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Gudoomiyihii Baydhabo ee horey u raacay Lafta-gareen oo manata ku laabtay Baydhabo

Apr 07(Jowhar)-Madaxweyne Xasan Sheekh ayaa maanta Xarunta Madaxtooyada Koonfur Galbeed ku qaabilay C/llaahi Cali Watiin oo ah Guddoomiyaha degmada Baydhabo ahna Duqa Magaalada.

Artemis astronauts reach farthest distance ever traveled by humans

Artemis crew flies further than humans have gone before
The Artemis II astronauts have photographed the surface of the Moon, seen here illuminated by Earthshine, light from the sun reflected from the Earth

When Humankind Stretched a Little Further

There are moments that feel like they belong to everyone at once: a sudden hush, a collective intake of breath, the soft fizz of radio static turning into words that stitch thousands of miles into something intimate. Late on April 7, 2026, that hush happened again. Four people aboard a silver capsule called Orion—Commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, mission specialists Christina Koch and Colonel Jeremy Hansen—cut a new furrow through human history by traveling farther from Earth than any human beings in half a century.

For a few hours they were not simply astronauts on a mission log; they were an urgent, live reminder that exploration still changes the way we understand ourselves. When Houston’s Mission Control re-established radio contact after about a 40-minute blackout behind the Moon, Christina Koch’s first words carried more than relief: “It is so great to hear from Earth again.”

Breaking the Record—and What It Feels Like

The headline is simple: Artemis II surpassed the distance record set by Apollo 13 in 1970. The new milestone—roughly 406,778 kilometres from Earth, some 6,606 km farther than the Apollo-era benchmark—was not just a number on a telemetry screen. It was a line in a story that stretches from the first footprints at Tranquility Base to the next generation of missions that will linger in lunar orbit, build new outposts and perhaps, one day, host long-term settlers.

“We will always choose Earth, we will always choose each other,” Koch said, a small ceremony of solidarity framed by the black infinity beyond the capsule windows. Colonel Jeremy Hansen, representing Canada aboard the mission, put it another way: “This moment is to challenge this generation and the next, to make sure this record is not long-lived.”

The Blackout: Alone Behind the Moon

Passing behind the Moon temporarily severs line-of-sight communications with Earth. In practical terms it was a roughly 40-minute blackout—time measured by computers but felt by humans as an almost tangible solitude. “It’s a weird kind of quiet,” a flight director at Mission Control later said. “Not silence so much as the sound of people listening harder to one another.”

In that silence, crew and capsule became both fragile and fiercely human. The Orion was on a free-return trajectory—an elegant, passive arc that uses lunar gravity to swing the spacecraft around and send it home, an old but reliable trick of orbital mechanics. With the Moon between them and Earth, the crew did what people who understand risk and wonder tend to do: they looked.

The Terminator: Where Night Meets Day on the Moon

Victor Glover’s voice, crackling through speakers, painted a lunar landscape with the urgency of a poet and the specificity of an engineer. He described the terminator—the ragged edge where lunar night becomes day—as “the most rugged that I’ve seen it from a lighting perspective.” Kelsey Young, lead scientist for the Artemis II observations, responded aloud in Mission Control: “You just really brought us along with you.”

There’s a reason scientists yearn for human eyes and human descriptions. Robotic cameras can map craters in excruciating detail, but a person in a window transmits scale, texture and the movement of light over time. “Those little pinprick highlights in the craters? They aren’t just bright pixels,” Koch said. “They’re like a lampshade with tiny holes, letting light through.” It’s a description that made engineers smile and poets nod.

Names on a Blank Canvas

Exploration is also an act of memory. Moments after breaking the distance record, the crew suggested naming two previously unnamed lunar craters. One would honor their ship’s nickname—Integrity—and another, more personal and tender, would be named Carroll, after Commander Wiseman’s late wife.

“It’s a bright spot on the Moon,” Colonel Hansen said, his voice thick. “And we would like to call it Carroll.” The embrace that followed, shared among four individuals traveling farther from home than any humans before them, felt like a small, private rite made public by radio waves.

NASA will submit these proposals to the International Astronomical Union, which governs the formal naming of celestial features. Whether or not the IAU approves, the gesture itself—fitful, human and immediate—marks how spaceflight stitches human stories onto the planetary canvas.

Firsts and Faces

Artemis II is heavy with symbolism as much as with instruments. Victor Glover is the first person of color to fly around the Moon; Christina Koch the first woman to do so; Jeremy Hansen is the first non-American crew member to make the lunar flyby. Those “firsts” matter. They break the stale template of who belongs at the frontiers of knowledge.

“We’re trying to open the story of space to more people,” an international space policy analyst said. “It’s not just about who can go; it’s about who gets to be seen going.”

Why This Moment Matters to You

Is it merely a stunt? A PR milestone? Look closer. Artemis II is a rehearsal for systems, a test of international partnerships and a deep breath before longer stays on the Moon. The free-return trajectory, the careful observation of the terminator, the emotional labor of naming—each is a stitch in the broader tapestry of a program that aims to return humans to the surface, build lunar infrastructure and use the Moon as a springboard to Mars.

