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Kneecap joins 1,100 artists calling for Eurovision boycott

Kneecap among 1,100 artists urging Eurovision boycott
Kneecap

A Festival of Flags, Friction and a Cultural Standoff: Why More Than 1,100 Musicians Are Boycotting Eurovision 2026

There is a peculiar hush at the edges of what is usually the music world’s most raucous party. The Eurovision Song Contest—known for its glitter, camp performances, and a viewing audience measured in the hundreds of millions—now finds itself the focus of a political rupture. Over 1,100 musicians, composers and cultural workers have put their names to a public call for a boycott of Eurovision 2026, arguing that the contest should not platform Israel while the conflict with Palestine continues.

The letter, coordinated by the campaign group No Music For Genocide (NMFG), stitches together an unlikely chorus: veteran rockers, electronic producers, anti-war rappers and festival crew. On the list of signatories are familiar names—Kneecap, Paloma Faith, Massive Attack, Paul Weller—as well as producers and luminaries often tucked behind the scenes: David Holmes, Brian Eno, Peter Gabriel and Macklemore. The signatories demand action from public broadcasters and fans alike: refuse to participate, stop streaming, and do not host or volunteer at Eurovision events until Israel is excluded.

What the letter says — and why it matters

“We refuse to be silent,” reads the letter, whose language moves between moral urgency and cultural strategy. It explicitly accuses Israel of committing genocide in Gaza and says that allowing Israel to perform at Eurovision would amount to the contest “whitewashing and normalising” alleged state violence. The letter also points to precedent: the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), which runs Eurovision, banned Russia in 2022 after its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The signatories argue that the EBU’s differential treatment reveals hypocrisy.

“Russia was banned from Eurovision in 2022. Israel has been murdering Palestinians for decades and is now committing genocide – and for the third year running, they’re welcomed back onto the stage,” say representatives of Kneecap, the Irish rap trio known for blending political ferocity with traditional music. “That’s not neutrality. That’s a choice.”

Artists who signed say they have already felt the costs of speaking out—lost bookings, canceled tours, even legal troubles. “We’ve paid a price for speaking out… and we’d do it all again tomorrow. Silence is complicity,” the trio adds. “No stage for genocide. Free Palestine.”

Voices from the street and the studio

On a rainy evening in a Dublin pub that usually hosts Eurovision watch parties, the mood is unsettled. “It used to be an excuse to dress silly and drink cheaper wine,” says Aoife, a 34-year-old primary school teacher and lifelong Eurovision fan. “Now people are asking whether it’s right to cheer while people are dying. That conversation is pretty uncomfortable.”

In London, where Massive Attack’s Robert Del Naja was arrested during a mass protest earlier this month, musicians speak with a mix of outrage and weary resolve. “Music has always been political,” says a session drummer who asked to remain anonymous. “When a contest with that kind of viewership becomes part of a diplomatic playbook, artists and crew become complicit in mythmaking if we show up and clap along.”

Not everyone agrees. An unnamed EBU insider told multiple outlets previously that the contest aims to unite, not divide—and that Eurovision has long provided a stage for marginalized voices. “Our remit is cultural exchange,” the source said. “We are not a forum for state policy.” The EBU has been contacted for comment on the boycott and has not issued a public response to the NMFG letter as of publication.

How wide is the boycott call?

NMFG isn’t asking only performers to stay away. Their list is broad: national broadcasters, volunteers, venue technicians, stagehands, fans hosting viewing parties, and online platforms that stream the event. The campaign has also pointed to recent withdrawals by the national broadcasters of Ireland, Iceland, Slovenia, the Netherlands and Spain as models—calling on other countries to follow suit.

The group frames the move as part of a wider, global push to isolate institutions and industries seen as complicit in state violence. “From the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel to creative collectives in Hollywood and film workers in Europe, this is not an isolated chorus,” an NMFG organiser said. “It’s part of a global refusal to normalise what many believe is ongoing genocide.”

History, hypocrisy and the politics of pop

Eurovision is a soft-power behemoth. For more than five decades it has been a stage for geopolitics disguised as pop spectacle. Israel’s participation has been a recurring flashpoint: the country first entered the contest in 1973, and, according to NMFG, has been present for 53 years—a tenure they say has coincided with policies they describe as apartheid and occupation.

The comparison to Russia’s ban is a central grievance. Critics argue that the EBU’s 2022 decision set a precedent: when a nation’s military actions reach a threshold of international condemnation, cultural exclusion becomes an accepted sanction. Supporters of the EBU counter that the contest was designed to bridge divides, not deepen them.

“Culture can’t be divorced from politics,” says Dr. Lina Khatib, a scholar of cultural diplomacy. “Events like Eurovision have always been about more than catchy choruses. They’re a forum for projecting national identity, and that projection can either humanise or whitewash actions depending on the optics.”

Beyond the headlines: what the stakes are

Ask yourself: what does it mean when art and alliance collide? For fans who love the kitsch and communal joy of Eurovision, the thought of political boycotts feels like an intrusion. For activists and artists who see the contest as a global billboard, playing along may feel like acquiescence to an injustice.

The practical stakes are real. Eurovision seasons generate ad revenue, tourism and platforms for emerging artists. Pulling broadcasters out would change viewership patterns, and a large-scale boycott could force broadcasters and the EBU to make a choice—either maintain the contest’s current policies or confront a mass cultural withdrawal that could reshape the event for years.

How people are responding across the cultural ecosystem

  • Musicians and road crews are being asked to decline work tied to Eurovision until Israel is excluded.

  • Film Workers For Palestine and academic boycott campaigns are coordinating awareness efforts and cultural strikes.

  • In some ports across Italy and Morocco, dockworkers have reportedly refused to service equipment linked to events or broadcasts in solidarity with Palestine.

Where do we go from here?

The coming months will test whether music can be both a balm and a battleground. Will the EBU respond to the moral calculus presented by thousands of signatories? Will broadcasters calculate the political cost of silence versus the financial cost of a withdrawal? And perhaps more intimately, will fans continue to treat Eurovision as a nightly ritual untroubled by the lives and deaths it might indirectly touch?

