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Mustaf Dhuxulow iyo Cabdullaahi Maxamed Nuur oo kusoo biiray safka mucaaradka

Apr 21(Jowhar)Siyaasiyiin miisaan culus leh ayaa kusoo biiray shirka mucaaradka ee ka socda guriga Madaxweynihii hore ee Soomaaliya Sheekh Shariif Sheekh Axmed, iyadoo dhaq-dhaqaaqyada siyaasadeed ee Muqdisho ay sii xoogeysanayaan.

Kallas: Rebuilding Gaza Will Cost an Estimated $71 Billion

Reconstruction of Gaza will cost $71 billion, says Kallas
A view of the heavily damaged Jabalia neighborhood in Gaza City, Gaza

Seventy-one Billion Reasons to Care: Rebuilding Gaza and the Moral Math of the International Community

Brussels felt unusually solemn this week. Beneath the glass atrium of the EU institutions, the hum of diplomats and the click of cameras were underscored by a single, disquieting statistic: $71 billion. That is the estimated price tag for rebuilding Gaza, a figure the EU’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, announced after months of consultations with the World Bank and the United Nations.

Numbers can be cold. But behind this headline sits a human geography of flattened neighborhoods, demolished hospitals, schools turned into shelters, and families who no longer recognize the streets they grew up on. Gaza is home to roughly 2.3 million people — a dense strip of land where everyday life has become a feat of endurance. The reconstruction needs are not abstract. They are kitchens to be rebuilt, water systems to be repaired, childhoods to be stitched back together.

Why $71 Billion?

Kallas was blunt: “This figure is the result of months of hard calculation and frank conversations with the UN and the World Bank.” The number is meant to bring clarity to a staggering practical challenge: reconstructing homes, restoring services, reinvigorating a shattered economy and, perhaps most crucially, creating conditions for a political future that avoids repeating this devastation.

But the announcement was also a mirror held up to the world’s conscience. “I often hear accusations of double standards, that we support Ukraine, but we don’t support the Palestinians,” Kallas said in Brussels. “Let me get this straight: Europe is the biggest supporter of the Palestinian people. Europe is the largest donor and the main backer of the Palestinian Authority. European missions on the ground support Palestinian police, justice and governance and border management. You will not find a stronger supporter of the Palestinian people anywhere in the world.”

Her words aim to counter a political narrative that pits one humanitarian crisis against another. Yet they don’t erase the hard policy disputes now playing out in capitals from Dublin to Jerusalem.

The Political Fault Lines

At the heart of this week’s meetings was a terse, but consequential, debate over the EU-Israel Association Agreement — the treaty governing trade and partnership between the bloc and Israel.

Ire, Spain and Slovenia have called for a formal review of the agreement, citing a spike in settler violence in the West Bank, Israeli actions in Lebanon, and controversial legislation debated in the Knesset that would impose the death penalty on Palestinians convicted by military courts in the West Bank. Such a review is not just bureaucratic theatre: Article 2 of the agreement binds both sides to respect human rights and international law. If Israel is found to be in breach, the EU could impose punitive measures up to suspension — but only if all member states agree.

“Member states have put this on the table,” Kallas told reporters. “Suspension of the Association Agreement requires unanimity.” That requirement has been the stumbling block. Germany, Hungary and Czechia (among others) have previously balked at drastic action, and last summer the EU stopped short of suspension when Israel pledged to open greater humanitarian access into Gaza.

Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, called for full suspension over the weekend — a move that drew an immediate, sharp rebuttal from Israel. Foreign Minister Gideon Saar posted on social media in Spanish that Israel would “not accept hypocritical lectures from someone who keeps ties with totalitarian regimes,” naming Turkey and Venezuela in his response.

Who’s in, who’s out?

Beyond the EU’s internal fissures, a wider institutional contest is unfolding. The United States has proposed a “Board of Peace” to help govern post-war arrangements in Gaza. The EU, Kallas said, will not join that mechanism because it diverged from the UN Security Council blueprint and from the principle of Palestinian-led state-building. “For us, the role of Palestinians in building up Palestinian state is the most important. It has to be Palestinian-led, and Palestinian-owned,” she said.

Yet she left open the possibility of parallel efforts. “The Global Initiative for the Implementation of the Two-State Solution could work in parallel with the US-sponsored entity,” she added, suggesting that different diplomatic tracks might coexist if they respect Palestinian agency.

Voices from the Ground

It’s one thing to speak of agreements and bank estimates in conference rooms; it’s another to walk through Gaza’s neighborhoods. Layla, a schoolteacher from Khan Younis, told me in a phone call that numbers don’t capture the small, stubborn things people miss. “We count our memories the way people count bricks now,” she said. “A home is more than a roof. It is where my son learned to tie his shoelaces. Will they rebuild those moments?”

Ahmed, who runs a small hardware store near Gaza City, was pragmatic. “We need electricity, sewage, and access to building materials. Not promises. Materials.” His voice had the fatigue of someone who’s negotiated scarcity his whole life. “We’ve rebuilt before. But every time, the cost is not only in money — it is in trust.”

A Palestinian aid worker in Rafah, requesting anonymity for safety, put it bluntly: “71 billion is a start, but only if it comes with accountability, access and protection. Otherwise we are only funding another temporary fix.”

Big Money, Bigger Questions

There are practical questions that follow a figure like $71 billion. Where will the money come from? Which institutions will manage it? How will projects be prioritized — housing, hospitals, water, livelihoods? And perhaps the most sensitive question: What political strings will come attached?

Historically, reconstruction in conflict zones has been a magnet for competing agendas. Donor leverage can rebuild infrastructure — and also reshape local governance. That tension explains some EU nervousness about joining unilateral or exclusionary initiatives that risk sidelining legitimate Palestinian authorities.

