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Israeli and Palestinian fathers unite in calling for peace

Israeli and Palestinian fathers campaign for peace
Bassam Aramin and Rami Elhanan have dedicated their lives to building respect and understanding between their communities following the deaths of their daughters

Two Fathers, One Impossible Friendship: A Quiet Counterpoint to Endless War

On a damp Dublin evening, beneath the warm glare of stage lights and the hush of a crowd that had come to listen rather than cheer, two men took the same small podium and made an old wound feel like fresh weather: raw, aching, but somehow also a promise.

They did not speak of strategies or slogans. They spoke of daughters.

Rami Elhanan, an Israeli who once fought in the Yom Kippur War, and Bassam Aramin, a Palestinian whose youth was marked by clashes with Israeli forces, have both been carved by personal loss. Where most of us would harden, they have, against expectation, chosen to open.

A meeting that changed everything

Elhanan’s eldest daughter, Smadar, was killed while buying schoolbooks in Jerusalem; Aramin’s daughter, Abir, was shot while playing in East Jerusalem. The kinds of deaths that usually calcify a lifetime of mistrust instead became, for these two fathers, the raw material for unexpected solidarity.

“When I first sat in that room,” Elhanan told the Dublin audience, his voice low and steady, “I expected to find enemies. Instead I found people who knew how to cry like I do.”

He is not alone in that discovery. Their paths crossed through well-worn networks of grief and activism: The Parents Circle – Families Forum, a joint Israeli-Palestinian organisation that brings together hundreds of bereaved families, and Combatants for Peace, a grassroots group of former fighters turned activists. In rooms like these, the language of accusation is often traded for the language of memory.

From suspicion to kinship

“I was suspicious, cynical,” Elhanan admits of his first encounter with Palestinians in a structured dialogue. “I’d only ever seen them as workers, or weapons of war. I had never met them as people.”

Aramin, who spent part of his youth building and hurling at jeeps, remembers meeting Elhanan as the first time he felt seen by someone who had lived on the other side of the headlines. “He told me once that he fell in love with me the minute he met me,” Bassam said, half laughing, half incredulous—a phrase that drew a ripple of warmth from the room. “Not love in the romantic way, but a kind of love that is born when someone else becomes family.”

Family is a loaded word here. For Elhanan, who grew up the son of an Auschwitz survivor, for Aramin, who learned the meaning of the Holocaust only after listening to that survivor’s testimony, family also means carrying the weight of history and trauma together.

Grief as a bridge

They both use grief not as an accusation but as testimony. “You learn the humanity of the person you thought was your enemy when you sit and listen to them tell the story of their child,” Aramin said. “When Rami’s father described the camps, it became real for me—this was not an abstract sadness; it was a person who survived horror.”

Those testimonies have ripple effects. According to The Parents Circle, hundreds of joint events, testimonies and educational programmes have reached tens of thousands of Israelis and Palestinians, carrying personal narratives into schools, churches and community centers. It is the slow, steady work of building empathy in a landscape scarred by decades of conflict.

Why their friendship matters

There is a reason journalists and novelists alike have turned to this pair. Colum McCann’s novel Apeirogon draws from their lives to imagine how intimacy can be a form of resistance. In Ireland, where they have often been welcomed, the comparison to the peace process is natural: people here know what it is to negotiate a bitter history and imagine an uneasy peace.

“We come to Ireland like a football team playing a home match,” Aramin said. “People here understand us. They remember how they stopped killing each other and started talking.”

That reference is deliberate. The Good Friday Agreement of 1998 is a beacon for many who work in conflict resolution; its lessons—dialogue, inclusion, power-sharing—are not a one-size-fits-all solution, but they are a reminder that entrenched cycles of violence can be interrupted.

Respect as the first step

“One word is essential,” Elhanan says. “Respect. Without it, nothing will change.”

It is an elegantly simple prescription for a complex problem. Respect, he argues, is not the same as agreement; it is the willingness to see the other as equal in dignity. “Once you can look into the eyes of the person beside you,” he told the audience, “everything else becomes technical.”

The wider context: hope and hard numbers

This is not a story of abstract hope. In the last decades, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has flared repeatedly—wars in Gaza, intifadas, and recurring cycles of violence that have claimed thousands of lives and displaced many more. Each flare reinforces polarization and makes moments of reconciliation harder to sustain.

Yet the grassroots peace movement remains alive. Hundreds of joint initiatives—educational programmes, memorial projects, and peacebuilding groups—operate across the region. They are small in scale compared to the machinery of war, but they offer a different measure of power: the ability to change minds.

For some critics, these gestures are naïve at best and performative at worst. For others, they are the bones of any future peace. “You cannot build a political solution without a social one,” says Dr. Eileen Murphy, a peace studies lecturer in Dublin. “When individuals from both sides form sustained relationships, they create constituencies for peace that politicians cannot ignore forever.”

What does it take to trust your former enemy?

Ask yourself: Would you sit across from the person who took your child’s life and listen? Would you invite them to your home? These are not rhetorical questions; they are the daily reality for Elhanan and Aramin.

“It’s the most difficult thing,” Bassam admits. “To trust your killer, your occupier, the one you believe stole your land. Yet here we are.”

They do not promise immediate miracles. They do not guarantee a political breakthrough. What they offer is testimony, and the conviction that testimony can change a heart, and that heart changes a community.

Small acts, big echoes

They meet parents, students, religious leaders. They speak in schools, where young people listen without the armor of decades. They share coffee, tears, sometimes anger. “I lost many friends,” Elhanan says. “But I gained a larger family.”

