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Israeli strikes in Gaza leave 24 dead, including three children

Israeli attacks kill 24 in Gaza, including three children
An Israeli military helicopter targeted tents sheltering displaced Palestinians in the al-Mawasi area of Khan Younis, Gaza

Smoke, Silence and a Fragile Promise: Another Day of Loss in Gaza

They buried four people in the lengthening dusk, and the air smelled of dust, incense and gasoline. A small procession wound through Khan Younis, men in keffiyehs carrying shrouds, children clinging to relatives, women crying out in a cadence that is both ancient and newly ruptured. A tank’s shelling, a second strike that found a medic rushing to help—these were the last things many of them remembered before the ground opened under their lives again.

“We were sleeping,” said a man at the funeral, voice raw. “The shells hit our house. My son—gone. My nephew—gone. We are not fighters. We are people.” He folded his hands as if to hold himself together. Around him, neighbors murmured agreement, not with politics but with the naked human fact of grief.

What happened today

Health authorities in Gaza reported that at least 24 Palestinians were killed in Israeli tank shelling and airstrikes across the enclave today, including seven children. The strikes hit southern Khan Younis and northern Gaza City; among those killed was a five-month-old boy and a paramedic who had run toward victims of the first strike only to be killed by a follow-up attack, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said.

The IFRC named the medics as Hussein Hassan Hussein Al-Samiri, describing him as “a dedicated paramedic” with the Palestine Red Crescent Society and noting that his death brings the tally of PRCS staff and volunteers killed in the line of duty to 30 since the conflict began in October 2023. “Humanitarian workers must be respected and protected at all times,” the federation said in a statement, adding an international sense of outrage to local sorrow.

Gaza’s health ministry—operating under the local governing authority—also reported at least 38 people wounded. Separately, Israeli military spokespeople said their strikes were targeted at a Hamas platoon commander they named as being responsible for a 7 October assault. Israel said it had taken measures “to mitigate harm to civilians as much as possible” and that the strikes were in response to militants opening fire near its armistice line—an action it described as a breach of the ceasefire.

Crossings, confusion and the fragile logistics of survival

Only three days earlier, the main Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt had been reopened as part of a US-brokered truce deal intended to allow people and goods to move in and out of the shattered strip. The reopening offered a sliver of normalcy: ambulances lined up on the Egyptian side, the hope that medical evacuations and basic supplies would flow.

Then, almost as quickly as it opened, the process stalled. Palestinian patients who had been preparing to cross were told their passage was postponed. Israel’s COGAT agency said it had not received the coordination details from the World Health Organization necessary to facilitate the movement. An Egyptian security official told visiting journalists the cited reason was “security concerns in the Rafah area.”

Minutes became hours; hope became a taut thread. “They tell us to prepare, then they tell us to wait,” said a doctor who had escorted patients and spoke on condition of anonymity. “For the people here, delays can be life or death.”

Mawasi: Tents Ripped, Lives Tossed

On the long, narrow coastal strip of Mawasi near Khan Younis, tents that had sheltered families displaced from other parts of Gaza were torn apart. The tents—patched and crowded, smelling of cooking fires and detergent—have become the only refuge for many among Gaza’s more than two million residents. Humanitarian agencies estimate that nearly the entire population has been uprooted at some stage during the fighting.

“We’ve been moving for months,” a woman in a faded headscarf told me, her hands steady despite everything. “Where do we go? The sea is to our left; the border is closed. You cannot live as if every night might be your last.”

Numbers that numb

Statistics accumulate like rubble. Since the ceasefire took hold nearly four months ago, local health officials say Israeli fire has killed at least 530 people in Gaza—most of them civilians—while Palestinian militants have killed four Israeli soldiers during the same period, according to Israeli authorities. The broader toll since October 2023 remains grim: Gaza’s health authorities report tens of thousands killed and injured, and whole neighborhoods reduced to the rubble that now passes for a map.

These are not simply numbers. Each is a story interrupted: a toddler who will never learn to speak, a medic who will never walk into an ambulance again, a farmer whose field is now a crater. Yet they also underscore a larger global truth about protracted conflicts in densely populated places: conventional distinctions between warriors and civilians dissolve under the pressure of modern warfare.

Voices from both sides

“Every violation threatens the whole architecture of the truce,” said an analyst who follows Gaza reconstruction efforts. “Trust is the currency of any ceasefire—and there’s very little of it left.”

Hamas decried the strikes as deliberate attempts to undermine stabilization efforts and called for immediate international pressure on Israel to cease such actions. Israeli military officials, meanwhile, framed the day’s strikes as necessary countermeasures against operatives they said were preparing attacks—measures, they say, justified even under a ceasefire when forces are active near armistice lines.

What this day tells us about the future

Beyond the immediate politics there are structural questions: how to protect medical workers and aid convoys; how to manage crossings to ensure patients get timely care; how to rebuild towns when the rules of engagement do not prevent repeated strikes on the same site. The second phase of the ceasefire—meant to negotiate governance and reconstruction in Gaza—has been stalled by unresolved core issues such as the presence of Israeli forces and the disarmament of armed groups inside Gaza.

What happens if the crossings open and close like a faucet—dripping hope and then drought—or if targeted strikes continue to claim medics and civilians? How can a battered population rebuild when fear frames every step into the street?

For readers far away

Ask yourself: how does one measure responsibility in a place where both sides point to violations? Where international agencies call for protection and yet the bodies keep arriving? Beyond taking sides, what practical steps can international actors insist upon to protect civilians, to enforce corridors for medical evacuations, to shield humanitarian staff?

