Mar 03(Jowhar)-Qarax xooggan oo jugtiisa si weyn looga maqlay inta badan magaalada Muqdisho ayaa maanta ka dhacay xaafadda Buula-xubeey ee degmada Wadajir.
Melania Trump presides over UN session on children in conflict zones

A First Lady in the Security Council: When Symbolism Meets a Smoky Chamber
It is not every day that the heavy doors of the United Nations Security Council swing open to a first lady. On a chilly New York morning, Melania Trump stepped into a room built for stern diplomacy and wartime calculus—rows of nameplates, towering flags, the hush that comes when 15 nations listen—and took the chair for a meeting about children, technology and education in conflict.
There was a surreal edge to the scene. The meeting had been scheduled before a fresh wave of violence upended the region; it unfolded just days after the United States and Israel launched strikes on Iran that have focused the world’s attention—and its anxieties—on civilian safety. For many observers, the setting felt like a collision of worlds: the ceremonial and the catastrophic, the symbolic and the immediate.
Historic, for better or worse
This was historic: the first time the spouse of a serving head of state presided over a Security Council meeting. Protocol sheets quietly ruffled. Diplomats exchanged glances. Some saw a well-meaning outreach to an issue that cries out for more attention; others saw the personalization of policy, an image of governance refracted through family and allies.
“The US stands with all of the children throughout the world. I hope soon peace will be yours,” Melania Trump told the council in a short, measured statement that sought to place education as the hinge upon which tolerance and peace could swing.
“It shows the importance that the United States feels towards the Security Council and the subject at hand,” UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said this week, framing the appearance as Washington’s signal to the world about where it wants to put the spotlight.
Voices from the ground: grief, accusation, and the question of credibility
As the polished language of diplomacy filled that chamber in New York, the town of Minab in southern Iran became an urgent, raw counterpoint in the global conversation. Iran’s UN envoy, Amir Saeid Iravani, accused the United States and Israel of responsibility for a strike on a girls’ primary school in Minab that he said killed 165 schoolgirls. “It is deeply shameful and hypocritical,” he said, pointing to the jarring optics of a Security Council meeting on protecting children at the very moment parents were allegedly mourning their children.
Reuters could not independently verify the casualty figures, and that gap—between raw grief and corroborated fact—was one of the most painful features of the day. In moments like this, every headline is freighted with the risk of amplifying tragedy and the duty to seek verification.
On the streets of Minab, people spoke with a cadence that mixed fear and a fierce need to be believed. “We heard the blast at the edge of the schoolyard; then there was dust and smoke,” said a woman who identified herself as the parent of a student at the school and who asked not to be named. “My son is safe, but so many families are waiting to know. We need answers.”
What the child protection community says
UNICEF, alarmed by reports from the region, warned that the military escalation marks a dangerous moment for millions of children. The organization urged de-escalation and cited the lifesaving role of education in conflict zones. China’s UN ambassador, Fu Cong, echoed a familiar refrain from child-protection doctrine: attacks on schools are one of the grave violations against children, and the international community must respond with robust investigations and accountability.
Experts who work on the ground say those calls are more than rhetoric. “When classrooms become targets, you’re not just destroying a building—you’re fracturing a community’s future,” said an independent child protection specialist who has worked for years in the region and asked to speak anonymously for safety reasons. “It’s a tactical blow with generational consequences.”
- The United Nations identifies six grave violations against children in conflict: killing and maiming, recruitment and use, attacks on schools or hospitals, sexual violence, abduction, and denial of humanitarian access.
- The Security Council has 15 members; the UN General Assembly counts 193 member states.
- UN agencies have repeatedly warned that large numbers of children—millions across multiple regions—live under the shadow of conflict and face interruptions to education, displacement, malnutrition and psychological trauma.
Politics, perception, and the role of symbolism
There is a broader conversation embedded in this single act of chairing a council session: who gets to speak for peace, and how does the messenger shape the message? The United States is in the midst of a foreign policy era in which personal relationships and family members have been unusually visible. The presence of a president’s spouse at the helm of the Council underlines this personalized approach.
A seasoned diplomat in New York, who asked not to be identified, noted that diplomacy lives on precedent and practice. “You can vary the choreography—but the credibility of those installations depends on the consistency between words and actions,” they said. “When a state convenes a meeting to protect children and is simultaneously involved in strikes reported to hit civilian areas, the Council’s moral authority comes under strain.”
Behind the rhetoric is another, less glamorous reality: Washington is behind on billions of dollars in UN contributions, and those arrears affect programs and peace operations that are often first responders when schools and hospitals are put at risk.
Education as protection—and as a contested battleground
There is no shortage of research showing that education protects children, reduces vulnerability to recruitment and exploitation, and provides psychosocial support that resilience hinges on. But when conflict seeps into the schoolyard, those stabilizing effects vanish. Schools are increasingly used as shelters, supply depots, or worse—becoming targets themselves.
“You cannot have rebuilding without education,” said a teacher who now works with a regional NGO, traveling between makeshift classrooms and refugee centers. “Kids need routine, learning, and a place where they are not told every day that the world is collapsing.”
Questions for the reader
What does it mean when gestures of concern are staged in the same week as deadly allegations? How should the international community hold itself—and those it accuses—accountable without becoming yet another platform for propaganda? And how do we protect children whose voices are almost never heard in the corridors where decisions are made?
