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Mucaaradka Hawiye oo Iclaamiyay iska caabin ka dhan ah madaxweyne Xasan

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May 02(Jowhar) Mucaaradka Soomaaliya ayaa ku dhawaaqay in laga bilaabo 15-ka May ay bilaabi doonaan qorshe ay ku sheegeen “badbaadinta dalka” iyo iska caabin ka dhan ah dowladda Federaalka ee uu hoggaamiyo Madaxweyne Xasan Sheekh.

Siyaasiyiinta mucaaradka oo ka hadlay mowqifkooda kadib 15 May 2026

May 02(Jowhar)-Siyaasiyiinta mucaaradka ka soo jeeda gobolka Banaadir ayaa soo saaray warmurtiyeed ay ugaga hadlayaan mowqifkooda siyaasadda xilligan.

Xasan Sheekh oo kulan casuumaad u fidiyay Golaha Mustaqbalka

May 02(Jowhar)-Madaxweyne Xasan Sheekh Maxamuud ayaa ku martiqaaday Golaha Mustaqbalka inay ka soo qeybgalaan kulan qabsoomi doona 10-ka May 2026.

Trump oo qirtey in ciidamadiisu ay u dhaqmayaan sidii burcad-badeed

Trump unhappy with Iran's latest proposal to end war
A US official said that Donald Trump was unhappy with Iran's proposal

May 02(Jowhar) Madaxweyne Donald Trump ayaa ku tilmaamay qabsashada ay ciidamada badda Mareykanka ku qabteen maraakiibta Iran ee mara marinka Hormuz ganacsi faa’iido badan leh, isagoo ku faanay in Washington ay la wareegtay shixnado iyo saliid Iiraan ay leedahay, taasoo qeyb ka ah go’doominta.

Stranded German humpback whale safely returned to open sea

Humpback whale stranded in Germany released into sea
Humpback whale stranded in Germany released into sea

A Breath, a Blowhole, and a Crowd Holding Its Breath: The Whale They Called “Timmy” Finds the Sea Again

Morning on the coast has a way of rearranging your priorities. The gulls argued above the harbor. Sea spray tasted like salt and memory. Onlookers huddled on the pier with steaming cups of coffee, their faces lit by the low sun and the faint hope that a creature beaten by the shore might be given back the one thing it needed most: space to swim.

Then a sound — not the wild, acoustic boom of a ship’s horn but the intimate, unmistakable exhale of a whale. A column of white steam popped through a blowhole, and an enormous, mottled back slipped into blue water. People cheered. Some cried.

That creature, for a few weeks the star of Germany’s evening news and the subject of countless social feeds, had been nicknamed “Timmy” by a crowd that needed names for what they were watching. Timmy had been paradoxically famous and fragile. Stranded on sandbanks near Lübeck on March 23, entangled by tide and geography, the humpback became the focus of rescue teams, veterinarians, armchair experts and, eventually, two entrepreneurs who bankrolled an audacious plan.

The Long, Uncertain Road Back to Open Water

The last days of Timmy’s stay on the sand were a patchwork of attempts and setbacks. Locals remembered the first sighting, a lone dark shape inked against a wide expanse of shallow Baltic, and the slow, terrible logic of a large marine mammal finding itself in an environment that resembles a trap.

“In the Baltic, the tides are low and the sands shift,” said Jens Kappel, a fisherman who had watched the whale from his skiff. “You don’t realize how quickly the waterline changes until you see a thing that huge stranded on a patch that looks dry from the shore. We couldn’t leave it there.”

Teams tried inflatable cushions, pontoons and coaxing — the tools of choice for many animal rescues — but the sea remained stubborn. Strandings are complicated. Humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) are migratory marvels, often traveling thousands of kilometers between feeding grounds and breeding grounds. Adults can reach 12–16 meters in length and weigh up to 40 tonnes. They live decades and, for the most part, recovered well globally after the era of industrial whaling; the species is listed as “Least Concern” by the IUCN in broad terms. Still, local populations can be vulnerable, and individual whales, like Timmy, can find themselves in mortal danger because of a simple navigational error or environmental shifts.

