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Golob fails to form Slovenian government, opening door for right-wing

Slovenia set for coalition talks after tight election
Prime Minister Robert Golob's Freedom Movement party ended in a near dead heat with the right-leaning Slovenian Democratic Party

A Thin Margin, a Big Pause: Slovenia’s Government in Limbo

On a damp spring morning in Ljubljana, baristas wiped espresso machines and the city’s pastel buildings seemed to hold their breath. Newspapers ran headlines that would have sounded improbable just weeks ago: a prime minister-designate saying he couldn’t put together a cabinet. In political terms, the country of just over two million people has been handed a messy arithmetic problem—one that will determine whether a liberal coalition governs or whether a conservative, Trump-tinged alternative gets a second chance at power.

“We are looking forward to our work in the opposition,” Robert Golob told reporters after meeting President Nataša Pirc Musar, describing a failure to secure partners among centre-right parties despite his party’s election victory. Golob’s Slovenian Spring (or the liberals he leads) emerged with a razor-thin edge in last month’s ballot: 29 seats in a 90-seat parliament. The conservatives led by Janez Janša, a polarizing figure who has already served three terms and whose foreign sympathies have included public admiration for Donald Trump, secured 28 seats.

The arithmetic of uncertainty

Numbers are rarely neutral. They are living things in parliamentary systems—bones around which alliances must clothe themselves. With 90 seats available, an outright majority requires 46 votes. Golob’s 29 and Janša’s 28 are both far from that mark, and even small parties or one or two wavering deputies can flip the script. The failure to form a coalition is not simply bureaucratic; it is a map of trust, old rivalries, and ideological fault lines.

“Politics here is now like a mountain pass in spring—still slippery,” said Dr. Ana Kranjc, a political scientist at the University of Ljubljana. “One misstep and you slide back. We have one party that won more seats but cannot find reliable partners. The other—Janša’s SDS—has kept its powder dry publicly. That creates an interregnum where the shape of government is uncertain.”

Voices from the street

At an old wooden table in a cafe near the dragon bridge, Maja, a 48-year-old nurse, stirred her tea and sighed. “We voted for change,” she said. “But now it looks as if change has voted for a timeout. I trust Golob, but he needs to find people who can actually work together. If that fails, what then? More promises, more talking.”

A young activist, Luka, who organizes community cleanups in Maribor, was blunt: “If the political class can’t agree, maybe voters should get to decide again. They promised a fresh start. That means not just new faces but new habits.”

What happens next: procedure and possibilities

Slovenia’s constitution sets the clock ticking. President Pirc Musar has 30 days from the parliament’s inaugural session on 10 April to propose a prime minister-designate. If the nominee fails to secure a parliamentary majority, parties have a further 10 days to present alternatives. If those doors close, the country could face either continued deadlock or fresh elections.

Janša, the runner-up, has publicly resisted immediate coalition talks. “The SDS is not forming any government at the moment,” he said, adding that he wants to focus on the constitution of the parliament and is “ready for new elections tomorrow” if that would produce a clearer mandate. Whether that is bravado or strategy—waiting for political winds to shift in his favor—remains to be seen.

Why this matters beyond Slovenia

It might be tempting to read this as a local skirmish. But Slovenia is more than a postcard of green valleys and alpine lakes; it is a member of the European Union and NATO, a small but strategically placed player in the heart of Central Europe. The balance of its government affects how Brussels and its neighbors handle everything from judicial reform and media freedom to migration and regional cooperation.

“For the EU, a stable government in Ljubljana matters,” said Markus Weiss, an analyst at a Brussels think-tank. “When small member states wobble, it complicates consensus-building on sanctions, energy security, and even enlargement policy. Janša’s flirtation with populist rhetoric and close ties to leaders outside the mainstream have often put him at odds with European institutions.”

Local color: culture, history, and the texture of debate

Walk the old town and you’ll notice how politics converses with daily life. Bus drivers chat about fuel prices and municipal budgets. Farmers in the lowlands of Prekmurje fret about subsidies; vintners on the Karst worry about export markets. In the Ljubljana market, sellers of Carniolan sausage and honey laugh, argue, and trade opinions on public radio reports. The debates are not abstract; they are about school funding, hospital appointments, and whether small businesses will get the help they need.