In the dusk in Khan Younis, a small boy kept asking adults for bread. He was too young to understand ceasefires or declarations; he only knew hunger and the ache of loss. That image—simple, stubborn—stayed long after I left: a reminder that amidst the geopolitics and the headlines, the most urgent task remains not winning arguments but saving lives.

What to watch next

  • Whether Rafah remains open for sustained medical evacuations and aid deliveries.
  • Whether international organizations secure guarantees to protect healthcare workers and civilian zones.
  • Whether negotiators can move from fragile pauses to durable arrangements for governance and reconstruction.

There are no easy answers. But there is a responsibility—political, moral and practical—to ensure that a day like today becomes less likely to be repeated. Otherwise, ash will be the only language left to describe a place that once hummed with family markets, weddings and almond trees.

British MPs support proposal to publish Peter Mandelson’s files

British MPs back plan to release Mandelson files
Peter Mandelson has resigned from the House of Lords

When Westminster’s Curtains Part: Mandelson, Epstein and the Small, Heavy Things We Call Secrets

On a damp London morning, when the flags over Parliament bowed to the wind and the scent of takeaway coffee mingled with the diesel hum of Whitehall buses, the Commons felt smaller than usual and yet curiously exposed — like a living room in which an argument has been taken out into the street for all to see.

By the time MPs voted to allow a tranche of archived files about Peter Mandelson’s appointment as UK ambassador to the United States to be released, the threads of the story had already stretched from the gilded corridors of power to a far more troubling place: the long shadow of Jeffrey Epstein and a raft of documents released in the United States that keep unsettling the British political landscape.

How the vote came to pass

The Prime Minister, under mounting pressure from his own side, agreed to shift the decision over sensitive documents away from the traditional route. Rather than letting the Cabinet Secretary — the head of the civil service — decide which pages might wither national security or diplomatic ties, Number 10 acceded to an unusual demand: the Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) should be allowed to see the files and advise.

“No one wanted this to become a bit of Westminster theatre,” a Labour backbencher told me, standing in the corridor outside the chamber. “But people are angry. There’s a feeling that we’re owed not just the truth, but the basic dignity of knowing how appointments were made.”

It was a small procedural twist — but in British politics, procedure is often the scaffolding of accountability.

The police and the pause

Just as ministers prepared for publication, the Metropolitan Police signalled caution. Scotland Yard asked the government not to release “certain documents” that might undermine an ongoing investigation. For now, that request has the effect of putting some files on pause.

“This is about ensuring we don’t compromise evidence or investigative lines,” a Metropolitan Police source said. “Requests like these are routine in complex inquiries; they’re not intended to shroud things in secrecy.”

Chris Ward, responding in the Commons, told MPs the material would not be published immediately and that lawyers would help determine what could go out. The ISC — a committee of nine MPs and peers charged with oversight of Britain’s security and intelligence services — will be asked to look at anything that might touch on national security or international relations.

Why this matters — beyond Westminster

At stake is not merely the biography of one politician, but the conversation about how old networks and private relationships intersect with public life. Peter Mandelson, once a titan of New Labour and a political architect of the UK’s modern era, resigned from the Labour Party and the House of Lords after recent revelations in the US files appeared to connect him to Epstein and to suggest he passed market-sensitive information while in office.

Keir Starmer told MPs that he had been aware of Mandelson’s friendship with Epstein when appointing him, and bluntly accused the former minister of lying about the extent of that relationship. “He lied repeatedly,” the prime minister said in the chamber, a sentence that landed like a stone in still water.

But what do we mean when we say someone “lied” about a relationship? And why is this more than a quarrel about a single appointment? The questions rippled out into a global conversation about influence, access and how power is traded in social circles that cross continents.

Files, leaks and the global echo

The documents that set this off were released in the US as part of the Department of Justice’s continuing review of Epstein-related materials. Epstein died in a Manhattan jail in 2019. The files — numbering, by some accounts, in the thousands of pages — have exposed relationships and correspondence that touch a surprised and often uncomfortable variety of public figures.

They have already forced apologies from billionaires and statements from former presidents. They led to renewed scrutiny of those who mixed socially or professionally with Epstein at a time when law enforcement and survivors were trying to piece together a global trafficking network.

“Every time a new tranche drops, another set of names goes viral and another layer of gloss is removed from public life,” said Dr. Maya Ellison, a lecturer in political ethics at King’s College London. “What we face now is the challenge of distinguishing between social connection and culpable wrongdoing — and doing so without making people suspects simply for having been in the same room as a later-disgraced figure.”

Voices from the edges

Outside the Palace of Westminster, the conversation was more prosaic and immediate. A parliamentary researcher who asked not to be named said, “People are frightened. Not for themselves, but for the institutions. They worry about what it does to public confidence when the colour between private and public life blurs.”

A nearby café owner, watching MPs shuffle in for their morning coffee, shrugged. “We all knew it would come to this eventually,” she said. “In a way it’s good. Let the light in. If there’s wrongdoing, get it out.”

And a former diplomat, now an ethics campaigner, had sharper words. “This is about the norms that used to hold elites to account,” he said. “If we accept that deals and sensitive exchanges happen in private, then we accept a world in which the public interest is negotiable.”

The international frisson

It is not just a British story. American politics has been roiled by the same documents: President Trump dismissed much of the furor as “conspiracy” and urged the country to turn its attention elsewhere; the Clintons have been drawn into congressional scrutiny; and high-profile figures from philanthropy to business have issued apologies or denials. The ripple effect is unmistakable: how one country deals with its file troves becomes fodder for political theatre half a world away.