These are not questions with tidy answers. They invite us to look beyond soundbites and into the messy work of verification, humanitarian access, and political will. They also demand that we remember the human faces behind the statistics: parents waiting for confirmation, teachers marking attendance sheets now full of empty names, children who will carry the memory of a destroyed classroom for the rest of their lives.
Closing scene: a fragile hope
Back in the Security Council chamber, as flags fluttered and cameras clicked, the agenda moved on. Few people would claim that symbolism alone will change the calculus on the ground in Minab or elsewhere. But the meeting did place an urgent subject on the international docket—a reminder that in war, some institutions still attempt to stand between power and its most vulnerable victims.
“Peace is spoken of as a lofty ideal,” one relief worker said quietly, “but it is born again in the mundane—the bell that calls children to class, the teacher who shows up, the parent who trusts. Those small acts need protection as much as any ceasefire.”
How we protect those small acts—through diplomacy, investigation, accountability, and funding—may determine whether a generation of children grows up to lead or to inherit scars. The Security Council meeting was a start. Whether it becomes a turning point depends on what comes next: the facts we confirm, the voices we listen to, and the promises the international community keeps. Will we rise to that responsibility?
Iran oo weeratay safaarada Mareykanka ee Riyadh iyo Trump oo si carro leh uga hadlay
Mar 03(Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha Mareykanka Donald Trump ayaa sheegay in dowladda Mareykanka ay si dhakhso ah uga jawaabi doonto weerarka lagu qaaday safaaradda Mareykanka ee magaalada Riyadh.
UN Secretary-General urges Israel to reopen Gaza crossings for humanitarian access

When the Gates Close: Gaza on the Brink as Rafah Shuts Again
The air tasted like dust and diesel. In Gaza City, a generator hummed its lonely, frantic rhythm beneath a sky that seemed to hold its breath. Then, as if someone had reached a hand across the border and turned a valve, the hum stuttered.
On a recent Saturday, Israeli authorities closed all border crossings into Gaza — including Rafah, the strip’s only gateway to the outside world that does not pass through Israel. For the more than two million people who live in the territory, already battered by years of conflict and displacement, the shutters going down are not an abstract diplomatic event. They are a sinking-in of dread: will hospitals run out of fuel? Will clean water stop? Will food supplies hold long enough for the next convoy?
A plea from the United Nations
From New York, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has urged an urgent reversal. “All crossings must be reopened as soon as possible,” UN spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said, puncturing the silence with a blunt warning that fuel and humanitarian resources have been rationed to stretch dwindling reserves. “When the doors are shut, we obviously stretch whatever we have to make it last longer.”
Rafah’s closure is especially painful because it is the crossing that links Gaza directly to Egypt — the narrow thread through which people, commercial goods, and lifesaving aid can move without transiting Israeli-controlled territory. It had only reopened to movement of people on 2 February, nearly two years after Israeli forces took effective control of the crossing amid earlier fighting with Hamas. Its latest closure followed air strikes that Israel said it carried out, with U.S. participation, against targets in Iran — an escalation that has reverberated through the region and into Gaza’s already fragile supply chains.
Counting down the hours
Inside Gaza, the arithmetic of scarcity is alarmingly simple. “I expect we have maybe a couple of days’ running time,” Karuna Herrmann, who heads fuel distribution operations for the UN in Gaza, told reporters. Other aid coordinators paint a slightly brighter — but no less urgent — picture: Amjad Al-Shawa, who coordinates between charities and the UN, estimated fuel might last three to four days and cautioned that stocks of vegetables, flour, and other staples could soon dwindle if crossings remain closed.
“It’s not numbers on a page,” said a young surgical nurse at a central Gaza hospital, asking not to be named for safety reasons. “It’s mothers holding babies while we count the minutes left on our oxygen tanks. It’s the dialysis patient who depends on a machine and the diesel that keeps that machine alive. We are not being dramatic — we are stating a timetable.”
What’s at stake — in practical terms
Gaza’s infrastructure is porous and precarious. The territory is overwhelmingly dependent on fuel delivered by truck through border crossings from Israel and Egypt. Without a steady inflow, hospitals rely on generators whose consumption can spike during emergencies; water and sanitation systems falter when pumps and treatment plants lose power; bakeries slow to a halt and supermarkets thin their shelves.
Local officials say most Palestinians in Gaza are internally displaced, living in scraps of shelter within the enclave. In the markets and alleyways — the places where daily life reasserts itself against war — people are acutely aware of the stakes. “When the trucks stop, the soup runs out,” said Mahmoud, a shopkeeper in Jabalia. “You can survive a day or two without much. But children cannot last without milk and warmth.”
Official responses and competing narratives
Israel’s COGAT agency, which oversees movement into Gaza, has sought to reassure the international community. COGAT said that since the start of an October truce there had been enough food delivered to meet needs, saying “existing stock is expected to suffice for an extended period” — without providing details or addressing fuel shortages.
That truce — brokered with U.S. support — included provisions to reopen Rafah, scale up aid flows and begin rebuilding. Now, with crossings closed, the truce’s promise feels fragile. The disconnect between stockpiles and distribution, between what is said and what is seen on the ground, leaves humanitarian workers scrambling to prioritize life-saving operations.
