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Lebanese President Aoun brands Hezbollah’s wartime conduct ‘treason’

Lebanon's Aoun accuses Hezbollah of 'treason' over war
Israeli air strikes in southern Lebanon continued despite the ceasefire

Smoke over the Bekaa: Lebanon at the Edge of Another Unruly Dawn

There is a particular way the Bekaa smells after dusk — a mix of grape vine dust, diesel, and something metallic that hangs in the throat. On a recent evening, that scent was interrupted by the sting of cordite and the orange bloom of flares cutting through the valley’s low clouds. Smoke threaded the hills like smoke from a cigarette: slow, stubborn, and impossible to ignore.

On the road into southern Lebanon, a campaign billboard of President Joseph Aoun towers above a traffic jam: “The choice is for Lebanon,” it proclaims in bold letters. Drivers inch past, children peering from the back seats. The billboard is new; the choices feel painfully old.

A president’s gamble — negotiations, rebuke, and the language of treason

President Aoun has been speaking in a tone that mixes statesmanship with exasperation. He told the nation that direct talks with Israel were not a betrayal but an attempt to finally end the state of war between Lebanon and its neighbor — an end he likened to the 1949 armistice. “My goal is to reach an end to the state of war with Israel,” he said, and added a vow that any settlement would not be humiliating.

But his message carried a sharper edge, aimed at those he says dragged Lebanon into this conflict. “Those who took us to war for foreign interests are committing treason,” he declared, implicitly singling out Hezbollah without naming it. In a country where allegiance, identity and survival are braided together, that accusation is both calculated and combustible.

Strikes resume in the Bekaa — an uneasy ceasefire frays

Despite a US-mediated ceasefire that began on 16 April and was extended to mid-May, drones and artillery sounds have threaded across the horizon. The Israeli Defence Forces said they renewed strikes in the Bekaa valley, targeting what they called Hezbollah infrastructure — rocket launchers, weapons depots, and fighters — while warning residents of seven towns to evacuate north and west.

Lebanon’s health ministry reported a grim tally from a single day of renewed strikes: 14 people killed and 37 wounded, including two children and two women. Since the latest round of fighting began on 2 March, the ministry says more than 2,500 people have died in Israeli strikes — a figure that includes 277 women, 177 children and roughly 100 medics. The ministry does not distinguish between combatants and civilians in its counts; Hezbollah has not released an aggregate toll for its fighters, though the group has held a string of mass funerals for fallen members.

Voices from the ground

“My brother’s shop is gone,” said Rami, a shopkeeper from a southern border town, his voice low over the phone. “We took shelter in a school. The children try to laugh but at night you can hear them counting the minutes until morning.”

In a crowded ward at a hospital in Beirut, Nurse Fatima wipes her hands on her scrubs and leans forward. “We are full. We cannot close our doors. People come with shrapnel, with burns, with fear. They need bandages, yes, but they also need a future where the night is not a war siren.”

Cross-border dynamics and the shadow of wider regional conflict

The fighting did not arise in isolation. Analysts point to a complicated web of triggers — including recent strikes against Iranian targets — that have ratcheted up tension across the region. Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, have framed their actions as necessary for the security of their soldiers and communities, insisting they act in accordance with understandings brokered with Washington and, ostensibly, with Lebanon.

Hezbollah’s response has been unequivocal: it will not stop its operations against Israeli forces in Lebanon or its raids on northern Israeli towns so long as it says Israel continues to violate the ceasefire. “We will not rely on diplomacy that has proven ineffective,” a Hezbollah statement read, and the group said it would not trust Lebanese authorities it believes have failed to protect the country.

A region awash in proxies

“This is a classic proxy environment,” said Dr. Lina Haddad, a regional security expert based in Beirut. “You have local actors who pursue local agendas, but they also act as nodes in wider regional rivalries. When those external pressures rise, local disputes ignite like tinder.”

Dr. Haddad warns that repeated cycles of flare-up, truce, and flare-up again erode civic trust. “Ceasefires can create breathing room, but only a political solution that accounts for governance, security and economic recovery will prevent the next flare,” she said.

Human cost and displacement — the numbers behind the headlines

The casualty figures are stark. Lebanon’s health ministry’s count of more than 2,500 dead since 2 March includes hundreds of women, children and health workers; Israeli officials report that Hezbollah attacks have killed two civilians in Israel and that 16 Israeli soldiers have died in Lebanon in the same period. The recent Israeli military statement also said one soldier was killed and six wounded in renewed clashes.

Beyond fatalities there is displacement. On the roads north of the Litani River, traffic resembled a human exodus: pickup trucks piled high with mattresses, pots, a goat, sometimes a single remaining olive tree. Families drove through checkpoints they could not fully trust, carrying what little they could salvage of their lives.

  • Ceasefire start: 16 April (US-mediated)
  • Extension: To mid-May
  • Lebanon ministry toll since 2 March: >2,500 dead (includes 277 women, 177 children, ~100 medics)
  • Israeli military toll since 2 March: 16 soldiers killed in Lebanon; Hezbollah-linked attacks killed 2 Israeli civilians

Culture, memory, and the ache of normal life

Walking the souks of Sidon, you can still hear the clink of coffee cups and the rattle of spice jars. A grocer named Amal hands you a sprig of mint with a smile and says, “We sell hope by the kilo.” It’s a small quip, but it is a kind of resistance: a merchant’s refusal to let war be the only narrative here.