And with that gain comes a sharpened moral focus. “I know exactly where I’m going,” he added. “I want children in this land to stop dying—Muslim, Christian, Jewish. No children at all.”

A quiet invitation

This is not a neat narrative with a tidy ending. The region is still fractured, and politics remains volatile. But there is a deeper, quieter current here: two bereaved fathers walking into rooms where people are expected to hate, and instead asking them to mourn together.

What would happen if more people in conflict zones—politicians, soldiers, parents, young people—sat across from their supposed enemies and truly listened? What if grief could become a bridge rather than a battlement?

Rami and Bassam cannot end the conflict. But they show us something essential: that human connection, stubborn and ordinary, can be a form of resistance. In a world quick to simplify and to rage, their friendship insists on complexity—and on the hard work of being human together.

  • Groups like The Parents Circle – Families Forum bring together hundreds of bereaved Palestinians and Israelis through joint remembrance and education.
  • Colum McCann’s Apeirogon, inspired by this friendship, helped bring the story to a wider international audience in 2020.
  • Comparisons to the Northern Ireland peace process remind us that entrenched conflicts can, in time and through negotiation and social repair, be transformed.

They left Dublin with new friends, a handful of invitations, and the same stubborn belief: that respect can travel farther than fear. If you are reading this, perhaps the question you should carry away is this—what small, brave act of listening might you undertake in your own community?

Iiraan oo xukun Daldalaad ah ku Fulisay Laba Nin oo Lagu Eedeeyay Basaasnimo

Apr 20(Jowhar)Dowladda Iiraan ayaa xukun dil ah oo daldalaad ah ku fulisay laba nin oo lagu kala magacaabo Mohammad Masoum Shahi iyo Hamed Validi, kuwaas oo lagu helay eedo la xiriira basaasinimo iyo amni darro gudaha dalkaas.

Zelensky denounces plans to relax international sanctions on Russian oil

Zelensky condemns easing of oil sanctions on Russian oil
Volodymyr Zelensky said: 'Every dollar paid for Russian oil is money for the war' (File image)

When Oil Sails, War Dollars Flow: Ukraine’s Plea and the Global Price of Convenience

There is a simple, brutal arithmetic playing out on the high seas: barrels of oil that change hands between anonymous tankers become bullets, drones and shattered homes in Ukraine. That is the argument Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky made this week, his words heavy with counting and grief—“Every dollar paid for Russian oil is money for the war,” he wrote on X—after a controversial U.S. move to ease sanctions on oil destined to calm an energy shock tied to the Middle East conflict.

It is easy to imagine the scene: a line of black-hulled tankers ghosting across a grey Atlantic, crewed by workers who are strangers to this calculus, loaded with crude that will end up in refineries, markets and, according to Kyiv, in the coffers of a military machine. Zelensky’s post, precise and unflinching, said more than words—it offered a ledger: more than 110 tankers, carrying over 12 million tonnes of crude, roughly $10 billion in value, now potentially marketable because of a month-long waiver the U.S. Treasury granted to ease surging energy prices.

Why Washington eased the tap

The waiver—short, temporary, aimed at calming global markets—was framed by its proponents as pragmatic. Energy markets are brittle; a flare-up in the Middle East can send ripples from the Gulf to grocery shelves in Europe and to utility bills in Seoul. “The urgency was clear: if prices spike at the wrong time we see cascading impacts across developing and developed economies alike,” said a Washington-based energy analyst who asked not to be named. “A short waiver is a pressure valve.”

But what looks like triage in political capitals can feel like betrayal elsewhere. Two days before the waiver’s extension, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent reportedly said the U.S. would not renew it—only for the department to reverse course. The U-turn has amplified a tension that has become painfully familiar in modern geopolitics: the collision of near-term domestic pain and long-term strategic commitments.

On the ground: lives, losses, and a city that remembers

In Chernihiv, a northern city whose churches and courtyards have witnessed centuries of history, the war announced itself in the small, sharp ways that make numbers personal. Local officials said a 16-year-old boy was killed and four people wounded in one overnight attack. “We make soups here and collect firewood,” said Olena Kovalenko, 42, a teacher whose apartment overlooks a square ringed with battered Soviet-era buildings. “We are tired of standing under alarms and counting the minutes between explosions.”

Kyiv’s tally of recent assaults underscores the human cost behind Zelensky’s calculation: in the last week alone, he said, Russia launched more than 2,360 attack drones, over 1,320 guided aerial bombs and nearly 60 missiles of various types at Ukrainian cities and communities. Each number is, in Zelensky’s formulation, bought with energy revenue.

“When my neighbor’s shop burned we all lost a common memory,” said Mykhailo, a grocer in Chernihiv who lost part of his stock to a strike. “You cannot say the price of oil is just a number after that.”

The mechanics of sanction-busting

It’s worth pausing on how this trade happens. Sanctions work by choking channels—ports, banks, insurance—and making oil shipments harder and more expensive. But the global oil market is a web: traders reroute cargoes, change ship names, employ so-called “dark fleet” tactics where AIS transponders are switched off, and use ship-to-ship transfers in remote waters. What once was visible on a public map becomes, at best, partial.

“Sanctions are only as effective as the enforcement and the political will behind them,” said Dr. Fatima Rahman, a sanctions expert at a European think tank. “A temporary waiver provides legal cover for transactions that would otherwise be restricted, and it creates a precedent. Markets respond less to black-and-white rules than to signals about how those rules will be applied.”

If Kyiv’s claim that 110 tankers carry 12 million tonnes of crude is accurate, the economic implications are not abstract. Zelensky argued that the potential $10 billion represented “a resource that is directly converted into new strikes against Ukraine.” Whether that money is immediately fungible for weapons procurement or indirectly fuels a broader economy, the symbolic link between fossil-fuel revenue and conflict funding is stark and hard to ignore.