“I don’t want to see music used to sanitise anything,” says Fatima, a Palestinian cultural worker in Beirut. “But I also know many artists on these lists feel enormous ambivalence. No one wants to see culture weaponised—but turning away is also hard when music is a survival tool.”

Whatever comes next, one reality is clear: Eurovision is no longer merely a contest about catchy hooks and stage pyrotechnics. It has become, for many, a mirror reflecting larger global fractures—questions of accountability, the limits of cultural diplomacy, and whether entertainment and ethics can ever be neatly divorced.

So where do you stand? When the curtain rises in 2026, will the world sing—and at what cost? The debate is no longer backstage. It is playing out under the brightest lights.

Trump; “Ma kordhineyo waqtiga xabadjoojinta duqeynta ayaan bilaabaynaa”

Trump delivers address on Iran war from White House
It will be the president's first formal national speech on Iran from the White House

Apr 21(Jowhar)Donald Trump ayaa sheegay inaysan jiri doonin muddo kordhin lagu sameeyo heshiiska xabad joojinta ah ee u dhexeya Maraykanka iyo Iran xilli ay dhowdahay waqtiga xabad joojinta oo ahayd labo toddobaad.

Xarunta cusub ee horumarinta manaahijta oo la dhagax dhigey

Apr 21(Jowhar)-Ra’iisul Wasaaraha Xukuumadda Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya, Mudane Xamsa Cabdi Barre, ayaa maanta si rasmi ah u dhagax dhigay Xarunta Horumarinta Manaahijta oo lagu horumarinayo tayada waxbarashada dalka.

UN: Nearly 7,900 Migrants Died or Disappeared on Routes in 2025

7,900 died, disappeared on migration routes in 2025: UN
The Missing Migrants Project has documented more than 80,000 deaths and disappearances during migration since 2014, the agency said

Between Shorelines and Silence: The Invisible Toll of a Global Migration Crisis

On a wind-raw morning, a line of small plastic shoes sits on a low wall at a port town. Salt flakes in the hair of fishermen as they sip bitter coffee. A lifejacket—faded orange, emblem of hope—hangs like a question mark from a lamp post. These are the makeshift memorials of our time, quiet markers for lives erased on routes that stitch together the map of our world.

Last year, the UN’s migration agency tallied nearly 7,900 people who died or vanished while attempting to cross international borders—pushing the documented total of dead and missing since 2014 above 80,000. Those are not only numbers on a report; they are grandparents, mothers, children, bakers, dreamers. They are the echo of journeys taken because safer, legal routes were closed, insufficient, or entirely missing.

What the numbers conceal

“We are seeing a continuation—and in many places an escalation—of preventable deaths on migration routes,” says an IOM spokesperson, voice measured but weary. “These figures are a minimum estimate. For every documented disappearance, many more families are left without answers.”

The Missing Migrants Project, run by the International Organization for Migration, compiles these figures from coastguard logs, NGO reports, local media, and eyewitness accounts. The result is a mosaic of tragedies that span deserts, storm-swollen seas, dense jungles, and hidden border corridors. While the figure of 7,904 deaths and disappearances in 2025 is stark, it is also the tip of a much larger iceberg: at least 340,000 family members are estimated to be directly affected by these unresolved losses, struggling with legal limbo, economic ruin, and staggering grief.

Routes that swallow people

Look at a map and you’ll see the arteries of human movement: the Central Mediterranean route between North Africa and southern Europe, the treacherous passages through the Darién Gap on the Colombia-Panama border, the Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea where flimsy boats push out from the coasts of Myanmar and Bangladesh, and the perilous crossings across Mexico toward the United States. Each corridor has its own weather, its own predators. But they share one common trait: where legal options for movement are few, dangerous routes flourish.

“Smugglers exploit the closures,” says Dr. Luis Ramirez, a migration researcher who has spent decades tracking crossings in the Mediterranean. “When humanitarian rescue ships are disallowed access or funding dwindles, those attempting the journey are left with tinier margins for survival.”

And funding has dwindled. 2025 saw unprecedented cuts to aid programs and a tightening of information flows about hazardous routes—measures that left search-and-rescue operations starved of resources and families blind to the fates of loved ones. Humanitarian groups have been forced to pull boats from patrols, scale back aerial searches, and limit outreach in remote regions. The result: more disappearances, more unrecorded dead, and more families living in the slow-burning trauma of not knowing.

Names, not numbers

At a bustling market in Tangier, a vendor named Karim pauses to explain why his nephew left home. “There were no jobs, no future,” he says in Arabic, his hands sketching the outline of the sea. “He wanted to work, to send money for his wedding. Now we have a photo and questions.”

On a remote island cemetery in the Aegean, a chalkboard registers names and dates—some accurate, many guessed. “We wait for a door that never opens,” says Eleni, who keeps the little shrine tidy. “People ask why they risk so much. Ask a mother who needs to feed her children. Ask a boy who sees no way out.”

These stories reveal the human calculus behind risk: climate shocks that ruin crops, wars that displace entire communities, economies that exclude, and policy choices that close off avenues for orderly, legal migration. When the safe doors are shut, desperate people take the narrow, dangerous paths.

Hidden families, long shadows

The toll is not only measured in lives lost at sea or in the jungle. For every missing person, entire networks unravel—families lose breadwinners, households lose legal status, children drop out of school. The IOM estimates that around 340,000 relatives are directly affected by disappearances since 2014, grappling with the psychological, legal, and economic ramifications.

“My wife vanishes, and our household collapses,” says José, whose brother disappeared in a boat tragedy on the Central American route. “We cannot get inheritance documents, we cannot bring him home, we cannot close a door we can’t find.”

These shadowed families endure a kind of ambiguous loss that clinicians describe as devastatingly corrosive: you can’t mourn fully because you don’t have certainty, you can’t move forward because a life is suspended in limbo. National systems are often ill-equipped to respond—missing persons databases are fragmented, consular cooperation is patchy, and many countries lack comprehensive death registration for migrants found on foreign soil.