  • Who disburses funds: multilateral banks, UN agencies, bilateral donors?
  • Which legal frameworks ensure human rights and protect civilians?
  • How do we prevent corruption and ensure long-term sustainability?

Beyond Aid: What Kind of Future?

Reconstruction is not merely bricks and mortar. It is a test of political imagination. Will the international community fund a temporary reconstruction that leaves the same political dynamics in place? Or will donors couple infrastructure with a genuine push for a viable, internationally backed two-state solution — the political horizon that many say is essential to prevent another cycle of destruction?

“Rebuilding without political clarity is like patching a dam with paper,” said an EU diplomat speaking off the record. “If there is no credible pathway to a two-state outcome, every investment risks becoming a bandage on a wound that will reopen.”

That sentiment helps explain why some EU members are cautious about unilateral approaches and keen to keep the Palestinian Authority central to any post-war governance. It also explains why others, alarmed by settler violence and legislative moves in Israel, are pushing for punitive measures under the Association Agreement.

What Can You Do?

As readers, we are often left with headlines and soundbites. But crises like Gaza require sustained public attention. Ask your representatives about humanitarian corridors, transparency in aid, and support for Palestinian-led rebuilding. Demand clarity about the mechanisms for disbursing funds, and insist that human rights be non-negotiable.

Can $71 billion buy peace? No. But it can buy hospitals, schools, and the dignity of having a home. It can provide a platform for political negotiations that honor the agency of the people whose lives will be most affected. The deeper question is whether the international community is ready to match generosity with political courage.

When the diplomats had left Brussels and the meeting rooms grew quiet, Kaja Kallas offered a parting provocation: “You will not find a stronger supporter of the Palestinian people anywhere in the world.” Her words were both a declaration and a challenge — to other partners, to Israel, and to Palestinians themselves. Rebuilding Gaza will test alliances, values, and the world’s willingness to turn rhetoric into durable reality.

What will we choose to rebuild: temporary shelters or a future people can believe in? The answer will reverberate far beyond one narrow strip of land.

Japan issues warning of massive earthquake after powerful tremor

Japan warns of 'huge' earthquake after powerful tremor
Soldiers stationed at the Iwate Garrison making preparations following the tsunami alert

When the Earth Shook: A Night That Reminded Japan — and the World — How Close We Live to the Edge

It arrived like a reminder taped to the chest of a nation that has learned, the hard way, how to read the earth’s moods. On a late afternoon that looked ordinary in many parts of Japan, a powerful jolt rolled across the northern Pacific and sent a ripple of alarm from coastal towns to the glassy towers of Tokyo.

“The likelihood of a new, huge earthquake occurring is relatively higher than during normal times,” the Japan Meteorological Agency warned in a rare special advisory — language that feels clinical until you imagine the alternative: silence when the sea rises.

From Tokyo’s skyscrapers to sleepy fishing ports

The quake was first estimated at magnitude 7.4, nudged to 7.5, and finally put at 7.7 by the JMA — a reminder of how quickly the numbers can change as sensors, models and lives try to catch up. It struck at 4:53pm local time off the coast of Iwate prefecture, with an epicentre 10km beneath the ocean surface. In Tokyo, hundreds of kilometres away, ceiling lights swayed and commuters steadied themselves as trains were brought to a halt.

“Everything moved. The bookshelves, the cups — it was like someone had taken the city and given it a slow, steady shake,” said a Tokyo office worker who asked not to be named. “You don’t forget that feeling.”

In the towns that face the Pacific, the memory of 2011 is not abstract. Otsuchi and Kamaishi, coastal communities that are still dotted with reminders of the triple catastrophe that struck more than a decade ago, issued evacuation orders for thousands. For many there, tsunami sirens are not background noise but a summons to move quickly.

“We came down to the hill in the dark and waited. You don’t think in sentences — you just move,” recalled an elderly resident of Kamaishi, who tied a towel around his head and climbed with neighbours to a school gym now used as an emergency shelter. “The sea there has a temper. You respect it.”

Tsunami readings and what they mean

Two hours after the tremor, tsunami buoys and coastal sensors recorded waves up to 80 centimetres, and the JMA warned that larger waves — even several metres — remained a possibility in parts of Honshu and Hokkaido. The agency noted that a three-metre wave could inundate low-lying areas, taking buildings and anyone unlucky enough to be in its path.

“Tsunami doesn’t always roar in tall walls; sometimes it creeps and it carries. That’s what makes it treacherous,” explained a volunteer from a regional disaster relief group. “People underestimate the current.”

Japan sits on the so-called Ring of Fire — that geologic necklace of volcanoes and deep ocean trenches that girdles the Pacific. It is a painful statistic that Japan accounts for about 20% of the world’s earthquakes of magnitude 6.0 or greater. To put that number into perspective: tremors happen here often — sensors register quakes at least every five minutes somewhere in the country — but the ones that reshape the landscape and the lives of people are rarer and brutal.

Warnings, infrastructure and the ghosts of 2011

Officials moved quickly to calm and to urge caution. Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara told reporters there were no immediate reports of serious injuries or significant damage — a relief, yes, and also a pause between luck and potential disaster. A Cabinet Office official, speaking in a televised briefing, underscored a grim and practical truth: “While it is uncertain whether a major earthquake will actually occur, we ask that you take disaster preparedness measures based on the principle that you are responsible for your own safety.”

That sense of personal responsibility is part cultural, part necessity. Drill culture in Japan means schoolchildren practice evacuation routes; workplaces keep seismic kits; communities pile supplies in neighbourhood centres. But drills do not erase trauma. The memory of the 9.0-magnitude quake and tsunami in 2011 — an event that killed around 18,500 people and triggered the Fukushima nuclear disaster — sits like an old scar along the northeastern coast.