“We live in an era when information leaks travel faster than the institutions meant to control them,” Dr. Ellison observed. “That’s why how we manage the release of documents is as important as the documents themselves.”

What comes next?

For now, documents will be processed with legal oversight, with portions routed to the ISC where national security or diplomatic sensitivities are implicated. The Metropolitan Police assessment remains a gating factor. And the Commons has made clear it expects transparency — even if the process will be painstaking and slow.

There are larger questions waiting patiently in the wings: about how political appointments are vetted, about the channels through which access and influence travel, and about the expectations we place on public figures when their private lives intertwine with public duties.

How much secrecy do we accept in the name of national interest, and how much sunlight do we demand for the sake of accountability? It’s a question that pushes past Mandelson, past Epstein, and into the ordinary architecture of democratic trust.

As the files creep into daylight, one truth feels undeniable: the appetite for answers is global, the cost of silence grows, and the institutions that mediate between what is private and what is public will be judged not only by what they know, but by how honestly they acted on it.

So ask yourself: when the next set of papers lands on your timeline, what will you want to see? What line do you draw between friendship and influence, between poor judgement and criminality? The answers matter — because the question is not just who sat at which table with whom, but what we allow those tables to decide for the rest of us.

Ten Men Face Charges in France for Raping Drugged Boy

Ten men charged in France over rape of drugged boy
The alleged incident took place in the northern French city of Lille (stock image)

In Lille’s Quiet Corners, a Shocking Case Rattles a City — and a Nation

On a gray winter morning in Lille, the city’s red-brick façades and narrow cobbled streets looked much the same as they always do: stoic, weathered, stubbornly ordinary. But ordinary was the very thing the people here suddenly felt they could no longer rely on.

French prosecutors have brought charges against ten men, aged between 29 and 50, in connection with allegations that a five-year-old boy was sexually assaulted while drugged. The investigation — which stretches back to November 2024 and centers on events culminating in February 2025 — involves horrifying accusations that the child was put in the presence of adult men by his father and subjected to “acts of sexual violence aggravated by the use of chemical substances.”

What Happened — The Facts, in the Prosecutor’s Words

Authorities opened the inquiry after a report about a “chemsex” party in Lille on the night of 14 February 2025. Prosecutors say the child was administered a substance without his knowledge, intended to impair his judgment or control his actions. The case has been referred to an investigating judge and has resulted in indictments for offences including rape and sexual assault with aggravating circumstances related to the administration of chemical substances.

Between last February and this January, ten men were charged; the father has been indicted for incestuous sexual assault and complicity in aggravated rapes and sexual assaults. In a grim turn, one of the principal suspects died by suicide while in pretrial detention in June 2025. The child is now being cared for by his mother, from whom the father had been separated.

What Is Chemsex — and Why Is It Dangerous?

Chemsex is the slang term for sexual encounters in which participants use powerful drugs to heighten arousal, lower inhibitions, or prolong sexual activity. While the phenomenon is often discussed in relation to adult communities and specific subcultures, the element that haunts this case — the use of substances to coerce, incapacitate, or control — cuts across any single group.

Common substances associated with chemsex include:

  • GHB/GBL (gamma-hydroxybutyrate / gamma-butyrolactone)
  • Methamphetamine
  • Mephedrone
  • Ketamine

These drugs can be unpredictable: doses vary wildly, interactions with alcohol or other medications can be deadly, and a victim’s ability to remember or give consent can be obliterated. Experts warn that drug-facilitated sexual assault is profoundly under-reported because victims often cannot recall events, are ashamed, or fear the stigma of coming forward.

Voices From Lille — Shock, Anger, and a Search for Answers

“It feels like a betrayal of the most basic trust,” said one neighbor who asked to remain anonymous. “This street is where children ride bikes and people buy bread at dawn. To think something like that happened close by — it’s unbearable.”

A social worker who has spent years helping survivors of sexual violence told me, “We see the fingerprints of coercion and substance use over and over: memory gaps, inconsistent testimony, victims who blame themselves. It’s a particular kind of cruelty — one that uses chemistry to make someone powerless.”

At a café near the Grand Place, regulars spoke in hushed tones. “You teach your children about strangers on the street, but who tells you how to guard them from people who are supposed to love them?” asked an older woman, stirring her coffee. The question hung in the air like smoke.

Legal and Social Ripples — A Broader Conversation

This Lille case did not arrive in a vacuum. France was still reeling from the Dominique Pelicot trial, in which a man was sentenced to 20 years in prison after admitting to repeatedly drugging his then-wife and facilitating her assaults between 2011 and 2020. The Pelicot case, and other recent convictions including that of a former senator found guilty of drugging a woman politician with ecstasy, have pushed the spotlight onto the weaponization of drugs in sexual violence.

“We’ve reached a moment where the legal system must adapt to a new, brutal reality,” said a legal scholar who requested anonymity. “Courts are learning how to handle cases where the drug itself is the instrument of subjugation. Evidence is more ephemeral; victims’ memories more fragile. This changes how investigations proceed, how prosecutors build cases, and how society supports survivors.”

How Common Is This?

Precise numbers on drug-facilitated sexual assaults are hard to pin down because of under-reporting and the fleeting nature of forensic evidence. The World Health Organization estimates that millions of people worldwide experience sexual violence every year; many experts say a significant fraction of assaults likely involve substances, whether alcohol or drugs. What is clear is that awareness is rising, and with it, demands for better prevention, testing, and survivor care.