Global ripple effects: energy, politics, morality

For countries facing rising fuel bills, the calculus is agonizing. Governments must balance the immediate need to keep homes warm and industry running against the geopolitical and moral fallout of appearing to subsidize aggression. For many European nations heavily dependent on energy imports, the decision is not binary: it is a daily negotiation between prices at the pump and pressure in the diplomatic pipeline.

“Sanctions are not a magic wand,” said an anonymous European diplomat. “They require coordination—and sometimes they require sacrifice.”

  • More than 110 tankers were reported to be carrying sanctioned Russian crude.

  • Those cargoes were estimated at upwards of 12 million tonnes, roughly valued by Kyiv at $10 billion.

  • Zelensky reported thousands of drone and bomb attacks in recent weeks, and dozens of missile strikes.

What this debate asks of us

As readers, what do we demand of our governments? Is it acceptable to stabilize energy markets at the possible cost of emboldening a military aggressor? Or is it reckless to ignore immediate economic pain in the hope of long-term strategic advantage? If sanctions are a tool of statecraft, what does their wavering say about the cohesion of the alliances that depend on them?

We should also ask: who pays for the choices made in high rooms? The answer is often the same: ordinary people—shopkeepers in Chernihiv, commuters watching their budgets, sailors on anonymous tankers—carry the consequences.

Toward a broader view

This episode is more than a dispute over policy; it is a prism through which global trends are visible. Energy security, financial interconnectedness, the limits of sanctions regimes, and the human toll of modern warfare—each is threaded into the story of a waiver and a presidential rebuke. It’s tempting to reduce the matter to blame: one side easing off, another counting strikes. But the fuller truth is messier, made of competing priorities, imperfect enforcement, and the brute arithmetic of supply, demand and political expedience.

As the tankers sail, as markets dip and spike, as families bury their dead and rebuild their lives, the rest of the world watches—and chooses. Will short-term relief trump longer-term resolve? Will sanctions regimes adapt into tighter, smarter tools? Or will they fray under pressure, letting commerce flow where conflict brews?

There are no easy answers, only choices. And those choices echo far beyond the decks of the tankers that sailed into headlines this week.

What do you think—should short-term energy stability ever override sanctions intended to constrain a wartime economy? Share your thoughts below and keep the conversation alive; the stakes are not just geopolitical, they are deeply human.

HiPP baby food jar in Austria found contaminated with rat poison

Rat poison found in HiPP baby food jar in Austria
HiPP has confirmed that the jars did contain rat poison (File image)

A jar on the kitchen table, a family’s quiet alarm

It begins like so many small domestic dramas: a tired parent reaching into a grocery bag for a quick dinner, a plastic jar of baby food caught by morning light on the kitchen table, the familiar label promising organic carrot and potato purée. In the Eisenstadt-Umgebung district of Austria, that ordinary moment became the start of something far more unnerving.

“I picked it up and something felt—off,” a local mother, Martina H., told me. “The lid looked like it had been opened before. My heart dropped. I have a nine-month-old; we use HiPP because it’s supposed to be safe. I just started shaking.” Her voice tightened around a small, private fury: the violation of a trusted ritual—the feeding of a child.

What happened: a product recall that rippled across borders

Officials in Burgenland, the easternmost Austrian state, say that sample testing of one 190g jar of HiPP Vegetable Carrot with Potato returned by a customer showed signs of rat poison. The jar carried a red circle sticker on the bottom and appeared to have a damaged or missing safety seal. That triggered the kind of chain reaction retailers dread: an immediate recall from roughly 1,500 SPAR supermarkets across Austria, and rapid removals in several neighboring markets.

Police statements reported that preliminary lab results from similar jars seized in the Czech Republic and Slovakia detected a toxic substance, and HiPP—the well-known German baby food maker long associated with organic and family-friendly branding—said it could not rule out deliberate contamination.

“We are treating this as an external criminal interference,” a company spokesperson said in a prepared statement. “Our priority is the safety of children and full cooperation with the authorities.” SPAR Austria confirmed it had pulled the affected jars from shelves in countries where it operates, including Austria, Slovenia, Hungary, Croatia and parts of northern Italy.

Signs to watch for

Authorities asked consumers to check jars carefully. Red flags include:

  • Broken or missing safety seals on the lid
  • Open or otherwise damaged lids
  • An unusual smell coming from the jar
  • A sticker with a red circle on the bottom (as noted in the cases reported)

SPAR and HiPP advised customers not to feed the contents to children and offered full refunds for returned jars. Police also urged anyone who handled the product to wash their hands thoroughly.

Voices from the frontline: fear, frustration, and cautious gratitude

In the small market town where the first jar was reported, emotions ran from anger to gratitude. “I’m furious that someone could mess with baby food,” said Lukas, a shop employee who helped remove affected stock. “But I’m also glad we caught it early. We could have had a real tragedy.”

A pediatric nurse at a nearby clinic, who asked not to be named, described the ripple effects in her ward. “Parents are calling. They’re terrified,” she said. “Even if only a handful of jars were contaminated, the breach of trust is enormous. Babies rely on us to protect them. When that feels broken, it’s devastating.”

Not everyone is convinced a wider conspiracy exists; some locals pointed to supply-chain vulnerabilities. “Packaging gets damaged during transport,” offered an elderly customer in Eisenstadt’s Sunday market. “But you never, ever expect it to be poisoned. That is another level.”