Consider these facts:

  • Artemis II is the first crewed lunar flyby in more than 50 years.
  • The mission reached about 406,778 km from Earth, surpassing Apollo 13’s record from 1970 by roughly 6,606 km.
  • The Orion capsule is on a free-return trajectory that will bring the crew home in about four days.

Beyond the figures, there is a second-order effect: seeing Earth from beyond its thin atmosphere changes how people think about planetary stewardship. Lookouts and astronauts alike speak about “the overview effect”—a shift in perspective that emphasizes our shared fate on a small, fragile planet. When the crew spoke of choosing Earth and choosing each other, that’s the echo of that same insight.

What We Take Back Down

When Orion swings back toward home and re-enters the thin, noisy envelope of Earth’s radio chatter, it will bring more than data. It will carry stories, images, and a renewed argument for exploration that includes grief and joy, precision and poetry. It will remind the world that human beings still look up and, sometimes, go farther than before—partly to prove we can, partly to honor those we have loved, and partly to see our own blue planet with fresh, reverent eyes.

So let me ask you, the reader: when you imagine standing at the rim of a lunar crater named for a person you love, does it feel distant or strangely near? How do you think history should remember this generation of explorers? The answers—personal, shared, contested—are already in motion, like radio waves threading the dark between two worlds.

Australia’s most decorated veteran charged with alleged war crimes

Australia's most decorated soldier on war crimes charges
Ben Roberts-Smith seen leaving the Federal Court in Sydney during his defamation action in 2025

A nation holds its breath: the arrest of Australia’s most decorated soldier

The sharp, fluorescent glare of Sydney Airport’s arrivals hall softened into a different light on a rainy morning as officers led a man in handcuffs across the tarmac and into a waiting police car. The footage, terse and unemotional, cut through the usual churn of travelogues and vacation snapshots: this was not the image of a returning hero it once might have been.

At 47, Ben Roberts-Smith — once feted as one of Australia’s most decorated soldiers — was arrested on charges that would, if proven, rewrite pages of the country’s military history. The Australian Federal Police say he faces five counts of alleged war crimes, connected to the killing of five unarmed people in Afghanistan between 2009 and 2012. Each charge, the officials reminded the country, carries a possible sentence of life imprisonment.

“It will be alleged the victims were not taking part in hostilities at the time of their alleged murder in Afghanistan,” AFP Commissioner Krissy Barrett said at the press conference, her voice steady, the words clinical and chilling. “It will be alleged the victims were detained, unarmed and were under the control of ADF members when they were killed.” She added that police would allege the victims were shot either by the accused or by subordinates acting on his orders and in his presence.

How a hero became the center of an unfolding legal storm

Roberts-Smith’s medals — including the Victoria Cross — were once worn as proof of extraordinary bravery. He served multiple tours in Afghanistan with the Special Air Service Regiment, the kind of covert, high-stakes deployments that forge legends and also, sometimes, shadows. For many Australians, he was the embodiment of courage; for others, his reputation had already been clouded by persistent allegations that began to surface publicly in 2018.

Those allegations, first reported in a series of newspaper articles, accused him of atrocities ranging from the fatal shooting of an unarmed teenager to ordering the execution of detainees. Roberts-Smith fiercely denied the claims and took the publishers to court in a defamation case that became the nation’s most expensive of its kind. In 2023 a Federal Court judge found that four of six murder allegations had been proven. A final appeal to the High Court was dismissed in September 2025.

“When the courtroom doors closed, people thought the legal chapter was over,” said Dr. Aisha Rahman, a legal scholar who has followed the case. “But the criminal process is different. A civil ruling and a criminal charge are separate paths to truth and accountability, and this arrest signals that path is now being walked.”

Investigations hamstrung by distance, complexity and the fog of war

The Office of the Special Investigator and the AFP opened their probe into alleged war crimes in 2021. The pair have since worked through a labyrinth of evidence, witnesses and operational records. Their task has been made agonizingly difficult by geography and time: investigators cannot travel to the original scenes in Afghanistan to gather forensic evidence the way they would in a domestic homicide.

“We don’t have access to the crime scenes, we don’t have photographs, site plans, measurements, the recovery of projectiles, blood-spatter analysis — all of those things we would normally get at a crime scene,” Ross Barnett, director of investigations at the OSI, told reporters. “It makes this process complex and very time-consuming.” Despite that, he said, the joint OSI-AFP effort has been methodical: they have opened 53 investigations into allegations against Australian Defence Force members for actions in Afghanistan, with ten still active and at least one other former special forces soldier due to face trial next February.

For families in Afghanistan — many of whom live with grief that stretched across borders — the arrival of charges in Sydney is a small, fragile echo of justice. “We cannot go back in time,” said one interpreter who worked alongside Australian forces and asked to remain anonymous for safety reasons. “But for the relatives, seeing that there is an investigation gives them a moment of recognition. It says: your loss was seen.”

