, down from the 30% Trump had initially threatened as part of his “Liberation Day” wave of tariffs in April. In exchange, Europe had agreed to invest in the US and make changes at on the continent expected to boost US exports.

The deal still needs approval from the European Parliament to become official.

But on Saturday, within hours of Trump’s threat of US tariffs over Greenland, Manfred Weber, an influential German member of European Parliament, said “approval is not possible at this stage”.

And Bernd Lange, who chairs the European Parliament’s committee on international trade, said there was “no alternative” but to suspend the deal because of the threats over Greenland.

“By threatening the territorial integrity and sovereignty of an EU member state and by using tariffs as a coercive instrument, the US undermines the stability and predictability of EU–US trade relations,” said Lange, whose committee needs to sign off on the deal before it heads to parliament for a final vote.

“There is no alternative but to suspend work on the two Turnberry legislative proposals until the US decides to re-engage on a path of cooperation rather than confrontation, and before any further steps are taken.”

The decision opens up questions about whether the EU will move forward with threats to retaliate against the US.

The bloc had announced a possible €93bn ($109bn, £81bn) worth of American goods that could be hit with levies last year in response to Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs before putting the plan on hold, while the two sides finalised details of a deal.

But that reprieve ends on 6 February, meaning EU levies will come into force on 7 February unless the bloc moves for an extension or approves the new deal.

French President Emmanuel Macron is among those urging the EU to consider its retaliatory options, including the anti-coercion instrument, nicknamed a “trade bazooka”.

Washington’s “endless accumulation” of new tariffs is “fundamentally unacceptable, even more so when they are used as leverage against territorial sovereignty,” he said in a speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos.

American response

Also speaking in Davos, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent reiterated his warning to European leaders against retaliation, urging them to “have an open mind”.

“I tell everyone, sit back. Take a deep breath. Do not retaliate. The president will be here tomorrow, and he will get his message across,” he said.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer warned that the US would not let retaliation go without response.

“What I’ve found is that when countries follow my advice, they tend to do okay. When they don’t, crazy things happen,” Greer said, in remarks reported by the Agence France-Presse.

The US has previously expressed impatience with European progress toward approval of the deal amid ongoing disagreements over tech and metals tariffs.

The US and the 27-nation European Union are each others’ single biggest trade partners, with more than €1.6tn ($1.9tn, £1.4tn) in goods and services exchanged in 2024, according to European figures. That represents nearly a third of all global trade.

When Trump started announcing tariffs last year, it prompted threats of retaliation from many political leaders, including in Europe.

In the end, however, many, opted to negotiate instead.

Only China and Canada stuck by their threats to hit American goods with tariffs, with Canada quietly withdrawing most of those measures in September, concerned they were damaging the Canadian economy.

In a speech in Davos on Tuesday, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney urged “middle powers” to unite to push back against the might-makes-right world of great power rivalry that he warned was emerging.

“When we only negotiate bilaterally with a hegemon, we negotiate from weakness. We accept what is offered. We compete with each other to be the most accommodating,” he warned. “This is not sovereignty. It is the performance of sovereignty while accepting subordination.”

Looming in the background of the trade tensions is a pending Supreme Court decision over whether many of the tariffs Trump announced last year are legal.

Billionaire Marc Benioff poses a question to the AI sector: ‘Is growth or our children’s future more critical?’

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Imagine it is 1996. You log on to your desktop computer (which took several minutes to start up), listening to the rhythmic screech and hiss of the modem connecting you to the World Wide Web. You navigate to a clunky message board—like AOL or Prodigy—to discuss your favorite hobbies, from Beanie Babies to the newest mixtapes.

At the time, a little-known law called Section 230 of the Communications Safety Act had just been passed. The law—then just a 26-word document—created the modern internet. It was intended to protect “good samaritans” who moderate websites from regulation, placing the responsibility for content on individual users rather than the host company.

Today, the law remains largely the same despite evolutionary leaps in internet technology and pushback from critics, now among them Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff. 

In a conversation at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Tuesday, titled “Where Can New Growth Come From?” Benioff railed against Section 230, saying the law prevents tech giants from being held accountable for the dangers AI and social media pose.

“Things like Section 230 in the United States need to be reshaped because these tech companies will not be held responsible for the damage that they are basically doing to our families,” Benioff said in the panel conversation which also included Axa CEO Thomas Buberl, Alphabet President Ruth Porat, Emirati government official Khaldoon Khalifa Al Mubarak, and Bloomberg journalist Francine Lacqua.