Practical Challenges — Evidence, Memory, and Justice

For investigators, cases like this are labyrinthine. Toxicology screens have narrow windows of detection for many substances; GHB, for example, is metabolized quickly. Witness testimony can be fractured; surveillance footage may be absent. In this Lille probe, prosecutors say they are building a case that spans several months — but gaps in time and memory complicate the path to court.

For survivors and families, the procedural world is slow and cold. “The legal steps are meant to protect, but they can feel like another obstacle,” a counselor in Lille said. “Victims need immediate care, psychological support, and clear channels to report. When a child is involved, the stakes are even more delicate.”

What This Means for Communities — and for You

When the betrayal comes from inside a family, the shockwaves are profound. Communities have to reckon with the uncomfortable truth that abuse often occurs behind closed doors, in friendships or domestic settings that looked ordinary from the outside. It forces questions: How do we teach consent when the perpetrator is a guardian? How do we rebuild trust after such a violation?

As readers, you might ask: What would you do if you suspected someone you knew? What systems would you lean on — the police, social services, neighbors? And how can communities create spaces where victims feel believed and supported?

From Outrage to Action — What Needs to Change

There is no single cure. But several steps can help: better access to rapid toxicology testing in emergency departments; training for first responders and social workers on how to handle suspected drug-facilitated assault; public education campaigns that explain how certain drugs are used to incapacitate; and stronger legal mechanisms to prosecute those who weaponize substances against others.

“We must meet this problem on multiple fronts: medical, legal, and cultural,” the social worker said. “Silence and shame are what abusers rely upon. If communities refuse to be silent, we narrow the spaces where this can happen.”

Final Thoughts — A Call for Vigilance and Compassion

As Lille waits for its legal process to play out, the human cost is already clear: a family fractured, a child traumatized, a city shaken. These cases force society to stare at the places where love and trust should protect the vulnerable — and where that protection fails.

What we do next matters. Will we confront the uncomfortable truths about drug-facilitated abuse? Will we invest in prevention, support survivors with dignity, and hold perpetrators accountable? In the tiny details of a neighborhood cafe and the vast machinery of the courts, the answer is being written.

For now, the streets of Lille carry on — but for many, nothing will ever look quite the same again.

Despite recent naval clashes, Iran and U.S. expected to resume nuclear talks

Iran-US nuclear talks expected despite clashes at sea
The US sent the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier to the Middle East last week

When Metal Meets Diplomacy: A Carrier, a Drone, and a Fragile Window for Talks

Before the sun pulled itself fully over the Arabian Sea, a U.S. F-35C slid from the flight deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln and changed the tone of a fragile diplomatic dance. The jet fired on a drone that, American officials say, came too close to the carrier. It fell into the water. No one cheered. No one celebrated. In the space between that flash and the splashes, a negotiation that world leaders had cautiously promised continued — a chance to cool one of the planet’s most combustible flashpoints — suddenly felt less certain.

“We were ordered to assume the worst,” said a young lieutenant who asked to remain unnamed. “You can’t tell that over the radio — it’s just a pulse in your chest and a thousand tiny, old training scenarios. We did what we had to.”

This moment was not an isolated clash. On the same day, Iranian fast boats and a drone converged on the M/V Stena Imperative, a U.S.-flagged tanker threading the Strait of Hormuz. The ship increased speed and kept course; an American destroyer provided air cover and shepherded it through. Both incidents happened where geography and geopolitics are braided tightly: a strip of water less than 40 nautical miles at its narrowest, through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s seaborne oil passes.

Diplomacy in the Shadow of Steel

Against this volatile backdrop, Washington insisted that dialogues would proceed. White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told reporters the U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff was still expected to “have conversations with the Iranians late this week,” even as the carrier steamed and the F-35C circled. Tehran’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, accepted the idea of talks — but only if the meetings were free of “threats and unreasonable expectations,” he wrote in a post on X.

“We want to talk, but we will not be bullied into giving away our security,” said a diplomat close to the Iranian negotiating team. “Words without trust are just noise.”

Where they might meet is still unclear. An Arab official, speaking on condition of anonymity, suggested Turkey; other reports said Iran preferred Oman. Little things — the color of a carpet in a meeting room, the way a host offers tea — may seem trivial, but in negotiations they symbolize status, parity and respect.

The Sound of a City and a Billboard

Back in Tehran, the mood was a strange mixture of defiance and dread. A giant billboard in the downtown district showed a digitally mangled image of the Abraham Lincoln — an anti-U.S. mural that read like a message to both domestic and foreign audiences. The city’s alleys hummed with the daily life that refuses to be entirely eclipsed by headlines: the clink of porcelain cups in chai houses, the bargaining over golden pistachios, the long, patient repair of Persian rugs in workshops where elders mutter poetry and politics in the same breath.

“There’s anger here, yes,” said a café owner who asked not to be named. “But there’s also fear. People are watching everything—what they say, where they go. It’s like living in two seasons at once: one of heat and protests, and one of cold caution.”

Numbers That Refuse to Be Quiet

The human cost of the unrest that began months ago runs through the current crisis like a fault line. Iranian authorities acknowledge more than 3,000 deaths in the aftermath of anti-government protests, while rights groups paint far starker scenes: the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) has confirmed 6,854 deaths, largely attributed to security forces firing on demonstrators. HRANA also reported at least 50,235 arrests tied to the protests.

“We’re not just negotiating nuclear dossiers or shipping lanes,” said Leila Hosseini, a human rights researcher in Tehran. “Each seat at that table is an echo of a person who disappeared, a family that lives with a hole where a loved one used to be.”