“We are used to coalition governments here,” noted historian Alenka Vidic. “Slovenia’s politics has always required compromise. That has been both our strength and our Achilles’ heel. A habit of coalition-building keeps extremism in check, but it also means negotiation fatigue can set in.”

Numbers that explain the mood

  • Population: roughly 2.1 million people.

  • Parliament: 90 seats; majority requires 46.

  • Election results snapshot: Golob-led liberals 29 seats; Janša’s SDS 28 seats.

  • Key date: Parliament inaugurated 10 April; president has 30 days to propose a candidate.

Broader currents: trust, polarization, and the health of democracy

Across Europe, the last decade has shown how thin the membrane between centrist governance and populist upsets can be. Slovenia’s story is a microcosm of a larger question: when electoral results are close, how do societies distribute power without eroding trust? Citizens look for competence and integrity; politicians look for partners and leverage. Both tasks come up against an increasingly fragmented media landscape and a public that is impatient for tangible results.

“Trust is the currency of democracy,” Dr. Kranjc added. “When parties refuse to talk, voters lose faith. When they compromise too quickly, voters feel betrayed. It’s a delicate score to keep.”

What readers should watch

There are several immediate things to monitor in the coming weeks: the president’s nomination; whether Golob or Janša can pull together multi-party support; any smaller party that decides to become a kingmaker; and public sentiment in the form of protests or demonstrations. If a government cannot be formed, the prospect of early elections—an expensive and destabilizing option—looms.

But beyond the mechanics, ask yourself this: what kind of political culture do you want in your country? One where parties hold out for purity, or one where messy compromise gets things done? Slovenia’s next moves will be a test of both ideals. They will reveal how quickly leaders can put daily governance above headline-grabbing rhetoric, and whether citizens get the tangible results they were promised.

“We want stability, not theatre,” said Maja, tapping her cup. “If our leaders can’t make that happen, they should let us decide again.”

As Ljubljana’s spring deepened, the streets filled with pedestrians and the drone of scooters. The politics of a small country can feel abstract to outsiders yet urgent to those who live here. For now, Slovenia is in a pause—exquisite, frustrating, and deeply human. The next act will tell us whether this pause becomes a new melody of cooperation or a prolonged cacophony that sends citizens back to the polls.

7.5 Magnitude Quake Strikes Japan, Authorities Issue Tsunami Alert

Tsunami warning as 7.5-magnitude earthquake hits Japan
Japan's Meterological Agency has said that tsunami waves are expected to hit repeatedly

A late-afternoon rumble: Northern Japan braces as sea rises

It was the kind of late-April light that softens the jagged edges of the Sanriku coast — fishermen mending nets, schoolchildren on their way home, shopkeepers stacking the last of the day’s bento boxes — when the earth rolled. At 4:53 pm local time, a 7.5‑magnitude earthquake struck offshore of northern Iwate Prefecture, the Japan Meteorological Agency said, and within minutes a chilling word threaded through the airwaves: tsunami.

For people who live on Japan’s long, serrated coastline, that single syllable carries memory and muscle memory. Evacuation sirens blared. Text alerts rattled pockets. “Evacuate immediately from coastal regions and riverside areas to a safer place such as high ground or an evacuation building,” the agency warned, urging residents not to return until it was safe.

What happened — and what we know

The quake was powerful enough to be felt as far away as Tokyo, hundreds of kilometres to the south, shaking panes of glass and causing commuters to grip train rails a little longer than usual. Roughly 40 minutes after the tremor, an 80‑centimetre tsunami was observed at Kuji port in Iwate. Initial warnings from the JMA said waves could reach as high as 10 feet (about 3 metres) in some places, and cautioned that multiple waves can arrive over hours.

National broadcaster NHK’s live footage showed busy ports and fishing harbors in Iwate with no immediate, visible devastation — fishing boats bobbing, breakwaters intact — but that calm can be deceptive. A JMA official told viewers in a televised briefing that the aftershocks could continue and urged vigilance. The prime minister’s office mobilised a crisis management team to coordinate rescue, information and logistics.

Voices from the coast

“We felt the floor lift under our feet like the sea had come inside the house,” said Akiko Tanaka, a shop owner near Kuji harbor, who climbed the stone steps behind her storefront with her elderly neighbour. “My neighbour’s cat refused to leave, so she wrapped it in a futon and we carried it up. It takes less than ten minutes to reach the evacuation shelter — but those ten minutes feel like an hour.”

