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Trump Says U.S. Could Escort Commercial Ships Through Strait of Hormuz

US could escort ships through Strait of Hormuz - Trump
Smoke rises after airstrikes in Tehran

When the World’s Lifeline Feels Like a Battleground: Oil, War and the Strait of Hormuz

There is a narrow strip of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran that has always felt larger than its map size. The Strait of Hormuz is the throat through which nearly one-fifth of the world’s oil moves; it is a place where tankers drift like metal whales and where a single misfire can ripple through economies from Mumbai to Minneapolis.

These last two weeks the strait has tasted the acid of war. American leaders say they are prepared to escort ships through those waters if necessary — a promise meant to steady markets and reassure jittery capitals — while at the same time Washington quietly eased a short-term restriction on Russian oil to blunt the blow at the pumps. The result has been a dizzying mix of military rhetoric, diplomatic unease, and swinging oil prices: Brent crude jumped more than 2.6% this week to top about $103 a barrel, and traders are bracing for more shocks.

A show of protection — and recalibration

“We would do it if we needed to,” a senior White House official told reporters off the record, describing contingency plans to escort commercial shipping through the strait. “But our hope is that cooler heads prevail before that’s required.”

At the same time, the administration issued a 30-day waiver permitting some purchases of sanctioned Russian oil already en route — a temporary lifeline for supply, and a political headache for allies. “We are trying to balance near-term economic pain with long-term strategic choices. It’s not pretty,” said an energy adviser in Washington.

European partners were candid in their frustration. Germany’s chancellor, for one, voiced the blunt calculus of their position: “Six G7 members warned against this move. The signals are mixed and the risk is high,” he said at a press briefing, underscoring the diplomatic strain.

Front lines in a region that thought itself used to them

What began as a regional escalation has bled into a more dispersed conflict. Israeli air raids have struck deep into Iran, with Israeli forces reporting strikes on hundreds of targets they say include missile launchers and weapons sites. Iran has launched missiles and swarms of drones toward Israel, and drones have been sighted over Gulf states — Kuwait, Iraq, the UAE, Bahrain and Oman — unsettling capitals unaccustomed to direct overflight by weapons.

The human toll is mounting. In just under two weeks of fighting, estimates put the death toll at roughly 2,000 people, most in Iran but with rising casualties in Lebanon and the Gulf. More than a million people, by some accounts, have fled their homes or been displaced. “We can’t keep track of every child who lost a parent,” a relief worker in southern Lebanon said, voice flat with exhaustion. “The town’s mosque is full of families who have nowhere else to go.”

In Beirut, residents reported relentless strikes on the suburbs. Lebanon’s interior ministry admitted it was overwhelmed; municipal shelters were full, and hundreds of thousands who sought refuge in the capital could not be properly accommodated. “There are women and children sleeping in cars in the rain,” a volunteer with a local NGO told me. “We are doing what we can, but we are out of space and out of supplies.”

Struck, yet defiant: public rallies and contested reports

Meanwhile, the streets of Tehran filled with people holding Quds Day rallies — demonstrations of solidarity with Palestinians that have taken on fresh life amid the wider conflict. State media showed ministers and senior officials joining the crowds, a public gesture meant to send a message of resolve. “People are not afraid,” the judiciary chief declared at one rally. “We will not back down.”

There are also competing narratives about the health and status of Iran’s top figures. American military officials suggested that Iran’s new leadership had been injured in recent strikes; Iranian state sources acknowledged a minor injury but insisted the leadership remained at work. These conflicting accounts have added a surreal layer to a war already defined by ambiguity and broadcasted bravado.

On the waves and at the pumps: the global economic shock

Beyond the headlines, the war is nudging practical lives. The International Energy Agency warned this week that the current disruptions represent the single largest oil supply shock in modern history — a puncture to a system long held together by complex logistics and political guarantees.

For ordinary consumers the impact is immediate. Gasoline and diesel price spikes have been seen from New Jersey to New Delhi. India, which has longstanding energy ties with Iran, is now facing a critical shortage of cooking gas; two Indian-flagged liquefied petroleum gas carriers were reportedly allowed safe passage through the strait, a small reprieve in a sea of complications.

  • Brent crude: up ~2.68% to about $103 a barrel (recent trading session).
  • Estimated fatalities in the conflict: ~2,000.
  • Displacement: several hundred thousand to over a million displaced in the region.

“A $5 bump in the pump price can mean the difference between grocery money and no grocery money for many families,” said an energy economist in London. “We are seeing the geopolitical risk premium re-enter markets with a vengeance.”

Allies, enemies, and the politics of shortages

The Washington waiver on Russian oil has been hailed in Moscow as pragmatic and criticized in Kyiv as dangerous. Ukraine’s president warned that the move could provide billions to Russia at a time when the Kremlin’s war coffers already draw on multiple revenue streams. The debate is a reminder that economic lifelines and military strategy are entangled in ways that make easy choices rare.

In Europe, discussions are underway about assembling multinational escorts for tankers — a naval manifestation of economic interests. France has been actively consulting with European, Asian and Gulf partners about a potential plan, though any operational detail remains sensitive and politically fraught.

Questions that linger — and what comes next

So where does all this leave us? With oil prices fluttering and the specter of naval escorts looming, the global economy is doing what it always does in a crisis: pricing the unknown. In the heart of the region the human cost keeps climbing. And politically, the fracture lines between allies — between the need to secure supply and the desire to deny revenue to belligerents — are widening.

Ask yourself: how far will nations go to keep commerce flowing when the corridors of trade become targets? And what will it mean for ordinary lives when energy, migration, and security snap together into a single knot?

“We used to think of geopolitics as something far away that our leaders handled,” a taxi driver in Dubai told me, looking across the glittering skyline toward the sea. “Now it’s in the price of our bread and the safety of our ports. That’s when it gets personal.”

For now, the Strait of Hormuz remains a fragile artery. The world watches, trades nervously, and waits for a cooling of the rhetoric that, in these narrow waters, becomes a matter of life, livelihood—and the shape of the months to come.

Pentagon intensifies investigation of recent Iran school strike

Watch: Strike on girls' school a 'targeting error' - US
Watch: Strike on girls' school a 'targeting error' - US

When a Schoolyard Went Silent: The Minab Strike That Has the World Asking How

On a sunstruck morning in late February, the painted murals on the courtyard walls of Shajareh Tayyebeh School — little birds, smiling children, Persian poetry in bright swirls — should have been a backdrop for recess games and the shrieks of girls racing one another across dusty ground.

Instead, the murals watched over ruin. By the time smoke and sirens cleared, Iran said 168 children were dead. Images filtered out: small shoes tossed like forgotten toys, backpacks torn open, a once-lively playground turned into a scene of stunned silence that rippled across the globe.

Within days, reporting from international outlets signaled something worse than the fog of war — initial investigative material suggested that US forces, not Iranian fighters, may have carried out the strike. The Pentagon has now elevated the inquiry into an administrative probe known in military parlance as a “15-6” investigation, a more formal process that can lead to disciplinary action if it concludes negligence or wrongdoing.