Lebanon’s landscapes — cedar-studded mountains, terraced vineyards in Bekaa, the salt breeze of the Mediterranean — are as much part of the story as the headlines. They are living reminders that the stakes are not just territorial but civilizational: livelihoods, heritage, memory.

What now? Questions for the weary and the watchful

Can diplomacy stitch together what years of conflict have frayed? Will a renewed focus on negotiation be enough to counter the centrifugal forces pulling Lebanon apart? And perhaps most urgently: who will stand between communities and renewed ruin?

There are no simple answers. The president’s push for talks argues that the path toward peace must be direct, even if it risks political ruptures at home. Hezbollah’s insistence on resisting what it calls Israeli violations points to a parallel logic: security through deterrence. Each claim has a constituency, and each risks a different kind of damage.

Closing — a plea and a pulse

As night falls again over villages on both sides of the Litani, the human rhythms endure: someone lights a cigarette, a child practices the alphabet by a weak light, a woman boils lentils on a cracked stove. War insists on being extraordinary; everyday life insists, with equal stubbornness, on being ordinary. Which force will win out is not just a question for strategists and statesmen — it is a question for each of us who watches and cares from afar.

What will we do with what we know? Will we let numbers become mere data, or will we let them be a summons to attention, advocacy, and—if possible—action? The Bekaa waits for an answer.

EU presidency places maritime strategy at forefront of its agenda

Maritime strategy 'to the fore' of EU presidency
Minister Helen McEntee with Poland's Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Radoslaw Sikorski in Warsaw

Ireland’s Atlantic Wake: A Small Nation Sets Big Maritime Ambitions on the EU Stage

On a spring morning in Warsaw, amid the soft bustle of diplomats and the faint whiff of roasted coffee drifting from a nearby café, Ireland’s foreign minister sketched a map not just of seas and coasts, but of strategy. Helen McEntee arrived in Poland with a clear intention: to use Ireland’s forthcoming presidency of the Council of the European Union — beginning 1 July — as a platform to lift maritime security from the broadsheets into urgent, practical action.

“The ocean is not some distant idea for us,” she said, clearly and simply, during a series of bilateral talks with Poland’s Radosław Sikorski and Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz, both deputy prime ministers who double as foreign and defence ministers. “It’s our sovereignty, our infrastructure and, increasingly, our vulnerability.”

Why the sea matters now

The line between the visible and the invisible has thinned. Above the waves, navies and drones patrol; below them, delicate fibers of international life—subsea cables—carry financial transactions, medical data, and the streaming that fills our evenings. More than 95% of intercontinental internet traffic travels under the sea in these cables. Cut one and economies stutter, markets wobble and hospitals that rely on cloud systems can be imperiled.

Ireland’s new National Maritime Security Strategy, launched in February, responds to precisely this modern topology of risk and reward. It names critical assets—ports, undersea infrastructure, fishing grounds—and envisions cooperation, intelligence-sharing and capability-building to protect them. The document also signals a willingness to deepen ties at sea with neighbouring powers, including France and the United Kingdom.

“This isn’t about posturing,” said Dr. Aoife Brennan, a maritime security analyst based in Cork. “It’s about practical steps: better radar and sonar, investment in counter-drone systems for patrol vessels, coordinated incident response and shared intelligence networks. For island nations—your lines of communication are your lifelines.”

From Warsaw with priorities

In Warsaw’s polished conference rooms, Ireland and Poland found common ground. Poland, which made security the axis of its EU presidency earlier this year, is carrying the heft of today’s defence conversations. Warsaw is projected to spend close to 5% of its annual GDP on defence this year—among the highest shares in Europe. Ireland, by contrast, has historically run one of the bloc’s more modest defence budgets, hovering slightly above 0.2% of GDP.

Numbers, though, do not tell the full story. Since 2022—the year Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine—Ireland has significantly stepped up its commitment to defence. The government allocated a record €1.5 billion for defence this year, a 35% increase compared with 2022. Capital funding for defence, ministers note, has risen by some 55% in that period. It’s an accelerated trajectory for a country that has long measured itself in civic neutrality rather than military might.

“We’re changing gear,” McEntee told reporters. “We must adapt to threats that are maritime, technological and hybrid. Our investments will focus on radar, sonar, counter-drone capabilities and protecting the underwater arteries of our economy.”

On the ground and at sea

Walk along the quays in Galway or Cork and you’ll hear different cadences: the shouts of trawler crews, the creak of ropes, the low rumble of ferries. These are places where national strategy meets everyday life. Subsea cable landing points—some of them in rural, often overlooked communities—are strategic assets, with technicians and local pubs marking the only visible signs that beneath them lies the global network.