“We still see the tape marks on the trees where the water reached; my grandchildren ask why the sea took away our home,” a father from a northern fishing village told me. “You prepare, and you teach the kids to run to higher ground.”

Energy, transport and the halting of normal life

There were swift checks on critical infrastructure. Hokkaido Electric Power Co and Tohoku Electric Power Co reported no abnormalities at their facilities. Bullet trains were suspended and some expressways were closed as operators prioritized safety inspections — small inconveniences that can save lives when structural stress is hidden beneath the concrete.

Seismic intensity measurements recorded an “upper 5” on Japan’s scale in some places — strong enough to make moving around difficult and to topple unreinforced masonry. That jolting force is why Japan’s building codes and emergency architecture are global case studies in resilience; engineers design for sway, for absorption, for the choreography of collapse so as to keep the people inside breathing.

Beyond the tremor: what this moment asks of us

When a nation acutely aware of its geological fate receives a “special advisory” — words not chosen lightly by the JMA — it exposes the tension every modern society faces: how to live fully in a place that could be reshaped in an instant. Risk management, scientific modelling, urban planning, and the daily habits of citizens all become strands in a single rope that must hold.

Globally, Japan’s situation raises questions about how cities worldwide prepare for extremes that are increasing in frequency or visibility: from earthquakes to floods to heatwaves. How do we fund infrastructure resilient enough for the worst? How do we maintain the public’s trust when warnings are sometimes false alarms, and sometimes a lifeline?

“False alarms are better than missed alarms,” said a disaster psychologist who has worked with shelters in the Tohoku region. “But the challenge is sustaining a culture of preparedness without breeding panic.”

Small actions that matter

There are practical steps every reader can take — whether you live in a seismic zone or not. Simple measures make a difference:

  • Keep an emergency kit with water, food, a flashlight and a radio for at least three days.
  • Know your evacuation routes and the higher ground near your home.
  • Secure tall furniture and heavy objects that could injure in a tremor.
  • Stay informed from official channels and sign up for local emergency alerts.

In the hours after the quake, people gathered in small clusters on overpasses and parks, trading stories and snacks from backpacks. A young mother handed a thermos of tea to an elderly neighbour. A fisherman checked his nets and shook his head; his eyes were set on the horizon. There was the quiet choreography of communities bound together by history and by hazard.

So, what do we hold onto? The facts: no major damage reported, tsunami waves recorded up to 80cm, the possibility — stressed by the JMA — of larger quakes in the short term. The feeling: a nation steadying itself, again, against a landscape that is constantly remaking the rules.

And finally, the question for us all: how prepared are you to act when the ground beneath you decides to move? The answer begins not with fear, but with habit — with drills practised and supplies packed, with neighbours known, and with the humility to listen when the earth speaks.

Amnesty: Predatory leaders aiming to impose a new global order

Trump warns Iran on nuclear revival as he hosts Netanyahu
US President Donald Trump held a meeting with Israeli Prime ⁠Minister ‍Benjamin ⁠Netanyahu in ‍Mar-a-Lago

At the launch in London: a warning with a bite

Rain had the city half-hidden on the morning Amnesty International chose to unveil its annual report in London. Inside a conference room warmed by tea and too-bright lights, Dr Agnès Callamard spoke with the kind of bluntness that snaps a newsroom to attention: a public rebuke of the way power is being wielded across the globe.

“Predators,” she said, naming three leaders by role and reputation—those at the top of many recent headlines—and accusing them of trying to impose a new world order premised on domination rather than cooperation. “This is an era of the coward,” she added later, a phrase that landed like a challenge. Journalists leaned in. Outside, small groups of protesters and curious passers-by separated into their camps, chanting or scrolling through their phones. The notes taken in that room felt like a ledger being opened.

Who are the predators, and what does that mean?

Amnesty’s report singles out the heads of some of the most consequential governments, arguing they have rejected the post‑World War II multilateral framework—built around institutions like the United Nations—and traded it for a “vision without moral compass.” The group paints a picture of leaders who prioritize force, economic leverage and unilateral action over diplomacy and shared norms.

“They are not simply politicians who disagree about policy. They are dismantlers,” said Emma Nash, a human rights lawyer who has worked on international accountability cases. “If you take away the institutions that define what is acceptable behavior, you leave civilians and minorities especially exposed.”

Not all with the same face

The report deliberately frames the threat as a pattern rather than a single cause. Some leaders, it says, are brazen—loudly repudiating rules and openly weaponizing domestic law to crush dissent. Others are subtler, expanding influence through trade, arms, or political alliances while staying below the headline threshold of overt provocation.

China, the report notes, is a case in point: not branded a “predator” in the same breath, but described as “much more discreet”—a powerful actor that shapes outcomes globally without the same rhetorical fireworks. “Discretion does not absolve responsibility,” Callamard told the room. “Power comes in many guises.”

Why Europe—and the world—was called cowardly

The Amnesty report’s most stinging rebuke was not reserved for presidents and prime ministers alone. Governments across the globe, and European capitals in particular, were accused of opting for ease or short‑term calculation over courage. The charge of “appeasement” was repeated: policymakers choosing not to rock the boat, to maintain trade ties, or to avoid confrontation even as rights violations mount.

“I think our governments are trading principles for pipeline deals and electoral calculations,” said a European diplomat who asked not to be named. “It’s easier to send a few words of concern than to lose a contract or create a headache at home.”

Two EU members—Spain and Slovenia—were singled out as exceptions for publicly using the word “genocide” to describe the situation in Gaza; a handful of others have applied varying degrees of pressure on Israel. Amnesty urged wider measures, even suggesting the EU should revisit its association agreement with Israel and use economic levers where necessary.