How the Investigation Shifted Gears

At the Pentagon, senior leaders have been careful with language. A defence official told reporters that the decision to appoint a senior, outside general officer to oversee the inquiry was “meant to put distance between the investigators and the command that planned the operation.” The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, added, “We need a process that can be trusted to get at the facts.”

The elevation to a 15-6 is not a mere bureaucratic flourish. It means sworn statements, a formal review of targeting protocols, weapons logs and intelligence sources, and the possibility that individual service members could face consequences. The head of the US Central Command ordered the step after an initial review; the Pentagon says the command investigation will take as long as necessary.

For families in Minab, process is a poor salve. “They tell us there will be a study, a paper,” said a mother whose daughter attended the school. “Words do not bring back our children. They are asking for time while our children are in the ground.”

What the Early Findings Suggest

Investigators reportedly are grappling with a troubling possibility: that outdated or faulty targeting data may have led US forces to confuse the school with a neighbouring Iranian military facility in Minab, a coastal town in southern Iran where date palms sway and weekly bazaars bring villagers from the hinterlands.

Video evidence and munition fragments examined by analysts suggest the strike was delivered by a Tomahawk cruise missile — a long-range, precision-guided weapon that, for decades, has been associated with US arsenals. While the Tomahawk’s precision is often touted, precision is only as good as the intelligence that points it.

“A weapon is only as accurate as the information feeding it,” said Dr. Leila Haddad, an independent weapons expert who has studied targeting errors in complex environments. “If the geolocation is old, or if a building has been repurposed but not reflected in the maps and databases, tragedy can happen. This is a human and technical problem intertwined.”

What a 15-6 Can Mean

The 15-6 process typically collects sworn interviews and documentary evidence and can recommend disciplinary steps ranging from administrative reprimand to courts-martial, depending on the findings. One former military investigator explained, “It’s the instrument you use when you need a paper trail that can survive legal scrutiny.”

For human-rights advocates, the move signals at least a willingness to probe the mechanics of the incident. “It shows recognition that something went wrong and a determination to understand what went wrong and why,” said Annie Shiel, US advocacy director with the Center for Civilians in Conflict.

Voices from Minab and Beyond

Local residents describe Minab as a place of open markets and fishing boats, a provincial town where life unfolds slowly under the heat and the scent of cardamom tea. The school was one of 59 institutions that belonged to a cultural-educational network that, archived pages show, had ties to the Revolutionary Guards. Its online presence — years of photos of classes, holiday performances, groups of girls in bright headscarves — made the building easily identifiable to those who knew where to look.

“We used to walk to school past the orange trees,” said a former teacher at the school. “There was a mural of a river on the wall. The children learned to recite verses of Hafez and to take pride in small things. Now every line on that mural seems like it tells a story we cannot read.”

A US defence analyst, who also asked not to be named, told me the gravity of the casualty figures — if confirmed — would place this incident among the deadliest single strikes causing civilian deaths in decades of US operations in the region. “There have been tragic incidents before,” the analyst said. “But the scale here, and the fact that children were targeted, magnify the consequences — strategic as well as moral.”

Politics, Public Messaging and the Struggle for Accountability

The arc of public statements has been messy. Early comments from senior figures sowed doubt and, according to some defence officials, raised concerns about whether the government would be willing to accept responsibility. Yet, after reports suggested US culpability, the tone shifted. Officials have emphasized that the final report will be accepted and acted upon — but many in Minab and far beyond will be watching how transparent that action will be.

“They can publish an apology,” said Zahra, a volunteer who helped collect names at a makeshift registry in Minab. “But for us, accountability means more than words. We want to know who failed, who will be punished, and whether anything will change to prevent another schoolyard from going silent.”

Why This Matters to the World

This is not just a local tragedy. It sits at the intersection of three global anxieties: the increasing reliance on long-range precision weapons, the fragility of intelligence in a world of shifting frontlines, and the erosion of trust between civilians and the militaries that claim to protect them.

Precision munitions were sold to the world as a way to reduce collateral damage. Yet, as analysts caution, precision does not equal infallibility. A chain of human decisions — how maps are updated, how intelligence is corroborated, who signs off on strikes — determines the outcome. And when that chain breaks, children die.

How might democracies, coalitions and armies reconcile the operational imperative to act quickly with the moral obligation to avoid civilian harm? How should international law evolve to address mistakes made by autonomous systems or by the data that feeds them?

Small Rituals, Large Losses

In the days after the strike, Minab’s small grief rituals took shape: tea boiled in simmering pots, women folding white sheets into simple shrouds, neighbours bringing dates and bread to families pacing the courtyards. A teacher I spoke with described an improvised memorial of shoes lined up like silent witnesses to lives interrupted.

“There is no way to stitch this back together,” she said. “We can say the dead will be remembered. But remembrance alone is not deterrence.”

Looking Forward

The 15-6 investigation will proceed. Evidence will be gathered, timelines reconstructed, statements taken. Courts, policymakers and the public will weigh the findings. But process alone cannot fill the empty seats in classrooms or erase the images that now crowd our screens.

What we can demand — as citizens, as journalists, as neighbours of a world defined by increasingly distant wars — is that the response be rooted in truth, not convenience; in accountability, not obfuscation. And when grief is measured in children’s lives, the measure for action must be uncompromising.

So ask yourself: when a single error can end dozens of young lives, who bears the burden of fixing the system that allowed it? And how do we ensure that the next mural on a school wall survives the politics and the missiles alike?

Stars shine on green carpet at Oscar Wilde Awards in LA

Watch: Stars on green carpet for Oscar Wilde Awards in LA
Watch: Stars on green carpet for Oscar Wilde Awards in LA

An Emerald Evening in Hollywood: The Oscar Wilde Awards Mark Two Decades of Irish Storytelling

Los Angeles glittered with a different kind of green the night the Oscar Wilde Awards returned to the Ebell. Not the gaudy neon of Hollywood Boulevard, but a softer, more resonant green—the color of home, of peatlands and shamrocks, of stories that travel farther than passports. For the 20th anniversary of this pre-Oscars ceremony, actors, directors, musicians and a diaspora of admirers gathered to celebrate a fact that feels small but is quietly enormous: Ireland’s cultural heartbeat has become a steady drumbeat on the global stage.

A room full of stories

Under the Ebell’s carved ceilings and chandeliers—this Los Angeles landmark that still smells faintly of old wood and possibility—guests traded laughter and long-form conversation. The night felt intimate despite the star power. Domhnall Gleeson, known for his chameleonic turns, stood near the bar and joked with an earnestness that made people lean in. Maura Tierney, whose career has threaded television and film with emotional precision, was all warmth; she hugged old friends and posed for photos with a gentle seriousness.

Director Lee Cronin, whose work has been a magnet for both critics and cult fans, accepted his honor with a half-smile and a clear-eyed gratitude. He spoke about making films in a small country with a far-reaching imagination. “Our landscapes are small, but our characters are enormous,” he said. “We bring an economy of story to a world that has forgotten how to listen.”

Who was there, and why it mattered

The evening was organized by the US‑Ireland Alliance, the Washington and Dublin-linked body that has quietly become a cultural diplomat, amplifying the connective tissue between the two countries. The awards—backed by organizations including Fís Éireann/Screen Ireland and Northern Ireland Screen—have grown into a cornerstone event in the run-up to the Academy Awards.