When Experts Doubt and Private Money Steps In

At one point, officials signaled their limits. Resources, logistics, risk to rescuers — these are not small concerns. When the formal rescue operations began to wither, two private backers entered the scene. One of them, Karin Walter-Mommert, a German entrepreneur known in some circles for her investments in sport and racing, helped underwrite something that looked part dream, part salvage operation: a specially adapted barge with a water-filled hold, designed to cradle a whale for towing.

“We couldn’t just watch,” Ms Walter-Mommert told a cluster of reporters after the release. “When veterinarians said the whale could be moved without undue risk, we made a choice to act quickly. You feel very small standing next to such a magnificent animal. It felt like the only moral thing to try.”

Not everyone applauded. Some marine biologists warned that moving a large whale could increase stress and injury. “Handling a cetacean of that size is like carrying a heart that must keep beating continuously,” said Dr. Anja Möller, a marine mammalogist who has studied strandings for decades. “There are always risks of internal trauma, masking of illness, or disorientation after transport.”

Engineering Hope: The Barge, the Channel, the Moment of Release

The operation itself had the air of a theater production: specialist crews, heavy straps, a channel hand-dug into the sand to make a runway to water, and a barge waiting with a flooded hold to receive Timmy. Rescuers swam alongside as the whale moved into the vessel — an intimate ballet of human determination and cetacean instinct.

“He didn’t cooperate like a dog at the beach,” joked one volunteer, wiping his hands on a jacket afterward. “But when he took off his tail and slid into that hold, we all felt like someone had pressed the reset button.”

Veterinarians were on hand throughout. After a tense tow, with the barge creaking and the North Sea’s swells testing every seam, the crowning moment came off Denmark’s coast. At about 08:45, Timmy slipped from the barge, breathed deeply, and turned toward the open water. Ms Walter-Mommert later said the whale had some superficial injuries — likely scrapes from the journey — but nothing that would stop it from continuing its migration.

What Happens Next?

For now, the whale is “swimming under its own power,” Ms Walter-Mommert said, and seemed to be heading in the direction of the Norwegian coast and, eventually, the Arctic — the northbound route humpbacks take to feed on dense shoals of fish and krill.

But the question that hangs over the whole episode is both practical and philosophical: when is intervention right? And who gets to decide?

After the Big Rescue: Questions That Outlast the Applause

The rescue has sparked celebration — and debate. Social feeds were awash with triumphant footage, but also with theories about why the whale stranded in the first place. Some accused sonar and shipping noise, others blamed changing prey distribution due to warming seas. Conspiracy-laden comments rubbed shoulders with heartfelt notes from schoolchildren who had drawn whales and taped them to telephone poles.

There are larger, systemic issues here. Strandings are not isolated events; they’re symptoms. Climate change is reshuffling marine life: prey moves, and predators follow. Increased coastal development and noisy shipping lanes add new obstacles to old migratory instincts. At the same time, maritime nations wrestle with limited resources for wildlife emergencies, and private funding can step in both as creative solution and a provocation — who pays, and why?

  • Humpback whales migrate thousands of kilometers annually and can live up to around 50 years.
  • Global humpback populations have largely rebounded since whaling bans, though local groups face varied pressures.
  • Strandings may be caused by illness, navigational error, human noise or shifts in prey distribution linked to climate change.

That list is small, and the reality is messy. It is the kind of problem that resists neat answers.

Walking Away, Watching the Horizon

After the cheers, some stood in quiet — the kind of silence you hear when a good thing has been done and yet the world remains complicated. A child asked her mother if whales remembered people; a fisherman lit another cigarette and said he hoped Timmy would find his old lanes again. An activist phoned her colleagues to document the transport and the fact that private money had intervened. A scientist sent the coordinates to colleagues to keep monitoring.

We can celebrate this outcome without pretending it solves everything. We can applaud the bravery of volunteers, the ingenuity of engineers, and the compassion of private donors — and still ask: are we building a world where rescue is the rule rather than the exception? How do we prevent these situations from happening in the first place?

For now, Timmy is a streak on monitoring maps and a hopeful anecdote people will tell over dinner in seaside towns for years. But the image that will linger is not of a barge or a bracket of straps; it’s that first breath, a white plume rising against a grey horizon, and a huge, wild animal turning toward the vast, uncertain blue.

What would you do if you were standing on that beach? How much are we willing to invest — in money, in policy, in the slow, patient work of protecting habitats — to make sure there are fewer rescues and more reasons for whales to find their way home on their own?