Voices from the street

On a grey market street near the conference, a vendor named Karim wiped his hands on his apron and listened. “I don’t want to be dragged into geopolitics,” he said quietly. “But when politicians treat lives like chess pieces, it comes home. The people who make the coffee, teach the kids—we’re the ones who pay.”

Across the Mediterranean, feelings run hotter. “We need accountability, not silence,” said Leah Cohen, an Israeli peace activist. “If leaders feel they can act without consequence, atrocities become easier to commit and harder to stop.” On the other side, a Gaza-based community organizer (reached via a secure call) spoke of daily loss and of legal and moral pleas that seem to bounce off diplomatic chambers. “We are not statistics,” she said. “We are people. That must matter.”

Connecting the dots: rights, geopolitics, and everyday lives

This is not an abstract argument about theory. It is about the erosion of the mechanisms that once constrained state behavior—treaties, international courts, norms around civilian protection—and the human cost when those constraints are ignored. The United Nations, created in 1945 as a promise to prevent future horrors, was built on the idea that no state could act entirely alone. Amnesty’s language is a stark reminder that promises fray when powerful actors choose unilateralism.

We must also remember that the effects are cumulative. The world now houses a record number of forcibly displaced people—more than 100 million globally in recent UN estimates—and the knock-on effects of conflict and rights erosion ripple through economies, health systems and educational progress.

What accountability could look like

Proposals in the report range from targeted sanctions and trade suspensions to renewed investment in international courts and strengthened protections for civilians in armed conflict. “Sanctions aren’t magic,” said Nash, “but they can change incentives. When used judiciously and collectively, they have teeth.”

There are also legal pathways: documentation, referrals to international tribunals, and public naming of abuses. But these require political will. Callamard’s criticism is less about legal minutiae than about the habit of looking away—and the human price of that habit.

Questions for the reader—and for our leaders

What do you think accountability should look like in a world where power can buy silence? How do we balance economic interdependence with moral clarity? If the multilateral system feels frayed, are we prepared to remake it—or to let it unravel?

When a seasoned rights advocate says the age belongs to the “coward,” it is both a condemnation and a provocation. It asks citizens and leaders alike to examine whether their choices are short‑sighted or principled, expedient or courageous.

Final thought: a call to stay awake

The Amnesty report may sit on a shelf next to a dozen other briefs, but its message is loud and plain: the protection of rights is not a passive thing. It is maintained by people who speak up, institutions that enforce, and nations that are willing to stand on principle even when it costs them. If we allow the rhetoric of domination and the practice of impunity to harden into the new normal, the consequences will be global and enduring.

“History will ask who saw it and who stayed silent,” Dr Callamard warned that day in London. The choice, it seems, is not only for diplomats and presidents—it’s for all of us. What will we choose?

Sh Shariif, Sambaloolshe iyo Mustaf Dhuxulow oo kulan uga socdo Muqdisho

Apr 21(Jowhar) Madaxweynihii hore ee Soomaaliya Sheekh Shariif Sheekh Axmed, Agaasimihii hore ee Hay’adda Socdaalka iyo Jinsiyadda Mustaf Dhuxuloow, iyo Taliyihii hore ee NISA Cabdullaahi Maxamed Cali (Sanbaloolshe) ayaa hadda kulan xasaasi ah uga socda hoyga Sheekh Shariif ee magaalada Muqdisho.

U.S. Labor Secretary to Depart Trump Administration, Prompting Cabinet Transition

US Secretary of Labour leaving Trump administration
The former congresswoman was supported by more than a dozen Democrats in her confirmation (file photo)

The Quiet Exit: How One Cabinet Resignation Revealed a Bigger Strain on Power, Trust and Workplaces in Washington

On a gray morning in Washington, a corridor that usually thrums with the small dramas of policy—late meetings, hurried aides, the hiss of the copier—felt strangely still. The Department of Labor’s flagship building, its stone facade weathered by decades of politics and policy, kept its secrets. But by midday the whisper had a name: Lori Chavez-DeRemer, the U.S. Secretary of Labor, was stepping away from her post to take a private‑sector job, the White House announced in terse, official language.

“Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer will be leaving the Administration to take a position in the private sector,” communications director Steven Cheung wrote on X, praising her “phenomenal job” in the role. The statement was polished, short, and left more questions than answers—exactly the way modern political exits often arrive.

From Bipartisan Surprise to Tumult

Chavez-DeRemer’s rise carried the kind of unexpected turns that Washington likes to romanticize. A one‑term congresswoman from Oregon, she won confirmation to lead the Labor Department with support that reached beyond party lines—dozens of Democrats joined Republicans in the vote. For many, she represented a pragmatic conservative voice at a moment when bipartisanship was hard to come by.

But the last months of her tenure were anything but steady. Media reports, internal complaints and a probe into the department’s leadership painted a picture of a workplace strained by allegations of inappropriate behavior, messy communications, and fractured trust. The New York Times reported exchanges of text messages that raised alarms among staff. The inquiry, launched after a complaint of widespread misconduct, found a pattern of incidents that some employees described as contributing to a hostile work environment.

What the Reports Say

According to published reporting, the probe reviewed messages in which Chavez-DeRemer and close aides asked employees to run personal errands during official travel—bringing wine for senior figures, for example. The Times also reported that family members, including the secretary’s husband and father, exchanged messages with young female staffers. One exchange from April 2025 quoted in reporting had her father telling a staffer: “Hearing u/r in town. Wishing you would let me know. I could have made some excuses to get out and show u around. Please keep this private.”

People close to the investigation say the findings prompted several personnel moves. Reported consequences included the departures of four members of Chavez-DeRemer’s team: her former chief of staff, deputy chief of staff, director of advance, and a member of her security detail. Civil rights complaints were also filed by three employees alleging hostile work conditions, and separate complaints surfaced alleging inappropriate touching by a family member in department offices—allegations that, if true, would compound the sense of alarm.