Matt Walsh hosted with a steady, mischievous tenor that kept the evening brisk. Music threaded through the program: Dermot Kennedy—whose voice carries a kind of wind-blown intimacy—took the stage, accompanied by the expressive, soulful guitar work of Dave Lofts. The music was not a backdrop; it was a reminder that Irish art has always been as much aural as visual: the timbre of a song can travel faster than a headline.

  • Honorees included Domhnall Gleeson, Maura Tierney and director Lee Cronin.
  • Host: Matt Walsh; musical performances by Dermot Kennedy and Dave Lofts.
  • Venue: The Ebell of Los Angeles, a historic venue with roots in the city’s early 20th-century cultural life.
  • Organiser: US‑Ireland Alliance; supporters: Fís Éireann/Screen Ireland and Northern Ireland Screen.

Voices from the night

“This event feels like a family reunion for people who make things for the world,” said Aoife Brennan, a producer who lives between Dublin and LA. “You feel the weight of history here—of people who left and of people who stayed—then you realize we’re all bringing something to the table.”

Local Angelenos with Irish roots came too. Eileen O’Sullivan, an Irish expat who’s worked in film wardrobe for 15 years, stood just off the dance floor. “You can’t underestimate what a night like this does for morale,” she told me, tapping her emerald brooch. “You go home thinking, we are seen.”

Academics and festival programmers attended as well. Dr. Liam McDermott, a film studies professor from Trinity College visiting for the awards, put it in perspective: “Ireland’s contemporary renaissance in cinema is not an accident. The investment in writers, in local craft, and in infrastructure has paid off. Irish stories have a particular clarity: they move between humor and melancholy without apologizing.”

Context: The Irish wave in global storytelling

It’s easy to point to faces—actors and directors—and call this a success, but the story is deeper. Over the past two decades, Ireland has become a small but potent hub for film and television production, co-productions and talent development. The island’s filmmaking apparatus efficiently marries tax incentives with creative labs and film festivals, and that ecosystem has become fertile ground for ambitious work that can carry international financing and audience attention.

Consider the diaspora effect: with roughly 5 million people in Ireland and millions more worldwide who claim Irish ancestry, there’s a natural appetite for narratives that tap into belonging, memory and reinvention. Hollywood takes notice not only because Irish talent arrives with polish, but because Irish stories ask universal questions in compact, surprising ways.

Behind the glamour: craft, money and cultural diplomacy

Investment has mattered. Screen Ireland and Northern Ireland Screen have, over years, funnelled resources into scripts, mentorship programs and production funding—small grants that often become the seed money for larger co‑productions. The US‑Ireland Alliance has used cultural programming like the Oscar Wilde Awards as a soft-power tool, promoting artists who might otherwise be boxed into national conversations.

“The awards are not merely celebratory,” said Patricia O’Connell, a cultural attaché who advises the Alliance. “They’re strategic. They remind decision-makers in Hollywood and Washington that the Irish creative sector is a reliable partner—one that offers talent, locations, and, crucially, stories that Americans and global audiences want to see.”

Local color and the small details that make a night

It wasn’t all speeches. Before the ceremony, I watched a line of people spill out onto the Ebell’s courtyard, swapping press notes and pastry crumbs. A bartender poured Guinness and a sharp, citrusy whiskey neat. A florist from West Hollywood had woven shamrock sprigs into the table arrangements. Someone had left a small, hand-painted sign that said: “Tell your story like you mean it.”

It’s these tactile things that keep cultural work grounded. A song sung in a bar, a grant given to a first-time director, an encouragement from an established actor—these are the scaffolds that raise a career.

Looking outward: what the awards signal for the future

So where does this leave us as the Oscars approach and the awards season churns on? The Oscar Wilde Awards are both mirror and megaphone. They reflect the sustained presence of Irish voices in global storytelling, and they amplify the kind of work that moves beyond national borders to reach wider audiences.

Ask yourself: what stories are we championing right now? Are we lifting voices that interrogate and expand our sense of belonging, or are we recycling safe narratives? The Oscar Wilde Awards, in their twentieth year, feel like a nudge toward the former.

As the night wound down and the city’s famous palm trees swayed in a warm breeze, the feeling was not triumphant in a headline way. It was quieter: a community pleased with itself for still being curious, for still showing up. We can measure success in prizes and box office, yes. But there is also this—people in a room, laughing and listening, making arrangements for the next film over a plate of late-night fries. That, perhaps more than any trophy, is what keeps cinema alive.

Unknown massive steel cylinder snarls traffic on Japanese highway

Mysterious large steel cylinder disrupts traffic in Japan
Roads in the vicinity of the cylinder were closed to traffic

The Day a Steel Column Rose from Osaka’s Streets

On a damp Wednesday morning in Osaka, the ordinary rhythm of the city — street vendors sweeping curbs, office lights flicking on, the trill of trains — was interrupted by something that looked like a scene from a surrealist painting.

Where a trench for routine sewer work had been open the day before, a hollow steel cylinder the size of a small room had pushed itself out of the earth and stood upright like a metallic obelisk, towering higher than a four-storey building.

People stopped. Phones lifted. Drivers honked in the slow-moving traffic that had already begun to snake toward the center of Japan’s third-largest city.

What Happened

City crews and engineers converged on the site within hours. The structure — a retention casing used to keep earth and water back during deep excavation — was about 3.5 metres in diameter and, at one point, had risen roughly 13 metres above ground. By the next morning, after frantic work to stabilize and weigh it down, it had been coaxed back to a still startling 1.6 metres above the surface.

“We received the first report in the early hours,” a municipal official told reporters, sounding as stunned as the commuters who witnessed the spectacle. “This column was not here the day before.”

Two arterial roads that lead into Osaka’s business districts were immediately closed. The ripple effect was felt across morning commutes: buses rerouted, taxis delayed, delivery trucks idling on parallel streets. One of the two lanes reopened later that afternoon; the other remains fenced off while officials consider cutting away the exposed portion of the cylinder.

Voices from the Scene

“I thought it was a movie set at first,” said Keisuke Tanaka, 54, who runs a coffee stand near the highway overpass. “Then my regulars came by and we all watched the cranes like it was some strange art piece. But we’re nervous — this kind of thing should not happen in downtown Osaka.”

Local shop owner Aya Nakamura, who has lived in the neighborhood for 28 years, put it more bluntly: “Our streets have lived longer than the people who built them. We hear about repairs, but seeing this makes you wonder what’s under our feet.”

Mayor Hideyuki Yokoyama addressed the media, thanking the workers who had waded into muddy, cramped conditions to pour water into the cylinder in an effort to submerge it. “We are relieved the situation has been stabilized for now,” he said, adding that the incident is being investigated thoroughly.

What Experts Say

Geotechnical engineers watching the footage and field reports point to several possible culprits. “A phenomenon like this is usually the result of an imbalance between buoyant forces underground and the weight or anchoring of temporary casings,” explained Dr. Keiko Sato, a professor of civil engineering with expertise in urban tunneling. “If groundwater pressure rises suddenly, or if a void forms beneath a casing, the column can literally heave upward.”