Man arrested in UK after bomb hoax at Peter Kay gig

UK police arrest man after Peter Kay show 'bomb hoax'
Comedian Peter Kay's show was halted after a 'potential suspicious bag' was found (File image)

Evacuated Laughter: A Night at the Arena When Comedy Met Caution

When the lights dimmed and the familiar cadence of a punchline hung in the air, thousands of people at Birmingham’s Utilita Arena were expecting an evening of relief and laughter. Instead, mid-joke, the show stopped, a hush spread like a cold hand through the crowd, and comedy gave way to a modern ritual: evacuation.

It was the sort of interruption that jars — not because the humor failed, but because the ordinary world nudged back in with extraordinary force. By the time stewards guided people out under fluorescent exit signs, an entire city block had briefly become a scene of guarded uncertainty. Police later confirmed that no hazardous item was found, but the event left a different kind of imprint: questions about safety, the rituals of public life, and how we cope when the rules of a night out suddenly shift.

What happened on the night

Around 45 minutes into the performance, two staff members approached the stage, spoke quietly with the comedian, and led him away. The audience, initially unsure whether this was part of an elaborate gag, soon realised something was amiss when ushers and security began a systematic sweep. Organisers moved with practiced calm, asking concert-goers to follow instructions, locate stewards, and listen for announcements.

West Midlands Police said officers investigated a report of a suspicious bag near the venue. After searches, no item of concern was discovered. A 19-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of making a bomb hoax and remained in custody as enquiries continued. “Our priority is the safety of the public,” an officer said in a routine statement, thanking attendees for their cooperation.

Nobody panicked — but nobody laughed either

“At first I thought it was a bit of stagecraft,” said Mark Reynolds, who drove three hours from Stoke to see the show. “Peter had the crowd in stitches one minute and then — silence. It felt eerie. People were calm but confused, like fish out of water.” Around him, couples clasped hands. A group of students swapped nervous smiles. An elderly woman tucked her scarf tighter and said, softly, “We’re alright. We’ll wait for instructions.”

Another attendee, Jasmin Ali, described the scene outside the arena: “You could see the neon of the city over the canal, but everyone was clustered in small islands — friends texting loved ones, security doing their walk-throughs. There was no rush. Just this collective holding of breath.”

The infrastructure of safety

Utilita Arena, part of the National Exhibition Centre complex, is built to host big nights — concerts that pull in tens of thousands, sporting fixtures, and touring shows. The arena’s doors can open wide for capacity crowds in the mid-to-high tens of thousands, and the NEC campus welcomes millions of visitors across hundreds of events each year.

That scale is both its blessing and its challenge. Managing the flow of people means training staff for emergencies, maintaining clear communication channels, and coordinating with local police. “Evacuation is never easy, particularly with a mixed crowd,” said Dr. Aisha Grant, a public-safety consultant. “But venues like the NEC rehearse these scenarios. The aim is always to get people moving calmly and account for vulnerable patrons — the elderly, those with mobility needs, or families with young children.”

Grant added, “Modern venues have learned painful lessons from past tragedies and hoaxes. There’s a constant tension between maintaining an open, welcoming atmosphere and staying vigilant to threats. Both are essential.”

A practical choreography

Watching stewards work that night was like observing a delicate choreography. Ushers whispered instructions through earpieces. Security swept aisles with torches. The public address system delivered crisp, measured information. Yet for everyone watching, there was an emotional script to follow as well: patience, concern, curiosity — in that order.

“You could feel the respect people had for each other,” noted another spectator, Ellie Turner. “No pushing, no shouting. It was actually quite moving to see strangers look out for one another.”

Why a hoax can feel as real as the real thing

Bomb hoaxes and false threats are not merely pranks; they strain emergency systems, eat into precious police time, and put people through the trauma of fearing for their lives. Each alert can ripple outward: roads closed, hospital resources diverted, live television interrupted. Even when nothing hazardous is found, the cost — both financial and psychological — can be significant.

Data collected by UK police forces over recent years shows that malicious or misinformed reports to emergency services remain a problem. While many incidents prove unfounded, the immediate response treats them as real until proven otherwise. That precaution is deliberate: the stakes are too high to gamble with inaction.

Local color: Birmingham’s response

Birmingham is a city used to adapting. A year-round hum of markets, canal walkers, curry houses spilling scent into the night, and commuters moving through New Street station has conditioned locals to a kind of urban resilience.