Voices in Australia: a country divided, searching for answers

Among veterans, reactions were varied and raw. In a suburban football club in Brisbane, where Roberts-Smith once coached junior players, a woman who had known him since childhood wiped rain from her face and said, “He used to come and help at the barbecues, teach the kids to kick the ball straight. You never think the person who helps your kids could be accused of something like this.” Her voice held both disbelief and fatigue.

“We served together,” said a former SAS comrade, speaking on condition of anonymity. “We are shaken. Not because we don’t want accountability — of course we want the truth — but because this could stain an entire generation of soldiers who put their lives on the line.”

Amnesty International, whose campaigners have long pressed for investigations into alleged violations, hailed the arrest as “a critical step toward global justice and accountability efforts.” “Australian authorities must now ensure all credible allegations are fully investigated and, where appropriate, prosecuted,” Zaki Haidari, Amnesty International Australia’s strategic campaigner, said. The plea is clear: this is about more than one person’s fate; it is a test of institutional will.

Why this matters beyond one courtroom

At stake is the broader question of how democratic societies confront the darkest allegations within their own institutions. How do militaries balance secrecy and security with transparency? How do nations ensure accountability while supporting troops placed in extraordinary danger?

These are not abstract questions. The 2020 inquiry into Australian special forces’ conduct in Afghanistan — which uncovered credible evidence that dozens of unarmed prisoners had been unlawfully killed — prompted sweeping cultural and procedural reviews. Reforms aimed at oversight, commander responsibility, and the mechanisms for reporting misconduct followed, but critics say progress has been slow.

“This case is a crucible,” Dr. Rahman said. “It will test whether reforms are substantive or merely symbolic. If the process is robust and fair, it can strengthen the rule of law and public trust. If it’s bungled, it can deepen cynicism.”

Questions to carry with us

As the defendant appears at a bail hearing, and as witnesses — some of them far away and difficult to access — are sought and scrutinized, Australians and readers worldwide alike are left to wrestle with uncomfortable truths. What does justice look like for victims thousands of kilometers from where cases are tried? How do communities reconcile pride in military service with the imperative to investigate wrongdoing? Can institutions both protect soldiers and hold them accountable?

These are not questions with neat answers. They are, instead, the contours of a national conversation that will shape policy, military culture, and the lives of many people — from veterans who served beside the accused to families in Afghanistan who may have waited years simply to be acknowledged.

For now, the rain has stopped at Sydney Airport. The police car pulled away. Inside courtrooms and in small houses in distant valleys, lives will pivot on testimony, documents and the slow, deliberate machinery of justice. Whether this chapter closes with conviction, acquittal or further complication, the arrest has already reopened a wound that Australia, and democracies everywhere, must confront sincerely.

What do you think justice should look like in times of war? How should societies balance loyalty to their soldiers with accountability for wrongdoing? I invite you to reflect, discuss, and keep watching — because this story is not just about one man. It is about how we, collectively, face the hardest parts of ourselves.

Weerar ka dhacay Istanbul oo sababay dhimasho iyo dhaawac

Apr 07(Jowhar)-Ugu yaraan saddex qof ayaa lagu dilay, halka laba askari ay dhaawacmeen, kaddib weerar goordhow ka dhacay magaalada Istanbul ee dalka Turkiga.

Israel’s military warns Iranians to avoid using train services

Israeli military tells people in Iran to avoid trains
Israeli military tells people in Iran to avoid trains

When a Warning Crosses Borders: The Night Phones Told Iranians to Avoid Trains

It was a warm evening in Tehran — the kind where the city exhales under the weight of summer, and the station lights at Rah Ahan gleam like constellations close to the ground. Commuters drifted toward the platforms with disposable cups of tea and backpacks slung over shoulders. Vendors hawked simorgh-shaped cookies. And then, for many: a ping, a pulse, a message that made people look up from their phones with the same suddenness as a siren.

“Avoid trains,” read the notification. “There is a credible threat to rail transport.”

Who sent it? The message claimed to come from the Israeli military — a jarring twist in a long, fraught relationship across a border that, on some maps, is thousands of miles away but in geopolitics feels painfully close.

A small alert, a large ripple

At first, people assumed it was a hoax, the sort of viral prank that circulates on messaging apps. Then television anchors interrupted programming. State radio urged calm. Passengers scanned each other’s faces. Train windows reflected the confusion back at them — small, private storms of worry.

“We laughed, then we didn’t,” said Sara, a teacher who had planned to take the evening express to visit family. “I thought, who would do that? Then I thought, what if? I stayed home.”

This is the ordinary human consequence of a modern security dilemma: a brief message, and schedules are rewritten, businesses rattled, trust frayed. Public transport — the veins of everyday life for a city of nearly 9 million people — is suddenly theater for geopolitics.

Why trains?

Rail systems are tempting targets in asymmetric conflicts. They move people in predictable streams, support economies by moving goods, and when disrupted, inflict grief and delay that ripple far beyond a single platform.

“Attacks or warnings aimed at transport infrastructure are designed for maximum disruption with minimal resources,” explains Dr. Lena Schwartz, a cybersecurity analyst who studies attacks on critical infrastructure. “Even a false warning can achieve the strategic aim: to sow fear, undermine confidence in authorities, and strain social cohesion.”