What could change—and what stands in the way

As the world prepares for the International Migration Review Forum in May 2026, advocates say the event represents an opportunity and a test. Can governments translate rhetoric into policies that reduce risks and restore dignity?

  • Expand safe, legal pathways: labor agreements, family reunification and humanitarian visas.

  • Reinstate and fund search-and-rescue operations across maritime and land routes.

  • Create robust family-tracing mechanisms and centralized data systems to record and notify families.

  • Invest in climate resilience and local economies to address root causes of displacement.

“Political will is the linchpin,” says Amina Hassan, founder of a migrant family support network. “People say it is complicated. It is. But what’s more complicated is a life broken into numbers on a report.”

Resistance comes from multiple directions: domestic politics that reward border-tightening, security logics that prioritize interdiction over rescue, and misinformation that frames migrants as threats rather than people. Yet other nations have shown it can be different—carefully designed pathways reduce irregular movement and suffering while helping economies meet labor shortages.

Look again—what do we owe each other?

When you pass a memorial card hanging from a lamppost or scroll through a news feed with another headline about migration, what do you feel? Indifference? Outrage? Compassion? The question is not only policy-deep; it is moral: what do we owe the ones who cross for work, safety, dignity?

“These are not distant strangers,” says Dr. Ramirez. “They are neighbors, seasonal workers, students, the same people who will build our houses, harvest our food, teach our children. Recognizing that could change laws, budgets, and the fate of many.”

There are no easy answers. But there are choices. We can let these routes remain theaters of disappearance—hidden by statistics and silence—or we can demand transparency, funding, and humane systems that prevent deaths and clarify fates.

Closing the distance

In a seaside town where the waves hush and gulls wheel, a young woman pins a new photo to the memorial wall. She writes a date, a name, a wish. “We want a simple thing,” she says. “To know. To be able to bury. To be able to return someday.”

As the world looks toward the May 2026 forum, the question lingers: will leaders choose policies that keep people safe and restore dignity, or will the next report simply record more names? The answer will be written not only in summit communiqués but in whether families can finally close an open door. What kind of world do you want to live in—one that counts coffin numbers or one that counts people, stories, and compassion?

Kallas Anticipates Approval of €90bn Loan Package for Ukraine

Kallas expects 'positive decisions' on €90bn Ukraine loan
A resident stands in front of a house destroyed by a drone strike in Shostka, in the northeastern Sumy region of Ukraine

When the Night Skies of Sumy Glowed: A Day of Missiles, Politics and Unsteady Hope

The sirens began in the small hours, a jagged chorus cutting through a night thick with rain and the metallic tang of fear. In Sumy, a city that has learned to sleep lightly for four long years, drone lights traced the sky before the explosions—an eerie, slow-motion constellation that left apartment facades scarred and people counting their blessings and their losses at dawn.

“We ran into the courtyard in our pajamas,” said Olena Petrenko, a nurse who lives above a damaged clinic. “There were flames on the cars, children crying. We kept thinking: will they come back? You never know when the drones will return.”

What happened overnight

Ukrainian officials reported a heavy aerial barrage: two cruise missiles and 143 drones launched by Russian forces. Air defences managed to intercept one of the missiles and 116 of the unmanned aircraft, but the attacks still wounded people across multiple regions.

  • Sumy: 15 people wounded; damage to apartment buildings and a medical facility.

  • Kharkiv region: 3 wounded in aerial strikes.

  • Sloviansk: 3 wounded.

  • Dnipropetrovsk region: 4 wounded.

Rescue teams worked in the rain, sometimes forced to pause operations and pull back to safety as waves of strikes threatened again. Emergency services shared images of workers hosing down burning cars and shepherding residents out of smoky stairwells—ordinary heroism in a very abnormal place.

Money, Morale and Diplomacy: The €90bn Hinge

As Ukraine grapples with rebuilding neighborhoods and patching up the emotional rips in communities like Sumy, another drama unfolded in conference rooms far from the front lines. On the eve of a gathering of EU foreign ministers in Luxembourg, European leaders were poised to decide on a landmark financial lifeline: a proposed €90 billion loan package for Ukraine.

Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas—speaking with the clarity of someone who has watched her region brace for the worst—said she expected “positive decisions” on the loan. “Ukraine really needs this loan and it’s also a sign that Russia cannot outlast Ukraine,” she told reporters.

What does this cash mean on the ground? For many Ukrainians it’s not just numbers. It’s salary payments for public servants, it’s electricity grids and hospital generators, it’s a promise that the international community will not let normal life wither under isolation and bombardment.

“If the money comes, we can repair the clinic roof and buy medicine,” Olena said. “If not, I don’t know how long we can keep dressing wounds in the dark.”

Trade, politics and a complicated EU agenda

The Luxembourg meeting wasn’t only about loans. Delegates were set to confront thorny questions about trade ties with other global players—among them, calls to suspend trade relations with Israel, a move that highlights how geopolitics now weaves into every diplomatic thread. For ministers juggling immediate military, economic and humanitarian needs, the choices are dizzying and consequential.

Ground Realities and Conflicting Maps

On the battlefront, narratives diverge. Moscow’s military leadership has claimed steady gains this year. Valery Gerasimov, Russia’s Chief of the General Staff, said in footage released by the defence ministry that “since the beginning of this year, a total of 80 settlements and more than 1,700 square kilometres of territory have come under our control.”

Ukrainian commanders paint a different picture. General Oleksandr Syrskyi said Kyiv had regained nearly 50 square kilometres in March alone. Independent and pro-Ukrainian mapping efforts suggest a far smaller Russian advance this year—around 592 square kilometres—than Moscow claims. Reuters and other agencies have not been able to verify Russian on-the-ground assertions.

Numbers matter: 1,700 sq km is a headline-friendly figure, but whether that matches the reality on the ground affects everything from humanitarian planning to the morale of soldiers and civilians alike.

Why the discrepancy?

Fog of war. Propaganda. Different definitions of control. In conflicts, territory can be claimed on paper long before the logistical and administrative structures that mark true governance are in place. “Territory taken” can mean anything from a temporary tactical foothold to full occupation with supply lines and governance—two very different realities.