Scenes at the closed crossing
At Rafah itself, memories of long lines and makeshift shelters cling to the air like heat. Elders recall the day in February when Rafah began accepting people again, the relief that swept through families reunited with relatives or able to seek medical care abroad. Now, with the stamping of a seal and the tightening of borders, that relief has been interrupted.
“Why is it our fault?” asked Hamada Abu Laila, a displaced Palestinian who fled his home months ago and now lives in a crowded school converted into temporary housing. “We are here because there is war. Regional wars are not our business to pay for. But it is our bodies, our kids, who suffer the consequences.”
Beyond the headlines: what this means globally
How should the world measure the closure of a crossing? As a side effect of escalating regional tensions, or as a direct humanitarian emergency? Both answers are correct, and together they expose a painful truth: civilians often pay the price when geopolitical strategies are deployed. When borders close, when fuel is withheld, the impact is not abstract. It is visible in the faces of children waiting for treatment, in the stalling pumps that empty a cistern, in the bakeries that cannot bake.
Consider these realities:
- Gaza is home to roughly 2.2–2.4 million people, a densely packed population with high dependency on aid and cross-border supplies.
- Most essential services — health care, water, sanitation — rely on imported fuel to operate at even a minimal level.
- Humanitarian actors can stockpile to an extent, but perishable food, medical oxygen, and fuel have limits; when crossings close, those limits arrive quickly.
Questions to carry with you
As you read this from wherever you are, ask yourself: what does it mean when diplomacy is measured against the rhythms of a nursery ward or a dialysis machine? How do international actors balance security concerns with the immediate needs of civilians? And how do communities — those living at the seams of these geopolitical decisions — survive when the lifelines used to do so are severed?
For families in Gaza, answers are not abstract policy debates. They are how long a baby can be fed, how long a hospital can keep its lights on. For the rest of the world, the moment calls for clarity, pressure, and — above all — compassion. “Open the crossings,” Mr. Guterres urged. It is a plea that reaches beyond borders and into the small, urgent things that sustain life.
What happens next will be decided in corridors of power and by the hum of generators in basements. For those who live where the gates have closed, each hour counts. For those of us watching, each hour is a test of conscience.
Oil soars as Iran conflict disrupts crude supply routes
When the Strait Tightens: How a Week of Strikes Sent Energy Markets Reeling
The morning opened with a jolt: oil tickers flashing crimson as traders absorbed news of strikes and counterstrikes across the Middle East. By midday, a string of disruptions — from a drone attack that silenced one of Saudi Arabia’s largest refineries to the suspension of Qatari liquefied natural gas flows — had rippled through markets and into everyday life in places that never thought they’d feel the heat of geopolitical volatility so directly.
Brent crude spiked to as high as $82.37 a barrel — a rise of roughly 13% at one point — before settling back to trade near $77.79, still up about 6.8% on the day. West Texas Intermediate climbed in parallel, touching the mid-$70s intraday and finishing the session near $70.89, up nearly 6%. Meanwhile natural gas benchmarks lurch ed higher: Europe’s TTF front-month leapt more than 40% to around €45/MWh, and Asia’s JKM benchmark surged almost 39% to about $15/ mmBtu.
The triggers: strikes, retaliation and a shipping lane under siege
What started as targeted military action became a chain reaction. Iranian retaliation, followed by US and Israeli strikes, set off a cascade of security measures. Tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz — the narrow throat through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s seaborne oil passes — snarled. Anchored ships multiplied into a grisly necklace of tankers waiting for word.
“We now have hundreds of vessels idling or diverting, and each detour adds days — and costs — to shipments,” said Captain Omar Haddad, a veteran Marseilles-based shipbroker who has spent decades charting those currents. “For the crews, for the ports, for the economies downrange — it’s immediate and it’s visible.”
In Gulf ports, the anxiety was palpable. An Iranian container worker in Bandar Abbas told me over a tin of tea that the usual morning hum felt “muted, like a city holding its breath.” Across the water, in the port city of Fujairah, a fuel tanker owner said insurers were already tightening coverage terms, meaning operators would soon face higher premiums or be forced into longer, costlier routes around Africa’s Cape of Good Hope.
Supply shocks in the short term, more questions for the long term
Some of the market’s fire was blunted by the knowledge that global production has room to breathe. Producers from the United States to Guyana and several OPEC+ members had added supply in recent months, and analysts note that stocks remain near long-run averages. “This is a geopolitical shock, not a systemic, structural crisis — at least for now,” Priyanka Sachdeva, a senior analyst at Phillip Nova, told me. “But shocks have a habit of becoming the new normal if they persist.”
OPEC+ agreed over the weekend to increase output by about 206,000 barrels per day in April, a move designed to ease tightness. Yet the calculus on the ground is different: when a chokepoint like Hormuz is compromised, overland pipelines and alternative export routes simply cannot absorb the shortfall. Morningstar analysts pointed out that while some oil can move by road or pipeline, those volumes are a fraction of what slips through the Strait on any given day.
Financial houses are parsing scenarios. Citigroup analysts placed near-term Brent between $80 and $90 a barrel while JPMorgan warned that a multi-week squeeze in Strait traffic could push Brent north of $100 — a level with profound consequences for consumers and policymakers worldwide.