“This is a city that looks after its own,” said Fatima Khan, who runs a kebab shop near the NEC. “We did evening shifts feeding evacuated patrons last year during a storm, and we do it again. People appreciate small kindnesses when the machine of the city pauses.” Her shop — like many around the arena — kept its lights on that night as a shelter and a place to charge phones.

What this moment asks of us

When a comedian is led offstage and 15,000 people file into the dark, we confront something awkward: the fragility of public joy. We also see a stronger impulse — the will to protect, to step into a minor role in someone else’s safety story. It asks us to be patient with procedures that inconvenience us and to remember that behind each safety measure are people making swift decisions under pressure.

What would you do in that crowded hush? Would your first instinct be to laugh it off, as many did at first, or to assume the worst? Perhaps both feelings can live together — a recognition that life alternates between comedy and precaution, sometimes within the same breath.

Looking ahead

As the investigation continues, the practical outcome is simple: no dangerous item was discovered, and an arrest was made. But the broader story is more enduring. Large-scale gatherings will always be sites of joy and vulnerability. Technology, crowd management and law enforcement will continue to evolve, but so will the social rituals we bring to these spaces — the ways we comfort each other, how we weigh risk, and how we rebuild the mood after a scare.

There will be more nights at the arena, more laughs, more caravans of fans streaming in from surrounding towns. For now, the city settles back into its rhythm — lights reflecting in the canal, late-night buses rolling by — and the memory of the pause becomes another part of the city’s long, complicated story of togetherness and care.

NATO Seeks Clarity Over US Decision to Reduce Troops in Germany

US to withdraw about 5,000 troops from Germany
US troops during an exercise at the Grafenwoehr Training Area in Grafenwoehr, Germany

A quiet town on edge: what 5,000 soldiers mean to a place and a partnership

On a damp morning in a German town that has long lived in the shadow of an American flag, the scent of fresh bread mixed with diesel from an early delivery truck. A playground swings empty. Behind a row of neat houses, the shuttered windows of a barracks tell a story most mornings do not: the slow recalibration of a continent’s security.

The United States has ordered a reduction of roughly 5,000 troops from Germany over the coming six to twelve months. On paper it reads like a logistics puzzle — units, timelines, transport manifests. Up close, it reads like quieter cafés, fewer international school buses and an economic tremor for communities that have relied on US presence for decades.

“You notice it everywhere,” said Lena Bauer, who runs a bakery near a small base town. “There used to be soldiers coming here for coffee every morning. Their children played in the square after school. If they go, that’s more than uniforms leaving — it’s families, jobs, routines.”

What Washington says — and what it implies

The Pentagon’s review, officials say, is framed as a response to “theater requirements and conditions on the ground.” A senior US official, speaking on background, described the pullback as part of a broader force posture reassessment in Europe — a trimming of some deployments while holding others deemed critical.

Those critical points remain visible: major air hubs like Ramstein, which German officials insist are not “up for discussion,” and logistical networks that move materiel across continents. Yet this announcement follows a bitter public spat between Washington and Berlin, and it has arrived amid wider tensions over the Middle East and transatlantic burden-sharing.

“We are working closely with our US counterparts to understand the precise scope and timing,” said a NATO diplomat. “But make no mistake: this moment underscores the need for Europe to shoulder more of its own defense — something leaders have pledged to do.”

Numbers that matter

  • Planned withdrawal: about 5,000 troops over 6–12 months
  • US troops deployed as of 31 December 2025: Germany — 36,436; Italy — 12,662; Spain — 3,814
  • Estimated immediate cost of 60 days of recent conflict (US figure cited in congressional testimony): under $25 billion

Politics, personality and the pressure valve of foreign policy

This is not merely a military decision — it is also a political one. In Washington, domestic frustrations about a costly and unpopular Middle Eastern conflict have pushed leaders to reconsider long-standing overseas commitments. President Donald Trump and his advisers have publicly linked troop posture to political demands: allies’ stances on Iran, contributions to collective defense, and cooperation in contested waterways such as the Strait of Hormuz.

“We’re asking our partners to do more,” a White House adviser told reporters. “If countries don’t pull their weight, we have to prioritize what we can sustain.”