Understanding the risk: what rodenticide can do and when to seek help

While the specific compound has not been publicly detailed in full forensic reports, many rodenticides used in Europe are anticoagulants—substances that can interfere with blood clotting and cause internal bleeding in severe cases. Health authorities in Austria, including the Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety (AGES), have urged immediate medical attention if a baby has consumed the affected product.

“If there’s any possibility an infant has ingested rodenticide, treat it as an emergency,” advised Dr. Eva Müller, a pediatric toxicologist at a Vienna hospital. “Symptoms may not appear immediately. Look for unusual bruising, persistent vomiting, lethargy, or bleeding from the gums or nose. Call emergency services and bring the jar if you still have it—knowing what was ingested can guide treatment.”

Medical services in Austria and most EU countries maintain poison control centers and emergency protocols for such incidents. Rapid access to blood tests and antidotes—vitamin K for certain anticoagulant rodenticides, for example—can be lifesaving.

Practical steps for worried parents

  • Stop feeding any jars of HiPP Vegetable Carrot with Potato bought from SPAR Austria.
  • Check lids and seals; look for the red circle sticker noted by authorities.
  • Return affected jars to the point of purchase for a full refund.
  • If a child has consumed the product, seek immediate medical care and keep the jar for testing.
  • Wash your hands thoroughly if you handled the jar.

Beyond the jar: what this incident says about trust and food systems

A single tainted jar is a local event that becomes a global signal: we live in a time when food moves across borders in minutes, where a product opened or altered in one place can be sold in another. The cross-border lab findings in the Czech Republic and Slovakia underline the transnational nature of modern retail networks—and the need for equally rapid, cooperative responses.

“This is a wake-up call,” said a food safety researcher at the University of Vienna. “Tampering is rare, but it tests the integrity of packaging, surveillance, and recall systems. We need tamper-evident designs that are robust and a regulatory framework that ensures traceability from factory to shelf.”

The episode also taps into deeper anxieties about how commercial brands build and lose trust. HiPP, with decades of reputation among parents who prize organic baby food, now faces the task of proving that trust remains warranted. How companies communicate in the hours and days after a crisis—what they disclose, how quickly they act, and how they support affected families—shapes public memory as much as the lab data.

Questions to sit with

What would you do if you found a breached safety seal on something you gave your child? How much trust should we place in packaging and brand reputation? And at what point do we shift from private anxiety to public demand for systemic change?

For now, the practical answer is simple: heed the recalls, return affected jars, and reach out to health professionals if there’s any concern. But the harder work—of rebuilding confidence, tightening supply chains, and making sure that a family’s dinner table is never again the site of a crime scene—remains.

As investigators in Austria continue to probe who tampered with the jars and how the contamination occurred, parents in living rooms across the region will be checking lids one more time, fingers tracing plastic seals that now feel heavier with meaning. In the hum of an ordinary evening, that small vigilance is an act of care—and of insistence that our youngest deserve better than the fear that filled Martina’s kitchen that day.

Shirka Golaha Wasiirada Hirshabelle oo looga hadlay arrimaha doorashooyinka

Apr 19(Jowhar) Madaxweynaha Dowladda Hirshabeelle Mudane Cali Cabdullaahi Xuseen (Cali Guudlaawe) ayaa shir-guddoomiyey kulanka Golaha Wasiirrada oo diirrada lagu saaray arrimaha doorashooyinka.

Eight children fatally shot in Louisiana mass shooting

Eight children killed in Louisiana shooting
The victims ranged in age from one to 14, police have said (stock image)

A Quiet Louisiana Morning Torn Apart

Shreveport wakes most mornings to the low hum of highway traffic, the distant call of crows along the Red River and the aroma of strong coffee and roux drifting from kitchen windows. On one such ordinary morning, that hum was replaced by something much harsher: the rattle of gunfire, sirens, and a grief so immediate it seemed to press on the town’s chest.

By mid-afternoon, authorities confirmed what neighbors already feared — eight children, ages one to 14, were dead after a shooting that police say appears to have stemmed from domestic violence. The suspect, not immediately identified, died after a car chase and an exchange of gunfire with law enforcement. Two other people were wounded, and investigators say they are still piecing together how the violence moved between at least two residences across the neighborhood.

What Happened — The Bare Facts

“This is a rather extensive crime scene spanning between two residences,” Corporal Chris Bordelon told reporters, noting that a third address was also being examined. “Some of the children inside were his descendants.”

Police say the suspect hijacked a vehicle, fled the scene, and was later shot and killed by officers following a pursuit. Investigators believe he was the only person who fired shots at the homes involved. Beyond those on the immediate scene, the ripple effects are already being felt: schools put extra counselors on call; neighbors opened their doors to stunned relatives; pastors updated their Sunday services with prayers for the bereaved.

Neighbors, Grief, and the Everyday Faces of Loss

In the small radius surrounding the homes, people speak in low voices, sometimes pausing mid-sentence as if the words themselves are too heavy to carry. “I’ve lived here twenty years,” said Patricia LeJeune, who sweeps the sidewalk outside a row of shotgun-style houses not far from the site. “You don’t think this can happen in a place you know. To children. Not here.”

Another neighbor, a youth soccer coach who asked that his name not be used, wiped tears from his face and said: “We coach little kids every Saturday. They have cleats and snacks and scraped knees. You don’t imagine holding a minute of silence for children who won’t come back.”

Mayor Tom Arceneaux told the press: “It’s a terrible morning in Shreveport and we all mourn with the victims.” Governor Jeff Landry said he and his wife were “heartbroken over this horrific situation,” and offered prayers for the families. U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Shreveport native, noted his team was in touch with local law enforcement.