Local stories, global implications
Ask a commuter in Mumbai filling a scooter tank or a farmer in rural Texas buying diesel for a tractor, and the connection between a geopolitical flare-up and the price at the pump becomes intimate. If prices keep climbing, higher energy costs feed inflation, erode household budgets and complicate the political math for leaders gearing up for elections.
“When petrol jumps two or three cents a liter in a week, people notice — and they vote with that in mind,” said Miriam Alvarez, an economics professor who studies energy politics. “For administrations facing close midterm contests, a persistent rise in gasoline prices can be an electoral hazard.”
That’s not abstract: US retail gasoline prices are tied directly to crude benchmarks, and spikes during an election year have real political consequences. Domestic pressures could prompt emergency releases from strategic reserves, talks with producers, or diplomatic pushes to de-escalate — all short-term fixes that leave deeper vulnerabilities untouched.
Where LNG fits into the picture
Natural gas adds another layer of vulnerability. Europe depends on timely LNG cargoes to see it through winter and into spring. With TTF surging more than 40% and Asian markers jumping nearly 39%, buyers are scrambling to secure shipments. QatarEnergy’s move to halt production and declare force majeure on some shipments amplified the scramble, triggering not just price moves, but logistics headaches.
“LNG is not just about commodity markets — it’s about cold homes in Poland, factories in Korea, and power plants in South Africa,” observed Dr. Fatima Noor, an energy policy expert. “When suppliers pause flows, the human consequences ripple quickly.”
Beyond the next headline: what to watch
The markets are volatile, but volatility does not equal inevitability. Here are the threads I’ll be following in the days ahead:
- Ship movements through the Strait of Hormuz and any military escalations that could extend port disruptions.
- Statements and actions by major producers: output adjustments, emergency stock releases and insurance market responses.
- Retail fuel price movements in key economies and any policy steps — from subsidies to strategic reserve taps — that governments take.
- Whether the current disruption creates a sustained “risk premium” that keeps prices elevated even after flows normalize.
We live in a world where local conflicts ripple into global markets with dizzying speed. The latest episode is a reminder that energy is as much about geopolitics and shipping lanes as it is about wells and rigs. It’s also a test of resilience — from the microeconomics of a household budget to the macroeconomics of inflation targeting and growth forecasts.
So I’ll ask you, reader: how do we build systems — political, economic and technological — that are less brittle in the face of such shocks? Is the answer more storage, smarter diplomacy, diversified supply chains, faster transitions to renewables, or some combination of all of these? There are no simple answers, but one thing is clear: in an interconnected world, the cost of standing still keeps rising.
For now, markets will watch the Strait, ships will wait at anchor, and politicians will count the pennies at the pump. The rest of us will watch and wonder how the next ripple will reach our daily lives.
Deposition videos of Clinton and Epstein made public this week

In the Quiet of Chappaqua, a Storm of Testimony: What the Clintons’ Epstein Depositions Reveal—and What They Don’t
There is a particular hush that falls over affluent suburbs when national drama comes knocking. In Chappaqua, New York—where clipped hedges meet flagstone walkways and the mailboxes are often more polished than a politician’s talking points—that hush was punctured last week by the staccato of news vans, the muffled footsteps of staff, and the hum of a story that refuses to fade.
The event was both ordinary and seismic: closed-door depositions by Bill and Hillary Clinton, recorded and then released by a congressional committee probing the ties between powerful people and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The footage is hardly a courtroom blockbuster; no shocking revelations leap off the screen. Instead, what we get is a study in how two of the most scrutinized public figures of the last half-century manage reputation, memory, and the relentless appetite of partisan politics.
Scenes from the Deposition
“I did not know him,” Hillary Clinton tells the panel in a measured tone, refusing to let the conversation be pulled into gossip. Bill Clinton, for his part, insists he “broke ties” with Epstein well before the financier’s 2008 conviction and says, plainly, “I did nothing wrong.”
In quieter moments, Bill Clinton acknowledges what is indisputable in the public record: he flew on Epstein’s private plane several times in the early 2000s for work related to the Clinton Foundation. “We went on humanitarian trips,” he says. “I did not visit Epstein’s island.”
Hillary’s response carries an edge of strategy as well as invitation. She urged the committee to depose President Donald Trump—another name that threads through the Epstein narrative—saying the panel should ask him “directly under oath about the tens of thousands of times he shows up in the Epstein files.” It is a pointed reminder that in American politics, power invites scrutiny in all directions.
What the Record Shows — and What It Does Not
Facts anchor this spectacle. Epstein was convicted in 2008 of soliciting sex from minors. He died in a Manhattan jail cell in 2019 while awaiting federal sex-trafficking charges; his death was ruled a suicide. The Department of Justice and other agencies have released large troves of documents—flight logs, financial records, and interviews—that link Epstein to an array of prominent people. But being named in those documents does not equate to criminal culpability.
“There’s a difference between presence in a document and provable wrongdoing,” says Dr. Laila Karim, a professor of law and ethics who studies high-profile investigations. “Documents open doors for questions, but they rarely provide airtight answers by themselves. Depositions like these are part of the slow work of tracing networks, not the quick thrill of a headline.”