Across the Atlantic, Berlin has not been a neutral actor in this argument. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s recent comments about negotiations with Iran drew a furious reaction in Washington and unleashed a chain of public barbs. The friction is emblematic of a larger trend: alliances strained by personality, domestic politics and competing priorities.

In the towns and at the front lines: local reactions

For some Germans, a reduction of troops is merely the next chapter in a long story about national responsibility. “We cannot expect America to be the world’s policeman forever,” said Mayor Anja Köhler of a small Rhine town that hosts several US families. “If the troops leave, we will adapt — but Europe must be ready to invest more in its security.”

Others worry about the immediate consequences. Marcus Vogel, who served with the Bundeswehr and now works in logistics for contractors serving US facilities, worries about livelihoods. “Even if this is a strategic rebalancing, supply chains are built around those bases. Canteens, schools, builders — many will feel this,” he said.

Within the military community, there is also a pragmatic calculus. A US soldier who requested anonymity described the mood as “unsettled but professional,” noting that units have moved before and will move again. “We train for mobility. Families, though — that is the harder part,” he added. “Kids change schools; spouses look for new jobs. That doesn’t show up on the deployment sheet.”

Allies, NATO and the long arc of burden-sharing

NATO has reacted with measured language. “We’re clarifying the details with the US,” a NATO spokesperson said. “This development reinforces why our Allies agreed to increase defense investment.” That reference points to a recent pledge — cited by officials — for significantly higher defense spending among European members.

But promises and realities sometimes drift apart. For years, Washington has pressed European partners to meet spending targets and to modernize capabilities. The debate is not only about money; it’s about industrial capacity, rapid reinforcement, cross-border logistics and political willingness to act in crisis.

“If Europe wants to be a full security actor, it will need more than words,” said Dr. Isabel Moreno, a defense analyst. “Investment in equipment is one thing. Developing command structures, airlift capacity and a political appetite to act independently are another.”

Questions for the reader — and a wider reflection

What does a reduced American footprint mean for the average European citizen? For an American taxpayer? For the families who split their lives between bases and hometowns? These are not rhetorical flourishes. They are the human dimensions of geopolitics.

As alliances evolve, so do expectations. Is a Europe that provides more for its own security necessarily a stronger, more sovereign Europe — or might it fragment into competing national strategies? Can NATO survive the strain of political crosswinds while staying cohesive against shared threats?

Those questions do not have tidy answers. They will be debated in capital city conference rooms, in brigade kitchens, and in small bakeries whose morning customers no longer gather as they once did.

Beyond the immediate: the shape of a new era

What is clear is that this withdrawal is a marker. It signals a recalibration of American priorities at a time of global friction — from Iran’s actions in the Gulf to enduring worries about Russia’s posture in Europe. It also puts pressure on European governments to convert pledges into capabilities and to knit political will into concrete steps.

“History teaches us that alliances must adapt,” Dr. Moreno said. “This moment could be a painful spur to innovation, or a crack that widens into something more serious. It depends on choices, investments, and leadership — on both sides of the Atlantic.”

So as buses roll past the gray gates of bases and as diplomats in Brussels and Washington trade terse lines and careful courtesies, ordinary people rearrange their lives. They will, as they always do, find ways to adapt. But the question lingers: who will stand with whom when the next crisis knocks? And at what cost?

Israeli strikes leave 12 dead in Lebanon, health ministry reports

Israeli strikes kill 12 in Lebanon - health ministry
Smoke rises from the site of Israeli strikes that targeted the southern Lebanese village of Habbouch

Smoke over Habboush: A Ceasefire That Never Felt Like One

When the bombs fell in Habboush, the smoke didn’t simply rise — it climbed like a mute accusation against a fragile promise. I watched the images and, for a moment, could smell the burnt fabric and dust through the screen: whitecloaked volunteers running, a child’s shoe on a road, shutters trembling from the shock of another strike.

Lebanon’s health ministry later said 12 people were killed across the south in the latest Israeli strikes. Eight were killed in Habboush — among them a child and two women — and 21 people were wounded. In neighbouring Zrariyeh, four people died and four were injured. These are numbers, yes, but behind each figure is a family rearranged, a kitchen emptied of its familiar life.

The warning that came too late

Residents of Habboush say they were told by the Israeli army to leave to “open areas” at least one kilometre from the town. The problem was not only the order itself, but the timing. Less than an hour after the warning, state photographers captured clouds of smoke rising from the same streets the notice had told people to flee.