Dr. Sato warned that while rare, such upward migration is not unheard of in cities with dense underground utilities. “Where pipes, sewers, old foundations and newer excavations overlap, the subsurface becomes a complex puzzle. One small miscalculation or an unnoticed pocket of water can produce dramatic results.”

Possible causes being examined

  • Hydrostatic pressure changes from groundwater or recent heavy rainfall
  • Unexpected voids created by soil erosion or prior tunneling work
  • Engineering or installation errors during the casing placement
  • Degraded or shifting material in aging underground infrastructure

Beyond the Spectacle: A Sign of a Larger Challenge

Osaka’s metallic monolith is more than a brief curiosity. It is an unsettling reminder of a broader issue that Japan — like other advanced economies with extensive post-war infrastructure — faces every day: how to maintain and renew a vast, aging underground network while keeping a modern city running on top of it.

Last year, a massive sinkhole near Tokyo that swallowed a truck and its driver captured global attention, underscoring the stakes. Here, too, the nightly news showed footage of a chasm where pavement had been whole only hours earlier. Those images, now paired with Osaka’s rising cylinder, make the invisible world below feel dangerously visible.

According to Japan’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, a substantial portion of the nation’s bridges, roads and water mains were built in the decades following World War II and are now reaching or exceeding their intended lifespans. Municipal budgets are often stretched thin, and maintenance can be expensive and disruptive — a challenge that is both fiscal and logistical.

Money, Gold, and Maintenance

Osaka’s own struggles with infrastructure funding have been in the public eye. In a twist of headline-making generosity last year, the city received an unusual donation: 21 kilograms of gold worth roughly €3.15 million, reportedly given to help pay for water system upkeep. The donor had previously contributed a much smaller cash amount, and Mayor Yokoyama publicly thanked them while acknowledging that the city’s waterworks program is strained by costs that exceeded initial budgets.

“We appreciate every contribution,” the mayor said, “but ultimately systematic, long-term investment is what sustains a city. One-time gifts, however generous, can’t replace a comprehensive plan.”

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has emphasized infrastructure investment as part of a “responsible and proactive” fiscal agenda, signaling central government support for municipalities grappling with repair backlogs. Still, the logistical challenge remains: excavations disrupt traffic, construction can run over budget, and residents are impatient for safer streets and reliable utilities.

What Comes Next

Investigators continue to probe the exact mechanics of the casing’s ascent. Crews are weighing options — whether to cut off the exposed steel and reinstate the road quickly, or to dismantle more carefully and reopen the artery only after rigorous checks. Meanwhile, the city has pledged to accelerate inspections in other work sites.

For the people of Osaka, the event has been a jolt — a dramatic, visible reminder of the subterranean theatre that makes city life possible. “You always assume the ground under your feet is solid,” said Tanaka, the coffee vendor. “Today we learned that solidity is just a lot of careful engineering and maintenance away.”

Questions for the Reader

How much trust do we place in the hidden systems that make urban life possible? When maintenance is deferred for budgetary reasons, who pays the price — and how should cities balance immediate convenience with long-term safety?

As you ride a subway, drive to work, or sip coffee at a curbside stall, consider this: beneath every street is a history of construction, repair and sometimes, neglect. Osaka’s steel column may have been an oddity, but it is also a lesson. What are our priorities in keeping the infrastructure of modern life safe, sustainable, and humane?

For now, cranes and crews will do the delicate business of returning a strange monument to the earth. But the conversation it has provoked — about risk, investment and the hidden life of cities — will likely persist long after the road reopens and the headlines move on.

London mayor mulls new charges on SUVs in central London

London mayor considering charges for SUVs in city
SUVs account for about a third of all new car registrations in the UK (stock image)

When the Car Gets Bigger Than the Street: London’s Debate Over Large SUVs

Walk down a residential road in south London and you’ll see it: a high, glossy silhouette that seems to own the pavement as much as it does the carriageway. Parked across from a nursery, a large SUV towers over a row of scrappy terraced houses and a line of small bicycles. For many Londoners this has become unremarkable. For others it is a growing worry — a sign that the way we build and move through cities is changing, and not always for the better.

Mayor Sadiq Khan has asked Transport for London (TfL) to take a hard look at large SUVs as part of its Vision Zero action plan, a broad effort to eliminate deaths and serious injuries on London’s roads by 2041. At the centre of the debate is a simple, if unsettling, idea: size matters. TfL’s document points to evidence that large SUVs are more likely to cause death or severe injury to people outside the vehicle, and that their height and heft make it harder for drivers to see pedestrians and cyclists—especially small children.

Numbers that nudge you to look twice

These aren’t just impressions. In the UK, SUVs now account for roughly one in three new car registrations, a shift that has reshaped the urban vehicle fleet within a decade. TfL cites research suggesting that, in collisions, SUVs are about 14% more likely to kill pedestrians and cyclists than standard passenger cars and a striking 77% more likely to kill children. Those figures, repeated in briefing notes and policy papers, make a case that goes beyond emissions and styling: they signal a tangible public-safety imbalance.

“I feel like I’m playing a daily game of hide-and-seek with cars,” says Amira Chowdhury, a mother of two in Tower Hamlets. “When I cross the road with the buggy, there’s a moment of panic — you can’t always see the driver’s face. These vehicles are big. They move differently. And my son? He’s at eye-line with their bumpers.”

From emissions to ergonomics: Why SUVs moved into the spotlight

The surge in SUV popularity is not unique to London. Globally, buyers have favoured higher seating positions and perceived safety benefits, even as many SUVs are less fuel-efficient than smaller cars. In August 2023, Mr Khan expanded London’s ultra-low emission zone (ULEZ) to cover the entire city—an attempt to tackle air quality that already charges drivers of non-compliant vehicles £12.50 per day. On top of that, central London drivers can face an £18 congestion charge at certain times. Yet those policies focus on emissions and traffic—not vehicle geometry.

“We’re looking at a different set of externalities now,” explains Dr. Helen Park, a transport safety researcher at University College London. “Emissions are critical, but the physical dimensions of a vehicle change the severity of crashes and the sight-lines on congested streets. It’s not merely a question of who pays for pollution; it’s a question of who survives a collision.”

Voices from the street: friction, fear and convenience

Not everyone welcomes the idea of penalties based on vehicle type. “We all have different needs,” says Marcus Reid, a carpenter from Croydon who drives a large van-like SUV packed with tools. “Some of us need space for work or family. Singling out a shape of car feels punitive.”

Mike Hawes, chief executive of the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT), has argued that all cars sold in Britain must meet strict safety and pedestrian-protection standards. “Restricting consumer choice by penalising a car size is unfair to those who genuinely need a larger vehicle,” he said in a recent statement. “Safety is built into vehicle design across the board.”

But on a busy cycle lane in Hackney, a courier named Julian taps his helmet and gestures toward the traffic. “When an SUV squeezes past, there’s less space for me and for the bus. You can feel the pressure,” he says. “We’re not anti-car, but we’re pro-streets where everyone’s safe.”

Possible policy tools on the table

TfL has been commissioned to undertake detailed analysis into the safety risks posed by large SUVs and their wider impact on London’s roads. This could lead to policy proposals in London or advice to national lawmakers and the auto industry. What might those measures look like?