Neighbors, Newsrooms, and the Weight of History
On the street outside the Clinton compound, local shopkeepers and residents watched with the peculiar mixture of distance and ownership common in small-town America. “You feel it here,” says Maria Lopez, who runs a bakery three blocks away and has lived in Chappaqua for 17 years. “People come into my shop and they’re whispering. It’s like our town is on the front page again. But really, this is about much more than our sidewalks—this is about how power gets around people who can’t protect themselves.”
A retired teacher, Tom Bertram, shrugged when asked what he thought of the depositions. “I’ve seen a lot in my day,” he said, folding his hands over his cane. “It’s a reminder that institutions are supposed to hold the powerful to account. Whether they’re doing it or using the moment for scoring points—that’s the question.”
The Broader Frame
These depositions arrive at a fraught moment in American public life, where congressional oversight is often accused of being either a grave necessity or a partisan sword. Democrats, including some allies of the Clintons, have argued the inquiry is being weaponized to wound political opponents rather than to pursue genuine oversight. Republicans argue the investigation is about accountability and transparency.
“Oversight means nothing if it’s selective,” says Monica Reid, director of a victims’ advocacy group. “Survivors deserve a system that is relentless and impartial—where allegations are investigated thoroughly regardless of the names involved. But survivor advocacy is too often caught in the crossfire of politics, and that hurts everyone.”
Small Data, Big Questions
When documents in high-profile cases are released, readers scan for patterns: flights logged between islands and cities, names that recur, the faint spoor of a network. But these fragments provoke as much speculation as clarity. The public appetite for closure collides with the slow churn of legal process and the murk of incomplete records.
Consider the flight logs that make frequent cameos in discussions of Epstein. They show a series of trips, some tied to humanitarian work, others not. They raise useful questions: Who was on these flights? What was discussed? What brought these people together in the first place? But they do not answer the central, searing question: who is responsible for the crimes alleged against victims?
- Epstein’s 2008 conviction was for soliciting sex from a minor; the case resulted in a controversial non-prosecution agreement in Florida.
- Epstein died in 2019 in federal custody while awaiting federal charges; his death was ruled suicide.
- Documentation released in subsequent years has included thousands of pages and records, but inclusion in files does not imply guilt.
Where Do We Go From Here?
As the video files circulate and pundits parse the faces and phrases, one question keeps returning: what do we want our systems of accountability to do? Do we want them to be swift and theatrical or slow and methodical? Is the point to extract confessions, or to build cases that can withstand scrutiny in neutral institutions?
“The spectacle of testimony can be satisfying,” Dr. Karim says, “but justice and truth often require patient, unglamorous work. That includes supporting survivors, preserving evidence properly, and ensuring that investigations aren’t derailed by political score-settling.”
For onlookers around the world, the Clintons’ depositions are more than a local soap opera. They are a mirror. They ask us to consider how societies handle power, privilege, and abuse. They force us to ask difficult questions: Do our institutions protect the vulnerable? Do we allow partisan interests to eclipse the pursuit of truth? And perhaps most importantly—how do we prevent the harm that seeds cases like Epstein’s from taking root again?
As the cameras pack up and Chappaqua’s sidewalks return to their genteel quiet, the questions remain. The videos are a piece of a sprawling puzzle, not its conclusion. For survivors seeking justice, for neighbors seeking answers, and for citizens trying to make sense of power in an age of relentless exposure, the work continues—away from the headlines, in courtrooms, archives, and the patient labor of law and policy reform.
What do you think? When powerful people are accused or connected to wrongdoing, how should societies balance transparency, due process, and the needs of survivors? The conversation matters, because the answers shape how we, collectively, live with power.
Passengers Left Stranded as Global Aviation Faces Widespread Disruptions
When the Sky Shuts: How a Middle East Airspace Closure Sent Shockwaves Through Global Travel
There are moments when the world shrinks to the size of a terminal gate. You watch the departures board flicker from green to red, hear the airline desk click into emergency mode, and suddenly the carefully stitched plans of thousands of people unravel.
That is the image unfolding this week as a sudden closure of key Middle Eastern airspace — and the grounding of hubs in Dubai, Doha and Abu Dhabi — ripped a hole through global flight routes. The disruption is not a blip. It is a sprawling, messy rerouting of people, schedules and supply chains that has left hotels full, prices jittery and passengers asking whether the era of ultra‑efficient hub travel has a brittle underbelly.
Not just a few flights — a cascading problem
Look at the numbers and the scale becomes chillingly clear. Analysed flight data showed that, on one day alone, 1,579 of 3,990 flights planned to operate to the Middle East were cancelled — roughly 40 percent. Of those cancellations, some 747 flights were destined for the United Arab Emirates and 285 for Qatar. Dublin’s airport authority, daa, estimates 5,000–6,000 passengers have already felt the impact locally — and that’s only the opening act.
“Dublin’s a hub airport; we normally operate a dozen to 14 daily connections to the Gulf,” Graeme McQueen, head of media relations at the daa, told national media. “When those hubs stop, passengers either stay, pivot or are stranded. It’s been chaotic.”
Half a million travellers a day pass through Dubai, Doha and Abu Dhabi under normal circumstances; with those arteries closed, east–west flows — the flights that knit Europe to Asia and Australia — have been severely constricted. “We’ve not seen this level of regional hub disruption outside of a global pandemic,” said one aviation analyst. “The Gulf carriers are central to modern long‑haul travel.”