Numbers That Refuse to Be Abstract

This latest massacre is not an isolated freak event; it lands amid a relentless drumbeat of gun violence across the United States. According to the Gun Violence Archive, there have been at least 119 mass shootings in the U.S. so far this year, resulting in 117 deaths — 79 of them children — and 458 injured. The Archive defines a mass shooting as an incident in which four or more people are shot, excluding the shooter. Last year, the U.S. recorded 407 such incidents.

Beyond mass shootings, firearm fatalities loom large in national public-health data. In 2021, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recorded more than 48,000 firearm-related deaths in the United States, a figure that combines homicides, suicides and accidental shootings — a staggering toll that ripples through families, schools, and communities.

Domestic Violence as a Trigger

Police say this was a domestic disturbance. That word — “domestic” — narrows the frame but does not capture the scale of the problem. Research shows that access to firearms dramatically raises the risk of intimate partner killings and the danger posed to children in the household. “Where guns and domestic disputes intersect, tragedy often follows,” said Dr. Maya Thompson, a public-health researcher who has studied firearms and family violence. “We need better prevention, safer storage, and more resources for families in crisis.”

Local Color in a Time of Mourning

Shreveport is a city of layered identities: Cajun and Creole flavors mingle with Delta blues, river barges ply the Red River, and casinos glow near the riverfront. On any other weekend, you might hear brass bands warming up for a parade or smell gumbo simmering in a backyard pot. Those everyday joys make the shock of violence all the sharper.

Little rituals already returning in condolences are rich with local detail: casseroles passed along from neighbors who know how to feed a grieving family, church choirs gathering hymn sheets, the long line that will form at a nearby funeral home where the staff are seasoned in compartmentalized compassion. “We do funerals here,” said Reverend Harold Dupree, who pastors a community church. “We pray, we sing, but we also ask: why did this happen? To children?”

Questions for a Nation

If you are reading this from beyond the United States, you might wonder how a place with such wealth and resources still confronts this frequency of mass shootings. If you live here, you have lived the debate: stronger gun laws versus Second Amendment freedoms; mental health services versus policing; immediate answers versus long-term cultural shifts. None is sufficient alone.

What kind of public response honors the victims without evaporating into performative gestures? How do communities balance mourning with the urgency of preventing the next incident? Those are the questions circulating in Shreveport today, as in many towns before and after it.

What Comes Next — For Families and for Policy

Investigators will continue to comb the scene, interview witnesses and family members, and try to make sense of the moments that preceded the shooting. The community will organize vigils and push schools to provide trauma counseling. Local officials will meet with state leaders and national figures to discuss immediate support. And beneath those steps, the longer debate about guns and safety will continue — often loud, sometimes productive, too often stalled.

“We are seeing the same patterns,” said an advocate at a national violence-prevention group, speaking on condition of anonymity: “Domestic violence, easy access to firearms, and communities with limited safety nets. If these tragedies are to stop, we need a combination of public-health strategies, community investments, and commonsense legislation.”

A Moment to Reflect

Grief is intimate and universal. Across Shreveport today, homes are quieter, toys sit where they were dropped, and the ordinary weight of daily life presses against an extraordinary grief. The broader debate about guns and safety will unfold in courtrooms, legislatures, and op-ed pages. But at its core, what matters most in the immediate term is the human response: who will hold the families, how will the children in the community be supported, and what small acts of compassion will stitch the neighborhood back together.

What will you do if horror lands in your town? Who would you call? How do we act collectively to protect the most vulnerable among us? These are not rhetorical questions; they are requests for us to imagine how to respond better.

Tonight, Shreveport will light candles, sing hymns and fold arms around one another. Tomorrow, the policy conversation will continue. Both are necessary. Both are a reminder that while statistics can tell us the scale of a crisis, it is the faces—those children, their families, and neighbors—that call for our urgent humanity.

Shirweynihii Midowga Baarlamaanada Adduunka oo la soo gabagabeeyay

Apr 19(Jowhar) Shirweynihii Midowga Baarlamaanada Adduunka ee ka socday magaalada Istanbul ee Dalka Turkiga ayaa maanta lasoo gaba gabeeyey, waxaana shirkaasi Soomaaliya ku matalayey wafdi Xildhibaano ah oo ka tirsan Baarlamaanka Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya labadiisa Aqal oo uu hogaaminayo Guddoomiye kuxigeenka labaad ee Golaha Shacabka Mudane Cabdullaahi Cumar Abshirow.

Several injured in shooting at U.S. university campus

'Multiple' injured in US university campus shooting
The university issued an alert in relation to the shooting (File image)

Night of Gunfire in Iowa City: A College Town’s Morning of Shock

Just after 2am on a chill Midwest morning, the usual hum of Iowa City’s nightlife—laughing groups spilling from College Street bar doors, the distant whoosh of the Iowa River, the neon steadiness of the Hawkeye banners—was ripped open by something stranger and darker: the crack of gunfire.

It happened in a pocket of town that students and locals think of as familiar, almost domestic—a stretch where corn-fed Midwestern friendliness meets late-night revelry. Within minutes, emergency alerts flashed across phones: “Active shooter” was not the language used, but the message was unmistakable—stay away, remain vigilant.

First responders and the scene

The Iowa City Police Department arrived to reports of a “large fight” and, according to officials, “heard gunfire” when they reached the scene. In a terse statement released as daylight dragged itself over campus, city leaders confirmed that multiple people had been taken to area hospitals with gunshot wounds and that no arrests had been made.

“We’re treating this as an active investigation,” said a man identifying himself as Captain Mark Reynolds, his voice steady with the practiced calm of someone who has seen too many emergency scenes. “Our priority remains the safety of students and residents. We are working through leads and asking anyone with information to come forward.”