  • Targeted charges for oversized vehicles in specific zones or at certain times.
  • Design regulations that incentivise lower front-ends and better pedestrian visibility.
  • Tax incentives for smaller, safer urban-friendly vehicles and accessible public transport alternatives.
  • Infrastructure changes like protected cycle lanes and raised crossings to minimize conflict points.

“There’s no silver bullet,” says Sophie Lang, head of sustainable city policy at a London think tank. “It will be a mix: regulation, urban design, public transportation that feels easier than driving. And a public conversation about what kind of city we want.”

Local color: streets, stories and the bigger picture

Walk any neighbourhood and the stakes are clear. In Clapham Common on a Sunday, pensioners with knitted hats shuffle between cars that glint under the low sun. In East London, families spill out of council estates, pushing prams that seem fragile beside the hulking steel of newer SUVs. London’s narrow, often Victorian streets weren’t designed for 21st-century vehicle tastes, and that tension shows in scratches on lampposts, in conversations over garden fences, in petitions outside town halls.

So what kind of city do we want? A place where the car dominates the street scene, or one where walking and cycling are not acts of bravery? These questions echo beyond London’s borders. Cities from Paris to Bogotá grapple with vehicle mix, road safety, and the balance between personal convenience and collective wellbeing.

Questions to carry home

As London debates whether to penalise large SUVs, several questions linger: Who gets to decide what constitutes a “necessary” vehicle? How do we protect vulnerable road users without unfairly burdening certain groups? And how do measures here ripple across the world—shaping how other cities weigh safety against freedom of choice?

“Change is never comfortable,” says Amira, watching her children cycle slowly down the pavement. “But when I think of my kids playing on the street instead of inside, I’m prepared for discomfort if it makes the roads safer.”

That sentiment—both personal and political—captures the heart of the issue. London’s streets are a living tapestry of commuters, carers, couriers, and children. The question now is how to weave them together so that the weave holds, even as the shapes on the road grow larger. Will size be taxed, redesigned, or regulated out of the cityscape? The answer will say not just something about transport policy, but about what Londoners value when they cross a street and look both ways.

Afar askari oo Maraykan ah oo ku dhimatay diyaarad ku burburtay Ciraq

Mar 13(Jowhar)-Diyaarad laga leeyahay dalka Mareykanka oo ah nooca shidaalk siisa diyaaradaha dagaalka ayaa ku burburtay galbeedka dalka Ciraaq, waxaana ku dhintay afar ka mid ah lixdii shaqaalihii diyaaradda, sida uu sheegay taliska dhexe ee Mareykanka ee CENTCOM, iyadoo ay socdaan dadaallada lagu samata bixinayo labada qof ee kale.

FBI: US campus shooter reportedly supported Islamic State

US university shooter was Islamic State supporter - FBI
A man was shot dead and two others were injured at Old Dominion University in Virginia yesterday

Chaos in the Classroom: A Campus Mourns, a Community Asks Why

It was an ordinary afternoon at Old Dominion University — the kind of late-winter stillness that sits over Norfolk like a held breath. Students drifted between lectures, coffee cups steamed against the cool March air, and the flag by the ROTC building snapped faintly in the breeze from the nearby Elizabeth River. Then, in one room, in one small pocket of time, everything changed.

By dusk the campus was a different place: cordoned-off sidewalks, uniformed officers moving with the studied urgency of people who have done this before, and a cluster of grieving faces. A life had been taken. Two others lay wounded. A shooter was dead. And a question buzzed through the crowd, loud and insistent: how did this happen here, in a classroom that trains the people many Americans rely on to protect them?

What Happened

Authorities have identified the shooter as Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, a former member of the National Guard who had previously pleaded guilty in 2016 to attempting to provide material support to the Islamic State group. He was sentenced in 2017 and released from prison in 2024.

The FBI declared it is treating the attack as “an act of terrorism.” FBI Director Kash Patel posted a statement on social media praising the students who intervened: “The shooter is now deceased thanks to a group of brave students who stepped in and subdued him — actions that undoubtedly saved lives along with the quick response of law enforcement.”

Special Agent Dominique Evans of the FBI’s Norfolk office told reporters the suspect shouted “Allahu akbar” before opening fire and that he told investigators he intended to carry out an attack similar to the 2009 shooting at Fort Hood, Texas. Three victims — all members of the university’s ROTC program — were struck. Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger named the fallen instructor as Lt Col Brandon Shah and wrote, “Lt Col Shah didn’t just lead a life of service to our country, he taught and led others to follow that path.”

Eyewitness accounts and official statements converged on one surprising — and chaotic — detail: the shooter did not die under immediate police fire. “There were students that were in that room that subdued him and rendered him no longer alive,” Special Agent Evans said, noting that the suspect was not shot by the students. Authorities have not released further specifics on how he died.

What We Know — Quickly

  • Motive: Investigators are treating the incident as an act of terrorism, citing the suspect’s prior conviction and comments during the attack.
  • Victims: Three ROTC members were shot; one — Lt Col Brandon Shah — was killed.
  • Perpetrator: Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, ex-National Guard, jailed 2017 for attempted support to ISIS, released 2024.
  • Campus response: Students intervened; law enforcement arrived quickly.

Voices from the Campus

What a press release can’t capture are the small, human moments that stitch a campus back together. “We heard shouting, then a pop — it sounded like something in the ceiling,” said a junior who asked not to be named. “Then somebody yelled ‘get down,’ and a bunch of us just lunged. I still can’t believe we did it.”

An ROTC cadet, bandaging a friend’s hand in a makeshift aid station, spoke in a steadier voice than his years suggested. “Brandon taught half of us here how to aim for more than targets — to aim for duty,” he said. “He was a leader. We reacted because we were trained. We reacted because we remembered what he taught us.”

A nearby resident, who had watched the ambulances arrive from her porch, wiped her eyes and summed up the town’s weariness. “We keep hearing about mass shootings like they’re weather reports,” she said. “You prepare for storms, you stock up on bread and water. But how do you prepare for something that’s meant to target your sense of safety?”

Context: Guns, Radicalization, and Returning Citizens

To make sense of this single, bloody episode, it helps to stand back and look at the landscape. The United States contains more firearms than people — a reality that shapes the contours of almost every conversation about security. According to estimates from the Small Arms Survey and other researchers, there are roughly as many as 120 firearms per 100 residents in the U.S., a statistic that helps explain why acts of violence can escalate so quickly.

But numbers alone don’t account for the other, quieter risks that thread through cases like this: the problem of radicalization, the challenges of rehabilitation, and the mixed success of deradicalization programs. Experts caution that prisons are not simple incubators; they are also laboratories where ideologies can be amplified or disrupted, depending on the programs and oversight in place.

“If someone has a history of trying to support an extremist group, and that person is reintegrated back into the community without robust monitoring or support, there’s a risk,” said Dr. Evelyn Carter, a researcher who studies violent extremism. “But the solutions are not simple. Surveillance can help, but so can community engagement, mental health care, and credible programs that offer exits from violent ideologies.”

That Same Day: A Wider Pattern

Across the country, another violent episode played out: a man drove a truck into a Michigan synagogue and its preschool. Security personnel there — trained and ready — engaged and stopped the attacker. All 140 children at the preschool were safely evacuated. It was a grim reminder that nowhere in the U.S. feels immune to sudden, targeted violence, and that security measures taken by places of worship and schools have become part of daily life.

Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard told reporters that hundreds of officers were involved in the response and that smoke from a fire inside the synagogue had sent several officers to the hospital for inhalation. “What happens around the world sometimes affects us, so we have to prepare for it,” he said, underscoring a point made increasingly often in recent years: local communities are on the frontlines of global tensions.

Questions We’re Left With

After the sirens fade, the questions remain. How did Jalloh, with a prior conviction for trying to aid an extremist organization, regain access to the tools of violence? How are universities balancing open campuses with the need to keep students safe? What role should prisons play in preventing reoffense, and how should communities be involved when a person is released?

Those questions don’t have easy answers. They thread through policy debates about gun laws, parole and probation systems, rehabilitation programs, and the way communities respond to individuals labeled as dangerous. They also require a kind of moral clarity that is too often missing from political conversation: a willingness to say that protecting public safety and preserving civil liberties are both urgent goals, and neither will be achieved without hard work and uncomfortable trade-offs.

Closing — A Community Remembers

At a candlelight vigil organized on short notice the evening after the shooting, a ROTC student read a folded card. “Lt Col Shah believed in service,” she said into the microphone. “He believed in teaching us to be stronger. We will not let his death be the last lesson.”

We can listen to the statistics and the policy experts and we can watch the footage of classrooms and ambulances, but at the heart of stories like this are human lives and small acts of courage: students who leapt toward danger, an instructor who taught more than drills, security teams who saved children in Michigan. The stakes are intimate and enormous at once.

As readers scroll past this piece tomorrow, what will they remember? The names? The numbers? Or the faces — the frightened, brave, resilient faces of people who, for a flash, were asked to do the impossible? If there’s one thing this campus and that synagogue unfold for us, it’s this: the need to look beyond headlines and into the messy, painful work of protecting each other — not just with policy, but with communal care.

What would you do if you were there? And what are we, as a society, willing to change to make sure fewer of us ever have to find out?

Trump asserts US strikes are destroying Iran’s regime

Both sides dig in as war in Iran approaches two-week mark
Smoke rises from the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted an area in Beirut's southern suburbs, Lebanon

When the Sky Shook: Two Weeks That Broke the Calm in the Middle East

There is a particular hush that falls across a city when it knows it might be next. In Tehran, in Tel Aviv, in Beirut and along the glistening skyline of Dubai, that hush has become routine—broken only by the anxious glow of television screens, the clatter of relief shipments being loaded, and the restless chatter of people trying to make sense of a world they recognize but no longer trust.

Two weeks into a widening conflict that has already killed thousands and uprooted millions, the region feels less like a map of nation-states and more like a pressure cooker: each strike, each declaration, each retaliatory volley increases the heat. Leaders posture. Markets wobble. Ordinary lives are remade in an instant.

Voices on the Ground

“You can feel the checkpoints being set up as if they’re stitching a different future,” said Laleh, a schoolteacher in northern Tehran, her voice low over a crackling phone line. “There are fewer cars at dawn. People walk faster. When the mosque speakers sound, it’s not the usual call to prayer—it sounds like an alarm.”

In Tel Aviv, a billboard with the face of the American president looms over a busy junction—an image meant to reassure some, to inflame others. “We wake up to missiles and to messages,” said Ahmed, a cab driver who grew up in Haifa and now ferries people between checkpoints. “I take fares, but some routes I refuse. It’s not worth getting stuck in a blast zone.”

Across the border in southern Lebanon, the streets smell of diesel and barbecue, reminders that life insists on continuing even when the horizon is on fire. “We shelter in basements, but people still queue for bread,” offered Rima, who runs a small bakery in Tyre. “The ovens are hot. The phones are hotter.”

What Leaders Are Saying — And What They Mean

On the diplomatic front, the rhetoric has hardened into threats and promises. Iran’s new hardline leadership has publicly warned of closing the Strait of Hormuz—a watery choke point through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s seaborne oil flows—unless neighbors shutter US bases on their soil. The message was blunt: comply, or risk escalation.

Israel’s government has signalled it will continue strikes on Iranian targets it believes underpin long-range weaponry, while the United States has publicly and repeatedly vowed to “destroy” what it brands a terrorist regime. The language is designed for domestic politics as much as for strategic signaling—demonstrating resolve to allies and to hungry domestic audiences while trying to deter further escalation.

“Words are weapons too,” observed Dr. Miriam Alston, a military analyst based in London. “When leaders speak of toppling regimes and of ‘unparalleled firepower,’ they aren’t just describing options. They’re shaping the battlefield of perception, which in turn shapes alliances, supplies, and investor behaviour.”

The Energy Chokehold: Why a Local War Turns Global

Energy markets have become the war’s loudest barometer. The Strait of Hormuz is not just geography; it is the artery of modern industry. Roughly 20% of the world’s crude oil that moves by sea passes through that narrow passage. When talk turns to its closure, traders respond in dollars and cents—oil shot up about 9% to hover around $100 a barrel in the days after the strike, after an earlier dip had sparked hope for a quick resolution.

Those higher prices cascade outward: gasoline pumps, airline tickets, shipping costs, even the price of food. The U.S. moved to ease some pressure by issuing a 30-day license to allow certain purchases of Russian oil stranded at sea—a temporary patch for a global system strained by conflict.

“We’re looking at short-term shocks with potentially long-term consequences,” said Chris Meng, an energy economist. “A month of spiking oil prices can tilt fragile economies toward recession and democracy-weariness. Two months and supply chains rethink sourcing. Beyond that, political realignments become possible.”

Market Ripples

  • Oil: surged roughly 9%, flirting again with $100 per barrel.
  • Stocks: the S&P 500 endured its largest three-day percentage drop in a month, as investors fled perceived risk.
  • Shipping and insurance: premiums for Gulf transit have jumped, raising costs for global trade.

The Human Toll: Numbers That Must Be Names

Numbers are blunt instruments, but they matter. Official tallies put the death toll at more than 2,000 people across the theatres of this confrontation—most of them in Iran—and nearly 700 in Lebanon alone. In a strike that sent shockwaves through the international community, a school in Minab was hit, killing at least 175 people, many of them children; early U.S. investigations point to a targeting error and outdated coordinates.

Behind each stat is a family, a funerary meal, a school desk left empty. “The children’s toys still sit on the floor,” said Hoda, whose niece attended the school in Minab. “We count the days since that laughter stopped.”

Refugee flows are another looming crisis. Families who have weathered decades of displacement now face new choices: flee again, or hunker down amid shortages and raids? Humanitarian corridors are congested, overstretched, and often dependent on the very nations engaged in the fighting to permit safe passage.

What Comes Next? Two Futures in Collision

We stand at an inflection point. One future is a slow burn: episodic strikes, localized escalation, economic pain that reshapes politics but doesn’t topple governments immediately. The other is a rapid, widening conflagration that draws in regional proxies and global powers, rupturing oil markets and igniting mass displacement.

“We are not on autopilot,” said Ambassador Najib Karim, a retired diplomat who has mediated in the region. “Strategies, not fate, will decide whether this is contained. The question is whether cooler heads can coordinate—now, while lines of communication still function.”