“We’re a small place but we’re on the map,” said Sean O’Malley, a harbourmaster from a coastal county, taking a drag on his cigarette as gulls circled overhead. “When the cables go down, it’s not just the city that feels it; the local shop, the hospital, the teenager doing homework. People don’t think of it until the lights flicker.”

Allies, alliances and a seat at the table

Security conversations in Warsaw also threaded through the wider European commitment to Ukraine. McEntee emphasized Ireland’s stance: that supporting Ukraine is inseparable from defending the peace and stability of Europe. “If Ukraine’s future is negotiated, the EU must have a voice, a seat at that table,” she said. “Our support cannot be transactional.”

Poland’s Sikorski nodded in agreement, pointing to the communities that bind the two countries. “We’re united not only by interests but by people—there are many Polish families who have made Ireland their home. Our ties are human as well as strategic.”

For some commentators, Ireland’s presidency offers a rare window. It’s not about turning the country into a military heavyweight overnight; it’s about shaping norms, pushing for common standards on protecting critical maritime infrastructure, and embedding information-sharing mechanisms across the EU.

Practical steps—and hard choices

Policy, of course, is economics. Defence spending is political. EU members differ starkly in capacity and appetite: while countries like Poland are spending nearly 5% of GDP on defence this year, other EU states still fall below the NATO guideline of 2% (for those who are members) or national spending priorities. Ireland’s increase in funding is meaningful, but it raises questions about long-term budgeting and the balance between investing in hard assets and building human expertise.

“Technology isn’t a set-and-forget solution,” Dr. Brennan warned. “You need trained crews, continuous maintenance, international coordination, legal frameworks that let countries share data swiftly when a crisis hits. Those are the things that take time and political will.”

What should a watching world take from this?

Consider the map again. The Irish coastline is a long, jagged suggestion of land against an immense Atlantic. The sea that has been a source of trade, myth and isolation is now a frontier for cyber and physical security. Small states like Ireland are proof that geography still matters, but so does diplomacy and policy imagination.

Ask yourself: how would your life be affected if the invisible lines beneath the seafloor were severed? Would your bank, your hospital, your child’s school be able to carry on? Ireland’s move to place maritime security at the heart of its EU presidency isn’t just about naval exercises; it’s about asking Europe to think of resilience differently—about how to protect the pipes and fibers and routes that make the modern world run.

There will be debates ahead—over budgets, over partnerships with neighbours like the UK and France, over how intrusive surveillance and intelligence-sharing should be. There will be town-hall meetings in coastal villages, committees in Brussels, and midnight cables humming under the waves. And when Ireland takes the EU helm in July, it will be steering conversations that touch ports and parliaments alike.

“We don’t want to alarm anyone,” McEntee reflected as the day’s meetings closed, “but we must be honest about the dangers. If a small island country can start a big conversation about the sea, perhaps that’s just the kind of leadership Europe needs.”

Who will listen? Who will act? And what stories will be written, not just by ministers in Warsaw, but by the fishermen, engineers and citizens whose lives run like threads beneath the ocean? The answers will, for better or worse, shape the next chapter of Europe’s relationship with the Atlantic depths.

Melania Trump urges ABC to take a stand on Jimmy Kimmel

Melania Trump says ABC should 'take a stand' on Kimmel
US First Lady Melania Trump described Jimmy Kimmel's behaviour as 'atrocious' in a social media message (file image)

A Night Interrupted: Laughter, Fear and a Nation Asking What Comes Next

Washington, D.C., has a particular smell in the spring — a mix of cherry blossoms, diesel from the Metro, and the faint perfume of optimism that gathers around the White House Correspondents’ Dinner. People arrive in gowns and suits, press passes sing in the shadows, and the joke writers of the capital sharpen their wits for the cameras. This year the cameras were still rolling. The jokes had already been told. And then, in the lobby of the Washington Hilton, a single burst of gunfire cracked through the air and the evening’s script was abruptly, terrifyingly rewritten.

It read like a scene from a political thriller — but it wasn’t fiction. A man later identified as Cole Allen barreled through a checkpoint, opened fire on Secret Service agents and wounded one before he was restrained and arrested. Guests were hurried outside. The dinner, an annual ritual where politicians and journalists mingle under a fragile tent of civility, was evacuated. Whispers swelled into shouts. Phones recorded hands that once clapped for satirists now trembling with fear.

When Satire Feels Like Flame

Jimmy Kimmel had already pushed the envelope days earlier. In a televised parody of the Correspondents’ Dinner, he launched into a monologue aimed at the first lady. “Mrs. Trump, you have a glow like an expectant widow,” he quipped — a line meant for shock and laughter, but landing hard in an atmosphere where political lines are redrawn daily on social feeds and talk radio.

For some, the joke was a classic late-night punch; for others it was the latest in an escalating litany of commentary they describe as hateful. “Enough is enough,” Melania Trump wrote on X, accusing the network and its talent of fanning flames. “How many times will ABC’s leadership enable Kimmel’s atrocious behavior at the expense of our community,” she said, in words that landed like a gavel.

President Donald Trump, speaking on his platform, called for Kimmel to be fired “immediately” by Disney and ABC, arguing the monologue went “far beyond the pale.”