As a growing number of children in the U.S. log onto AI and social media platforms, Benioff said the legislation threatens the safety of kids and families. The billionaire asked, “What’s more important to us, growth or our kids? What’s more important to us, growth or our families? Or, what’s more important, growth or the fundamental values of our society?”

Section 230 as a shield for tech firms

Tech companies have invoked Section 230 as a legal defense when dealing with issues of user harm, including in the 2019 case Force v. Facebook, where the court ruled the platform wasn’t liable for algorithms that connected members of Hamas after the terrorist organization used the platform to encourage murder in Israel. The law could shield tech companies from liability for harm AI platforms pose, including the production of deepfakes and AI-Generated sexual abuse material.

Benioff has been a vocal critic of Section 230 since 2019 and has repeatedly called for the legislation to be abolished. 

In recent years, Section 230 has come under increasing public scrutiny as both Democrats and Republicans have grown skeptical of the legislation. In 2019 the Department of Justice under President Donald Trump pursued a broad review of Section 230. In May 2020, President Trump signed an Executive Order limiting tech platforms’ immunity after Twitter added fact-checks to his tweets. And in 2023, the U.S. Supreme Court heard Gonzalez v. Google, though, decided it on other grounds, leaving Section 230 intact.

In an interview with Fortune in December 2025, Dartmouth business school professor Scott Anthony voiced concern over the “guardrails” that were—and weren’t—happening with AI. When cars were first invented, he pointed out, it took time for speed limits and driver’s licenses to follow. Now with AI, “we’ve got the technology, we’re figuring out the norms, but the idea of, ‘Hey, let’s just keep our hands off,’ I think it’s just really bad.”

The decision to exempt platforms from liability, Anthony added, “I just think that it’s not been good for the world. And I think we are, unfortunately, making the mistake again with AI.”

For Benioff, the fight to repeal Section 230 is more than a push to regulate tech companies, but a reallocation of priorities toward safety and away from unfettered growth. “In the era of this incredible growth, we’re drunk on the growth,” Benioff said. “Let’s make sure that we use this moment also to remember that we’re also about values as well.”

Warning from Canada’s Leader of a Potential ‘Breakdown’ in Global Order

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new video loaded: Canada’s Leader Warns of ‘Rupture’ in World Order

transcript

transcript

Canada’s Leader Warns of ‘Rupture’ in World Order

At the World Economic Forum, Prime Minister Mark Carney of Canada took a stand against President Trump’s desire for the United States to own Greenland, and called on medium-size countries to stand up to larger powers.

Great powers have begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited. Every day we are reminded that we live in an era of great power rivalry, that the rules-based order is fading, that the strong can do what they can and the weak must suffer what they must. Let me be direct: We are in the midst of a rupture, not a transition. Our commitment to NATO’s Article V is unwavering. Canada strongly opposes tariffs over Greenland and calls for focused talks to achieve our shared objectives of security and prosperity in the Arctic. The middle powers must act together, because if we’re not at the table, we’re on the menu. Great powers can afford for now to go it alone.

At the World Economic Forum, Prime Minister Mark Carney of Canada took a stand against President Trump’s desire for the United States to own Greenland, and called on medium-size countries to stand up to larger powers.

By Amogh Vaz

January 20, 2026

Milk & Honey expands further in the UK, adds Grammy-winning mixer Dan Grech-Marguerat to roster

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Lucas Keller‘s music management and sports agency Milk & Honey has announced the signing of Grammy Award-winning mixer Dan Grech-Marguerat.

Working from his studio in Hackney, East London, Grech-Marguerat has mixed breakthrough projects for artists including Lana Del Rey, Halsey, George Ezra and The Killers.

He also produced debut albums for Tom Odell and Liam Gallagher, and his work has contributed to over 20 No.1 records and more than 48 billion streams globally.

Milk & Honey says that accelerating Grech-Marguerat’s career in the United States will be a “major priority” for its firm globally.

Making the announcement, Ant Hippsley, Head of Milk & Honey Music UK Office, said: “We’re thrilled to welcome the brilliant Dan to Milk & Honey!

“Dan has built an amazing business in the UK and internationally and is a master of his craft. We’re very much looking forward to expanding his reach across the board and partnering with them in this next season of his acclaimed career.”

“Few companies operating the way Milk & Honey does globally, and DAN will be a main priority for all of our offices.”