That coordination requires more than nightly briefings. It needs humanitarian prioritization, clear channels for de-escalation, and honest accounting from the powers involved. It also requires the public—wherever you are—to demand transparency about civilian harm and the true costs of military adventures that are too often sold as tidy victories.

Questions for the Rest of Us

What do we owe the civilians caught in a war’s crossfire? How do global markets and electoral politics shape the decisions that lead to bombing runs and blockades? And finally: when energy becomes leverage, who pays the price and how can the world build resilience against weaponized supply chains?

Walking the streets of cities on edge, you can taste the impatience and the fear. You can also see the small acts that stitch communities together: neighbors sharing water, bakers keeping ovens lit, volunteers ferrying the wounded. If there is a lesson in the first two weeks, it’s this: global geopolitics read like headlines, but they are lived as intimate acts of survival.

As the immediate shocks reverberate through markets, policy rooms, and living rooms, remember that beyond strategy and statistics lie lives, stories, and futures. We can count barrels and missiles. But if we do not count the people—really count them—we risk letting the hush become permanent.

Fifteen handed life sentences for Moscow concert hall attack

15 people given life terms for Moscow concert hall attack
The four men who carried out the attack are citizens of Tajikistan

A night of music that turned into a country’s wound

It was supposed to be an evening of nostalgia: a concert by Picnic, a band whose chords have threaded through Soviet and post‑Soviet lives for decades. Instead, on 22 March 2024, the bright lights and familiar riffs at Crocus City Hall were pierced by gunfire, then by smoke and flame. By morning a community was grieving, and a nation was left with questions that sounded louder than the guns.

For weeks the images replayed in the global mind: crowds spilling into the cold Moscow night, emergency lights strobing like a harsh punctuation, people hauling the wounded down stairwells. In the end, 149 people were dead, more than 600 injured, and six children among the victims—numbers that turned private tragedies into a civic scar. It was the deadliest attack on Russian soil in roughly two decades, a calamity that the state and the world could not ignore.

The verdict: sentences handed down in a closed courtroom

On a gray morning months later, a Russian military court handed down what the state press called a decisive judgment. According to the TASS news agency, four men from Tajikistan and 11 accomplices received life sentences for their roles in the Crocus City Hall assault. RIA Novosti reported that the remaining four defendants were each given prison terms ranging from 19 to 22 years.

Nineteen people had been charged in total. Some of the accomplices were Russian nationals; others came from abroad. Families of victims sat through the hearing, according to state reports, clutching the fragile relief that a verdict can sometimes bring—though relief in these moments often feels incomplete.

The trial, like many such cases in Russia, was conducted behind closed doors. The absence of public scrutiny only thickens the air of mystery around what happened and why. For relatives, victory in court is seldom equal to the loss they face every day when they reach for a hand that is not there.

Voices from the courtroom and the street

“No sentence brings my daughter back,” said a woman who identified herself as the mother of a victim, her voice raw. “They told us justice would be done. We will live by that… somehow.” Her words were echoed by others who came to watch the courtroom drama and carry the memory of their lost loved ones forward.

A lawyer who has worked on terror cases, speaking on condition of anonymity, noted: “Closed trials are sometimes defended as necessary for state security, but they also make it harder for the public to trust the outcome. Transparency matters for healing.”

What unfolded inside Crocus City Hall

Witnesses say the assailants entered shortly before the concert began and opened fire on the waiting crowd. Panic metastasized instantly; people ran for exits that were quickly blocked by smoke. At least some attackers set parts of the hall alight, turning the building into a trap. Emergency services raced to the scene, but in a space designed for sound and celebration, the geometry of stairways and doors turned into a hazard.

Survivors’ memories of that night read like shards. “The music stopped. The lights went out. I remember a smell—like burning plastic—and then my friend pulling me toward the exit,” said one man, his jacket still bearing a stain from where he had dragged himself across a burned floor months later. “People were yelling. Some were trying to help. Some were… not moving.”

Paramedics and firefighters who responded described scenes of extraordinary difficulty: corridors thick with smoke, bodies in alcoves where people had sought refuge, and the simple cruelty that comes when an entertainment venue transforms into a battlefield. “It felt like a war zone,” a first responder said. “You learn to steady your hands. You don’t learn to steady your heart.”

Who claimed responsibility — and the politics that followed

The Afghan affiliate of so‑called Islamic State, known as IS‑K (Islamic State Khorasan), claimed responsibility for the assault. That claim changed the tenor of public debate. Terrorism specialists quickly noted that IS‑K has been active in the region since at least the mid‑2010s and has carried out brutal, high‑casualty attacks in several countries.

Russia, for its part, pointed fingers in another direction as well. The Investigative Committee publicly stated that the attack had been “planned and committed in the interests of” Ukraine—a charge that was repeated in official statements and fed into a broader wartime narrative. Moscow has for months pushed back against international warnings that an attack was imminent, even as security services investigated.

“This intersection of terror and geopolitics is dangerous,” said Dr. Elena Korol, a terrorism analyst based in Moscow. “Groups like IS‑K seek to create fear and chaos. States, in turn, can instrumentalize those acts for political aims. The victims—ordinary people—get lost in both narratives.”

Context and cold facts

  • Confirmed deaths: 149
  • Injured: more than 600
  • Number charged: 19
  • Sentences: 15 defendants received life terms (four Tajik nationals plus 11 accomplices, per TASS); others received 19–22 years, per RIA
  • Claimed responsibility: IS‑K (Islamic State Khorasan)

Local color: a community’s subtle grief

Crocus City Hall sits in Krasnogorsk, a town on the northwestern edge of Moscow’s sprawl, where shopping centers and office parks meet suburban apartment blocks. The venue was not only a landmark for the capital’s music scene; it was a place where families celebrated anniversaries, teenagers saw their first live shows, and older generations returned for familiar hits. After the attack, makeshift memorials sprung up along the avenue: candles melted into pools of wax, bouquets laid on benches, handwritten notes taped to lampposts.

“We are a place that loves public life,” said Yuri Petrov, a café owner near the hall. “People come to eat, to dance, to remember. That’s what makes this hurt so deep—it was an assault on the ordinary joys.”

Beyond the headlines: bigger questions for a global audience

As readers around the world scroll past the story in a feed of tragedies, what should they take away? Is this another isolated act in a troubled region, or a symptom of broader shifts: the spread of extremist networks, the fracturing of information ecosystems, and the political uses of terror? How should societies protect open public spaces—concert halls, markets, sports arenas—without turning them into fortresses that feel unwelcoming to the very citizens they aim to protect?

These are painful, practical questions. Security will cost money and will impose new routines. But there is also a human cost to a permanent state of siege: the slow erosion of trust among neighbors, the suspicion of strangers, and the politicization of grief.

A call to reflection

When courts hand down sentences, they enact the law. When communities mourn, they enact memory. Both are necessary. But neither can alone restore what was lost at Crocus City Hall: the presence of remembered voices, the warmth of small rituals, the ease of entering a hall for music without thinking of the worst.