At a hilltop evacuation site, fishermen huddled under raincoats, cigarettes burning between nervous fingers. “We’ve seen tsunamis here before,” said Hiroshi Sato, his face browned from a life on the water. “The sea changes in a heartbeat. Tonight we watch, we wait, and we do not go back down until the all-clear.”

Emergency workers and local officials spoke with a different cadence — precise and procedural. “We have dispatched teams to check the shoreline and coastal infrastructure,” said one prefectural official on condition of anonymity to focus on operations rather than headlines. “Communication is our priority: letting people know where to go and making sure vulnerable residents get lifts.”

Why Japan feels every rumble

Japan’s archipelago sits at a busy, bruised crossroads of tectonic plates. The country is on the edge of the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” where the Pacific, Philippine Sea, Eurasian and North American plates interact. The JMA and seismologists note that Japan experiences roughly 1,500 quakes a year and accounts for about 18% of the world’s earthquakes. The population of the islands hovers at approximately 125 million, concentrated in coastal plains and river deltas that have historically fed both prosperity and peril.

The scars of history remain vivid. Many residents still carry the memory of the 2011 Tohoku disaster — a magnitude‑9.0 undersea quake and tsunami that killed around 18,500 people and triggered the catastrophic meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant. “You don’t forget that sound,” an older resident in Iwate told me years ago — the same resident who, tonight, stood again on higher ground watching the lighthouse blink against the dark.

Authorities have been transparent about worst-case scenarios: the government has warned that a major rupture along the Nankai Trough — an 800‑kilometre undersea trench where the Philippine Sea Plate subducts beneath Japan — could potentially kill up to 298,000 people and cause as much as $2 trillion in damage. Those stark numbers catalyse policy and practice: everything from reinforced seawalls and evacuation drills to the national “disaster science” curriculum in schools.

Preparedness, culture and anxiety

Japan’s disaster readiness is baked into daily life. Yellow-and-black evacuation signs mark pedestrian routes to hills and temples. Monthly drills are normal. Radio channels test sirens. But preparedness does not erase anxiety. In 2024, when the JMA issued a special advisory about a possible “megaquake” along the Nankai Trough, grocery stores saw panic-buying, rice disappeared off some shelves, and families rearranged travel plans. A week‑long advisory in December 2025 followed a 7.5 magnitude tremor off the northern coast; waves of up to 70 centimetres were recorded and dozens were injured, though damage was limited.

“Drills keep us alive,” said Professor Naomi Ishikawa, an urban resilience expert at a university in Sendai. “But living under a tectonic sky is also a social and psychological burden. Governments can build walls and sirens, but communities carry the intangible work of preparation — the conversations, the mental maps, the plans for elderly family members.”

Beyond the immediate: what this quake tells us

Moments after the tremor, volunteers mobilised, NGOs dusted off contingency plans, and local councils opened gyms and school halls as temporary shelters. The scenes are familiar — and instructive. They reveal the strengths of Japan’s civil defence fabric and the gaps that remain: the need to speed communications to remote hamlets, ensure backup power for hospitals, and keep evacuation routes accessible in time of night and storm.

There are also broader questions. How do densely populated coastal cities reconcile economic lives bound to the sea with the existential risk it sometimes brings? How do governments balance investment in hard infrastructure — seawalls, automated gates, elevated shelters — with “soft” resilience such as social networks, local leadership, and mental-health support after disasters?

What you can take from this

If you are reading this from afar, consider how disaster preparedness is not merely a local concern but part of a global conversation about urban planning, climate resilience and social cohesion. Japan’s experience — its drills, its technology, and its scars — offers lessons for coastal communities worldwide.

And if you have connections in the affected area, one small thing can matter: reach out. A message, a phone call, a check-in. Human contact helps steady the nerves when the ground won’t.

So tonight, under starlight and sodium lamps, people in northern Japan sleep in clusters of blankets, or stay awake listening for the ocean’s steps. They follow the ancient practice of looking to high ground, while science and state do the hard work of counting aftershocks and checking damage. They hold fast to ritual and community — the slow, stubborn work of staying alive in a place where the earth keeps reminding everyone who rules.

What would you take if you had ten minutes to get to safety? How would your community respond? These are the questions we should ask before the next siren sounds.