That’s not hypothetical. Globally, transport networks have been in the crosshairs of cyber and hybrid operations for years. In recent times, municipal transit systems, freight logistics, and airline reservations have all faced disruptions linked to state and non-state actors. The result is an uneasy new rule: if your city’s trains go quiet, somewhere politicians and strategists are paying attention.

Messages and methods

How would an Israeli military message reach Iranian citizens? The digital contours of modern life make such cross-border nudges possible in many ways: hijacked social media accounts, targeted ad buys, hacked billboards, or fake SMS messages masquerading as official alerts. In other instances, messages have been amplified by bots or foreign-language channels that reach diasporas and domestic audiences alike.

“We have seen a surge in ‘influence operations’ — a hybrid of cyber intrusion and psychological tactics,” says Omar Haddad, a Middle East analyst based in Amman. “They often test the boundaries of what’s permissible, and they do so on civilians. The objective isn’t only to damage infrastructure; it’s to change behavior.”

The human cost and the politics of warning

Local voices capture the texture of the moment better than any strategic analysis. A retired railway guard, Ali, said he watched as commuters drifted away from the platforms, some deciding to drive instead, clogging Tehran’s already congested streets.

“People are tired of being told what to fear,” Ali said, leaning against a column. “If it’s real, we need to know. If it’s not, why do they do this to us?”

Iranian officials were swift in their denouncement. State media labeled the alert “an act of psychological warfare,” urging citizens to follow official channels and warning that false information would be punished. The state’s rapid response to reassert control is familiar: in a world where rumors can become mass movements, authorities often prioritize calming the public.

But calming the public is not simply a matter of issuing rebuttals. Trust erodes faster than it can be rebuilt. When people begin to doubt the neutrality of the media they rely on — or suspect that foreign actors can phone in fear — the social fabric destabilizes in small, cumulative ways.

A global pattern

Consider the wider context: across regions, infrastructure and communications have become theaters of competition. Whether it’s the disruption of energy grids in Europe, interference with voting infrastructure, or misinformation campaigns ahead of elections, the pattern is clear. Civilians are rarely the intended final audience; they are the instrument through which pressure is applied.

And that raises ethical questions that should concern everyone, not only diplomats and generals. What responsibility do states have when using methods that rely on civilian disruption? When does an informational warning cross the line into coercion? And how should international law adapt to shield everyday people from becoming collateral in these campaigns?

What now? Practical steps and deeper conversations

For commuters and city planners, the immediate fix is practical resilience: diversify channels for official alerts, harden communications infrastructure, and invest in public education so people can make informed choices when alarms appear on their screens.

At the strategic level, the episode invites a negotiation about norms. “There has to be a conversation about red lines,” says Dr. Schwartz. “Not every competitive tactic is wise or ethical. When messages deliberately target civilians’ daily routines, they’re ratcheting up the stakes.”

  • Invest in verification: Official channels need verifiable authentication so that citizens can distinguish legitimate safety alerts from disinformation.
  • Strengthen civil resilience: Communities trained in emergency protocols are less likely to panic and more likely to make rational choices under uncertainty.
  • International dialogue: Diplomatic mechanisms — even among adversaries — can create norms about what kinds of informational tactics are unacceptable.

Where do we go from here?

On the platform, the trains eventually resumed. Ticket counters reopened. Some commuters boarded with a shim of unease, others with an intensified appreciation for the small, reliable motions of daily life.

But the episode lingers. It raises questions about the new geometry of power: not only where borders lie, but how far a message can travel, how quickly it can unsettle, and how little it can cost the sender to do so.

What would you do if your phone buzzed with an urgent warning from an unfamiliar source? Who would you trust? In a world where notifications can jolt whole cities, perhaps the most important conversations are not about missiles or tanks, but about trust, verification, and the invisible infrastructures that keep societies functioning.

Because while a train delay is a minor inconvenience, a breach of trust is harder to repair — and it travels farther than any express line.

Iran Refuses to Back Down as Trump’s Ceasefire Deadline Looms

Iran defiant on eve of Trump's ceasefire deadline
Tehran has refused to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and accept a ceasefire deal

The Midnight Deadline: A Strait, a Threat, and a World Holding Its Breath

By the time dawn bled pale over the Persian Gulf, a strange hush hung over ports that usually thrummed with activity. Cranes stood idle like sleeping giants. Fishing boats bobbed in the oily light, their nets uncast. The Strait of Hormuz — a narrow throat through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil and natural gas once flowed — had become the fulcrum of a crisis that felt, in the small hours, both impossibly large and painfully intimate.

Inside Tehran, the mood was the opposite of calm. Streets were full of small, urgent conversations. In a bakery near Valiasr, Fatemeh, whose hands still smelled of cardamom and yeast, folded a scarf around her head and said, “We are used to sanctions, to shortages. But this is different. The talk of bridges and power plants being ‘decimated’ — it makes you think of your own children.”

What’s at Stake

The immediate trigger was a deadline set by U.S. President Donald Trump: an ultimatum to Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and accept a ceasefire arrangement. If Tehran refused, the president warned of a campaign so devastating that “the entire country can be taken out in one night.” Within minutes, those words ricocheted across diplomatic channels, social media, and markets.