Inside the terminals: humanity and inconvenience
Walk into any major hub and you would see a shared tableau: people camped on luggage, small children wrapped in blanket jackets, conference travellers staring at screens searching for alternate routings, and airport staff juggling phone calls into the night. A woman from Dublin, stranded in Doha, described the sound of distant explosions and the tingle of uncertainty. “It felt like the whole room held its breath,” she said. “We were all just waiting for the next message.”
Elsewhere, at a makeshift information desk, a hotel concierge helps rebook a family of four who were due to fly to Melbourne for a holiday. “We’ve rearranged rooms twice in 24 hours,” she sighed. “People are tired but polite; they know it’s bigger than any one airline.”
Airport culture and the human details
There are cultural threads woven into the chaos. A retired Irish couple sheltering at Dublin Airport passed around a thermos of tea, offering quiet solidarity. At an overflow hotel near Dubai International, an expat chef pivoted his usual menu to offer simple porridge and flatbreads for stranded passengers, turning his kitchen into a small island of calm. Security staff — multilingual, patient, exhausted — became the unsung translators of worry into action.
Where the airlines stand
The response from carriers has been a patchwork of cancellations, reroutes and flexible rebooking policies. Major operators altered schedules across the region:
- Air France and KLM suspended or warned of disruption on Middle Eastern routes, with some cancellations stretching into early March.
- British Airways opened rebooking windows and refunds for passengers with travel through affected countries.
- Etihad confirmed all commercial flights to and from Abu Dhabi were grounded while Qatar Airways paused operations into Doha.
- Other airlines such as Lufthansa, Singapore Airlines and Turkish Airlines listed multiple suspensions spanning the Middle Eastern network for days ahead.
For many passengers the alternatives are thin. Analysts point out that direct flights from Europe to Southeast Asia or Australasia — the routes that could absorb diverted passengers — are already heavily booked. “There’s simply not a great deal of spare capacity,” said an aviation consultant. “Even where alternatives exist, they’re premium or full.”
Economic tremors: stocks, oil and tourism
Markets responded instantly. Travel shares fell in sympathy: TUI slid roughly 8.5 percent, Lufthansa around 6.5 percent and IAG, British Airways’ parent, near 4.8 percent. Cruise and hotel stocks also retreated as the prospect of prolonged disruption set in.
Fuel prices, too, tightened the screw. Brent crude spiked by around 7 percent, touching levels not seen in months — a reminder that geopolitics at altitude has consequences on the ground, from ticket prices to airline margins.
Major events, small mercy
Not every calendar item is collapsing. Organisers of the Australian Grand Prix, for example, expressed confidence the race would go ahead despite staff scrambling to rearrange travel. “We’re adapting; contingency plans are in place,” one official said. It’s a small solace for fans and workers who must still thread new itineraries through a thinning web of flights.
What travellers can do now
If you’re scheduled to travel to or through the affected hubs, here are some practical steps gleaned from airline staff, airport reps and veteran travellers:
- Check your airline’s website first — they often update rebooking and refund policies online before calling centres catch up.
- Consider travel insurance that covers cancellations tied to political unrest or airspace closures; read the fine print.
- Stay flexible: overnighting near the airport or choosing a longer, multi‑stop routing might be the only way forward.
- Expect longer queues and delays — build extra time if you must move between airports or change airlines.
What this means for the future of global travel
There is a deeper question here. We’ve built a travel ecosystem that prizes speed and efficiency — the hub-and-spoke model that concentrates millions of passengers through a handful of mega-hubs. That model is marvelously efficient until the hubs are closed.
Will airlines diversify routes? Will governments invest in redundancy? Or will passengers, burned by the experience, demand more resilient, direct connections? These are not only business questions; they are about how we keep the world connected in an increasingly volatile geopolitical climate.
As you read this, someone is repacking a suitcase, switching a phone number to voicemail, or choosing between sleeping on a terminal bench and a cramped hotel room. They are part of a ripple that began in the skies above the Gulf and reached around the planet. How we respond — with compassion, better planning, and clearer communication — will determine whether this week’s chaos is a one-off or the beginning of a new normal.
Where were you when the departures board went dark? How would you plan differently if the sky could close for days? The answers will shape travel for years to come.
Video shows US military aircraft plummeting from sky over Kuwait
The Sky Over Al Jahra: A Sudden, Surreal Moment
The clip appears before you: a streak of metal cutting the pale desert light, a burst of smoke, and then — impossibly — a parachute blossoming against the flat Kuwaiti horizon. For a country used to the hush of oil fields and the dignity of old palm groves, Al Jahra’s clear air filled with the physics of modern war.
What happened in those few, breathless seconds is being pieced together by officials on all sides. U.S. Central Command has confirmed a dramatic loss: three U.S. F-15E Strike Eagles came down over Kuwaiti territory during active combat operations. In the chaos — amid Iranian aircraft, ballistic missiles, and swarms of drones — CENTCOM said, Kuwait’s air defences mistakenly engaged the American jets. All six aircrew reportedly ejected and were recovered safely after a coordinated effort between Kuwaiti and U.S. forces.
Kuwait’s Ministry of Defence also acknowledged the crashes in a brief statement carried by the state wire. Iran’s state media, for its part, relayed a different line: the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed Iranian forces had struck a U.S. plane that later crashed in Kuwait. In the fog of war, competing narratives arrive almost as fast as the ordnance.