Voices in the Halls

“We are public servants. We come to work to make people’s lives better,” said a senior Labor Department aide who asked not to be named. “When the things swirling around leadership start to feel personal and intrusive, it corrodes morale. People stop trusting the mission.”

Outside the department, reaction ran the gamut. “This is not just about one person,” said Ana Rivera, president of a national labor union. “It’s about power, access, and the culture that allows boundaries to be blurred. Workers deserve a department that protects them—not one that becomes the source of complaints.”

A local barista across from the department, used to seeing government staffers grab morning coffee, shrugged: “They come in every day like anyone else. But when what happens behind those stone walls becomes front‑page news, it reminds you how much at stake these jobs are. These are places where policy is made that affects all of us.”

What Chavez-DeRemer and the Administration Say

The White House framed the departure as a voluntary move to the private sector. Chavez-DeRemer has not been accused personally of criminal wrongdoing in connection with the messages reviewed; nonetheless, the swirl of reporting and internal fallout created a political reality that made continued leadership challenging. The administration named Keith Sonderling, her deputy, as acting labor secretary while speculation mounts about a permanent successor.

In volatile administrations, cabinet posts can turn into revolving doors. In recent weeks, the departures of other high‑profile women in the cabinet have amplified questions about the stability of senior roles and the costs of political churn—particularly for women, who are frequently scrutinized in ways their male counterparts are not.

Beyond One Office: Power, Gender and Public Trust

This story is not only a personnel change; it exists at the intersection of larger forces. How do institutions respond when the private lives of leaders spill into professional spaces? What protections are in place for young staffers who might feel pressured to comply with requests from those in power? And what does it say when appointments that once drew bipartisan praise end under a cloud?

Workplace experts say these aren’t isolated issues. “Government workplaces are not immune to the same dynamics you find in corporations,” said an employment law scholar at a Washington university. “Hierarchies, blurred boundaries, and the sometimes-ambiguous distinction between personal and official travel create vulnerabilities. Complaints and investigations are how systems surface, but they’re also a sign that preventative cultures weren’t fully in place.”

For many observers, the story also stirs familiar anxieties about accountability. When staffers allege hostile conditions, they are often up against opaque processes and political calculations. For young women, the calculus can be even harder: the fear of career fallout, reputational harm, or being ignored altogether.

What Comes Next?

There’s an arc of accountability at work here: a complaint triggers an investigation; the findings produce personnel changes; and political leaders respond with public statements and new appointments. But what the arc often leaves unresolved is healing—within agencies, among staff, and in public confidence.

Is there a way to rebuild trust while keeping the department focused on wages, workplace safety, unemployment benefits and the array of tasks that affect millions of Americans every day? Some pragmatists argue that solid interim leadership, transparent reviews, and better employee protections can steady the ship. Others insist that cultural change requires more than new memos—it requires listening, structural reforms, and a willingness to confront uncomfortable truths.

As Washington turns another page, the people who work in those limestone corridors will keep showing up to the work of governing. The questions raised by this exit—about power, about the safety of young staffers, about how political leaders are held to account—are not just Washington’s to sort out. They are, quietly and insistently, everyone’s business.

So what do you think? When leaders fall short of standards we expect, how should institutions rebuild—through personnel changes, policy reforms, or deeper cultural shifts? The answers will shape not just this department, but how we imagine public service itself.

US and Iran Signal War Readiness as Diplomatic Talks Stall

US, Iran warn of readiness for war as talks in limbo
An Iranian national flag hangs from the Judiciary's headquarters, which was damaged in a US military operation in Tehran

Clockwork Diplomacy and the Edge of War: Islamabad’s Quiet Before a Possible Storm

There is a strange hush in the marble-lined hotels of Islamabad—an expectant silence that feels less like the calm before a summit and more like the pause in a held breath. Delegates are arriving in suits, security teams map routes in phone-booth corners, and waiters quietly replenish mint tea. Outside, the city hums with everyday life: children on bicycles, shopkeepers sweeping dust from doorsteps, the distant call to prayer threading the afternoon air. All of it feels ordinary, and yet the stakes could not be more extraordinary.

At the center of this tension is a two-week ceasefire that has been wobbling like a candle in the wind. With that truce due to lapse, the United States and Iran both issued warnings that they were prepared to resume hostilities if talks failed—casting a long shadow over the hopeful choreography of diplomacy in Pakistan’s capital.

Who’s at the table, and who is refusing to sit?

The White House signalled readiness to send Vice President J.D. Vance back to Islamabad, just days after a first round of talks. “We’re prepared to keep negotiating,” said a U.S. official who asked not to be named, “but not from a position of unilateral concession.” Yet Tehran has been coy, declining to confirm participation and sharply accusing Washington of undermining the ceasefire.

“Negotiations under the shadow of threats are not genuine negotiations,” said Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of Iran’s parliament, in a post on X. “If Washington insists on turning a table meant for talks into a stage for surrender, we will be forced to reconsider our options.” It was the tone of a side that does not intend to be hurried into a deal.

A maritime chessboard: the Strait of Hormuz

Much of the drama hinges on a narrow, blue artery: the Strait of Hormuz. In peacetime, around 120 vessels thread this strait every day, according to Lloyd’s List—about one-fifth of the world’s seaborne oil. Close the tap here and the global economy notices. Insurance premiums spike, charterers divert vessels around the Cape of Good Hope, and the cost of everything from heating fuel to fertilizer creeps upward.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have warned they will target any ship attempting to transit the strait without permission. The United States, for its part, accuses Iran of harassing commercial vessels and of using a flotilla of “shadow vessels” to flout a U.S. blockade. “We’ve seen more than 20 such vessels move around the blockade,” said a source at Lloyd’s, pointing to a shadowy maritime cat-and-mouse game that threatens to choke trade routes.