The Echoes of a Joke

Television thrives on provocation. Satire pierces pomposity, punctures pretense, and sometimes lands a needed blow. Yet in an America where fireworks and gunfire can feel alarmingly close to each other, a barb that once would have been dismissed as merely tasteless now ricochets into debates about safety, incitement and corporate responsibility.

“Comedy has always been about pushing boundaries,” said Dr. Lila Moreno, a media ethics professor at Georgetown University. “But when those boundaries overlap with a climate of political violence, we must be reflective about intent, context and consequence. A punchline isn’t created in a vacuum.”

Not everyone agrees that the joke warranted the fury it’s received. “I watch late-night hosts to unwind,” said Rashid Alvi, a public relations consultant who attended press events in D.C. “It felt like performative outrage — an attempt to score points. But then shots were fired, and everything became raw.”

Regulatory Pressure and the Blurring Lines of Broadcast Control

The incident didn’t occur in a vacuum. The months preceding the dinner had already seen a tug-of-war between broadcasters and regulators. FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr had publicly pressured stations to consider pulling Kimmel from airwaves, warning that local broadcasters who aired his show could face fines or even loss of licenses. In response, some broadcast groups — notably Sinclair and Nexstar — briefly dropped Kimmel’s program on dozens of ABC-affiliated stations.

“What we’re witnessing is a test of where the line is drawn between free expression and public safety,” said James Huang, a communications lawyer who has represented broadcasters. “The FCC’s rhetoric signals a desire to expand local control over programming, but the downstream effect is a chilling one for editorial independence.”

ABC briefly suspended Kimmel’s show months earlier after comments about the assassination of a political activist drew condemnation. Disney, ABC’s parent company, declined immediate comment after the shooting.

On the Ground: Voices That Cut Through the Headlines

Walking the block around the Hilton the morning after, you could feel the city processing what happened in micro conversations — in coffee lines, on metro platforms, at the desks of reporters who make lives out of being present when history folds into chaos.

“We were supposed to be laughing,” said Tara Nguyen, a junior reporter, fingers still stained with coffee. “Instead, we were running. You never think that a joke could be the preface to a lockdown. It makes you wonder how easily public discourse tips into danger.”

A Secret Service veteran, who asked to speak on background, described the chaotic minutes: “Training kicks in — shield, evacuate, secure. But none of that removes the human reaction. You don’t compartmentalize fear because it’s part of the job. You feel it.” The agent’s voice was measured but haunted.

  • Wounded: One Secret Service agent was reported wounded by the suspect.
  • Arrest: The suspect was subdued and taken into custody at the scene.
  • Network responses: Disney/ABC had not issued an immediate public statement following the shooting.

Questions That Aren’t Going Away

How do we balance satire’s role as a corrective against the responsibilities of platforms and networks? When does provocative speech cross into a risk that media companies must proactively manage? And who decides when a joke moves from punchline to provocation in a landscape already brittle with political resentment?

“The immediate reaction — to pull, to punish, to punish quickly — is emotionally satisfying,” said Dr. Moreno. “But we should ask what long-term precedent we want to set for content control. Are we comfortable with regulators or corporations becoming the arbiters of comedic taste?”

At the same time, data reminds us why the stakes feel so high. The United States records tens of thousands of firearm-related deaths each year; unfamiliar headlines about violence accumulate into a national anxiety. When entertainment edges close to imagery or rhetoric suggestive of harm, that paranoia is easily weaponized.

Beyond D.C.: A Mirror for the Moment

The drama at the Hilton is more than a isolated episode. It’s an illustration of how culture, media and politics collide in modern America — how jokes become ordinance, how platforms and power trade blows, and how the public sphere is increasingly policed by both corporate boards and the loudest corners of social media.

People across the political spectrum expressed unease, but not unanimity. For some, the call to punish Kimmel is a necessary stand against what they see as normalized dehumanization. For others, it’s a dangerous slide toward censoring dissenting voices. Both sides look at the same sparks and fear different fires.

So what should an audience expect from those who shape public conversation? Should networks act as guardians, editors or simply as marketplaces of ideas? As you read this, consider where you stand: Do you think media companies should immediately remove personalities who provoke, or do you worry about the broader implications for free speech?

Closing Thought

That night at the Correspondents’ Dinner exposed more than a fissure in American humor. It exposed a nation still struggling to reconcile freedom with safety, entertainment with consequence, satire with the very real human cost of political antagonism. The jokes will return — and so will the debates. But if the past few days have taught us anything, it’s that the line between stage and street can, in moments, be alarmingly thin.

“We must ask ourselves,” Dr. Moreno said, “what kind of public square we want: one where we can laugh at power without endangering each other, or one where every laugh becomes ammunition.”

Madaxweyne Deni oo tababar u furay boqolaal askari

Apr 27(Jowhar) Madaxweynaha Puntland Siciid Cabdullaahi Deni ayaa boqolaal askari tababar uga furay dugsi ciidan oo ku yaalla magaalada Badhan ee gobolka Sanaag.