“They told us to go to the fields,” said one Habboush resident I spoke to over the phone, his voice brittle with sleep and fear. “But where do you go when there is nowhere safe? The open ground is only grass and the sky is still full of planes.”

Ceasefire in name, not in life

On 17 April a ceasefire was announced after more than six weeks of intense fighting between Israel and Hezbollah. The text of that agreement carved out an exception: Israel retained the right to act against “planned, imminent or ongoing attacks”. Yet the raids and artillery fire did not stop. Israel has continued to operate inside what is being called a “Yellow Line” — a 10-kilometre strip into Lebanese territory where soldiers have been conducting detonations and large demolitions.

In the town of Yaroun, local reports say soldiers detonated buildings and destroyed a monastery and a school run by a religious order. Shamaa, too, was the scene of detonations. The coastal city of Tyre — known to the world for its ancient ruins and its fishermen — heard the pounding of shells and warplanes in a place that, until recently, smelled of salt and frying fish at dawn.

Why those details matter

Monasteries and schools are not just bricks. They are places where histories and hopes live. To flatten a school is to flatten a generation’s classroom, its routine, its safe place to be a child. To demolish a religious site is to take at least a sliver of a community’s identity. These are symbolic and practical blows to the fabric of everyday life in a country already fraying at the edges.

Frontlines close to home: First responders under fire

Perhaps the most wrenching detail is the toll on those who run toward danger rather than away from it. Lebanon’s health ministry records show that since 2 March more than 2,600 people have been killed in Israeli strikes — a grim total that includes 103 emergency workers and paramedics. Two Lebanese Red Cross paramedics were among those killed in recent strikes.

“When our volunteers go out, they fear for their lives,” said a humanitarian coordinator who asked to remain unnamed for safety reasons. “They are not soldiers. They carry stretchers, water, blankets. Their job is to bring someone back to their family alive. The idea that someone who saves lives could be targeted is unbearable.”

Xavier Castellanos, the under-secretary general for national society development and coordination at the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, offered a similar lament near Beirut: that the volunteers who step into rubble and smoke do so with a real fear that their mission makes them a target.

Voices from the ground

“My friend was a paramedic,” a neighbour in Ain Baal told me. “He would always make tea for us when he came by, even during checkpoints. Now his uniform is folded on a chair in his house. People ask how we sleep. I say, we don’t. We just rest with one eye open.”

These are ordinary people with breaks in their days for bread and coffee, for catching up at the souk, for Sunday prayers. The war has made heroism banal; saving a life is a daily chore that has become life-threatening.

Local colours: Tyre, olives and the weight of history

To understand the ache of the south, picture Tyre at dawn: fishermen hauling nets from the Mediterranean, the tiled roofs glittering, a hush broken by the call to prayer and the smell of za’atar warming in tiny bakeries. Now imagine those streets punctured by the sound of distant artillery. It is not just the loss of life — it is the theft of routine, the erasure of a community’s daily rituals.

Olive groves in the hills, family gardens divided by generations, monasteries that held manuscripts and memory — these are collateral in a war whose reverberations stretch far beyond borders. People point to the cedar trees inland and ask, “Who will claim our history when our homes are gone?”

Numbers that stubbornly refuse to capture reality

  • Latest local tallies: 12 killed in recent southern strikes — 8 in Habboush, 4 in Zrariyeh;
  • Wounded in those attacks: at least 25 people (21 in Habboush, 4 in Zrariyeh);
  • Total fatalities since 2 March (Lebanon’s health ministry): more than 2,600, including 103 emergency workers;
  • Ceasefire date: 17 April, with carve-outs for “planned, imminent or ongoing attacks”;
  • “Yellow Line”: Israeli operations extending roughly 10 km inside Lebanon.

What this means beyond the tallies

Ask yourself: what does a ceasefire mean when the instruments of war still hold sway? To many Lebanese, it feels like a contract written in pencil — easy to erase. The continuation of strikes under a ceasefire umbrella raises questions about the shape of modern agreements and the calculus nations use when they say “we paused” but their planes remain in the air.