Oil traders reacted before diplomats could finish their coffees. Brent crude hovered near $110 a barrel, spooked by the possibility that a lasting closure of Hormuz — through which about 20% of the world’s oil and gas used to be shipped — could choke global energy supplies. For consumers thousands of miles away, this was no abstract geopolitical drama; it was a prospect of higher bills at the pump and more inflation at the supermarket.

Negotiations that Unraveled

Behind the headlines was an attempt, brokered by Pakistan, to thread the crisis back to calm: an immediate ceasefire, a reopening of the Strait, and negotiations on a broader settlement within a few weeks. Iran rejected that proposal. According to sources familiar with Tehran’s response, the government’s counter-offer consisted of ten demands: an end to regional conflicts, a formal guarantee for safe passage through Hormuz, the lifting of sanctions, and funds for reconstruction among them.

“We didn’t say no to peace,” said an Iranian foreign ministry official in a low, weary voice. “We laid out conditions that must be part of any durable arrangement. Empty assurances aren’t enough.”

Voices on the Ground

Ali, a fisherman from Bandar Abbas, banged a palm on the pier as he spoke. “Hormuz is our lifeline and our prison,” he said. “If it opens, our gas and oil flow. If it stays closed, we have to worry every day about missiles, about returning home.”

In Tel Aviv, a different anxiety played out in public squares. Anti-war protesters gathered outside the U.S. Embassy, chanting and holding signs that read “No More Nightmares” and “Talk, Don’t Bomb.” “We’re not against Israel,” said Rachel Cohen, a schoolteacher, “we’re against the kind of decisions that send planes and missiles into the night. War is for politicians; it’s our children who pay.”

Escalation: Strikes, Intercepts, and Human Cost

In the early hours, the Israeli military announced a series of airstrikes on sites it described as Iranian government infrastructure in and around Tehran. Iran responded with ballistic missiles and drones, some aimed at Israeli territory and others at U.S. forces in the region. Air defenses roared to life — missiles streaked across the sky and left trails of smoke that residents later described as “writing in the heavens.”

Saudi Arabia reported intercepting projectiles aimed at its eastern oil regions, with debris falling dangerously close to energy facilities. The kingdom, along with the UAE and Bahrain, issued public safety alerts, and authorities said that hundreds of Iranian-fired missiles and drones have been launched since the conflict began on February 28 — most intercepted, but some causing damage and casualties.

Casualty figures are grim. Human rights groups on the ground estimate thousands killed across the region: more than 3,500 in Iran and nearly 1,500 in Lebanon, where Israeli strikes have targeted the Iran-backed Hezbollah militia. Thirteen U.S. service members have died since the conflict escalated, and a downed F-15E earlier in the week — with one airman stranded deep in hostile territory — nearly pushed the crisis over the edge before a daring rescue mission brought him back.

“Every life is a story,” said Dr. Mona Hafezi, a Tehran-based physician volunteering at overwhelmed hospitals. “These numbers are not statistics on a page; they are parents, students, carpenters. We stitch wounds and bury the rest.”

Law, Threats, and the Language of War

President Trump’s rhetoric sharpened the stakes. He warned that if Iran did not comply, U.S. forces would target bridges, power plants, and other infrastructure “burning, exploding, and never to be used again.” Iran’s UN envoy responded with fury, calling the remarks “direct incitement to terrorism” and evidence of an intent to commit war crimes under international law. Tehran’s leadership, meanwhile, urged citizens to form human chains at power stations, turning sites of vulnerability into symbols of resistance.

“Threatening to wipe out civilian infrastructure crosses a threshold,” said Captain Sarah Mitchell, a retired naval strategist now teaching at a university in London. “It’s not just about military advantage; it’s about the civilian population’s future. Under international conventions, attacking purely civilian objects is illegal — and it puts the attacker on dangerous moral ground.”

Beyond the Strait: Global Ripples

This conflict is not contained to the Gulf map. Energy markets twitch when Hormuz clutches shut. Supply chains with components from Asia to Europe feel the tremor. Refugee flows, already pressured by climate and instability, may swell. Geopolitically, regional fault lines are deepening: the emboldening of proxies, the erosion of multilateral institutions, and the normalization of hyperbolic rhetoric as policy leverage.

“We’re watching the unspooling of another era of geopolitical risk,” said Javier Ortega, an energy analyst in Madrid. “If you combine military strikes with sanctions and trade disruptions, the global economy doesn’t respond linearly. It’s nonlinear — you get tipping points.”

Questions for the Reader — and the World

Ask yourself: How willing are we to accept civilian suffering as collateral for strategic goals? When leaders threaten entire nations, where does responsibility lie — with the commander in chief, with international courts, with bystanders who watch on screens? And what price are we willing to pay for short-term security over long-term stability?

Back on the pier in Bandar Abbas, Ali tied a new knot on his nets and stared toward the narrow mouth of the Strait. “We have always navigated between storms,” he said. “But this is a storm made by people on another map. Sometimes I feel the world is smaller — because our fear is shared — and sometimes it feels so big I cannot reach it.”