LUCAS KELLER, MILK & HONEY

Grech-Marguerat, who is a long-time collaborator of both MUNA and Tom Grennan, has also mixed for artists including Griff, Jessie Ware, Mumford & Sons, Sam Ryder, and Bastille.

Standout achievements include mixing several albums for Kelsea Ballerini including her Grammy-nominated album Rolling Up The Welcome Mat, as well as MUNA & Phoebe Bridgers’ single Silk Chiffon.

“Dan is world-class, and crossing further into America is going to be a major priority for us,” added Keller, President & Founder of Milk & Honey Music + Sports.

“Few companies operating the way Milk & Honey does globally, and he will be a main priority for all of our offices. So excited to have him in the family, and to add to his already impressive discography.”

The signing of Grech-Marguerat follows Milk & Honey’s recent expansion in the UK with the addition of talent management company Bigfoot Music Management and its clients.

Milk & Honey described that move as part of its ambition to build “the premier artist management company in the UK”.

In October, the Los Angeles-headquartered company launched its own label: the pop and dance music-focused Milk & Honey Records, with a physical and digital distribution agreement in place with The Orchard.Music Business Worldwide

Second Team All-Region Selections for Pennsylvania in 2025

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LEIGHA KANE
Palmyra Area High School
Junior – Midfield

5 goals, 31 assists, 5 defensive saves
Mid-Penn Keystone Division First Team
AA All-State First Team
PennLive’s Mid-Penn Second Team
HSNI Additional Top Performer
NFHCA All-Pennsylvania Region Second Team

Simple Honey Harvesting Techniques for Small-Scale Beekeepers

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The traditional method of beekeeping – using heavy frames that hold the honey, and large extractors that do the harvesting – can be a grubby, physically demanding, time-consuming procedure that takes up a large amount of space along with the hazards of being stung or harming the bees.

Simon Mildren, an Australian firefighter with a passion for beekeeping, has streamlined the process with the Hivekeepers Micro Honey Harvester system, which sounds like it could be ideal for the recreational or small-scale beekeeper with one to five hives.

“I didn’t want to change the way we care for bees, I just wanted to make it easier to enjoy what they give us” says Mildren, who is also founder and CEO of the Hivekeepers company.

The result of a 2025 Kickstarter that was 437% funded in five minutes, the system is designed to reduce unnecessary steps with a compact user-friendly design that is sustainable while protecting the bees and the integrity of the hives. Hivekeepers was also a 2025 Australian Agritech Awards finalist for redefining agriculture through innovation and technology.

The Micro Honey Harvester Starter Kit

HiveKeepers

The Micro Honey Harvester was the result of six years of experimenting with prototypes along with feedback from beekeepers worldwide who vented about the frustrations of honey production being laborious, messy and stressful for both beekeepers and the bees.

Mildren came up with a flexible system of food-safe BPA-free frames (48.3 x 23.1 x 3.2 cm / 19 x 9 x 1.25 in) which hold eight reusable cassettes that fit into standard Langstroth hives without the need to upgrade equipment while allowing for more additions as required.

The 100 x 100-mm (3.9 x 3.9-in) cassettes are interchangeable, making the system adaptable for varying honey yields as the beekeeper can harvest a small section of the frame at a time. Each cassette holds about 250 ml of honey, with each frame holding eight cassettes that can yield about 2L total of honey.

Each frame holds eight cassettes
Each frame holds eight cassettes

HiveKeepers

To harvest the honey, the beekeeper removes a cassette from the frame and pulls it apart into two pieces, then slides each part (with the waxy layer facing inwards) into the battery-powered portable harvester. About the size of a small coffee machine, that device weighs about 3 kg (6.6 lb) and has an ergonomic handle, thus allowing for easy transport from hive to kitchen.

The beekeeper then pushes the start button, causing the central spinner to start rotating, and the honey is extracted in 20 seconds. Each full frame takes about 10 minutes total, and the detachable base allows for easy pouring. Cleanup is as quick as a warm-water rinse.

Honey is easily poured out of the harvester
Honey is easily poured out of the harvester

HiveKeepers

One charge of the harvester’s lithium-ion battery is reportedly good for more than two full frames or approximately 20 cassettes. The harvester can also run continuously when plugged into mains power, or it can be powered by a portable external battery pack.

A Micro Honey Harvester starter pack including a harvester, two frames with cassettes and two extra cassettes is set to start shipping early this year if all goes according to plan. It’s priced at approximately US$424.

Source: HiveKeepers