So, as you put down this piece and return to your own habits and routines, consider this: how can societies hold both safety and openness in their hands without crushing one under the other? What does justice look like when lives are not only counted but remembered? And how do we, across borders and languages, learn to grieve together—without letting grief be used as the lever of politics?

For the families who left the courtroom, for the survivors still in recovery, and for the empty seats at future concerts, the answers will have to be more than legal motions or official statements. They will need remembrance, transparency, and a collective will to ensure public spaces remain places of life, not of fear.

Iran pledges to keep Strait of Hormuz sealed amid rising tensions

As it happened: Iran vows to keep Hormuz shut
As it happened: Iran vows to keep Hormuz shut

A narrow throat, a loud threat: Iran says it will keep the Strait of Hormuz closed

The sea between Iran and Oman is rarely quiet. Fishing boats carve pale wakes against a blue that deepens into navy by the horizon. Container ships pick their slow way through the shipping lanes. And in recent days, the Strait of Hormuz — a narrow, strategic throat through which a staggering share of the world’s oil and gas flows — has become the scene of a renewed geopolitical standoff that feels, to locals and traders alike, both sudden and inevitable.

“They say if we are pushed, we will close it,” a port worker in Bandar Abbas told me on the phone, voice low, as the call dropped into the hiss of a nearby market. “It’s not a threat for us, it’s about survival. But everyone knows what closing the strait means.”

What happened

State media in Tehran reported a firm announcement: Iranian authorities said the Strait of Hormuz would be closed to international shipping if Western powers and their allies continued hostile measures — sanctions, seizures of Iranian oil, or attacks on Iranian vessels. The message was blunt, delivered with the uncompromising rhetoric familiar from years of rivalry between Tehran and Washington, and it landed across global markets with an immediate intensity.

The statement — carried by state broadcasters and amplified across social platforms and diplomatic briefings — framed the move as defensive. “This is not escalation for its own sake,” a senior official told Iranian television. “It is deterrence. Those who try to strangle our economy must understand the consequences.”

Why the Strait matters

To understand why such pronouncements reverberate around the planet, imagine a single choke point through which a vast portion of the world’s energy must pass. The Strait of Hormuz, between Iran’s southern coast and Oman’s Musandam peninsula, is that narrow path.

Roughly one-fifth of the world’s seaborne crude oil moves through it on any given day. Tankers laden with crude, condensates and liquefied natural gas weave through its lanes; an interruption would ripple through energy markets, shipping insurance, and the already-fraught economies of energy-importing nations.

“When a chokepoint like Hormuz is threatened, markets don’t wait for the first shot to be fired,” said Leila Haddad, a maritime security analyst based in Dubai. “They price in risk. That drives up freight rates, insurance premiums, and ultimately consumer prices. The real victims are ordinary people at the petrol pump and families paying more for food and heating.”

On the ground: fear, defiance, and the daily grind

In Bandar Abbas, the city that serves as Iran’s southern gateway, life goes on with a stubborn normalcy. Merchants sweep dusty thresholds, children sell cold oranges, and the smell of strong tea floats from narrow alleys.

“Every time there’s tension, the city gets nervous,” said Fatemeh, who runs a small bakery near the docks. “Boats come in late, some fishermen don’t go out, and there are more soldiers in the streets. But the bread still must be baked.”

Fishermen, who have made these waters their home for generations, describe a mix of pride and anxiety. “This sea fed our grandfathers,” said Hassan, a weathered man with a sun-scoured face. “If politicians want to use it as a weapon, then they are playing with our lives.”

Across the strait in the Omani port towns, the mood is cautious. Oman has traditionally carved a path of neutrality, hosting negotiations in the past and acting as a middle ground. Local officials there express concern for civilian safety and the potential economic fallout.

Global reaction and the chessboard of alliances

Beyond the region, capitals reacted with alarm, measured statements, and emergency meetings. Western navies have long maintained a presence in the Gulf to ensure the free flow of commerce, and commercial shipping companies scrambled to assess risk and reroute where possible. Energy markets tightened; oil traders watched for spikes in price as uncertainty rose.

“Any closure — even a temporary one — is disruptive,” said Marcus Ellery, a shipping consultant in London. “It’s not only oil: the whole shipping ecosystem recalibrates. Container lines, bulk carriers, insurers, and lenders all react in ways that can last months.”

For governments, the calculus is delicate. Military options risk escalation; sanctions and diplomacy may not persuade a state that views its survival as threatened. Meanwhile, energy-importing countries weigh the short-term pain of higher prices against the long-term strategic imperative of diversifying supplies and accelerating a move away from fossil fuels.

Insurance, shipping costs, and the quiet cost of tension

One immediate, tangible effect of such threats is on the cost of doing business at sea. War risk and Gulf premiums — additional sums insurers charge to cover tankers and other vessels entering dangerous waters — often climb when tensions spike. In past episodes, premiums rose by double-digit percentages, pushing carriers to consider longer, more expensive routes around Africa’s Cape of Good Hope.

“Longer voyages mean higher fuel consumption and delayed deliveries,” said Ellery. “That feeds into higher prices for goods, and for countries dependent on maritime trade, those costs are significant.”

Local stories that reveal the global stakes

In a small café tucked behind the port, an English-speaking tugboat captain, Amir, sipped cardamom tea and reflected on the human dimension. “You think of geopolitics as abstract,” he said. “But when your crew asks if they will still get home to their families, it becomes very personal.”

An energy hedge fund manager in Singapore, on the opposite side of the globe, told me she watches geostrategic chatter more than economic reports these days. “Physical supply matters less now than expectations about supply,” she said. “A credible threat to Hormuz inflates risk premiums and changes positions instantly.”

What comes next — and what this moment asks of us

Will the Strait of Hormuz actually be closed? History shows that while Tehran has at times threatened or briefly restricted passage, a full-scale closure would be a major, risky step with global consequences. Diplomacy, back-channel engagements, and economic calculations will all play a part in the coming days and weeks.

But the declaration opens a larger conversation about vulnerability. How do we manage chokepoints in a world still heavily reliant on maritime flows of energy? How do ordinary people — fishermen, port workers, families — cope when their lives are caught between geopolitical giants? And perhaps most importantly, how do nations de-escalate once brinkmanship becomes the instrument of policy?

“We often focus on tanks and jets,” said Haddad, the analyst. “But modern conflict is also economic and maritime. The sea can be a battlefield without a single missile. That should worry everyone — especially when the livelihoods of millions are at stake.”

Questions to sit with

  • How resilient are global supply chains to sudden disruptions in strategic chokepoints?
  • What responsibility do major powers have to defuse tensions that threaten global commons like the oceans?
  • And how do we support the communities who live on the fault lines of geopolitics — those whose daily work can be upended overnight?

For now, the strait remains a living, breathing place — gulls wheel, engines hum, and the people who depend on these waters watch and wait. The world watches too, because when a narrow stretch of water is threatened, the consequences are not contained by borders. They ripple outward — into markets, into kitchens, into the quiet anxiety of parents checking the news as their children sleep.

In the end, the question is not only whether the Strait of Hormuz will be closed. It is whether the world will choose mechanisms — diplomatic, economic, and structural — that reduce the risk that a single choke point can hold so much of our collective future in suspense.

US could escort ships through Strait of Hormuz - Trump

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