On social media and official channels alike, both sides have traded barbs. “The blockade is absolutely destroying Iran,” former President Donald Trump wrote on his platform, promising that it would remain in place “until there is a deal.” In Washington, officials counter that pressure is part of negotiating leverage. In Tehran, it feels like leverage turned into coercion.

Markets and lives: the economic pulse of a conflict

Markets reacted with the tautness of a drawn string. Oil prices dipped as traders clung to the hope of a diplomatic breakthrough, while equity indices in much of the world ticked upward. But beneath the headline numbers, shipping companies tally longer routes and higher fuel bills; farmers in distant countries worry about fertiliser shortages; importers hedge against volatility. “These are not abstract ripples,” said Marina Alvarez, a maritime economist in London. “They become waves felt in grocery aisles and at the gas pump.”

For ordinary people along the Persian Gulf, the effects are even more immediate. In the port city of Bandar-e Mahshahr, a veteran dockworker named Reza described the mood: “We’ve lived through sanctions before. The cranes sit idle when trade slows; my friends go on unpaid leave. We need peace for our families, not slogans.”

Lebanon’s fragile ceasefire — and a grim casualty

On a parallel track, a separate ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, which brought Hezbollah into the calculus, held tenuously. A second round of Israel-Lebanon talks was due in Washington, even as sporadic violence kept many villagers from returning home in southern Lebanon. The Lebanese government’s latest toll said Israeli strikes had killed at least 2,387 people since the fighting began—figures that layer heartbreak over geopolitics.

The killing of a French peacekeeper in southern Lebanon last weekend further underscored the fragility of the situation. “Our peacekeepers are there to create space for diplomacy,” said a U.N. official in Beirut. “When they are attacked, that space shrinks by the minute.” Hezbollah blamed Israeli actions for provoking instability, while Israel accused the group of using civilian areas as cover—each side offering narratives that make de-escalation harder.

Voices from the ground

“We are exhausted,” whispered Nadia, a schoolteacher from a village near the Israeli border, as she sifted through a box of students’ art. “Children draw rockets less and less now; they draw homes and trees and ask why this keeps coming back.”

From Tel Aviv, an Israeli municipal official argued, “We cannot compromise on safety. Neutral zones are not permanent unless militant groups disarm.” The human cost, he conceded, was heavy. “There are always innocent people who pay for decisions made far above them.”

The uranium question and the diplomacy of mistrust

Another wedge in the talks has been Tehran’s enriched uranium—Washington says Iran agreed to hand over its stockpile, while Iran’s foreign ministry has flatly denied such an option was ever on the table. “It was never raised,” said Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei, rejecting claims of transfer. Experts worry that even the perception of bargaining over nuclear material deepens mutual suspicion.

“When either side casts the other as dishonest, it makes verification nearly impossible,” said Dr. Laila Haddad, a non-proliferation expert. “Confidence-building measures are the scaffolding of any meaningful accord; without them, you have fragility, not peace.”

What comes next—and why it matters to you

So where does this leave the world? In a place of brittle, conditional calm. Ceasefires can be a low, hopeful beginning—or a prelude to a broader conflagration. They depend not only on leaders’ words but on logistics: open ports, uninterrupted shipping, transparent verification. When any actor feels coerced rather than persuaded, the cost of returning to conflict becomes uncomfortably low.

Ask yourself: would you trust concessions made under duress? Would you believe a peace that arrives with gunboats off your coast? The answers matter because, in an interconnected world, the reverberations of a single political misstep can be felt in distant grocery stores, in pension funds, and in the lives of families who never wished for war.

For now, Islamabad waits and the world watches. Delegates shuffle papers in hotel lobbies, negotiators craft language that could cool or ignite, and ordinary people—dockworkers, teachers, farmers—hold their breaths. Diplomacy is messy, imperfect, and deeply human. If the coming days produce a genuine dialogue, it will be because someone on either side chose to confront fear with the slower, stranger courage of compromise.

Will they choose to lay down leverage for long-term peace? Or will the next sunrise bring the noise of bombs and the grim arithmetic of lives lost? The answer will tell us not just about these governments, but about how the world negotiates the balance between power and prudence in an age when the consequences are truly global.

Father Identified After Fatally Shooting Seven of His Children in US

Man who shot dead seven of his children in US identified
Police identified the gunman in the Louisiana shooting as Shamar Elkins

A small street in Shreveport, and a morning that will not be forgotten

It was the kind of dawn you find across many American towns: quiet, humid air hanging over porches, a few cars idling as neighbors began their routines. In a small two-storey house on a modest street in Shreveport, Louisiana, that ordinary morning turned into the unthinkable.

Early on a weekday, gunfire swept through three separate homes in a brief, brutal span. By the time the sun rose fully, eight children lay dead — three boys and five girls, their ages between three and eleven. Seven of them were siblings; one was their cousin. Two women were critically wounded. The man police later identified as the shooter, 31-year-old Shamar Elkins, fled in a carjacked vehicle before being stopped and fatally shot by officers after a pursuit.

The sequence of a tragedy

Local law enforcement says the attack began as a domestic disturbance. According to investigators, a woman was shot at a house where the violence first erupted; the suspect then moved to another nearby residence where the children were killed. One child survived with non-life-threatening injuries and was taken to hospital. Authorities have described the episode as confined to a single shooter and said they are still combing through three separate scenes for evidence and motive.

The Caddo Parish Coroner’s Office released the names of the children: Jayla Elkins, 3; Shayla Elkins, 5; Kayla Pugh, 6; Layla Pugh, 7; Markaydon Pugh, 10; Sariahh Snow, 11; Khedarrion Snow, 6; and Braylon Snow, 5.