Money and Misinformation: The Russian Economy Under Scrutiny

While bombs and drones shape the physical map, numbers and narratives shape the economic battlefield.

Sweden’s Military Intelligence and Security Service (MUST) warned that Russia appears to be manipulating its economic data to project resilience. MUST suggests Moscow may be underreporting inflation and masking a larger budget deficit—despite higher oil prices that have given the Kremlin a temporary cash cushion.

“Despite the recent period of high oil prices, which has provided Russia with increased revenues, it would take a price of over $100 per barrel for an entire year to remedy the Russian budget deficit,” Thomas Nilsson, head of MUST, said. “The weak economy does not affect the strategic objectives.”

In short: even if the economy strains under sanctions and war costs, that doesn’t necessarily translate into a pivot away from political or military goals. That is the most unsettling kind of perseverance.

Human Faces, Global Questions

Walk through Sumy today and you’ll see laundry hanging on battered balconies, young people queuing for coffee with the determined nonchalance of those who will not be defeated by fear, and old men who’ve lived through more than one chapter of Russian aggression but still flinch at the sound of aircraft.

“We are not just a line on a map,” said Pavlo Mykhalchuk, a teacher. “We go to work. We teach children. We mourn. We are tired, yes. But we’re here.”

So what should the rest of the world do? Is money enough? Are sanctions meaningful? Can the so-called “resilience” of a nation be measured in euros, in territory, or in the stubbornness of its citizens?

These questions are not academic. They are the calculus that ministers in Luxembourg must weigh; they are the whispered worries of parents in Kharkiv; and they are the lens through which global audiences try to make sense of a conflict that has reshaped European security norms and tested the limits of international solidarity.

Wider lessons

This war—now the deadliest in Europe since World War II—has exposed the interplay between kinetic warfare, economic pressure, information operations and the political will of allied states. It has shown how drones can make the night an active battlefield, and how finance can be both lifeline and leverage.

As you read this, ask yourself: What is the measure of support? Military hardware? Economic stability? Or the quieter stuff—the moral clarity and persistence that keep aid convoys rolling, sanctions enforced and diplomatic bridges open?

When Olena returns to work tomorrow and stitches another wound in a clinic that still bears the echo of concussion, she will carry small proofs of global decisions: a generator that hums because a loan arrived, bandages that came from a donor fund, a staff member paid because salaries were covered. These are the discreet, tangible outcomes of choices made in faraway meeting rooms.

We often discuss geopolitics in abstractions. Here, in a rain-slick courtyard with cigarette smoke curling into the cold, politics looks and feels like a cracked window, like a burnt-out car, like the yawning gap where a neighbor’s life once was. Policy is human. So is endurance. So is hope.

Dismissed aide alleges Downing Street pressured to exonerate Mandelson

No 10 used pressure to clear Mandelson - sacked official
Olly Robbins speaking at the Foreign Affairs Committee at the Houses of Parliament in London

A cloak over Downing Street: how a high-profile envoy appointment turned into a crisis of trust

There is a particular kind of silence inside corridors that know they have been hurried. It’s the hush of civil servants who once moved at the deliberate pace of statecraft but who, for weeks, found themselves being pulled along at someone else’s agenda. That silence has become the soundtrack of Britain’s latest political storm: the short, scandal-strewn tenure of Peter Mandelson as the UK’s envoy to Washington and the difficult questions now ricocheting through Westminster, Whitehall and beyond.

On a grey Tuesday in Parliament, Olly Robbins — until recently the most senior official at the Foreign Office — described a Whitehall environment bruised by pressure from the very top. “There was a very strong expectation coming from Number 10 that he needed to be in post and in America as quickly as humanly possible,” Robbins told MPs. “For my team it felt like constant chasing. That atmosphere influenced how we approached the vetting.”

The anatomy of a diplomatic appointment gone wrong

It sounds procedural, but vetting is the fulcrum on which national security and diplomatic credibility balance. For the highest posts — ambassadors to key allies like the United States — UK vetting typically runs through several stages, including Baseline Personnel Security Standards (BPSS), Security Check (SC) and the rarefied Developed Vetting (DV) for those with access to the most sensitive material. These aren’t boxes to tick; they are designed to identify risks that could be exploited by foreign intelligence or others.

In Mandelson’s case, the drama was not only in the mechanics of the process but in what the process flagged. Independent vetting officials reportedly leaned toward recommending denial of clearance. The Foreign Office security team, however, judged the risks manageable — and Downing Street, eager to see the appointment proceed, ratcheted up the pressure.

“We were told the risks could be mitigated,” Robbins said. “I was also told the risks did not relate to his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.” It is a difficult sentence to parse because it contains both reassurance and warning; both are meaningful. Epstein, who died in a US jail in 2019 while facing sex-trafficking charges, throws a long and ugly shadow. Mandelson’s known past ties to Epstein were part of the public discomfort from the moment the appointment was announced in December 2024.

Why this matters: trust, transparency and the cost of haste

Why did Downing Street press so hard? The answer lies at the intersection of geopolitics and politics. An ambassador to Washington is not a ceremonial posting — the job is a pressure valve for the relationship between two powerful democracies. Yet speed can be a false economy. A refusal to grant clearance is not only inconvenient; it’s a blunt diplomatic fact that could rile an ally or reveal internal turmoil. “You have to weigh the immediate diplomatic hit against long-term integrity,” said Dr. Amina Chaudhry, a security analyst who has studied vetting processes in democracies. “But circumventing or sidelining independent risk assessments corrodes public confidence in those systems.”

There are also questions about the appearance of influence and access. Reports suggested that concerns about links between Mandelson’s now-shuttered lobbying firm and Chinese companies were among the security worries — not solely his associations with Epstein. Whether real or perceived, such connections matter in an era when Beijing’s economic reach is often viewed through a security lens by Western capitals.

Voices from the ground

Outside Parliament, reactions mixed between anger, bewilderment and a weary, familiar cynicism. “This is the same playbook we’ve seen before — appoint, defend, wait for the noise to die down,” said Tom Ellis, a junior diplomat who asked not to use his real name for fear of reprisal. “But there’s nothing routine about someone whose name keeps appearing beside one of the most toxic figures of the last decade.”