The Maritime Tightrope

The Strait of Hormuz is a place that teaches you how thin the line is between routine and crisis. Over the years it has been the stage for tanker seizures, near-miss collisions, and naval shadow-boxing. On this recent day, U.S. Central Command said two Iranian boats and a drone had threatened to board and seize the Stena Imperative. British maritime security firm Vanguard Tech reported that three pairs of small armed boats of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps approached the tanker roughly 16 nautical miles north of Oman — a detail Iran’s Fars news agency contradicted by saying the ship had briefly entered Iranian waters and left after a warning.

“In a region like this, one misread signal can become a war,” said Captain Tim Hawkins, a Central Command spokesman. “We will defend our forces at sea and ensure freedom of navigation.”

For sailors on the deck of a carrier or a freighter, the abstract language of deterrence turns tactile and immediate: the smell of jet fuel, the thud of supersonic training routines, the tense silence of radio channels as command crews file routine checklists. A moment’s hesitation can become a headline.

Beyond the Headlines: What This Means Globally

Why should anyone outside the Gulf care? Because the region is not a closed system. Interruptions in the Strait of Hormuz ripple through global energy markets, raising fuel prices and unsettling economies already taxed by inflation and supply chain upheaval. Because a single skirmish at sea can freeze diplomatic windows that had begun to open. Because the humanitarian story inside Iran — the protests, the arrests, the contested death toll — raises questions about how negotiations over nuclear programs intersect with citizens’ calls for rights and accountability.

“If conversation is the alternative to conflict, then we must ask: who is listening at both ends?” urged Dr. Miriam Ansari, a scholar of Middle Eastern diplomacy. “And can a single track focused on nuclear issues detach from the broader social and political realities on the ground?”

Questions to Sit With

As you read this, ask yourself: Can nations truly separate the battlefield from the bargaining table? Should they try? And who pays the price when security is prioritized over civic freedoms?

For sailors, diplomats, shopkeepers and grieving families, the answer matters in ways that transmit not just across water but through lives. The F-35C that downed the drone returned to its carrier. The tanker continued. The envoy still plans to meet. But the thin thread of restraint that keeps the world from spinning into larger conflict is frayed — and how it’s mended will depend on whether leaders can temper muscle with listening.

“We are living in a moment when small actions have enormous consequences,” a foreign policy analyst in London said. “This is a test of whether diplomacy can outpace escalation.”

So watch the headlines. But also listen to the quieter signals: the tea shop conversations in Tehran, the radio checklists on a carrier, the convoy captain’s breath as he steers through a narrow channel. Those are the human sounds that will tell us whether this dangerous moment becomes yet another chapter of violence — or the beginning of something harder and more hopeful: a negotiated, sustained peace.

Wararkii u danbeeyay khasaaraha dagaal Xooggan oo ka dhacay Baydhabo

Feb 04(Jowhar)-Warar dheeraad ah ayaa kasoo baxaya dagaal khasaare kala duwan sababay oo magaalada Baydhabo ku dhaxmaray ciidan uu hogaaminayo sarkaal lagu magacaabo Cabdiraxmaan Nishoow oo horay ugu tirsanaa saraakiisha Ciidanka Xooga ee qeybta 60-aad iyo kuwa maamulka Koonfurgalbeed Soomaaliya.

Madaxweyne Xasan oo hay’adaha dowladda faray iney shaqadooda ugu badan u weeciyaan Gurmadka Abaaraha

Feb 04(Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya, Mudane Xasan Sheekh Maxamuud oo maanta booqday Xarunta gurmadka degdeg ah ee Hay’adda Maareynta Musiibooyinka Qaranka.

Fifteen killed as Greek coastguard vessel collides with migrant ship

15 dead after Greek coastguard, migrant boat collide
Emergency personnel wait at the port following a collision between a Greek coastguard vessel and a boat carrying migrants

Morning on Chios: A Quiet Sea, Then a Sudden Horror

It was the kind of morning the Aegean gives when it wants to remind you how small you are: pale light slipping across olive groves, a soft wind smelling faintly of resin and salt, fishing boats slowly trimming their nets near the island’s jagged shoreline. Then came the sirens.

Fishermen on the western coast of Chios say they heard a thunderous impact and saw spray bloom like a broken sheet of glass. Lifeboats pushed off. Men and women who have long known the sea’s moods raced toward a scene that would quickly become one of Greece’s deadliest maritime tragedies in months.

What Happened

Greek police say a port police patrol vessel and a high-speed migrant boat collided off the coast of Chios yesterday, with at least 14 people killed. The coastguard reported that two of its members were taken to hospital and that 24 migrants were pulled from the water in the immediate rescue effort. Greek media outlets added a heartbreaking detail: among the injured were seven children and a pregnant woman.

“We issued a warning signal,” a coastguard spokesperson told local broadcasters, echoing accounts carried by the national public broadcaster. “But the vessel attempted to flee and a collision occurred.” A Greek air force helicopter joined the search for survivors, scouring the glittering blue for signs of life.

Voices from the Shore

“You could see small shoes drifting in the wake,” said Giorgos Katsaros, a fisherman who helped recover survivors at the pier. “A woman kept repeating a name, over and over. It was chaos—then a silence where people were counting the living and the dead.”

An exhausted nurse at the small hospital in Chios town described scenes that the island’s medical facilities are ill prepared for. “We do our best,” she said, speaking under the weight of fatigue. “We don’t often see so many children in a single incident.”

The Geography That Makes Chios a Crossroads

Chios sits like an attentive sentinel close to the Turkish coastline, its nearest point only a few nautical miles from Asia Minor. For decades, that narrow channel has been a highway for desperate, illegal, and sometimes deadly crossings — crowded dinghies, rubber boats, or high-speed skiffs attempting to bridge the stretch to safety and asylum in the European Union.