The university, echoing the police, said there were confirmed victims and urged people to avoid the area around College and Clinton streets. In the morning, the Pedestrian Mall—normally a place of coffee shops, bookstores, and bicycle bells—felt brittle and tentative, its usual playlist of college life briefly muted.

Faces in the crowd

Talk to anyone in Iowa City, and you get a mosaic of reactions. “I woke up to alerts and the sirens were nonstop,” said Lina Torres, a junior studying English who lives two blocks from the scene. “You never expect this in a town like this. Everyone feels safe. Then something like this happens and you realize how fragile that is.”

Across the street from a shuttered bar, Dan O’Malley, whose family has run a late-night diner in the neighborhood for decades, shook his head. “College towns are supposed to be where you grow up without too much fear,” he said. “Now parents are calling at 4am asking if their kids are okay. It’s heartbreaking.”

Hospital spokespeople confirmed that multiple victims were treated, but as of the first public disclosures, the conditions and identities of those hurt were not being released. “We’re focused on care and supporting families,” a representative told reporters, the lines around his eyes betraying long hours.

Where this sits in a larger pattern

This incident is not an isolated blip; in the United States, gun violence is a recurring, stubborn reality. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, tens of thousands of people die from firearms every year, and many more are injured. The human cost ripples out through classrooms, dorms, and neighborhoods, reshaping how communities think about freedom, safety, and everyday life.

Campus shootings have scarred universities across the country in recent years. Less than four years ago, a gunman opened fire at Brown University, leaving two dead and several wounded in a classroom; earlier this year, a different campus in the Southeast also reported fatalities after gunfire. Each event reignites familiar debates—about gun access, mental health services, campus security, and the role of law enforcement—while the people most directly affected try to put their days back together.

Experts weigh in

“What we are seeing is a public health crisis manifesting in educational spaces,” said Dr. Ayesha Khan, a researcher who studies firearm injury prevention. “When young adults are shot on campuses or in downtown entertainment districts, the ripple effects go beyond the immediate injuries. Attendance drops, enrollment fears grow, and mental health needs spike. That’s a long tail of consequences.”

Dr. Khan pointed to national patterns: research shows that places with concentrated nighttime economies—clusters of bars, venues, and student housing—can become hotspots for violent incidents when other layers of prevention are absent, whether that means fewer trained security staff, limited lighting, or a cultural tolerance for risky behavior late at night.

How a town copes

In the hours that followed the shooting, Iowa City mobilized the familiar routines that come out of long experience: emails from the university, community prayer vigils announced on social media, counselors dispatched to student housing, and additional patrols on the streets. A small memorial of flowers and candles appeared near the scene by late afternoon, strangers leaving notes that read, simply, “We are with you.”

For students, grief mixed with adrenaline. “You feel numb,” said Jamal Peters, a graduate student in sociology. “There’s this immediate worry—are my friends okay?—and then a slow, settling fear. You start to look at things differently: which streets you walk at night, who you text when you leave a party.”

The university also reminded students of on-campus resources: mental health services, 24/7 hotlines, and reporting tools for suspicious activity. Small acts of solidarity—students sharing rides home, professors postponing classes—helped stitch the day back together.

What can be done?

No single answer will stop all violence. But communities across the U.S. are experimenting with layered approaches: improved campus lighting and design, increased and trained civilian responders, robust student mental health programs, and policies aimed at limiting access to firearms for those at immediate risk. Here are a few measures towns and universities often consider:

  • Investing in violence-prevention programs and conflict de-escalation training for bar staff and campus security.
  • Enhancing communication systems so students receive clear, timely alerts on their devices.
  • Expanding counseling and support groups to address trauma and prevent escalation.
  • Working with local government on ordinances that promote safer nightlife districts through lighting, transport options, and regulated capacity.

Questions that linger

As the investigation unfolds and the wounded recover, bigger questions press in: How do we balance the freedoms of college life with the real needs for safety? What role should local and federal policymakers play in preventing future tragedies? And how do communities heal when a place that felt like home suddenly feels unsafe?

For now, Iowa City is a portrait in resilience: students creating impromptu support groups, bar owners opening their doors for those who need to talk, and local leaders promising transparency as the facts are pieced together. But resilience is not a substitute for prevention.

What would you do if your town faced this kind of shock? Walk home? Hold a vigil? Demand policy change? The answers we choose will determine whether these late-night streets are, again, just the backdrop for youthful laughter—or whether they remain haunted by a memory no one wanted.

UK ministers rally behind Starmer as renewed calls to resign mount

UK ministers back Starmer amid fresh calls to quit
Keir Starmer has faced repeated questions about his judgement for selecting Peter Mandelson whose friendship with Jeffrey Epstein was well known

Westminster’s Quiet Storm: A Prime Minister, a Controversial Appointment, and the Price of Trust

The rain had barely stopped when Westminster stirred into another day of political theatre — umbrellas collapsing on pavements, red buses slaloming past the sober stone façade of the Foreign Office, and a Prime Minister rehearsing explanations he must deliver to the country the next day.

Keir Starmer, by most accounts a careful operator, finds himself at the centre of a controversy that smells less of policy disagreement and more of human error and institutional failure. At the heart of it is a man whose name is tangled with one of the 21st century’s most toxic reputations: Peter Mandelson, an erstwhile political kingmaker recently appointed Britain’s ambassador to Washington, despite — officials now concede — not having the required security clearance.

The Appointment That Went Wrong

For months the appointment was quietly moving through the channels that deliver Britain’s senior diplomats abroad. The post in Washington is one of the crown jewels of the diplomatic service: influence, access, and the symbolism of Britain’s relationship with its most consequential ally.