Globally, the images from Habboush and Tyre pose a larger challenge. We debate rules of engagement and the sanctity of humanitarian workers while entire neighbourhoods are reduced to addressless ruins. We speak of precision strikes while the casualties are mothers, children, paramedics, teachers.

Looking ahead

For people living in the south, days blur into a monotonous negotiation with danger: where to sleep, when to send the children to fetch water, whether to tend the goat that feeds the family. For humanitarian organisations, the dilemmas are thornier: how to deliver aid when roads are uncertain, how to protect volunteers, how to maintain neutrality in a landscape where the map of danger shifts daily.

“We need corridors for aid that are respected,” a Beirut-based aid worker told me. “This isn’t charity. It’s survival. And survival needs rules — rules that everyone has to follow.”

Questions to hold with you

As you close this piece, consider these questions: Can a ceasefire be meaningful while exceptions swallow the rule? How do we protect those who risk everything to rescue a neighbour? And what responsibility do distant bystanders — the global community, policymakers, readers of this post — have to turn numbers into urgent action?

The south of Lebanon is not just a theatre of war; it is a collection of towns with kitchens, olive trees, priests, teachers, and volunteers. The smoke that rose over Habboush was not just from an explosion. It was the smoke of homes, histories, and fragile agreements burning in real time. If we are to keep witnessing, let it be with the intent to understand and to act.

Dowlada Federalka oo amartay in laga guuro xaruntii Jaamacadda Ummadda

May 02(Jowhar) Wasiirka Wasaaradda Waxbarashada, Hiddaha iyo Tacliinta Sare ee Xukuumadda Federaalka Soomaaliya, Faarax Sheekh Cabdulqaadir, ayaa amar ku bixiyay in dadka deggen dhulka Jaamacadda Ummadda Soomaaliyeed ay si degdeg ah uga guuraan.

Can Italy and Spain derail Hogan’s bid for Ireland’s UN seat?

Hogan's run: Could Italy, Spain complicate Irish UN bid?
Phil Hogan is seen as the ideal candidate to become the first European director-general of the Rome-based organisation in 50 years

A Battle for Rome: Why Europe’s Quiet Contest for the FAO Could Shape Tomorrow’s Dinner Table

Walk the broad avenues that lead to the FAO headquarters in Rome and you can feel history rubbing shoulders with the present. Olive trees rustle under the shadow of imperial walls, pigeons wheel over a marble façade, and inside, a less romantic but far more consequential struggle is unfolding — a diplomatic order-of-battle over who will steer the UN’s food agency at a time when the world’s cupboards look unexpectedly bare.

On paper it’s a simple job: lead an organisation born in 1945 to defeat hunger, malnutrition and food insecurity. In practice, the role of FAO director-general is a geopolitical fulcrum. There are 193 UN voting members who will choose the next leader in July 2027. But before Rome’s assembly hall can seal a choice, Europe is trying — in private and sometimes not-so-private corridors — to unite behind a single nominee. That unity is fraying.

The man in the middle: Phil Hogan

Phil Hogan, once Ireland’s agriculture and later EU trade commissioner, has quietly emerged as the candidate Brussels’ centre-right circles like to whisper about. At 66, Hogan carries the kind of résumé that appeals to both technocrats and donors: years in high-level European office, a command of agricultural policy, and the political instincts honed in Dublin leather-clad debates and Brussels committee rooms.

“He knows how to move in these institutions,” says a Dublin official who has watched Hogan’s outreach across capitals. “People remember experience. They remember who can get things done.”

Hogan’s post-Brussels life has been more mercantile than monastic. After his 2020 resignation he founded a lobbying firm — Hogan Associates — with a client list that reads like a modern economic directory: finance, tech, pharmaceuticals. The firm reported over €1 million turnover in 2024 in the EU transparency register. To some, that background makes him a pragmatic fixer; to others it raises questions about the line between public service and private influence.

Rivals, reasons and the politics of nomination

But Hogan is not running unopposed. Italy has put forward Maurizio Martina, a former agriculture minister who currently sits within FAO’s deputy leadership, while Spain’s pick is veteran minister Luis Planas, a well-known figure around EU ministerial tables. Both candidates have their own maps of alliances.

“This isn’t just about personalities,” an Italian foreign ministry source confides. “It’s about preserving influence. If Rome fields a candidate, it’s to keep a seat at the table — or at least the deputy chair.”