What We Saw — And What It Means
Images of a pilot drifting under a parachute are arresting not just because of their visual drama, but because they condense a dozen uncomfortable truths about twenty-first-century conflict. First: crowded skies are dangerous skies. Add into that mix artillery, missiles, drones, and the rapid pace of decision-making, and the door opens for tragic mistakes, even among close partners.
“This is the kind of error that haunts air commanders,” said a retired U.S. Air Force pilot who reviewed the footage and asked to remain anonymous. “You have split-second identifications to make. Friend-or-foe systems help, but they are not infallible. Once missiles and drones are in the air, the margin for error evaporates.”
Friendly fire has been part of warfare as long as armies have existed. But the tools have changed. The battlefield is now three-dimensional, filled with autonomous systems and fragmented command-and-control networks. It is messy, and that messiness can have geopolitical consequences when mistakes happen in allied airspace.
Why Al Jahra Matters
Al Jahra sits west of Kuwait City, a place where desert meets the urban fringe — date palms and low-rise buildings punctuated by the hum of trucks and the occasional rooftop terrace. The sight of parachutes over its district is the kind of jarring image that transforms abstract reports into something local and immediate.
“I saw something falling,” a witness in Al Jahra told reporters in the hours after the crash. “At first we thought it was a drone. Then the parachute — it looked like a person. People ran into the streets. Children were crying.” The human scene is simple and scaled: an aircraft, a chute, neighbors offering water and a blanket to someone who had just come down from ten thousand feet.
Voices in the Storm
Officials on both sides moved quickly to manage the narrative. CENTCOM’s terse explanation framed the incident as an accident during “active combat” operations, noting the involvement of Iranian aircraft, missiles, and drones in the same airspace. Kuwait’s defence ministry confirmed recovery efforts and said it was coordinating closely with U.S. forces.
Regional security analysts are already parsing the account for deeper meaning.
“The incident underlines how tightly wound the region has become,” said a security analyst based in Amman. “Any engagement now risks cascading into something bigger. Misidentification in the air is an old problem made more dangerous by new tools. This could have been a headline about catastrophe; instead, it’s a near-miss with a lot of questions attached.”
And then there is Iran’s reaction. Tehran’s media lines — particularly those coming from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps — framed the episode differently, asserting responsibility for hitting a U.S. aircraft. Whether that claim reflects on-the-ground reality, strategic posturing, or a mix of both remains to be seen.
Quick Facts
- Aircraft involved: U.S. F-15E Strike Eagles (three reported downed)
- Crew: Six aircrew ejected and reportedly recovered safely
- Location: Al Jahra area, Kuwait
- Actors in the airspace: U.S. aircraft, Iranian aircraft and missiles, drones, Kuwaiti air defences
Beyond the Footage: The Wider Questions
When a friendly system shoots down its partner, who answers the phone? Who takes responsibility? And how do allies manage the political fallout when the battlefield is also a diplomatic arena?
Military planners will comb through radar logs, communications tapes, and weapons-release data. They will look for the point at which identification failed, and for the procedural breaks that allowed a contact to be classified improperly. But the problem is not only technical. There are deeper policy questions about rules of engagement in complex, multi-actor environments — and about trust between partners.
“We need joint training and interoperable systems, yes, but we also need humility,” the retired pilot said. “Everyone assumes their systems are speaking the same language. They often are not.”
Humanity in the Middle of Strategy
For people in Al Jahra, the politics are secondary to the immediate scene: people coming down from the sky, helicopters circling, medics and soldiers coordinating responses. For families of the aircrew, there are phone calls, prayers, and long waits. For commanders, there is the calculus of escalation and the dread of unintended consequences.
And for the rest of the world, the episode is a stark reminder that regional crises are not abstract. They land in neighborhoods, they interrupt lunches, they produce images that travel faster than clarifications or apologies.
What Comes Next?
Expect investigations and statements. Expect regional capitals to parse the event for signs of intent, and for tactical adjustments: changes to identification friend-or-foe procedures, revised flight corridors, and perhaps stricter rules of engagement. Expect political leaders to talk about de-escalation — even as militaries on all sides prepare for the next time the sky fills with danger.
But one question lingers more quietly: as warfare becomes more technologically dense, how do we protect the basic human life at its center? How do we ensure that pilots parachuting into a neighborhood become less frequent images and not more?
We will be watching. Will you be watching too — not merely for the spectacle, but for the answers that must follow?
Zelensky Confirms Ukraine Peace Talks Still Expected This Week

On the Edge of Dialogue: A Fragile Pause Between Bombs and Hopes
There is a strange hush that falls across Ukraine’s towns after the sirens die down, a brittle quiet that feels like the world holding its breath. In the kitchens of Pavlohrad, in the rubble-strewn lanes of Kramatorsk, and in the makeshift shelters where families press their faces into winter-worn scarves, people talk about two things at once: the next missile and the next meeting.
This week was meant to be a moment of rare diplomatic focus: a US-brokered round of talks between Kyiv and Moscow had been penciled in for March 5–6 in Abu Dhabi. The plan, however, has become another casualty of a region that refuses to stay still. After weekend strikes across the Middle East — which rippled through global security calculations — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky told reporters that the talks had not been called off, even if their location was in flux.