What Comes Next

At the moment, there is no tidy ending. The proposed ceasefire remains rejected. The deadline has come and gone in political and public discourse, replaced by a longer arc of diplomatic horse-trading, back-channel discussions, and the terrible arithmetic of risk. But in markets, hospitals, and kitchens across the region, people are composing lives that refuse to be mere footnotes in strategic statements.

In the days ahead, watch for three things: whether diplomatic mediators can reframe the deal in terms that address Iranian security concerns; whether international law bodies raise the heat on any threats against civilian infrastructure; and whether communities on both sides of the conflict can begin to tell different stories—stories that move from obliteration to rebuilding.

Because before any map, before any resource, before any trophy of power, there are human beings — making tea, mending nets, teaching, protesting — and their stories are the ones that will, in the end, define what this moment becomes.

Trump oo ka fiirsanaya dib u dhigista weerarro ka dhan ah Iiraan

Apr 07(Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha Mareykanka, Donald Trump, ayaa la sheegay inuu ka fiirsanayo dib u dhigista weerarro militari oo lagu beegsan lahaa kaabayaasha Iiraan, haddii ay muuqdaan calaamado dhab ah oo muujinaya in xal diblumaasiyadeed la gaari karo. Warbixintan ayaa waxaa baahisay shabakadda Axios.

Iran Holds Firm Ahead of Trump’s Imposed Ceasefire Deadline

Iran defiant on eve of Trump's ceasefire deadline
Tehran has refused to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and accept a ceasefire deal

On the Edge of Midnight: A Strait, a Deadline, and the Taste of War

There are moments when the world seems to hold its breath — when a single choke point, a terse ultimatum, and a few incendiary words can bend markets, unsettle cities, and rewrite human plans. This morning was one of those mornings. The Strait of Hormuz, that narrow artery through which roughly one in five barrels of the world’s oil flows, remained effectively closed. A deadline set by a U.S. president loomed; a counter-offer from Tehran arrived in the form of a handwritten-sounding, ten-point response. And across the region, people went about their days as sirens, screens, and whispered rumors rewired normality.

“If you stand where I stand, the sky looks like a scoreboard,” said Miriam, a café owner near Tel Aviv’s Jaffa port, as she watched the news scroll on a phone propped between espresso cups. “Everyone counts the seconds and the chances. We make coffee anyway.”

Diplomacy, Declined

In recent days an uneasy diplomatic shuttle carried a U.S. proposal — reportedly brokered with Pakistan as intermediary — offering Iran an immediate ceasefire and the lifting of its effective blockade of Hormuz, followed by talks aimed at a broader settlement within two to three weeks. According to a source familiar with the plan, Tehran answered not with a yes or no but with a list: ten clauses that read like a list of national priorities — an end to regional conflicts, a written protocol guaranteeing safe passage through Hormuz, the lifting of sanctions, and commitments toward reconstruction.

“We submitted conditions, not capitulation,” said one Iranian official quoted by state media. “Our people have paid a heavy price; any agreement must restore dignity and safety first.”

Across the ocean, a different voice thundered. The U.S. president set a hard deadline: open the strait by a specified hour or face devastating strikes targeting critical infrastructure. “The entire country can be taken out in one night,” he told reporters, adding grim specifics about power plants and bridges. “That night might be tomorrow night.” He later brushed aside questions about the legality of such threats.

Words that Push and Pull

Rhetoric is combustible. For millions of people in the region, the words were not abstract; they were the prelude to blackouts, evacuation drills, and prayers. Iran’s deputy sports minister urged artists and athletes to form human chains around power stations — a call mixing symbolism with civic defiance. The Iranian U.N. envoy described the threats as “direct incitement to terrorism” and warned of international-law consequences.

“When leaders speak of ‘taking out’ an entire country’s infrastructure, it’s not a metaphor for most of us,” said Dr. Rania Haddad, a researcher on conflict displacement. “It’s a very real fear of loss — of hospitals, of water, of lifesaving electricity.”

Fighting and Fallout

Combat did not wait for diplomacy to conclude. The Israeli military reported strikes targeting what it described as Iranian government infrastructure in Tehran and beyond, while it activated air defenses to intercept projectiles launched in its direction. Saudi Arabia said it intercepted ballistic missiles aimed at its eastern provinces, with debris falling near energy facilities.

Authorities in the Gulf — Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Bahrain — issued simultaneous public-safety alerts. Meanwhile, the Iranian semi-official Mehr news agency reported heavy damage to a synagogue in central Tehran after a projectile struck the area, underscoring how fragile civilian life has become amid state-on-state exchanges.

Casualty figures reported by rights groups stitch a grim tapestry. U.S.-based HRANA counted more than 3,500 deaths in Iran and nearly 1,500 fatalities in Lebanon, where fighting has pounded communities as Israel targets forces it ties to Iran. Thirteen U.S. service members were reported killed since hostilities flared; a downed F-15E and a daring rescue deep inside Iranian territory briefly pushed Washington to the brink of a larger escalation before special forces extracted a stranded airman.