In a north London café, a passerby shrugged and asked, “Why does it feel like facts are negotiable now?” A former career ambassador, sitting over tea, was more blunt: “You don’t ship a top posting to Washington while the vetting team is telling you ‘don’t.’ That’s not boldness — it’s negligence.”

How this played out politically

The fallout was rapid. Mandelson, 72, who took up the post in February 2025, was sacked by Prime Minister Keir Starmer in September 2025 after fresh revelations about his ties to Epstein emerged. UK police now have an open investigation into alleged misconduct in office related to actions from more than a decade ago; Mandelson has been arrested and released and denies wrongdoing. The episode has triggered calls for greater accountability, with opposition figures arguing that the prime minister must explain what he knew and when.

Political theatre intensified when former US President Donald Trump — no stranger to weighing in on allies’ domestic affairs — commented that Mandelson “was a really bad pick,” while quipping that there was “plenty of time to recover.” Whether meant as advice, insult or both, it landed in a UK debate already heavy with questions about who in government calls the shots.

Broader themes and a moment of reckoning

This is not just a Westminster story. It touches on global anxieties about revolving doors between politics, lobbying and foreign business; about how democracies handle scandals tied to transnational figures; and about whether the impartial civil service can withstand political heat.

How should we think about the balance between political prerogative and institutional safeguard? When ministers override or discount independent security advice, is that democratic accountability or a perilous short-cut? And what does it say about a political culture if the first instinct is to accelerate an appointment instead of pausing for clarity?

“Institutions are more than a collection of procedures,” said Professor James Whitaker, who studies governance and public trust. “They are the assurance that the state will put country before convenience. Undermining them corrodes trust — not just in government, but in the country’s ability to stand by its own rules.”

Where do we go from here?

Starmer has launched a review of the vetting process, an acknowledgement that procedure needs scrutiny. But for many, a review does not feel like enough. “We need not only reform, but also a culture that respects the independence of those who do the vetting,” Robbins warned in his testimony. “If political actors view vetting as an obstacle rather than a safeguard, that’s a systemic problem.”

What would a reformed system look like? It might mean firmer legal protections for vetting bodies, clearer public explanations when exceptions are made, a more robust whistleblower framework — and perhaps most difficult — a political class willing to accept that sometimes the right answer is to say no.

As the sun sets on another Westminster day, you can almost see the outline of the questions left behind: Can institutions hold the line when politicians push? Will insiders be held to account, or cast aside as convenient scapegoats? And for citizens — at home and in friendly capitals like Washington — will the next appointment feel like a cautious, considered choice or another momentary fix?

These are not merely procedural queries. They speak to a deeper inquiry about who governs, how decisions are made, and whether the systems meant to protect the public interest are more than the sum of their parts. In the end, that is the question voters will want answered — not just by bureaucrats, but by the politicians who ask them to trust the process.

Iran sends no delegates to U.S. talks as truce deadline looms

No Iran delegation sent to US talks ahead of truce expiry
Security measures in Islamabad, Pakistan have been heightened ahead of anticipated talks between the US and Iran

On the Brink: A Two-Week Truce and the Fragile Breath Between War and Wider Catastrophe

In a Tehrani alley where the sun bakes the tar and samovars hiss in storefront windows, life feels suspended — not peaceful, but waiting, like a city holding its breath before the next stanza of an old, violent song.

The latest lifeline — a two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran — is due to expire. And with it, the small hope that the grinding, costly spiral of tit-for-tat attacks might be paused long enough for ordinary people to catch up on the groceries, repair broken pipes, or sleep through the night without bracing for the sound of explosions.

Delegations That Never Left

Officially, Iran insists it has not dispatched a delegation for follow-up talks in Islamabad. State television was blunt: no main, no subsidiary, no secondary group had departed for Pakistan. Across town, diplomats and analysts parsed that claim like an old book, looking for hidden footnotes.

The peace talks in Pakistan earlier this month were the highest-level conversations between Washington and Tehran since 1979, and for a moment they shimmered with possibility. Delegation seniority, observers said then, was a sign that both sides might be ready to stitch together a workable bargain. Yet the conversations collapsed without a deal.

“We came to the table because we had to, not because either side was ready to surrender its core demands,” said a foreign-policy analyst who has tracked the region for decades. “Now those core demands look immovable, and the truce sits like a bandage on a wound that someone keeps picking at.

Accusations, Blockades and the Strait of Hormuz

Since the breakdown of the talks, both sides have levelled public accusations of violations. The United States says Iran has fired on commercial vessels; Iran counters that US seizures and a declared blockade of Iranian ports have breached the agreement. Tehran, in turn, has closed the Strait of Hormuz once more — a chokepoint through which vast quantities of the world’s seaborne oil flow.

To put that in perspective: during ordinary times, the narrow channel sees roughly 120 transits a day, according to Lloyd’s List, the shipping intelligence service. In recent weeks the waters have been crowded not just by commercial tonnage but by a flotilla of what observers call “shadow vessels” — more than 20 of them, Lloyd’s reported, skirting and testing the edges of a US-enforced maritime perimeter.

“The sea has become a chessboard,” said a shipping captain who asked not to be named for fear of reprisals. “You’re watching for fast-moving craft in the dark and a radio signal that’s not answering. The danger is no longer just lasers and missiles; it’s confusion.”

The Mosquito Fleet: Small Boats, Big Disruption

One of the most unnerving realities is Iran’s so-called “mosquito fleet” — an irregular armada of speedboats, small corvette-like vessels, jet skis and other low-signature craft that specialize in asymmetric maritime warfare. Kevin Rowlands, who headed a strategic studies center connected to the Royal Navy, explained how such forces can make life at sea terrifyingly complicated.

“It’s guerrilla warfare on the water,” Rowlands told reporters recently. “The fleet uses speed, surprise and numbers. They may deploy missiles, gunboats, mines; they’ll slip out from behind an island, disappear among commercial traffic, and reappear. Against a conventional navy designed to fight peer competitors, this is deeply disruptive.”