The island itself is a mosaic of serenity and tension: medieval mastic villages with stone alleys where elders gossip over thick coffee; seaside tavernas that serve fresh octopus grilled over wood fires; a coastline where tourists swim in summer and the sea tests the resolve of migrants year-round. Local residents describe a rhythm in which tragedies punctuate normal life with terrible regularity.

Numbers That Tell a Larger Story

This accident is not an isolated tragedy. The United Nations refugee agency reported in November that more than 1,700 people either died or went missing on migration routes to Europe in 2025, a grim reminder of the relentless human cost of these crossings. And the International Organization for Migration estimates that roughly 33,000 migrants have died or gone missing in the Mediterranean since 2014.

Those figures, horrifying in themselves, also mask stories: the people who leave with newborns swaddled, or teenagers clutching backpacks; the smugglers who spin promises of safety into engines and rubber; the families left behind in cities and camps across the Middle East, Africa, and Asia.

Why Do People Risk It?

Ask any refugee or migrant why they boarded a small boat, and you’ll receive answers that cut across politics and geography: escape from war and persecution, hunger and drought, a daughter’s future, debts that suffocate a household, or the slow violence of corruption and collapsed economies. For many, that narrow sea is a gamble forced by circumstances, not a choice of desire.

“We left because there was no life left,” a man who identified himself as Amir, speaking softly in the hospital hallways, told a reporter. “Better to try and perhaps drown than to stay and watch my children fade.”

Search and Rescue — Limited by Capacity and Politics

Greece’s coastguard and military have often been the first and only responders to incidents like this. But the resources available on islands like Chios are limited. Smaller ports, limited ICU capacity, and the logistical challenge of coordination at sea mean that response times and outcomes can vary dramatically.

There’s also a political dimension that complicates rescue efforts: EU border policy, bilateral agreements with neighboring countries, and frequent tensions over accusations of pushbacks and interdiction strategies all shape the contours of what happens when a small boat is spotted.

  • Immediate needs after shipwrecks: rapid medical triage, shelter, psychological support, and forensic care for the dead.
  • Longer-term needs: safe reception centers, routes for legal migration, and stronger international cooperation on search and rescue.
  • Systemic solutions: addressing root causes in home countries and disrupting criminal smuggling networks.

Neighbors, Officials, and the Everyday Human Cost

Locals gathered by the harbor spoke in low voices, hands busy threading together an understanding: grief that arrives without invitation, gratitude for those who helped, and anger at a world that frames these crossings as statistics rather than lives. “We are tired of burying children,” said Eleni Papadopoulou, a teacher, as she lit a candle in the church that evening. “This island has warm hearts, but our hearts are not enough.”

European officials routinely promise tougher measures to stem irregular migration and to bolster maritime surveillance. Yet every policy discussion seems to collide with the same human facts: people on the move, smugglers adapting, and a sea that remains indifferent to fear and need.

What Should We Ask Ourselves?

How do we balance border security with basic humanity? Is there a way to keep people from risking their lives without shutting them out entirely? When a ferry of grief pulls into a tiny island port, who is responsible for the living and the dead?

These are not just policy puzzles; they are moral tests. The Mediterranean is a mirror of global inequality, conflict, and climate pressure. It asks of us not only better systems and better policies, but better empathy.

Where We Go From Here

For now, Chios will tend its wounded and bury its dead. The island’s usual rhythms—market days, church bells, the smell of frying fish—will return. But the questions raised by this collision will not dissolve so quickly.

We can remember the names and faces behind the statistics. We can press for transparent investigations into what happened at sea and for safer legal routes for those seeking refuge. We can insist that the bright-blue Aegean — so beloved by holidaymakers — be treated as more than a border: as a shared space holding lives that deserve dignity.

What will you do with this knowledge? Will it become a headline you scroll past, or the prompt for conversation, action, compassion? The sea keeps asking, and the answers may well define us.

Extraordinary rains force thousands to evacuate homes across Spain

Spain evacuates thousands as 'extraordinary' rain strikes
The Guadalete river overflows its banks as it passes through the area of Las Pachecas in Cadiz

When the sky opened: Storm Leonardo and the soaked heart of Andalusia

There are moments when weather ceases to be background and becomes a character with a temper. On a wind-slashed morning in southern Spain, that character arrived as Storm Leonardo — an unrelenting, gray-green wall of rain that turned the whitewashed villages of Andalusia into islands of tile and stone surrounded by streaming water.

People here are used to dramatic skies. They measure their lives by harvests, fiestas and the slow shift of light across olive groves. But this was different. “I have lived in Ronda for 62 years,” said Carmen Márquez, a retired teacher whose home overlooks the gorge. “I have never seen it rain like this. It sounded like the sea was falling from the sky.”

A red alert and a landscape already near breaking point

Spain’s meteorological agency, AEMET, issued its most serious warning — a red alert — over wide parts of Andalusia, citing torrents that forecasters called “extraordinary.” Emergency services warned of floods and landslides as swollen rivers and already-saturated soils could not absorb another downpour.

In places such as the Sierra de Grazalema, a landscape famed for its limestone crags and verdant valleys, scientists and forecasters warned that Leonardo might deposit a volume of water equivalent to an entire year’s precipitation in a matter of hours. The Environment Ministry reported that January rainfall across Spain hit 119.3 mm — 85% above the 1992–2020 average, making it the second-wettest January of the 21st century. The ground, hydrologists say, had no appetite for more rain.