The Global Price of a Narrow Passage

Markets listen when ships stop moving. Oil hovered around $110 a barrel as the deadline approached — a number that translates directly into higher pump prices, strained household budgets, and renewed inflationary pressure in economies still recovering from pandemic shocks. The Strait of Hormuz is not just a ribbon of water; it is a lever on the global economy.

“When supply routes falter, every face at the gas station pays the cost,” said Javier Alvarez, an energy analyst in Madrid. “Even nations far from the Gulf will feel this in manufacturing, shipping rates, and power bills.”

Local Color: Streets Beyond the Headlines

In Tehran, a fruit vendor named Soraya wrapped her remaining pomegranates in newspaper and shrugged at customers who asked what will happen next. “We talk, then we sell,” she said. “My grandson’s school closed today. He asked if the lights will still work. I told him we will light candles if we must.”

In Tel Aviv a line of protesters gathered outside the U.S. embassy, holding signs that read “No More War” and “Sanity Before Arsenals.” “We came because our children are tired of sirens,” said Yosef, a father with a stroller. “This is not a prophecy; this is our living room.”

Legal, Moral, and Strategic Fault Lines

Lawyers and historians watching demand clarity. Deliberate attacks on civilian infrastructure — especially power plants that sustain hospitals and water systems — raise stark legal questions under international humanitarian law. “The principle of proportionality exists for a reason,” said Professor Miriam Klein, an international-law expert. “Targeting civilian infrastructure as a punitive tool risks criminal liability if it cannot be linked to legitimate military objectives and if the expected civilian harm is disproportionate.”

Strategists, meanwhile, warn that what begins as targeted strikes can cascade into broader conflagrations. Proxy dynamics in the Middle East, arms proliferation, and the intertwining of local grievances mean that conflict lines are rarely clean or predictable.

What Comes Next?

We are left with open-ended questions: Will the Strait reopen? Will a fragile ceasefire lead to lasting talks? Can sanctions, reconstruction, and guarantees be stitched together fast enough to convince people that peace is more than a promise?

“Negotiations fail when they ignore the human ledger,” a former diplomat observed. “Anyone who thinks they can paper over the losses without addressing truth, compensation, and safe passage is betting on another cycle of violence.”

For people on the ground, the abstract contours of high diplomacy mean practical choices: whether to refill medicine cabinets, whether to send children to school, whether to board a ship through a disputed channel. For readers far from the Gulf, the consequences are less immediate but real: the cost of goods, the stability of markets, the ethical weight of global alliances.

How Will You Watch?

As journalists, citizens, and neighbors of a shared planet, our task is not only to track headlines but to hold the human stories at their center. Whose lights will go out if power plants are destroyed? Which school will close first? Whose voice will be the last to speak at a funeral?

What do you think should be done next — more diplomacy, tougher deterrence, a humanitarian corridor, or something else? I’d love to hear your perspectives. Leave a comment, share a story from your own community, or simply sit with this discomfort: decisions made in capital rooms travel fast, and they land hardest on ordinary people with ordinary lives.

For now, the strait remains narrow, the deadline ticks, and the world watches — waiting to see whether the worst words of this weekend will become the worst night in our recent memory, or whether cooler heads will, at the last possible minute, redraw a path toward calm.

Iran’s wartime executions escalate after protester killed during unrest

Iran wartime executions mount with protester's killing
Several men have been executed over the protests which erupted in Iran in January

On a Quiet Street in Tehran, the State’s Quietest Violence Continues

There is a particular hush that falls over parts of Tehran after dark these days — not the silence of peace, but the thin, watchful quiet of people who have learned to measure their words. Shopkeepers roll down metal shutters a little earlier. Neighbours exchange news in hushed tones. A man rides by on a motorbike, his face half-hidden beneath a scarf; he pauses, looks at the sky as if searching for a reason, and then keeps going.

It is in that atmosphere that the Iranian state carried out another execution this week: 23-year-old Ali Fahim was put to death after being convicted, authorities say, of taking part in an attack on a Tehran base of the Basij — the paramilitary volunteer arm of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps — during nationwide protests in January.

His death was confirmed by official outlets and tracked by international rights groups. It is not an isolated act. In the last eight days alone, the Norway-based Iran Human Rights (IHR) reports that ten people considered “political prisoners” have been executed — four connected to the January protests, six on charges of membership in the outlawed People’s Mujahedin of Iran (MEK). Seven men were originally sentenced to death over the Tehran base incident; four have now been executed, including Fahim, leaving three at imminent risk, advocates say.

What the Courts Say — and What Critics Say Back

The judiciary’s Mizan Online website portrayed Fahim in stark terms: “one of the enemy elements in the terrorist riots,” a shorthand the state often uses to frame protesters as foreign-backed subversives. It said the supreme court had approved the original verdict.

Human rights activists and legal observers contest that narrative. The IHR has alleged that Fahim and his co-defendants were “subjected to torture and denied access to legal counsel” and tried in what it called a “grossly unfair” fast-track trial presided over by Judge Abolqasem Salavati — a judge who was sanctioned by the United States in 2019 and widely nicknamed the “Judge of Death” for his frequent use of capital punishment.