Then, late last year, the story unspooled. Security vetting — the painstaking checks that range from basic identity confirmations to the highest-developed vetting (DV) for those with access to sensitive intelligence — flagged concerns. Yet somehow, a senior political figure was lined up to take his place in the embassy on the Potomac.

When the details emerged, Starmer called the lapse “unforgivable.” He sacked the top civil servant at the Foreign Office, Olly Robbins, and promised accountability. The move, which to some looks decisive, has been read by others as an act of political theatre: a head rolled to protect a higher one.

What the files say — and what they don’t

What exactly failed in the transfer of information between security officials, Whitehall mandarins, and Downing Street remains the central question, and answers have been partial and halting. Sources close to the process speak of a labyrinthine system where responsibility is diffused across teams and where reputational assessments can be as subjective as they are bureaucratic.

“When checking for high-profile roles, you expect a single thread, a single line of truth,” said a former senior security official who declined to be named. “Here, the threads snapped. It’s not just a human error — it’s a system error.”

Scapegoat or Necessary Sacrifice?

Robbins’ dismissal has sharpened a debate older than any government: when a politican is held to account, should civil servants be the sacrificial lambs?

Ex-civil servants have quickly accused Downing Street of scapegoating. “There’s a pattern here,” said a director of a Whitehall union. “Sack a mandarin, close the papers, move on. But these are complex processes. Blaming one person simplifies a mess we all helped create.”

Opposition leaders, meanwhile, smell blood. Calls for Starmer’s resignation have not abated. From the outside, the narrative is simple: a prime minister appoints a controversial ally linked — through friendships and associations — to Jeffrey Epstein, a name that has haunted many corridors of power internationally since his arrest and death in 2019. For a public weary of scandals, the optics are brutal.

Voices from the Ground

Not all reactions have been performative. In the coffee shops around Parliament, people talk of erosion — of faith in institutions and of politicians who seem to think rules apply differently to them.

“It doesn’t feel like a mistake to us,” said Aisha, who runs a café a five-minute walk from Westminster. “It feels like privilege: that someone’s connections can outweigh checks and balances. People are angry because they feel rules are bendable.”

But inside the Labour Party, allies have rallied. A senior Labour figure, speaking on condition of anonymity, described Starmer as “frustrated but steady.” “He accepts the appointment was a mistake,” the figure said. “But he has also taken action — and his record on major policy decisions deserves weight in the balance.”

Experts weigh in

Academics and constitutional experts have used the episode to highlight a larger tension: the relationship between political leaders and an impartial civil service.

Professor Helena Marchant, a scholar of public administration at King’s College London, told me, “There’s a danger in making the civil service a lightning rod. It protects ministers in the short term but corrodes institutional trust in the long run. Accountability should be honest scrutiny, not theatrical punishment.”

Peter Mandelson: Reputation, Allegation, and the Law

Mandelson’s fall from grace has been public and gradual. Once a towering figure in Labour’s modernising wing, his name resurfaced under darker clouds when fresh details about his ties to Jeffrey Epstein emerged. He was dismissed in September 2025, and he has faced police inquiries relating to alleged misconduct during his time in government more than a decade ago. He denies criminal wrongdoing and has not been charged.

Such allegations always carry seismic consequences for democratic life. Epstein’s network, which wound across continents and elites, has left an imprint on how societies scrutinise power and friendship. When someone with that proximity is put into one of the most sensitive diplomatic roles, it raises questions about judgment, vetting, and the price of political loyalty.

Where This Fits in a Bigger Picture

This is not merely a Westminster soap opera. It feeds into a global conversation about how democracies protect themselves from the corrosive effects of privileged networks and the failures of institutional oversight.

Consider these broader threads:

  • Trust in public institutions is fragile. According to widely cited surveys over the past decade, confidence in government in many Western democracies has dipped, driven by scandals and perceived elitism.
  • Security vetting procedures are essential in a world of cyber threats and classified alliances. When those procedures falter, the risks go beyond reputational harm.
  • There is an enduring tension between political expediency — putting a trusted advisor into a key role — and the public demand for transparent, rules-based governance.

Questions for the reader — and for Britain

What should come next? Should the Prime Minister be judged chiefly on whether he knew and chose to ignore the vetting? Or is the more reasonable standard whether he acted swiftly and transparently once the truth surfaced?

And beyond personalities: do we want a political system where reputations and friendships can vault someone into sensitive office, or do we insist that institutions do their job, transparently and visibly, every single time?

After the Headlines

Tomorrow, Mr Starmer will walk into the House of Commons and answer questions on an appointment that has already cost a senior civil servant his job and reignited debates about power and privilege. Whether he emerges chastened, strengthened, or diminished will depend not only on his words but on how the story unfolds — on whether Whitehall opens its processes to meaningful scrutiny and whether Britain’s political culture changes in response.

Back at the café near Parliament, Aisha refilled my cup and sighed. “We want leaders who own their mistakes and fix systems—not just tidy up reputations,” she said. “Is that too much to ask?”

It’s a fair question. And in the weeks ahead, as committees demand papers and headlines chase daily revelations, the country will be watching for answers that matter beyond Westminster’s walls.

Bulgaria Heads to Polls for Eighth Election in Five Years

Bulgaria votes in eighth election in five years
A high turnout is expected as people queued in some areas before polling stations opened

Bulgaria at the Ballot Box: A Country’s Quiet Reckoning

Early frost still clung to the pavement outside the primary school turned polling station in central Sofia when the first voters arrived, coffee cups in hand and the breath of the city fogging in the morning air.