Dib U Dhac ku yimid qabashada Doorashada dowlad Goboleedka Koofurgalbeed

Apr 27(Jowhar)Doorashada golayaasha deegaanka iyo golayaasha wakiilada dowlad goboleedka Koofurgalbeed ayaa dib u dhac ku yimid iyadoo guddiga doorashooyinka uu shaaciyay waqtiga ay dhacayaan doorashooyinka.

Madaxweynaha Ruushka oo la kulmay wasiirka arrimaha dibadda Iran

Apr 27(Jowhar)-Wasiirka arrimaha dibadda Iran Cabbaas Araghchi iyo madaxweynaha Ruushka Vladimir Putin ayaa maanta ku kulmay magaalada Moscow.

Gaza residents repurpose rubble to rebuild and reopen neighborhood streets

Palestinians use Gaza rubble to restore streets
UNDP has so far removed about 287,000 ⁠tons of rubble

Rubble Roads: How Gaza’s People Are Turning Destruction into a First Step Toward Rebuilding

The first thing you notice when you step into southern Gaza is the dust. It hangs in the air like a memory—fine, gray, stubborn—stirred up by the slow, grinding teeth of machines turning deathly silence into a kind of activity. Bulldozers plough through piles of concrete and bent rebar, excavators clawing away at what used to be homes, shops, schools. Men with work boots and tarpaulin hats stand beside them, licking their lips against the grit, eyes glinting with a mix of purpose and fatigue.

“We are making a road out of what was a home,” says Alessandro Mrakic, who runs the UN Development Programme office in Gaza. He speaks with the weathered calm of someone who has seen emergencies before and knows how long the climb back up will be. “We don’t just clear; we sort, crush, and reuse. It’s practical—and it gives people work.”

The idea that could change daily life

It is a blunt, pragmatic solution: crush the wreckage, sift the steel and concrete, and repurpose the gravel and fill to repave streets, pad shelter sites, and lay foundations for community kitchens. Machines reduce giant, jagged ruins to manageable granules. The UNDP has so far removed about 287,000 tons of rubble—an enormous figure until you remind yourself it is barely a splinter compared with the full scale of destruction.

UNDP officials estimate Gaza still houses roughly 61 million tons of debris—one of the largest post-conflict clearance challenges in recent memory. At the current pace, and with unimpeded access to fuel and heavy equipment, clearance could take up to seven years. Those are generous assumptions in a place where fuel is scarce, access is contested, and the threat of unexploded ordnance punctures every day’s work.

On the ground in Khan Younis

In Khan Younis, on a dusty street that used to be lined with citrus trees and small shops, the sound is relentless: metal grinding, engines rasping, workers shouting instructions over the machinery. Men with orange vests sweep and sort. Women walk by carrying thermoses—their bright floral scarves a small defiance against the monotone of concrete.

“We used to sit and sip tea under the old fig tree,” says Fatima, a middle-aged woman from a nearby tent encampment. “Now we sit and watch the diggers. The tea is the same. The stories are the same. The soil tastes different.”

The reclaimed rubble is being used to mend roads that are vital arteries for hospitals and water trucks. Officials say many wells and clinic entrances remain blocked by collapsed structures, and loose rubble makes it almost impossible for ambulances to reach those who need them. The work is not glamorous; it’s a kind of civic triage, rebuilding access before buildings.

Risks and real costs

There is danger in every scoop. Before a single block is lifted, the UN’s mine action teams sweep the site for explosives and ordnance. Hidden beneath the broken facades are booby traps and shells—silent killers lying in wait.

“We check every meter,” says a demining supervisor who asked not to be named for security reasons. “We mark, we clear, and then the heavy equipment comes in. It’s slow, because speed kills in more ways than one.”

For men like Ibrahim al-Sarsawi, 32, the risk is also a daily calculation. “I can’t find any other source of income,” he says, wiping a hand across his dusty face. “I work because I have to. You might get hurt. You might not come home. But what else am I supposed to do?”

That stark pragmatism is echoed throughout Gaza. For many, this is work and survival braided into one. For others, it’s the first step in reclaiming a small piece of their daily life: a smoother path to the cistern, a stretch of road where children can walk without fear of stepping on nails or twisted metal.

Numbers that demand global attention

The scale of rebuilding that Gaza needs is staggering. A recent joint assessment by the European Union, United Nations, and World Bank estimates that recovery and reconstruction will require about $71.4 billion over the next decade. That figure covers housing, infrastructure, water and sanitation, electricity, schools, and health services—everything that makes a normal life possible.

“We removed 287,000 tons so far—but that is just the tip of the iceberg,” Mrakic says. “The real test is sustained support: fuel, equipment, safe corridors for materials, and time.”

Cultural fragments and daily endurance

Walk through any of the temporary camps scattered outside Gaza City and you’ll see how people stitch life back together. A father repairs an oud in a corner, its wood sanded smooth despite the chaos outside. Children draw little chalk houses on flat patches of reclaimed concrete as if rehearsing the architecture of the future. A woman makes mana’eesh—flatbread with thyme—and sells slices to workers for a few shekels. The smoke from a small stove carries a scent of cumin and resilience.