MPs ramp up questioning of Starmer amid Mandelson scandal

Starmer faces grilling from MPs over Mandelson scandal
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer will battle to save his job in parliament later

A Quiet Scandal That Roared: Westminster’s Vetting Fiasco and the Price of Secrecy

On a cool Westminster morning, the marble corridors of power felt smaller than usual — as if the architecture itself were leaning in to listen. At the heart of the whispering was a single line of accusation: how could the government not know that one of its senior appointees had been red‑flagged by security vetting?

By the time Prime Minister Keir Starmer prepares to stand in the House of Commons, the story has stretched beyond one man’s appointment. It has become a question about trust, about the opaque systems that cradle national security, and about what happens when the civil service, intentionally or not, keeps ministers in the dark.

The immediate drama

Last week’s shock turned on an uncomfortable triangle: Peter Mandelson, once a central figure in past Labour governments, was appointed ambassador to Washington; UK Security Vetting (UKSV), the agency responsible for clearance, reportedly did not clear him; and senior officials in the Foreign Office did not alert ministers. When the truth emerged, the Foreign Office’s most senior official, Olly Robbins, was effectively removed from his post.

Down the marble steps and into the newsrooms, the language hardened quickly — “unforgivable,” “either lying or incompetent,” “a tawdry and shaming affair.” Those words were hurled by MPs and commentators, but they only echo an older, deeper unease: in a democracy, who watches those who watch the watchers?

How vetting is supposed to work — and where it went wrong

Developed Vetting (DV) is the most intensive level of security clearance in the UK. It involves deep interviews, background investigations and, where necessary, probing into personal associations. DV is used for roles where access to deeply sensitive material is routine — intelligence, defence, and some diplomatic posts.

The UKSV’s publicly available guidance notes that, when a “security risk has been identified,” there are limited circumstances where vetting information may be shared appropriately. That line — “limited circumstances” — is now the battlefield where rules, discretion and judgment collide.

A No 10 statement put out the legal framing soberly: while civil servants, rather than ministers, make vetting decisions, nothing in the law explicitly prevented officials from flagging a high‑level risk to the prime minister. “There is nothing in the guidance which prevented information being shared,” the statement read.

What we know — and what ministers say

Mr Starmer has said he was not told about the UKSV’s recommendation and that it was “astonishing” and “unforgivable” that he was kept in the dark. “I should have been told,” he told press. Across Westminster, that line — that a prime minister was not informed — has been treated as the core failure.

Down the corridor from No 10, opposition politicians have not been gentle. “Either lying or incompetent,” one senior Tory declared in public; another called the affair “shaming” and tied it to national security risks and diplomatic damage.

Inside the Foreign Office, sources with long careers in Whitehall took a different, quieter view. “We have a culture of protecting sensitive information,” said a veteran diplomat who asked not to be named. “Sometimes that translates into over‑caution. Other times it becomes secrecy by default.”

Faces in the story: not just officials, but people

Politics here is rarely abstract. At a café three blocks from Parliament, a young parliamentary researcher stirred her tea and shrugged. “People are exhausted with scandals,” she said. “But when it’s about national security and a public reassurance that turns out to be false, it bites differently.”

A retired security officer who spent decades doing clearance checks watched the story unfold with a practical eye. “Vetting is about assessing risk — not punishing people. If the services deem someone ‘high concern,’ that should be communicated up if the post is high‑impact. That’s common sense, not a loophole.”

What happens on Monday — and why it matters

When the prime minister takes his place in the Commons, he will attempt to set out the facts, to insulate himself from accusations that he misled Parliament. Yet for many MPs this is already a test of the ministerial code, a litmus test for accountability at the top.

Calls for resignation have come not only from the opposition but from some corners of the Labour movement — voices worried about electoral fallout ahead of the packed May calendar, when English local elections and devolved contests in Scotland and Wales will test the party’s standing.

Why this is about more than one appointment

At a surface level, this story is about administrative failure. Dig deeper, and it points to three structural tensions that modern democracies must manage:

  • Security vs. transparency: Agencies must protect sensitive data, but secrecy can obscure accountability.
  • Professional bureaucracy vs. political oversight: Civil servants are guardians of the state across governments, but ministers need information to be accountable to Parliament and the public.
  • Privacy law vs. public interest: Data protection matters, but when a potential national security risk meets a public office appointment, the scales tip toward disclosure, at least to those with responsibility.