They were not here for a festival. They were here to decide whether Bulgaria — the European Union’s poorest member and a nation of 6.5 million people — will place its fate back in the hands of a familiar figure who vows to uproot corruption, or keep steady with parties that promise continuity with Brussels and the West.

It is the eighth election in five years, a dizzying rhythm that says something about political exhaustion and about citizens who have grown used to making the impossible choice between stability and upheaval.

The Main Players: Promises, Past, and Polarization

At the center of the drama stands Rumen Radev, a former air force general and long-serving president who stepped down to lead Progressive Bulgaria, a centre-left coalition forged in the wake of mass anti-graft protests.

Campaign polls released before the vote suggested his bloc could capture roughly 35% of the ballots — an outcome that would reshape the 240-seat National Assembly if it were to translate into an absolute majority. Behind him on the paper trail of numbers sits Boyko Borissov’s GERB, the pro-European conservative party, polling around 20%, with the liberal PP-DB in pursuit.

“People are tired of the same old deals in back rooms,” Radev told a crowd of about 10,000 at his final rally. “We must close ranks and rebuild a state that serves its citizens, not oligarchs.”

Opponents fired back with equal conviction. Borissov, who led the country for nearly a decade, accused Radev of offering nostalgia wrapped in a new label. “We have fulfilled the dreams of the 1990s,” Borissov declared at a recent rally, pointing to achievements like the country’s recent accession to the eurozone — a claim he used to argue GERB’s economic stewardship is proven.

Beyond the Soundbites: What’s Really at Stake

This election is about more than personalities or parliamentary arithmetic. It is about trust — or the lack of it. After multiple governments and persistent corruption scandals, voter fatigue has taken root. Turnout plunged to 39% in 2024, and the question now is whether hope, anger, or simple exasperation will drive turnout higher this time around.

“I didn’t vote in the last round,” said Yana Petrova, a 34-year-old high school teacher from Sofia, as she folded her ballot and stepped out into the light. “But I came today. I can’t watch my students leave because there’s no work here. If someone promises to clean it up, I want to give them a chance.”

Analysts such as Boryana Dimitrova from Alpha Research predicted a surge in turnout, driven by Radev’s mobilization and by explicit appeals from parties to protect the vote’s integrity. In recent weeks, police raids aimed at preventing vote buying netted more than €1 million and led to hundreds of detentions — including local councillors and mayors. These heavy-handed operations are as much a symptom as a cure.

Russia, the EU, and the Tightrope of Foreign Policy

Flavoring the domestic debate is an international question that carries a special charge in Bulgarian politics: the country’s relationship with Russia. Radev has been open about renewing ties with Moscow and has criticized some EU green energy policies as naive, saying they miss the realities of a world “without rules.”

He has made clear he opposes sending Bulgarian arms to Ukraine in the wake of the 2022 invasion, a stance that has drawn heated pushback from pro-European rivals who warn that such a posture risks isolating Bulgaria in Brussels’ corridors.

“You can’t pretend foreign policy is a local matter,” said Dr. Ivaylo Marinov, a Sofia-based geopolitical analyst. “Bulgaria sits at a crossroads. Choices here echo in Brussels and in Kyiv. Voters understand that the decision isn’t just about domestic issues — it’s about identity and alliances.”

At the same time, Radev has publicly stated he would not block EU decisions outright — a hedged position that leaves room for governing complexity while inviting suspicion from critics who see too much proximity to Moscow in his gestures, including campaign images of meetings with Vladimir Putin.

Culture, Daily Life, and the Feel of the Moment

On the ground, politics rubs shoulders with everyday life. Outside the polling station, a vendor sold warm banitsa — a flaky pastry layered with cheese and the smell of butter — to voters who lingered and debated. An elderly man with a cane laughed and said, “We have had many governments. We just want one that will fix the pipes in our neighborhood.”

Small details like these matter. They are the soft fabric of a nation making a hard decision: will political renewal come from the ballot or from another cycle of protest? Will institutions reform, or will corruption find new disguises?

What Comes After: Scenarios and Chances

Radev is shooting for an absolute majority, a political unicorn in Bulgaria’s fragmented landscape. If he falls short, the inevitable negotiations will either produce a coalition or extend the pattern of short-lived governments that has characterized the past half-decade.

What that outcome means for Bulgaria’s European trajectory is anyone’s projection. Will the country tilt toward a more independent stance, recalibrating ties with Moscow and adjusting its approach to EU policy? Or will it reaffirm its western path and align more closely with Brussels on sanctions, arms, and green transition?

“Elections are mirrors,” said Sofia-based sociologist Maria Kolarova. “They reflect where people put their trust. Right now, many put it in an individual who promises to sweep away a corrupt model. The risk is institutional fragility — concentrating power without building systems that prevent a return to the past.”

Final Hour: A Nation Waiting

Polls closed at 20:00 local time, and exit poll numbers began to trickle out. The tense waiting that follows — for official tallies, for coalition math, for the predictable tweets and statements from capitals abroad — is itself a civic rite.

For voters like Yana, the choice was personal and practical. “If he cleans up the courts and the tenders, if there is real transparency, then maybe my students will stay and build a life here,” she said. “That’s all I ask.”

What do you think? Is reform possible at the ballot box, or does Bulgaria need a deeper social reckoning? As the night settles over Sofia and the country waits for results, these are the questions that will shape debate long after votes are counted.

  • Population of Bulgaria: ~6.5 million
  • Parliament seats: 240
  • Poll estimates (pre-vote): Progressive Bulgaria ~35%, GERB ~20%
  • Turnout in 2024: 39%
  • Recent law enforcement seizures linked to vote buying: over €1 million
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