“We are not just clearing rubble,” says Sobhi Dawoud, a 60-year-old displaced man sitting outside his tent. “The war is over, yes. But this is the beginning of another war—a war of rebuilding: schools, water, electricity, sewage. The fight now is to put life back.”

Questions we can’t avoid

What does rebuilding mean when the very soil is contested? How do you plan a decade-long reconstruction while short-term politics and security anxieties keep shifting? And how should the international community balance urgency with care—speeding up aid while ensuring that rebuilding is safe, sustainable, and respects local needs and labor?

These aren’t theoretical questions for Gaza’s residents. They are practical matters of survival and dignity. A road repaired with crushed rubble can be a lifeline, yes—but it is also a stopgap. True recovery will need permanent materials, steady funding, and, above all, political will.

Beyond stones: what rebuilding must include

  • Safe, continued access for heavy machinery and fuel;
  • Comprehensive demining and unexploded ordnance removal;
  • Long-term funding for housing, hospitals, water systems, and electricity;
  • Meaningful local employment and capacity-building so Gazans shape their own recovery.

“If everything depended on outsiders, we would never start,” remarks Lila Mansour, an engineer coordinating community repairs. “But people want to work. They want to be part of rebuilding their neighborhoods. That dignity matters.”

What the rubble reveals

Rubble is more than a physical problem; it’s a witness. It tells stories of families interrupted mid-laundry, of storefronts frozen with last week’s goods, of schools where a single desk remains upright among the plaster and glass. Turning crash into road isn’t a solution to all those stories, but it is a beginning—a way to restore movement, connection, and the possibility of commerce and care.

As machines chew and sort, and as workers carry thermoses and small radios, one question settles in: when the dust finally clears, will the world be ready to fund and support the next stages? Will international pledges turn into sustained action? Gaza’s people are doing their part—often with little more than muscle, grit, and ingenuity. The rest is up to the rest of us.

So as you read this, consider the scale: 61 million tons of rubble, seven years of clearance in best-case scenarios, $71.4 billion in rebuilding needs. And then imagine a street—rebuilt, paved with stones ground from the ruins of a home, children walking to school, a vendor selling tea at dusk. What does it take, globally and locally, to make that image durable? What role do we play, right now, in stitching those fragile first stitches into something that lasts?

Duqa magaalada Muqdisho oo la kulmay Guddiga Qaran ee Xuquuqul Insaanka

Apr 27(Jowhar)-Guddoomiyaha Maamulka Gobolka Banaadir ahna Duqa Magaalada Muqdisho Dr. Xasan Maxamed Xuseen (Muungaab) ayaa xafiiskiisa ku qaabilay Guddoomiyaha Guddiga Qaran ee Xuquuqul Insaanka Drs. Maryan Qaasim iyo xubno ka tirsan Guddiga oo booqasho gogol-xaar u ah wada-shaqeyn ku soo gaaray Aqalka Dowladda Hoose ee Muqdisho.

Drone attack on Odesa wounds 14 people, including several children

Odesa drone strike injures 14, including children
People stand amid the debris in the yard of a damaged residential building in Odesa

A Midnight Sky of Metal: Odesa Wakes to Glass, Smoke and the Sound of Drones

When the sirens began, they sounded like a city clearing its throat—soft at first, then growing into a prolonged wail that gathered neighbors on doorsteps and in stairwells. It was the kind of alarm that rearranges sleep into action: coats, keys, the careful lifting of a cat into a crate. By morning, Odesa’s historic Prymorskyi district, with its ornate balconies and narrow lanes that have seen centuries of trade and tide, lay marked by shattered windows, soot, and a trailing smell of burned insulation.

“It was an extremely difficult night,” Serhiy Lysak, head of the local military administration, wrote on Telegram, his terse update a civic waypoint for residents tuning in for news between sips of coffee and the slow sweep of glass from cobblestones.

The Human Toll

Local officials said at least 14 people were injured in the strikes, including two children. The blows landed hardest in Prymorskyi, the city’s storied seafront quarter where a hotel, residential blocks and small businesses sustain both locals and visitors. Governor Oleh Kiper confirmed the casualty count as the day unfolded.

A photograph Lysak shared showed the stark geometry of daylight through a ruined frame: curtains hanging like flags from a building whose windows had been transformed into jagged lace. Down the block, 68-year-old Volodymyr Taban—an Odessa man with the habitual stoop of someone who has lifted a lifetime of pantry sacks—swept debris from the sidewalk and smiled wryly at a passing journalist.

“We made it through. Old buildings are the strongest,” he said, his voice a mix of pride and fatigue, settling a human line under the harder headline.

Port, Ships and the Blunt Edge of Supply Chains

Odesa is more than a skyline; it is a gateway. The city’s docks and terminals have for decades been part of the arteries that move Ukrainian exports to the world. On this night, the attack grazed those arteries: Ukraine’s seaports authority reported damage to port infrastructure in the Greater Odesa hub and said a Nauru-flagged vessel, the Ramco, sustained minor damage while transiting a maritime corridor.