Consider this: the public trusts institutions less than they did a decade ago. Surveys over recent years have repeatedly shown declining faith in government and experts. When that trust is fragile, administrative lapses can quickly become political earthquakes.

Questions we should be asking

What safeguards are in place to ensure ministers receive critical security information when appointments involve sensitive posts?

How do we prevent “institutional silence” — a learned practice where officials assume that secrecy is safer than honesty?

And perhaps the most uncomfortable: when secrecy fails, who bears the political cost — the officials who erred or the elected leaders who were left uninformed?

Endgame — transparency, reform, or more questions?

At its best, this scandal could be a point of reform. It could prompt clearer rules: when and how to flag vetting concerns to ministers, how to balance data protection with national security, and how to ensure record‑keeping and transparency in appointments to delicate roles.

At its worst, it will be treated as another Westminster scandal: heat today, headlines tomorrow, and no lasting fix. But the stakes are higher than reputation; they touch the integrity of democratic oversight itself.

As you read this, ask yourself: how much secrecy should Westminster be allowed in the name of security? And when transparency collides with privacy, who should decide where the line is drawn?

Whatever happens in the Commons, this story will live on as a test case — a small, bruising reminder that in democracies, processes are only as strong as the people who respect them. And when those processes fail, the public’s faith is the first casualty.

Siyaasiyiinta Mucaaradka iyo Odayaasha Hawiye oo shir xasaasi ah uga socdo guriga Sheekh Shariif

Apr 20(Jowhar) Shir ay isugu yimaadeen siyaasiyiinta mucaaradka iyo odayaasha dhaqanka ee beesha Hawiye ayaa maanta ka furmay magaalada Muqdisho, gaar ahaan guriga madaxweynihii hore ee Soomaaliya Sheekh Shariif Sheekh Axmed.

Pro-Moscow Bulgarian Radev clinches victory in election

Bulgaria's Kremlin-friendly Radev wins election
Bulgarian ex-president Rumen Radev ran on a pledge to fight corruption

A Night of Reckoning in Sofia: Bulgaria’s Long Political Winter May Finally End

The square outside Progressive Bulgaria’s modest headquarters in central Sofia felt, for a few electric hours, like the heart of a country finally exhaling.

There were bouquets of red and white roses — the color of the national flag — and clusters of people who had stood through years of uncertainty, waiting for a moment that might tilt history. When preliminary results showed the grouping led by former president Rumen Radev taking an absolute majority, the light in the crowd changed. Strangers hugged. A few elderly women crossed themselves in the quick, private way of those whose faith is woven from long habit and hard times.

“It is not just a victory for a party,” said Maria, a schoolteacher who had come with her teenage daughter to taste the possibility of change. “For many of us it feels like a chance to stop existing on the sidelines of our own country.”

Numbers That Reshape Power

The math was stark: with 91.7% of ballots counted, Progressive Bulgaria stood at 44.7% of the vote — a projection that will translate into roughly 130 seats in the 240-seat National Assembly. If that holds, it would be the first time since 1997 that a single formation has secured an outright parliamentary majority in Bulgaria.

For context: Bulgaria is a nation of about 6.5 million people, the European Union’s member state with the lowest GDP per capita. It has spent the better part of the last five years in a state of political churn, with repeated elections and fragile coalitions that failed to tackle endemic corruption and a long-running brain drain. In that landscape, a decisive result feels seismic.

More Than a Local Story: What Voters Said

At a kiosk near the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, a retired engineer named Ivan pulled his cap low against an April wind and said, “We are tired of backroom deals. We want someone to look at the courts, to look at the oligarchs, to look at the money that leaves this country. If Radev can do that, then good.”

Others were less certain. “Winning is one thing,” said a passerby who introduced himself as Nikola, a small-business owner, echoing a sentiment that has rattled through Sofia’s cafes for years. “Governing in this system, with entrenched networks, is another.”

Political scientists have been tracking the mood shift. “Turnout surpassed 50 percent — the highest since April 2021 — after a string of elections that saw participation dip to as low as 39 percent in recent ballots,” noted Dobromir Zhivkov of Market Links. “That’s a signal that the electorate took this vote seriously.”

On the Streets: Color and Concern

Local color punctuated the evening. A handful of young activists chanted slogans against corruption while an elderly man sold banitsa from a steaming pan. People hailed taxis in Bulgarian, ragged but proud, and at a shop window someone taped a yellow flyer calling for judicial reform and better pay for nurses.