Rowlands and others estimate that a sustained campaign by these small craft could keep the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed for weeks or even months. Imagine a vital global artery — already vulnerable and heavily insured — hemming up trade and energy shipments while the world watches and reacts.

Life Under Strain: Voices from Tehran

Back on the ground in Tehran, the war’s toll is not measured in tonnage or strategic gains but in grocery bills and quiet dread. Market stalls that once spilled with cilantro and pomegranate now do brisk business in rationed flour and gas canisters. Streets hum with conversation, but the talk is tired.

“This supposed pause has been a punishment,” said Leila, a 34-year-old primary-school teacher who has lived through sanctions cycles and supply shortages. “We were promised relief; instead the economy is tighter. I know parents who can’t afford the bus fare for their children. I know shop owners who closed because there’s no supply.”

Another resident, a 45-year-old taxi driver named Amin, shrugged when asked what would happen if the ceasefire crumbled. “Oscillation,” he replied. “We used to think of peace and war as different countries. Now it’s the same street with different weather.”

The Wider Front: Lebanon and the Shadow of Hezbollah

Meanwhile, on Israel’s northern border, the conflict’s other flank is fragile. Hezbollah has been engaged in deadly exchanges with Israeli forces; the group announced mass funerals for 44 fighters killed over six weeks of fighting. Israel’s defence chief has described the campaign in Lebanon as a mix of military pressure and diplomatic maneuvering aimed at disarming Hezbollah — “to remove the threat to our northern communities,” he said.

Despite the recent localized ceasefire, Israeli troops remain on the ground in southern Lebanon, and warnings continue for civilians not to return to evacuated homes — a grim echo of the ordinary calculus of modern asymmetric conflict, where civilian space is disputed and never entirely safe.

Markets, Oil and the Global Ripple

The economic reverberations are immediate. Oil prices, reacting to both the risk of renewed fighting and glimmers of hope for a negotiated extension, have bounced up and down; recently they fell while stock markets rose on lingering hopes of a deal. But those shifts are cosmetic compared to the structural risks.

  • About 120 vessel transits typically move through Hormuz every day (Lloyd’s List).
  • Over 20 “shadow vessels” have been tracked near the US blockade (Lloyd’s List).
  • Estimates from maritime experts suggest Iran’s small-boat tactics could disrupt the strait for weeks or months.

In practical terms, disruption at Hormuz affects refineries, shipping insurance premiums, and national energy strategies from Tokyo to Rome. It forces countries to consider alternatives — pipelines, longer shipping routes via the Cape of Good Hope — all of which cost time and money in an already tight global market.

Why This Matters — Beyond the Headlines

So what should we notice beyond missiles and soundbites? First, this is not a conflict limited to combatants. It reaches into kitchens, classrooms and hospitals. It pressures fragile economies and tests the seams of alliances. Second, the form of the fighting matters: asymmetric tactics — from shadow vessels to speedboats — level certain playing fields and complicate traditional military advantages.

And finally, diplomacy — slow, messy, imperfect — remains the only mechanism that can realistically stop escalation. The absence of a delegation in Islamabad is not merely bureaucratic; it is symbolic. It tells a story about mistrust, negotiating leverage and the hard-to-bridge demands on either side.

Questions to Sit With

As a global reader, ask yourself: how would a longer closure of Hormuz affect the price of heating fuel this winter where you live? What would prolonged instability mean for supply chains that already creak under pandemics and climate shocks? And perhaps most importantly: who pays the steepest price when diplomatic talks stall — commanders in capital cities, or the families in the alleys and markets who simply want to live?

The ceasefire may end tonight, or it may be extended. Whatever happens, the choices made in the coming hours will ripple far beyond the sites of firefights. They will reshape the everyday lives of millions, determine the steadiness of global trade routes, and answer, at least for a moment, whether restraint can outlive rhetoric.

For now, Tehran polishes its windows and counts its losses quietly. The world watches, waiting to see whether the fragile pause will hold — or whether it will shatter, and with it a chance to step back from a wider, bloodier horizon.

Mustaf Dhuxulow iyo Cabdullaahi Maxamed Nuur oo kusoo biiray safka mucaaradka

Apr 21(Jowhar)Siyaasiyiin miisaan culus leh ayaa kusoo biiray shirka mucaaradka ee ka socda guriga Madaxweynihii hore ee Soomaaliya Sheekh Shariif Sheekh Axmed, iyadoo dhaq-dhaqaaqyada siyaasadeed ee Muqdisho ay sii xoogeysanayaan.

Kallas: Rebuilding Gaza Will Cost an Estimated $71 Billion

Reconstruction of Gaza will cost $71 billion, says Kallas
A view of the heavily damaged Jabalia neighborhood in Gaza City, Gaza

Seventy-one Billion Reasons to Care: Rebuilding Gaza and the Moral Math of the International Community

Brussels felt unusually solemn this week. Beneath the glass atrium of the EU institutions, the hum of diplomats and the click of cameras were underscored by a single, disquieting statistic: $71 billion. That is the estimated price tag for rebuilding Gaza, a figure the EU’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, announced after months of consultations with the World Bank and the United Nations.

Numbers can be cold. But behind this headline sits a human geography of flattened neighborhoods, demolished hospitals, schools turned into shelters, and families who no longer recognize the streets they grew up on. Gaza is home to roughly 2.3 million people — a dense strip of land where everyday life has become a feat of endurance. The reconstruction needs are not abstract. They are kitchens to be rebuilt, water systems to be repaired, childhoods to be stitched back together.

Why $71 Billion?

Kallas was blunt: “This figure is the result of months of hard calculation and frank conversations with the UN and the World Bank.” The number is meant to bring clarity to a staggering practical challenge: reconstructing homes, restoring services, reinvigorating a shattered economy and, perhaps most crucially, creating conditions for a political future that avoids repeating this devastation.