An energy facility within a cargo terminal caught fire, officials said, prompting localized blazes that were extinguished. A fire aboard the Ramco was likewise put out by its crew; early reports suggested no injuries on board. Still, for a global market watching grain and oilseed flows, even a small disruption at a major Black Sea port can unsettle pricing and logistics far beyond the quay.

Numbers That Tell a Story

Ukraine’s military response tallied the volume of the night: the air force said Russia launched 94 drones from 6 pm; Ukrainian defenses downed or neutralized 74 of them. President Volodymyr Zelensky escalated the account, saying that in the past week Russian forces had unleashed about 1,900 attack drones, nearly 1,400 guided aerial bombs and around 60 missiles of various types.

“This highlights how timely the new partner contributions to the PURL initiative are,” Mr. Zelensky wrote on X, pointing to the NATO-led program formed to speed US-made weaponry into Ukrainian hands. He also noted the European Union’s new sanctions against Russia and approval of a €90 billion loan to Ukraine—measures that stitch politics and finance to the front-line reality.

On the Streets: Voices of Odesa

The city’s response is practical and intricate—volunteers with brooms, municipal workers patching temporary shelters, cafes offering free tea. The mood is weary but stubbornly ordinary. A young mother, clutching a toddler with eyes still rimmed with sleep, paused on the staircase of a reinforced basement shelter.

“My child didn’t understand the sirens,” she said. “I told him it’s thunder. He asked when the sky will stop being angry.” Her name, like many here, is withheld; the city has become adept at privacy as a kind of safety.

Beside a bakery, where the smell of fresh challah fought the scent of smoke, a shopkeeper named Anton grinned despite a streak of ash on his cheek. “We joke that we live where the sea teaches you not to be surprised,” he said. “But jokes are thinner now.”

Military analysts watching from Kyiv and abroad caution that this pattern—swarms of inexpensive drones probing air defenses—is a deliberate Russian tactic designed to exhaust interceptors and targets alike. “Drones are the new saturation weapon,” explained a defense analyst who asked to be identified only as a regional specialist. “They are cheap, disposable, and force you to keep shooting, which can degrade your stockpiles and response time.”

Why This Matters to the Rest of the World

Is a strike on a Black Sea port a local incident or a global ripple? The answer is both. Odesa’s terminals are nodes in a global food system where disruptions can spike prices in markets already jittery from climate shocks, geopolitical uncertainty and supply-chain fatigue. When a port that loads grains and oilseeds is intermittently threatened, importers from Africa to Asia lean back on contingency plans—sometimes paying premiums for insurance or rerouting shipments at extra cost.

Moreover, the episode reflects a larger technological and ethical shift in modern warfare. Affordable, long-range drones lower the threshold for persistent strikes and blur the lines between battlefield and civilian life. When aerial munitions can be launched with mass and relative anonymity, cities like Odesa become arenas where urban life and geopolitics collide.

Quick Facts

  • Injured: 14 people, including two children (local officials)
  • Reported drones used in the attack window: 94 (Ukraine’s air force)
  • Drones downed or neutralized that night: 74
  • President Zelensky’s weekly tally: roughly 1,900 attack drones and nearly 1,400 guided bombs
  • EU financial aid approved: €90 billion loan; new sanctions announced

Resilience, Memory and the Long View

Walking past the Opera House and the slope of the Potemkin steps later in the day, you can still hear the soft clack of shoes on stone—tourists and locals returning to routines, to the slow commerce of empanadas and espresso. In Odesa, every street feels like a palimpsest: imperial murals, Soviet mosaics, and the graffiti of a new generation layered one over the other. The city’s humor—gritty, self-aware, sharp—has kept it afloat through history’s many storms.

How long can that endurance be asked of a city? What is the cost, not just in brick and glass but in the collective patience of a population that keeps being asked to adapt? These are the questions that hover above the pragmatic lists of numbers and the immediate needs of medical care and shelter.

For now, volunteers hand out bottled water; emergency crews check gas lines; the Ramco sails on, patched and escorted if necessary. Yet the night’s images—glass shimmering in daylight like frost, curtains fluttering from broken frames—are the kind that remain. They become the small, human bookmarks in a conflict ledger the world reads in fits and starts.

So the city cleans, counts, and remembers. And the rest of us—trading goods, taking notes, weighing policy decisions—watch and, perhaps, ask ourselves how we shore up the fragile threads that connect a harbor to a supper table half a world away.

Iconic Ronettes vocalist Nedra Talley Ross passes away at 80

Ronettes singer Nedra Talley Ross dies aged 80
Ronettes singer Nedra Talley Ross has died at the age of 80

Nedra Talley Ross: The Last Ronette, Gone at 80 — A Voice That Lingers

When a voice that helped shape the soundtrack of the 1960s falls silent, the air seems to hold its breath. Nedra Talley Ross, the last surviving member of The Ronettes, has died at 80. The news landed like a vinyl crackle at the start of a favorite record — sudden, intimate, and impossibly personal for anyone who has ever mouthed the words to “Be My Baby” in a car, a kitchen, or at the back of a classroom.