“Everything simply has to change,” Stiliana Andonova, a retired engineer, told me after she voted. “We saw raids, arrests, seizures of cash. That’s why people came out. We are fed up.”

Promises and Contradictions at the Top

Rumen Radev, 62, stepped up to a microphone with that measured air of a former air force general. He resigned the presidency earlier this year after nine years in the role to lead his movement into the parliamentary arena. His central pitch was simple and direct: clean up the state and dismantle what he calls an “oligarchic governance model.”

“This is a victory for hope over a politics of fear,” he told supporters — a line that landed well with many who have watched a handful of powerful families exert outsized influence over business and media. He also pledged to “make every effort to continue on its European path,” adding a qualifier that revealed his cautious diplomatic posture: Europe, he argued, needed pragmatism and critical thinking in an era of shifting global rules.

That comment points to one of the central tensions: Radev has cast himself as an EU critic who favors closer, more practical relations with Russia. He has also opposed sending weapons to Ukraine and criticized a recent ten-year defence pact between Bulgaria and Kyiv — a stance that alarms some in Brussels and Washington but resonates with a segment of Bulgarian society wary of being drawn further into a geopolitical crossfire.

Voices of Warning

Boyko Borissov, the former prime minister who has loomed over Bulgarian politics for nearly a decade, was quick to temper the celebrations. “Winning elections is one thing, governing is another,” he said. He emphasized his party’s pro-European credentials and reiterated support for Ukraine, framing the debate as one about continuity versus change.

Analysts say these differences matter. Bulgaria sits on the European Union’s eastern flank, sharing history, trade links and a complex strategic position with its neighbours. How Sofia positions itself on issues such as energy, sanctions and regional security will ripple beyond its borders.

Corruption, Raids, and a Public That Said Enough

In the run-up to the vote, Bulgarian law enforcement struck hard: more than one million euros were seized in anti-vote-buying raids, and hundreds were detained, including mayors and local councillors. Those headlines fed a larger narrative of citizens who have watched public money and public office slip into private hands.

“There were times when votes felt like market goods,” said Boryana Dimitrova, a pollster with Alpha Research. “This result shows voters were prepared to push back. They wanted to end the logic of short-lived governments and to demand real judicial reform.”

Whether a single parliamentary majority will be enough to uproot long-standing malpractices is an open question. Institutional change requires more than parliamentary arithmetic; it demands sustained pressure, independent courts, and a civic culture of transparency.

What This Means for Europe — and for You

If Progressive Bulgaria’s majority is confirmed, Sofia will have a rare chance to act decisively. But choices will be messy: balancing EU obligations with a desire for “practical” ties to Moscow; curbing oligarchic power without sparking a backlash from entrenched interests; translating popular frustration into durable reforms that stop the brain drain and revive public services.

This election is not simply about one country’s politics. It raises questions that resonate across the continent: How do democracies rebuild trust after years of fragmentation? Can economic stagnation and corruption be addressed without social upheaval? And how should small states navigate great-power competition in a polarized world?

As you read this, consider this: what would you demand of leaders if you had lived for years seeing power concentrate in a few hands — and watched young people leave for brighter futures abroad? How do you balance security, sovereignty and values when those priorities collide?

Looking Ahead

For now, Bulgaria waits. Parliament will be convened, laws will be proposed, and the hard work of governance will begin. On the streets of Sofia, in villages where the old clock towers keep time for windows that look onto empty playgrounds, people are cautiously hopeful. Whether that hope is rewarded will depend on choices made in committee rooms and court chambers as much as in the smoke-filled corners of backroom deals.

“We voted for a new chapter,” said a young mother holding her child, whose eyes were already heavy with sleep. “Now let’s see if the story changes.”

  • Votes counted so far: 91.7%
  • Progressive Bulgaria share: 44.7%
  • Projected seats: around 130 of 240
  • Population (approx.): 6.5 million
  • Turnout: over 50% (highest since April 2021)
  • Recent low turnout (2024): about 39%
  • Anti-vote-buying seizures: over €1 million; hundreds detained

In the weeks ahead, watch for how Sofia handles judicial appointments, anti-corruption legislation, and its foreign-policy posture. These will tell us whether this election was a fleeting burst of enthusiasm or the opening chapter of a deeper, more transformative story for Bulgaria — and perhaps for a Europe that is still learning how to mend its own fractures.

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.

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