“These executions are part of the Islamic republic’s strategy of survival — waging war against its own people under the shadow of external conflict,” said Mahmood Amiry‑Moghaddam, director of IHR. “The international community must respond with urgency. The situation of prisoners and the regime’s systematic use of the death penalty must be made a central condition in any negotiations or engagement with the Islamic republic.”

Amnesty International, too, has been blunt: the executions represent a judiciary that functions as a “tool of repression, sending individuals to the gallows to spread fear and exacting revenge on those demanding fundamental political change.” That sentiment echoes on Tehran streets, where people talk about reprisals and the chilling effect of public punishment.

Numbers that Refuse to Stay Abstract

Facts and figures can numb us — until you attach names to them. Iran is, according to multiple rights organisations, one of the countries with the highest rates of execution in the world. In the rolling litany of recent days, the names are painfully specific: Mohammad‑Amin Biglari, 19; Shahin Vahedparast, 30; Amir Hossein Hatami, 18 — all executed in connection to the same case.

These are young lives, with birthdays and mornings and small acts of defiance that led them, by the state’s account, to a rope. Whatever the charges, the swiftness of the process and the frequency of executions make them feel less like isolated sentences and more like a pattern — an instrument of deterrence and retribution.

Voices from the Ground

“We are afraid to talk openly,” said a tea seller near Azadi Square, whose name I do not publish for safety. “Every family knows someone who has been taken, or who has been called into a station at night. When the men from the neighbourhood park their vans across the road, people step inside their houses and draw the curtains.”

A woman who identified herself as a cousin of a young man on death row described the anguish in simple, heartbreaking detail. “He called me twice from prison,” she said. “The second time he whispered, ‘If anything happens to me, tell my mother I loved her.’ You cannot undo those words. We keep living, but parts of us are already gone.”

An academic in Tehran, speaking on condition of anonymity, framed the executions in strategic terms. “When you face external pressure — conflict at borders, sanctions — autocratic governments often turn inwards. They try to rally supporters by spelling out a clear, brutal cost for dissent. It’s a sad, predictable logic.”

Local Colour, Global Consequences

Walking through Grand Bazaar this week, I noticed everyday life continuing alongside a palpable grief. A fruit seller quoted the price of pomegranates while his eyes remained distant. A small poster calling for prayers for the dead was stuck on a telephone pole. In a city that has always been a mosaic of histories and hopes, grief now layers itself over ritual: the tea, the prayers, the slow recitation of names.

For many inside Iran, the slogans that have echoed since the unrest — especially the chant “Woman, Life, Freedom” that entered the international lexicon with the women’s rights protests — are a constant reminder that this is about more than single incidents. It is about a deeper contest over dignity, rights, and what the future of the country might look like.

How Should the World React?

Governments and international bodies now face an uncomfortable calculus. Should diplomatic engagements with Tehran be conditioned on human rights performance? Do sanctions and public condemnations save lives — or do they harden the state’s resolve?

Mahmood Amiry‑Moghaddam urged immediate action. “This is not merely about law; it’s about humanity,” he said. “If the world continues to treat the regime as a strategic actor only, without accounting for its domestic brutality, then we are complicit in the erasure of young lives.”

Many foreign policy analysts point out a paradox: the same geopolitical tensions that make Tehran a pivotal player on the regional stage — conflict with Israel, fractious relations with the United States — also provide the regime with the pretext to clamp down at home. External conflict can, in effect, become cover for internal repression.

The Human Toll and the Long View

Numbers, slogans, legal terms: they are all useful, but what lingers is the human shadow. Every execution reverberates outward — through family networks, through communities, through the sense of possibility for those who had once dared to imagine change.

So ask yourself: what does justice look like in a world where the instrument of death is wielded in the name of order? When does the pursuit of stability become the perpetuation of injustice? And if you live beyond Iran’s borders, what responsibility do you feel when a state uses the finality of execution to silence its critics?

There are no easy answers. But there are ways to act: supporting independent journalism, pressing elected representatives to prioritize human rights in foreign policy, and backing organizations working to document abuses and assist victims’ families. These actions may not undo what has already happened, but they keep the story from disappearing into the fog of geopolitics.

Back on the street where I began, the quiet persists. People still buy tea and bread; children still run past parked cars. But in their faces, and in the conversations that happen a little more carefully now, there is the knowledge that state violence is not only about bodies removed from the public square. It is about the way that fear reshapes everyday life, one hush at a time.

Madaxweyne Xasan Sheekh oo guddoomiyey shirka amniga Koonfur Galbeed

Apr 06(Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya, ahna Taliyaha Guud ee Ciidamada Qalabka Sida, Mudane Xasan Sheekh Maxamuud ayaa guddoomiyey Shirka amniga Dowlad Goboleedka Koonfur Galbeed, kaasi oo diiradda lagu saaray xaaladda amniga deegaanka, maareynta isbeddelladii amni iyo maamul ee dhawaan  dhacay iyo xaqiijinta hannaan caddaaladeed oo loo simanyahay.

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