“The soil is already holding water like a sponge that can’t take another drop,” AEMET spokesman Rubén del Campo told reporters. “Riverbeds are fuller than normal, and any concentrated downpour could send systems over the edge.”

Life under Leonardo: evacuations, soldiers and silent stations

The storm’s effects felt immediate and practical. Thousands were ordered from their homes as a precaution. Children missed school across Andalusia — every province closed classrooms except Almería — while nearly all suburban, regional and long-distance trains were cancelled. Renfe, the state rail operator, warned there would be no bus replacements because key roads were unsafe or impassable.

Rescue teams turned to manpower and the sky: hundreds of soldiers were mobilised to back up civil protection crews; two aircraft and two helicopters kept tight circles over flood-prone river valleys, relaying live conditions back to control centers. Mobile phone alerts buzzed across the region: messages asking residents to move to higher ground, to avoid travel, to heed the advice of emergency services.

“We had families waiting outside the municipal hall at dawn,” recalled Javier Ortega, a volunteer with a local rescue group in Campo de Gibraltar. “People arrive with a bag and the look of someone who suddenly realises what matters most. No one wanted to stay in a ground-floor apartment when the water climbs.”

Road closures and cancelled services left commuters stranded, shopkeepers locking shutters early and farmers watching their terraces and orchards worryingly: olive trees can survive heavy rain, but young fruit and soil erosion are another story. In small bars, where the community usually debates football and politics, talk shifted to river forecasts and whether the drainage culverts would hold.

Portugal braces, too — a reminder that weather ignores borders

Leonardo did not stop at the Iberian frontier. To the west, Portugal faced its own emergency: the country, still recovering from lethal floods last week that claimed five lives, placed swathes of its coast on orange alert and readied defenses along major rivers. Authorities deployed up to 3,000 troops and 42 inflatable boats with marine teams stationed near the rivers most likely to burst their banks.

“This is about response and also about prepositioning,” said Lieutenant Commander Ana Ferreira of the Portuguese armed forces. “We are not waiting for calls for help. We are where the water will be.”

In northern and central Portugal, forecasts also flagged heavy snowfall and strong winds. That unusual mix — blizzards in the interior, floods on the coast — underlined a fundamental truth of climate-driven weather systems: they can hit multiple sectors at once, complicating rescue and recovery.

Why the floods feel both local and global

Anyone who has watched the storms rolling in from the Atlantic over the past decade knows they are not just meteorological events — they are climate signals. Scientists say human-driven warming increases the atmosphere’s capacity to hold moisture (a relationship often summarised as roughly 7% more water vapor per degree Celsius of warming). That physics translates into heavier, sometimes more concentrated rainfall when conditions are right.

“We are not saying every storm is caused solely by climate change, but we are seeing a clear trend: extreme precipitation events are becoming more frequent and more intense,” explained Dr. Elena Ruiz, a climate scientist at the University of Seville. “When you combine saturated soils with a very moist air mass, you get precisely what we are witnessing: systems that have less place to put the water.”

Spain’s recent history has been sobering. In October 2024, the country endured some of its deadliest floods in decades, with more than 230 lives lost, mostly in the east. Those losses are not just statistics; they have reshaped communities, municipal budgets and the way planners think about river corridors, urban drainage and emergency shelters.

More than a storm: questions for a wetter future

As the rain eased and rescue teams tally damage, two questions hang in the Andalusian air: how to rebuild, and how to prepare. Will towns invest in floodplain restoration and upgraded drainage? Will transportation networks be reimagined so trains and buses are less vulnerable when the roads are underwater?

Local officials say there is a growing appetite for change. “We need to rethink infrastructure as something alive,” said María López, an official at the regional government, standing beneath a newspaper awning while rain slit the sky. “Concrete is not enough; we need wetlands, permeable pavements, smarter land use. It is expensive, yes, but the cost of doing nothing is higher.”

In the markets and plazas of Andalusia, recovery will be practical and intimate: drying out rooms, salvaging tiles, bringing in pumps, replanting terraces. But there is also a deeper cultural resilience — a willingness to gather, to talk over coffee and share resources. That communal muscle will be tested in the months ahead.

So what does a storm like Leonardo ask of us, beyond umbrellas and sandbags? It asks us to imagine a landscape designed for water, to invest in warning systems and to treat climate risk as part of everyday life. It asks, perhaps, whether our modern towns and transport networks can survive a pattern of weather that is becoming less predictable and more extreme.

As you read this, think of the plazas where children play, the orange trees by the roadside, the terraces cut into hillsides — and imagine how they fare when the sky decides to pour. What would you change in your town if the next downpour could be as fierce as Leonardo?

  • 119.3 mm — Spain’s January rainfall, 85% above the 1992–2020 average.
  • Over 230 — people killed in Spain’s October 2024 floods, according to official reports.
  • 3,000 troops and 42 inflatable boats — Portuguese emergency forces deployed ahead of worsening conditions.

Leonardo will pass. The rain will slow, the rivers will recede, and life will resume its orbit. But storms like this leave a memory and a ledger: a list of repairs, a count of losses, and a growing conviction that in a warmer world, weather is not simply something that happens to us — it is a force that demands our attention, our planning, and our care.

Norwegian Crown Princess’s Son Firmly Denies Rape Allegations

Son of Norway's crown princess denies rape charges
Marius Borg Hoiby is on trial in Oslo

A Winter Trial and a Kingdom Watching

On a brisk morning in Oslo, the city felt unusually small. Cameras lined the sidewalks like an uninvited parade; commuters glanced up from their phones; a hush—part curiosity, part unease—fell over the courthouse steps. Inside, Marius Borg Høiby, 29, sat for the first day of a trial that has sent ripples through Norway’s royal household and into living rooms across the country.