What police said

“At the end of that pursuit, the suspect exited the vehicle with a firearm, and ultimately our officers were forced to neutralise the suspect,” a police corporal told reporters. Investigators have said they were not aware of prior domestic-violence complaints in the defendant’s history, though records show he pleaded guilty to a firearms charge in 2019.

Neighbors, grief, and the details that haunt a neighborhood

People who live on that block described a place where childhood echoed across yards — bikes, chalk drawings, dogs and the quick energy of small people at play. “Yesterday afternoon, all of those kids were in the front yard playing,” one neighbor recalled, the image of them frozen in memory like a photograph smudged by sudden grief.

By evening, the curb outside the house was a small, makeshift shrine: bouquets, stuffed animals, handwritten notes. A candlelight vigil drew families and strangers alike, an uneven choir of prayer and stunned silence. A local pastor, standing under a magnolia tree heavy with blossoms, said softly, “We cannot erase what happened, but we can sit with the pain and hold the survivors. The danger is not just in the weapon — it is in the broken places of life that allow violence to grow.”

A videographer at the scene filmed five bullet holes pocking the white door of the house — small, terrible punctuation marks on a room that had been full of ordinary life.

A national pattern, and the questions it raises

For the country at large, this attack landed as another grim waypoint in an ongoing crisis. According to public health data and independent trackers, the United States records tens of thousands of firearm-related deaths each year, the majority of which are suicides, with homicides and mass shootings adding to the toll. Gun Violence Archive, which tracks mass shootings (incidents in which four or more people are shot, not including the shooter), said this was the deadliest mass shooting in the U.S. in more than two years.

Those cold statistics do not blunt the raw human questions: How did a man with a previous firearms conviction obtain a weapon? What led to the breakdown that ended in such loss? How do communities detect and address the danger signs of domestic violence before they erupt into catastrophe?

Voices from the city and beyond

Local officials called the slayings “terrible” and lamented the scale of the loss. The mayor of Shreveport noted the “distressing” fact that the victims were all children and urged the community to respond with compassion. State leaders sent condolences; the scene became a focal point for grief for a city already familiar with economic challenges and the complicated fabric of southern life.

A family friend who attended the vigil lingered at the foot of the street: “There’s no single word for this. We come from a place that prays, that cooks for one another, that watches each other’s kids — and yet here we are. We have to ask ourselves what we’re missing as neighbors and friends.”

Domestic violence, firearms access, and prevention

Experts say this tragedy sits at the intersection of two critical and overlapping issues: domestic violence and the ready availability of firearms. Studies consistently show that intimate partner violence escalates when guns are present. Cities and states that have tried to limit firearm access to people with domestic-violence restraining orders or recent convictions have seen measurable reductions in some forms of fatal violence, researchers note.

“When you combine personal turmoil with easy access to a gun, the odds of a lethal outcome rise sharply,” said a domestic-violence advocate. “Prevention isn’t just about the firearm — it’s about early intervention, mental-health resources, and a community willing to say something before tragedy blooms.”

How a community holds on

In the days after the killings, resources appeared in small, grassroots ways: a church opened its doors for counseling, high school staff offered rooms for students to meet with grief counselors, and neighbors coordinated meal trains for relatives. Fundraisers began to appear online, and volunteers threaded through hospital waiting rooms, offering tissue and quiet company to those whose faces were rimmed with the kind of shock that looks like a physical weight.

But the practical needs are immediate and long-term: medical bills for the wounded, funeral arrangements for the dead, and the psychological scars an entire neighborhood will carry for years. “When violence like this happens,” said a social worker who has worked in Shreveport for decades, “it ripples outward. Kids who watched, adults who could not help, first responders who carried the scene home — all of them need sustained support.”

What do we owe the victims — and ourselves?

When awful things arrive on quiet streets, they test our collective imagination: What kind of future do we want for our children? How do we balance rights, safety, and the realities of grief? These are hard questions, and they have no single answer.

Today, a small city is counting its losses and lighting candles. Tomorrow, the work begins: investigations, funerals, policy debates, and the slow, ordinary labor of rebuilding trust. For now, we can hold the faces and names of the children close, refuse to let them dissolve into a statistic, and ask ourselves what we will do differently next time — as neighbors, as voters, and as a nation.

What would you change in your community to make sure the next morning stays ordinary? How do we turn mourning into action without turning grief into political division? Share your thoughts; listen to the survivors; and, if you can, reach out to someone near you who may be struggling.

One killed after Ukrainian drone strike hits southern Russia

One dead after Ukrainian drone strike in south Russia
This was the second assault on the seaport in a matter of days

Night on the Black Sea: Smoke over Tuapse

They say the Black Sea remembers everything. On a cool April night the smoke from an oil refinery rose like an ugly exclamation over Tuapse — a coastal town that has long balanced on the seam between seaside leisure and heavy industry.

It was the second blow in less than a week. Flames licked at tanks and pipelines inside Rosneft’s export-oriented Tuapse refinery, a facility capable of processing roughly 240,000 barrels of crude a day and feeding markets with diesel, naphtha and fuel oil. Kyiv’s drone forces commander, Robert Brovdi, published a post claiming responsibility for the strike. Russian officials confirmed a fire and, heartbreakingly, at least one fatality among port workers and residents, with a second person wounded and taken for treatment.

Veniamin Kondratiev, the regional governor, spoke with the clipped formality of an official used to issuing somber updates. “Tuapse came under yet another massive drone attack tonight,” he said, noting damage to a swathe of civilian buildings — apartments, a primary school, a kindergarten, a museum and a church. “I extend my deepest condolences to the family of the deceased.”

On social media and in the narrow streets that slope down to the water, people exchanged versions of the same question: how did we get here, where a seaside town’s boardwalk and a refinery sit within a drone’s reach?