“No one has canceled the meeting,” Zelensky said in a briefing, adding that Turkey or Switzerland could host should Abu Dhabi be deemed unsafe. “We will definitely support any of these three venues.” It was a calibrated mix of insistence and realism: the will to negotiate is present, he implied, but so is an awareness of the hazards that follow war into every room where men and women try to broker peace.
Talks continue, but distance remains
From Moscow, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov struck a similar chord of cautious optimism. “It is in Russia’s interest to continue talks,” he said, repeating Moscow’s stated preference for a diplomatic settlement even as the guns — and the missiles and drones — keep talking for them.
That rhetorical alignment masks a far wider gulf. After three years of fighting that began with Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, Kyiv and Moscow remain stubbornly apart on fundamentals — territory, security guarantees, and the shape of any post-war future. The public, meanwhile, watches for signs that bargain and blood can ever coexist in the same room.
Winter’s endurance and the looming summer of strikes
On the ground, Ukrainians say they have weathered the harshest part of the year. “We survived the cold,” says Olena, a teacher who evacuated her elderly parents to Dnipro last month. Her hands folded in her lap as she recounted nights without heating, when families huddled by gas stoves and hummed old songs to keep each other awake. “But surviving winter is not the same as being safe.”
Zelensky himself warned that Russia may be preparing a new campaign of attacks focused on infrastructure, logistics and water supplies. Such strikes, experts warn, are not just aimed at military targets; they are designed to strain governance and break the will of civilians dependent on electricity and running water.
“We’re seeing a shift toward systemic targeting of lifelines — power, water, transport nodes — intended to sap morale and sustainment,” said Dr. Elena Kovalenko, a Kyiv-based analyst who studies modern conflict logistics. “Air defense remains the most immediate need for Ukraine to blunt those strikes.” She added that, beyond hardware, training and spare parts are often the invisible currency that determines whether a system works when it is needed most.
Air defenses: the bottleneck in a long fight
Ukraine’s leaders have been candid about limits to what they can accept. Zelensky reiterated that Kyiv will not cede the roughly 20% of Donetsk region that remains Ukrainian — land that, for many, is not negotiable without guarantees that are, today, nonexistent. At the same time, he acknowledged a pragmatic reality: prolonged fighting will stretch the pool of air-defense systems allies can spare.
“A long war changes supply chains,” he said. “We understand that intensity of fighting will affect the amount of air defense equipment we receive.” The types of systems Ukraine has sought publicly — from medium-range systems like NASAMS and IRIS-T to longer-range systems such as Patriot batteries — require continuous supplies of interceptors, radar maintenance and skilled crews. That’s a pipeline that can be throttled by politics, production capacity and competing crises around the globe.
Casualties underline the urgency
Even as diplomacy whimsically chases available hotel conference rooms, the violence grinds on. Ukrainian authorities reported that overnight strikes killed at least five people: three in Kramatorsk, one body found under rubble in Dnipropetrovsk region, and another death in Chernihiv. Local officials said the city of Kramatorsk, a bastion of Ukrainian control under pressure from Russian advances, bore the brunt of the attack.
“We are tired of counting the dead,” said Pavlo Hryhorenko, head of a temporary shelter in Pavlohrad where families arrive with backpacks and blank stares. “People ask whether talks will stop the next rocket. We cannot promise them that. We can only promise we will try.”
Those numbers — small in a day but vast in lives — are threaded into larger, grim totals from the conflict’s third year: tens of thousands of combatants and civilians have been killed, and millions displaced, creating one of the largest humanitarian crises in Europe since World War II. The precise figure varies by source; but the human toll is indisputable and immediate at kitchen tables and field hospitals.
Local color and global stakes
Walk through a Ukrainian town now and you sense the crosscurrents of ordinary life and geopolitics: babushkas in woolen headscarves arguing over the price of potatoes, teenagers snapping selfies in bombed-out courtyards, volunteers cycling crate after crate of chargers and canned food into the night. In cafés that still hang on, patrons balance talk of the future with an unspoken ledger of loss.
“We talk about peace like a distant relative coming to visit,” a volunteer named Maksym jokes, then corrects himself with a softer note. “We want her to come, but only on our terms. We have learned the difference between a peace that frees you and a peace that erases you.”
The broader question these conversations raise is not simply whether two delegations can agree on a list of concessions. It is whether a global system — one that supplies arms, mediates interests, and musters humanitarian relief — can respond quickly enough and wisely enough to prevent the next humanitarian catastrophe while still asking the right moral questions.
What comes next?
For now, the plan is to try. Abu Dhabi remains on the table, but Turkey and Switzerland are being weighed as alternatives. The negotiating rooms will be small, the security tight, and the stakes enormous. Each side will bring conditions that feel essential to survival.
And the rest of us — readers, thinkers, policymakers — must ask ourselves: when a war reaches into our living rooms through streaming feeds and satellite images, how do we balance urgency and patience, pressure and principle? What price are we willing to pay for a ceasefire that is generous in words but stingy in guarantees?
In Ukraine, where people still bake bread in basements and light candles when the grid fails, the answer will be lived long before it is negotiated. The coming days will tell whether talks are the start of a genuine thaw or merely another interlude between thunderstorms.