But the announcement was also a mirror held up to the world’s conscience. “I often hear accusations of double standards, that we support Ukraine, but we don’t support the Palestinians,” Kallas said in Brussels. “Let me get this straight: Europe is the biggest supporter of the Palestinian people. Europe is the largest donor and the main backer of the Palestinian Authority. European missions on the ground support Palestinian police, justice and governance and border management. You will not find a stronger supporter of the Palestinian people anywhere in the world.”

Her words aim to counter a political narrative that pits one humanitarian crisis against another. Yet they don’t erase the hard policy disputes now playing out in capitals from Dublin to Jerusalem.

The Political Fault Lines

At the heart of this week’s meetings was a terse, but consequential, debate over the EU-Israel Association Agreement — the treaty governing trade and partnership between the bloc and Israel.

Ire, Spain and Slovenia have called for a formal review of the agreement, citing a spike in settler violence in the West Bank, Israeli actions in Lebanon, and controversial legislation debated in the Knesset that would impose the death penalty on Palestinians convicted by military courts in the West Bank. Such a review is not just bureaucratic theatre: Article 2 of the agreement binds both sides to respect human rights and international law. If Israel is found to be in breach, the EU could impose punitive measures up to suspension — but only if all member states agree.

“Member states have put this on the table,” Kallas told reporters. “Suspension of the Association Agreement requires unanimity.” That requirement has been the stumbling block. Germany, Hungary and Czechia (among others) have previously balked at drastic action, and last summer the EU stopped short of suspension when Israel pledged to open greater humanitarian access into Gaza.

Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, called for full suspension over the weekend — a move that drew an immediate, sharp rebuttal from Israel. Foreign Minister Gideon Saar posted on social media in Spanish that Israel would “not accept hypocritical lectures from someone who keeps ties with totalitarian regimes,” naming Turkey and Venezuela in his response.

Who’s in, who’s out?

Beyond the EU’s internal fissures, a wider institutional contest is unfolding. The United States has proposed a “Board of Peace” to help govern post-war arrangements in Gaza. The EU, Kallas said, will not join that mechanism because it diverged from the UN Security Council blueprint and from the principle of Palestinian-led state-building. “For us, the role of Palestinians in building up Palestinian state is the most important. It has to be Palestinian-led, and Palestinian-owned,” she said.

Yet she left open the possibility of parallel efforts. “The Global Initiative for the Implementation of the Two-State Solution could work in parallel with the US-sponsored entity,” she added, suggesting that different diplomatic tracks might coexist if they respect Palestinian agency.

Voices from the Ground

It’s one thing to speak of agreements and bank estimates in conference rooms; it’s another to walk through Gaza’s neighborhoods. Layla, a schoolteacher from Khan Younis, told me in a phone call that numbers don’t capture the small, stubborn things people miss. “We count our memories the way people count bricks now,” she said. “A home is more than a roof. It is where my son learned to tie his shoelaces. Will they rebuild those moments?”

Ahmed, who runs a small hardware store near Gaza City, was pragmatic. “We need electricity, sewage, and access to building materials. Not promises. Materials.” His voice had the fatigue of someone who’s negotiated scarcity his whole life. “We’ve rebuilt before. But every time, the cost is not only in money — it is in trust.”

A Palestinian aid worker in Rafah, requesting anonymity for safety, put it bluntly: “71 billion is a start, but only if it comes with accountability, access and protection. Otherwise we are only funding another temporary fix.”

Big Money, Bigger Questions

There are practical questions that follow a figure like $71 billion. Where will the money come from? Which institutions will manage it? How will projects be prioritized — housing, hospitals, water, livelihoods? And perhaps the most sensitive question: What political strings will come attached?

Historically, reconstruction in conflict zones has been a magnet for competing agendas. Donor leverage can rebuild infrastructure — and also reshape local governance. That tension explains some EU nervousness about joining unilateral or exclusionary initiatives that risk sidelining legitimate Palestinian authorities.

  • Who disburses funds: multilateral banks, UN agencies, bilateral donors?
  • Which legal frameworks ensure human rights and protect civilians?
  • How do we prevent corruption and ensure long-term sustainability?

Beyond Aid: What Kind of Future?

Reconstruction is not merely bricks and mortar. It is a test of political imagination. Will the international community fund a temporary reconstruction that leaves the same political dynamics in place? Or will donors couple infrastructure with a genuine push for a viable, internationally backed two-state solution — the political horizon that many say is essential to prevent another cycle of destruction?

“Rebuilding without political clarity is like patching a dam with paper,” said an EU diplomat speaking off the record. “If there is no credible pathway to a two-state outcome, every investment risks becoming a bandage on a wound that will reopen.”

That sentiment helps explain why some EU members are cautious about unilateral approaches and keen to keep the Palestinian Authority central to any post-war governance. It also explains why others, alarmed by settler violence and legislative moves in Israel, are pushing for punitive measures under the Association Agreement.

What Can You Do?

As readers, we are often left with headlines and soundbites. But crises like Gaza require sustained public attention. Ask your representatives about humanitarian corridors, transparency in aid, and support for Palestinian-led rebuilding. Demand clarity about the mechanisms for disbursing funds, and insist that human rights be non-negotiable.

Can $71 billion buy peace? No. But it can buy hospitals, schools, and the dignity of having a home. It can provide a platform for political negotiations that honor the agency of the people whose lives will be most affected. The deeper question is whether the international community is ready to match generosity with political courage.

When the diplomats had left Brussels and the meeting rooms grew quiet, Kaja Kallas offered a parting provocation: “You will not find a stronger supporter of the Palestinian people anywhere in the world.” Her words were both a declaration and a challenge — to other partners, to Israel, and to Palestinians themselves. Rebuilding Gaza will test alliances, values, and the world’s willingness to turn rhetoric into durable reality.

What will we choose to rebuild: temporary shelters or a future people can believe in? The answer will reverberate far beyond one narrow strip of land.

Japan issues warning of massive earthquake after powerful tremor

Japan warns of 'huge' earthquake after powerful tremor
Soldiers stationed at the Iwate Garrison making preparations following the tsunami alert

When the Earth Shook: A Night That Reminded Japan — and the World — How Close We Live to the Edge

It arrived like a reminder taped to the chest of a nation that has learned, the hard way, how to read the earth’s moods. On a late afternoon that looked ordinary in many parts of Japan, a powerful jolt rolled across the northern Pacific and sent a ripple of alarm from coastal towns to the glassy towers of Tokyo.