Scenes from the Shore

Tuapse is not Moscow. It is a place where old women in headscarves run samovars by the sea, where fishermen mend nets beneath the shadow of the Caucasus ridges. The promenade is peppered with Soviet-era kiosks selling sun-warmed cherries in summer; now shards of drone debris had sent glass tinkling into stairwells and classrooms.

“We heard something — like a gust, then a bang. The windows on our floor were full of smoke,” said Irina, a shopkeeper who asked that only her first name be used. “My grandson has been terrified since. He keeps asking if the ship will come back. He doesn’t understand why they would fight here.”

Another resident, Sergei, who has worked on the port for 20 years, picked through scorched paper near a loading bay. “We load fuel for ships and trucks. We are not soldiers. This place feeds people’s cars and tractors across the country,” he said. “Now we work under sirens. We all want a normal life — that’s all.”

Collateral Damage: The Human and Cultural Toll

The physical damage is immediate — blown-out windows, the smell of burnt rubber and oil, classrooms lined with broken glass — but the psychological toll lingers. A 14-year-old girl and a young woman had already been killed by a previous nighttime drone strike in the city days earlier. Grief is now an open wound for families, for teachers consoling children, for shopkeepers counting the cost of shattered stock.

Local museum curators rushed to check collections; priests worked late into the night handing out blankets and water. The tiny seaside church — a place where generations have lit candles for calm seas and safe returns — now sits a short distance from the charred ruins of industrial infrastructure.

Why Tuapse Matters

It’s easy to reduce this episode to an isolated headline. But Tuapse matters not only to those who live within earshot of the refinery’s boilers. The port and refinery are nodes in a larger network: pipelines, tankers, routes that feed domestic demand and international buyers. Damage to such a facility ripples through supply chains, creates local fuel shortages and can raise prices at the pump — and all of this happens at a human cost.

“Attacks on energy infrastructure are designed to exert pressure beyond the battlefield,” explained Dr. Lena Myers, an energy security analyst in London. “Even relatively small disruptions can force re-routing, strain logistics and signal that a country’s export lifelines are vulnerable. That’s both an economic and psychological lever.”

Rosneft’s Tuapse refinery is one of several along Russia’s Black Sea coast that enable export-oriented product flows. On a global scale, disruptions to refining capacity are felt unevenly: some markets absorb the shock, others — particularly nearby countries reliant on swift deliveries — may see immediate shortages.

The New Face of an Old Conflict

If anything, what unfolds in Tuapse is an epitome of modern conflict: a ballet of drones, claims and counterclaims, and a blurring of front lines. Russia’s defence ministry reported that its air defences had “destroyed 112 Ukrainian drones” overnight — an astonishing number that underscores how small, cheap, and ubiquitous unmanned systems have become.

“We’re seeing saturation attacks, where dozens or hundreds of low-cost drones are launched to overwhelm air defences,” said Maj. Tomasz Nowak, a retired air-defence officer who now advises NATO think-tanks. “That changes calculus. It’s asymmetry at scale. Defending fixed infrastructure becomes a resource-intensive and imperfect exercise.”

For locals, however, the technology behind the strikes matters less than the immediate reality of loss, fear and disrupted lives. “We used to wake to gulls and the sea. Now we wake to blasting and sirens. Children ask why the sky is angry,” Irina said, glancing toward the harbor.

Arrests, Accusations, and the Fog of War

Complicating matters, Russian authorities announced the arrest of a German woman in the Caucasus city of Pyatigorsk, alleging she was carrying a homemade explosive device and was part of a plot orchestrated by Ukrainian handlers. The security service (FSB) said the woman, born in 1969, had been “dragged into the plot” by a foreign national working on orders from Ukraine.

Independent verification of such claims is often difficult in wartime. “Propaganda and security announcements are both tools of war,” noted Dr. Mykola Hrytsenko, an expert in information operations. “Some arrests are valid, others are used to justify crackdowns or rally domestic support. Context matters.”

What Comes Next?

There are no neat endings in this story. The refinery will be inspected, repairs will be planned, and lawyers will sift through insurance claims. Families will bury their dead. The wider questions — about escalation, the ethics of targeting infrastructure, and how to protect civilians — will not be solved by a single report.

Consider what is at stake: a port city that lives in the shadow of both mountains and industry, ordinary people who want peace, and a global economy that remains oddly sensitive to the punctures of localized violence. How do we weigh strategic aims against civilian vulnerability? When does a military objective cease to be a legitimate target because of the civilian cost?

As you read this, ask yourself: would you feel safer if such infrastructure were off-limits, or does the reality of modern warfare make that an impossible wish? How do we protect people and livelihoods while resolving political contests?

After the Smoke

In Tuapse, the sea will continue to remember. Fishermen will mend nets, mothers will tend to frightened children, and the refinery’s tanks will either be repaired or replaced. For now, there is smoke, there is sorrow, and there is the stubborn human insistence on carrying on.

“We will clean up the glass, mend the roofs, visit the families,” Sergei said, folding his hands as if in prayer. “We are not heroes. We are just people trying to live in a place we call home.”

  • Refinery capacity (Tuapse): ~240,000 barrels per day
  • Reported overnight drone interceptions by Russian defence ministry: 112
  • Recent civilian fatalities in Tuapse from strikes: at least three in consecutive attacks

Trump;” “Israa’iil weligeed igalama hadlin dagaalka Iran,”

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Democrats have until now been reluctant to engage in calls to remove Donald Trump from office in his second term

Apr 20(Jowhar)Madaxweyne Donald Trump ayaa beeniyay in Israa’iil ku qalqaalisay amaba ku riixday dagaalka Iran, iyadoo madaxweynaha Mareykanka uu wajahayo dhaleeceyn sii kordheysa oo ku aaddan dagaalka, oo ay ku jiraan qaybo ka mid ah maamulkiisa.

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