The family’s note online said she passed surrounded by loved ones, at home and at peace. “She went home to be with the Lord,” her daughter wrote, promising a later celebration of life. Social feeds that once celebrated retro beehives and sequined stage jackets immediately filled with small memorials: photos of teenage girls with blue-shaded eyelids, fathers pointing to a worn single with pride, older sisters twisting their hair into the signature bouffant.

A Sound That Changed the Room

It is hard to overstate what The Ronettes did in the early 1960s. With their dramatic eyeliner, towering hair, and voices that could sound both fragile and indomitable, they turned teenage longing into an art form. Their signature smash “Be My Baby” — released in 1963 — hit No. 2 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and became an enduring masterclass in pop production. Produced by Phil Spector and draped in his so‑called “Wall of Sound,” the record was as much about texture and atmosphere as it was about melody.

“You could feel it in your chest,” a lifelong fan named Maria Blanco in Los Angeles told me. “It was like love had a rhythm, and Nedra’s voice was the echo.”

The Ronettes’ catalogue also includes the rain-soaked romanticism of “Walking in the Rain,” the declarative pleading of “Baby, I Love You,” and the heartbreak‑simmering “(The Best Part of) Breakin’ Up.” Though the group officially released just one studio album — Presenting the Fabulous Ronettes Featuring Veronica (1964) — their influence rippled far beyond a single LP. Artists from Brian Wilson to Bruce Springsteen have acknowledged the group’s impact; the way those harmonies sit atop orchestral swells still serves as a template for dramatic pop production.

The Image and the Era

Think of the beehive and you think of an era: girls swapping gossip in diners, poodle skirts and slim cigarette ads, cities pulsing with new sounds. Yet behind the lacquered hair and matching dresses were young women navigating a music industry that often tried to tidy, package, and profit from their youth. Nedra — alongside cousins Ronnie Spector (born Veronica) and Estelle Bennett — walked that tightrope, building a public persona that was glamour and grit at once.

“They were presented as perfect girls next door, but their story is so much more complicated,” explains Dr. Aisha Reynolds, a music historian who studies 20th‑century American pop. “The Ronettes embodied the contradictions of the era: immense popularity and limited control, exposure and exploitation. Nedra’s voice carried both the joy of stardom and the weight of its costs.”

More Than a Hairstyle: Cultural Echoes

There is something almost religious about the way “Be My Baby” reverberates across generations. John, a record collector I met flipping through a crate in Brooklyn, held up a 45 and said, “You don’t play that record for people — you baptize them.” That is not hyperbole. Musicians and film directors have used The Ronettes’ songs to conjure nostalgia, to create tension, to underscore innocence and longing.

Nedra’s place in that iconography was quieter than Ronnie Spector’s headline-making life, but no less essential. She provided harmonic counterpoints that made the leads bristle with emotion; she was part of a tightly wound machine whose seams were invisible because of the polish. When the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inducted The Ronettes in 2007, it was an institutional nod to the group’s long shadow. For Nedra, the honor was one among many small corrections history eventually made in acknowledging women whose contributions had been minimized.

Legacy in Numbers and in Memory

Numbers tell part of the story. “Be My Baby” achieved a No. 2 position on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1963 and has been featured on countless “greatest songs” lists since. The group’s induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame came in 2007. Today, their recordings have earned millions of streams on digital platforms, but that figure only hints at an older, analog intimacy — teens pressed up against transistor radios and lovers listening together on dimly lit nights.

“Statistics don’t capture the way a single harmony can take you back to the first time you felt something intense,” said music teacher Marco Alvarez in Miami. “Nedra’s voice is a bookmark in a life.”

Remembering the Human in the Headlines

When the glitz fades, what remains is the human choreography behind the songs: late-night rehearsals, car rides to auditions, the fierce loyalty of family. Several tributes called attention not only to Nedra’s artistry but to her warmth. A neighbor in her community recalled how she would wave to children playing in the street, sometimes with a cassette of old demos tucked into her purse.

“She was always kind,” the neighbor said. “You’d see her and think, there goes someone who made the soundtrack to my mother’s life, my grandmother’s life — and she’s smiling like she knows a secret.”

Questions to Carry With Us

As we say goodbye, there are larger questions to consider: How do we honor artists whose lives were entangled with an industry that both elevated and exploited them? How do we keep those harmonies alive without flattening the people who sang them into icons alone?

For those who grew up with The Ronettes and for younger listeners discovering them for the first time on streaming playlists, Nedra Talley Ross’s passing is a moment to listen differently. It’s an invitation to turn the volume up, to read the liner notes, to remember that behind every recorded note there was a person with a story.

What Comes Next

The family has asked for privacy and promised a Celebration of Life to be announced later. In the meantime, tributes will multiply online and in living rooms, on radio waves and in classrooms where new musicians study the craft of harmony. Nedra’s voice — part of a trio that defined a generation — will continue to be a companion through sorrow, joy, and everything in between.

So, when the next rainstorm rolls in, when a lover knocks on the door, when a record skips to that opening drumbeat, listen. Hear the echo of an era, and remember the woman behind it. What song did you first hear that changed you? How will Nedra’s music sound in your life now?

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