“The likelihood of a new, huge earthquake occurring is relatively higher than during normal times,” the Japan Meteorological Agency warned in a rare special advisory — language that feels clinical until you imagine the alternative: silence when the sea rises.

From Tokyo’s skyscrapers to sleepy fishing ports

The quake was first estimated at magnitude 7.4, nudged to 7.5, and finally put at 7.7 by the JMA — a reminder of how quickly the numbers can change as sensors, models and lives try to catch up. It struck at 4:53pm local time off the coast of Iwate prefecture, with an epicentre 10km beneath the ocean surface. In Tokyo, hundreds of kilometres away, ceiling lights swayed and commuters steadied themselves as trains were brought to a halt.

“Everything moved. The bookshelves, the cups — it was like someone had taken the city and given it a slow, steady shake,” said a Tokyo office worker who asked not to be named. “You don’t forget that feeling.”

In the towns that face the Pacific, the memory of 2011 is not abstract. Otsuchi and Kamaishi, coastal communities that are still dotted with reminders of the triple catastrophe that struck more than a decade ago, issued evacuation orders for thousands. For many there, tsunami sirens are not background noise but a summons to move quickly.

“We came down to the hill in the dark and waited. You don’t think in sentences — you just move,” recalled an elderly resident of Kamaishi, who tied a towel around his head and climbed with neighbours to a school gym now used as an emergency shelter. “The sea there has a temper. You respect it.”

Tsunami readings and what they mean

Two hours after the tremor, tsunami buoys and coastal sensors recorded waves up to 80 centimetres, and the JMA warned that larger waves — even several metres — remained a possibility in parts of Honshu and Hokkaido. The agency noted that a three-metre wave could inundate low-lying areas, taking buildings and anyone unlucky enough to be in its path.

“Tsunami doesn’t always roar in tall walls; sometimes it creeps and it carries. That’s what makes it treacherous,” explained a volunteer from a regional disaster relief group. “People underestimate the current.”

Japan sits on the so-called Ring of Fire — that geologic necklace of volcanoes and deep ocean trenches that girdles the Pacific. It is a painful statistic that Japan accounts for about 20% of the world’s earthquakes of magnitude 6.0 or greater. To put that number into perspective: tremors happen here often — sensors register quakes at least every five minutes somewhere in the country — but the ones that reshape the landscape and the lives of people are rarer and brutal.

Warnings, infrastructure and the ghosts of 2011

Officials moved quickly to calm and to urge caution. Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara told reporters there were no immediate reports of serious injuries or significant damage — a relief, yes, and also a pause between luck and potential disaster. A Cabinet Office official, speaking in a televised briefing, underscored a grim and practical truth: “While it is uncertain whether a major earthquake will actually occur, we ask that you take disaster preparedness measures based on the principle that you are responsible for your own safety.”

That sense of personal responsibility is part cultural, part necessity. Drill culture in Japan means schoolchildren practice evacuation routes; workplaces keep seismic kits; communities pile supplies in neighbourhood centres. But drills do not erase trauma. The memory of the 9.0-magnitude quake and tsunami in 2011 — an event that killed around 18,500 people and triggered the Fukushima nuclear disaster — sits like an old scar along the northeastern coast.

“We still see the tape marks on the trees where the water reached; my grandchildren ask why the sea took away our home,” a father from a northern fishing village told me. “You prepare, and you teach the kids to run to higher ground.”

Energy, transport and the halting of normal life

There were swift checks on critical infrastructure. Hokkaido Electric Power Co and Tohoku Electric Power Co reported no abnormalities at their facilities. Bullet trains were suspended and some expressways were closed as operators prioritized safety inspections — small inconveniences that can save lives when structural stress is hidden beneath the concrete.

Seismic intensity measurements recorded an “upper 5” on Japan’s scale in some places — strong enough to make moving around difficult and to topple unreinforced masonry. That jolting force is why Japan’s building codes and emergency architecture are global case studies in resilience; engineers design for sway, for absorption, for the choreography of collapse so as to keep the people inside breathing.

Beyond the tremor: what this moment asks of us

When a nation acutely aware of its geological fate receives a “special advisory” — words not chosen lightly by the JMA — it exposes the tension every modern society faces: how to live fully in a place that could be reshaped in an instant. Risk management, scientific modelling, urban planning, and the daily habits of citizens all become strands in a single rope that must hold.

Globally, Japan’s situation raises questions about how cities worldwide prepare for extremes that are increasing in frequency or visibility: from earthquakes to floods to heatwaves. How do we fund infrastructure resilient enough for the worst? How do we maintain the public’s trust when warnings are sometimes false alarms, and sometimes a lifeline?

“False alarms are better than missed alarms,” said a disaster psychologist who has worked with shelters in the Tohoku region. “But the challenge is sustaining a culture of preparedness without breeding panic.”

Small actions that matter

There are practical steps every reader can take — whether you live in a seismic zone or not. Simple measures make a difference:

  • Keep an emergency kit with water, food, a flashlight and a radio for at least three days.
  • Know your evacuation routes and the higher ground near your home.
  • Secure tall furniture and heavy objects that could injure in a tremor.
  • Stay informed from official channels and sign up for local emergency alerts.

In the hours after the quake, people gathered in small clusters on overpasses and parks, trading stories and snacks from backpacks. A young mother handed a thermos of tea to an elderly neighbour. A fisherman checked his nets and shook his head; his eyes were set on the horizon. There was the quiet choreography of communities bound together by history and by hazard.

So, what do we hold onto? The facts: no major damage reported, tsunami waves recorded up to 80cm, the possibility — stressed by the JMA — of larger quakes in the short term. The feeling: a nation steadying itself, again, against a landscape that is constantly remaking the rules.

And finally, the question for us all: how prepared are you to act when the ground beneath you decides to move? The answer begins not with fear, but with habit — with drills practised and supplies packed, with neighbours known, and with the humility to listen when the earth speaks.

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