Madrid’s calculation is no less strategic. Spain is a major voluntary donor to FAO and has deep ties with Latin American capitals. “Planas has been cultivating relationships for years,” says a Madrid diplomat. “That matters in elections where personal contacts sway votes.”

And the EU process itself is messy by design. There is an informal convention: member states seek to present a single, united candidate. But that arrangement is not legally binding. Cyprus, which currently holds the EU presidency and is shepherding the selection, has until late May to decide whether to hold a secret indicative vote. A final moment of reckoning is expected at an EU agriculture meeting in Luxembourg in June — though officials increasingly warn that the deadline is perilously slim.

Why this job matters — the stakes beyond personality

This fight is not vanity. It’s about who controls agendas, who sets priorities, and who can defend — or weaponise — international humanitarian responses when politics and food collide.

Consider the numbers. The UN’s state of global food security and nutrition report has painted a grim landscape: hundreds of millions contend with chronic food insecurity; tens of millions of children suffer acute malnutrition. The FAO’s work touches emergency rations and long-term agricultural transformation alike. Whoever sits in the director-general’s chair will be a steward of billions in aid, scientific networks, and norms that shape what farmers plant and how nutrition policies are set in capitals from Kinshasa to Kansas.

Then add geopolitics. Tensions in the Strait of Hormuz have underscored how fragile supply lines are; roughly one-fifth of the world’s urea and ammonia — ingredients for fertilisers that feed modern agriculture — transits those waters. A prolonged closure or disruption could ripple into harvests, markets and prices.

“You don’t realise until your local supermarket has empty shelves how interconnected these systems are,” says Maria, a vegetable vendor in a Dublin market who worries about rising input costs. “It starts with a shipment somewhere else and ends with what you can buy for your family.”

There are also accusations — voiced most forcefully by some EU politicians — that the FAO under the outgoing director-general appeared at times to hew towards a narrow set of geopolitical interests. Critics worry that a UN agency intended to be neutral could be instrumentalised to frustrate sanctions or privilege certain blocs.

What Europe is arguing for — and against

For Brussels, a united European candidate would mean influence: a chance to champion transparency in food markets, to push sustainable agricultural transition, and to resist politicisation. The Cyprus presidency has appealed for coherence, saying the EU’s leading role in global food security requires a single approach.

“It remains of strategic importance for the European Union to move towards a unified approach,” a Cyprus presidency spokesperson told campaigners. “We are trying to be an honest broker.”

Not everyone is convinced that unity is either possible or desirable. Some capitals, especially in Rome and Madrid, view an internal EU agreement as a potential sacrifice of national leverage. They see value in running their own ticket — either out of genuine belief or as bargaining chips to protect national interests elsewhere in the UN system.

Local color and wider currents

Behind the diplomatic communiqués are human rhythms. In Rome, FAO staff talk about the palazzo corridors as if they were rival cafés where alliances brew. In Brussels, Hogan has been courted at conferences on agroecology — an odd stop for someone who once represented corporate clients — and in Dublin the conversation in pubs about the campaign mixes national pride with a sense that Ireland, historically outsized in this corner of multilateralism, might finally reclaim a prized post.

“We’ve had people do very well in Rome from Ireland,” notes an Irish academic who spent years liaising with FAO scientists. “It would be a big moment.”

But the contest also sits at the intersection of larger trends: the creeping fragmentation of multilateralism, the politicisation of humanitarian institutions, and a world where food security is increasingly at the mercy of climate extremes, trade chokepoints and geopolitical rivalry.

So as the EU squabbles quietly in meeting rooms, a simple question hangs in the Mediterranean air: who will be trusted to keep the world fed when politics turns the tap of cooperation down?

That question matters to farmers outside Rome, to aid workers in drought-stricken regions, to consumers at grocery counters, and to diplomats counting votes in dimly lit conference halls. It is, in short, one of those decisions that looks like a bureaucratic shuffle but feels — deeply — like the shaping of futures.

Will Europe find the discipline to act as one, or will national ambition fracture its influence? And beyond Europe, will the next FAO director be able to bridge North–South divides and protect the agency’s mission from becoming a pawn in great-power games?

Those are the negotiations happening now, in backrooms and over lunches, in Brussels, Rome, Madrid and Dublin. The outcome will not just name a person; it will send a signal about who shapes the rules of the table where the world’s food security is decided.

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