This is not a tale of crowns or coronations. It is a story of a son, a family, a legal system and a nation trying to reconcile privacy with public accountability. It is also, as historian Trond Noren Isaksen warned before the hearings, “the most serious crisis to hit the Norwegian royal family in peacetime.”

The Charges and the Pleas

The indictment is long: 38 counts in total. On opening day, Høiby pleaded not guilty to the most severe accusations—four counts of rape and one count of domestic violence. He conceded guilt, however, on a cluster of lesser charges: one count of offensive sexual behavior, driving too fast and driving without a valid license, among other infractions. Under Norwegian law, defendants can also plead partial guilt; in this case, Høiby admitted to being partially liable for aggravated assault and reckless behavior.

“He will not be handled tougher or milder because he is part of this family,” prosecutor Sturla Henriksbøe told the court, underscoring a principle Norway likes to believe in: the impartiality of its justice system.

Defense counsel Ellen Holager Andenaes pushed back with equal force, not over the merits of the evidence but over the climate surrounding the case. “The press coverage—which the defendant sees as 10,000 press articles written about him… He has experienced books being written about him, and more are coming,” she told the judges, suggesting that fair treatment had been compromised by relentless media glare.

The Possible Penalties

If convicted on the most serious counts, Høiby faces multiple years behind bars. Yet the courtroom is not just about potential sentencing; it is about how a state holds its citizens to account when those citizens happen to be linked to institutions that are symbolic as well as private.

Family Ties and Public Duty

Høiby’s mother, Crown Princess Mette-Marit, has been forced into an awkward public contrition of a different kind. Days before the trial, she apologised for maintaining contact with Jeffrey Epstein after his 2008 conviction—an admission that reopened old wounds and invited fresh scrutiny. The apology was terse but significant: a rare acknowledgment of poor judgement from a person who occupies a space between the private and the ceremonial.

Crown Prince Haakon, who will not attend the proceedings, issued a statement that mixed familial love with civic distance. “We love him. He is an important part of our family. He is a Norwegian citizen, so he has the same responsibilities as everyone else, as well as the same rights,” he said, also expressing sympathy for the alleged victims: “We think about them. We know many are going through a difficult time.”

Outside Voices: A Nation in Conversation

Oslo’s cafes have become informal salons for the issue. At one table near the courthouse a barista paused when asked about the mood. “People are torn,” she said. “There’s loyalty to the family, but there’s also a demand for fairness—especially from younger people.”

Opinion polls reflect that ambivalence in numbers. A poll for Verdens Gang reported support for keeping the monarchy down to 61% from 72% the previous year, while a Norstat survey for NRK put support at about 70% in January of the same cycle. Those figures may seem contradictory, but they reveal a public that is both steady in institutional affection and sensitive to scandals that call the institution’s moral standing into question.

Context: A Royal Family Under Strain

To understand why this trial resonates so strongly, it helps to look at the wider context. King Harald, Europe’s oldest reigning monarch at 88, scaled back public duties in 2024 after health complications that included treatment for an infection and the insertion of a pacemaker. Crown Princess Mette-Marit herself lives with pulmonary fibrosis and has been on a waiting list for a lung transplant. Princess Märtha Louise stepped back from official engagements in 2022 to pursue private ventures—choices that have sometimes unsettled traditionalists.

These personal trials, combined with headlines about relationships and controversial public projects, mean the royal family now navigates a more scrutinised, more skeptical public stage than in decades past.

What This Trial Asks Us

How do you balance compassion for a family member with a collective demand for justice? When a person connected to national symbolism stands accused, does the institution itself suffer—or does it in some ways make the state’s commitment to the rule of law more visible?

Local Color: Oslo in Winter

Outside the courtroom, Oslo displayed its ordinary textures: a tram jingling past, a grandmother walking a dachshund, a group of students huddled over textbooks. A market vendor selling brunost (brown cheese) offered a spare comment: “We want fairness. We also don’t want the monarchy to vanish because of one difficult case.” His voice held both affection for tradition and a pragmatic wish to see institutions tested, not toppled.

The Larger Picture

This trial is not simply a family drama on public display. It intersects with broader global conversations about power, privilege and the media’s appetite for scandal. In an era when social media accelerates reputational damage and courts wrestle with privacy protections, Høiby’s case becomes a lens through which we consider the architecture of justice.

Norway’s constitution is clear: the king is the ceremonial head of state while political authority rests with parliament and government. Yet symbolism matters. When a monarchy is under strain, popular support can shift quickly, as those polls hint. Will the institution weather this moment? Will the family and the nation emerge with greater trust in their systems or with deeper skepticism?

Closing Questions

As the trial unfolds, we might ask: What does accountability look like in a democracy that prizes equality? Can a society maintain affection for an institution while demanding that those connected to it be held to the same standards as any citizen?

These are not rhetorical questions for Norway alone. They are questions for any country where private lives and public symbolism collide—questions that will continue to reverberate long after the courthouse empties and the cameras move on.

Dr. Maryan Qaadim oo loo doortay gudoomiyaha guddiga madaxa-banaan ee xuquuqul insaanka

Feb 04(Jowhar)-Dr. Maryan Qaasim ayaa maanta loo doortay Guddoomiyaha Guddiga Madaxa-bannaan ee Xuquuqul Insaanka Qaranka Soomaaliya, kaddib doorasho ka dhacday caasimadda Muqdisho.

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