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Storm Leonardo claims one life after battering Portugal and Spain

One dead as Storm Leonardo hits Portugal and Spain
A man stands at the door of his establishment surrounded by water in Alcacer do Sal, south of Portugal

When the Rivers Forget Their Place: Storm Leonardo’s Wake Across Iberia

By late afternoon, a kind of stunned hush settled over towns that had never expected to see their main streets become rivers. Cars sat half-submerged; market stalls that had sold oranges and olives for generations lay waterlogged and silent. This was not a gentle inconvenience. It was Storm Leonardo—another chapter in a brutal season that has left parts of Spain and Portugal reeling.

The numbers that make your chest tighten

In a 24‑hour stretch, some areas took more than 40 centimetres of rain—the kind of downpour that turns channels into torrents and drains into death traps. Authorities confirmed one fatality in Portugal: a man in his 60s swept away while trying to drive through flooded terrain near a dam in the municipality of Serpa.

Across Andalusia, Spanish weather service AEMET raised the alarm to the highest red level in parts of the south, describing the rainfall as extraordinary. In the nearby mountains of Grazalema, forecasts warned of up to 35 centimetres of rain in a single day.

The human toll is measured not only in lives lost but in disruption. About 3,500 people were evacuated from Andalusian communities. In Portugal, civil protection teams logged more than 3,300 incidents since the weekend—flooding, landslides, trees down—and deployed more than 11,000 responders to the crisis. Tens of thousands remained without power after a previous storm, and officials braced for more rain, gusting winds, and rising rivers.

On the ground: places and people

Drive through southern Spain and you meet whitewashed villages perched on hills and serried rows of olive trees sliding into soggy earth. Ronda’s cobbled streets are famous for their dramatic gorge; this week the gorge seemed to have been filled with the weather’s anger. “We’ve never seen the soil give up like this,” said Maria Paz Fernández, the city’s mayor, her voice threaded with exhaustion. “Landslides are cutting off rural hamlets—people are frightened.”

In Cádiz province, the Guadalete swelled and spilled over at Las Pachecas, turning fields into lakes and forcing residents to retread the familiar ritual of sandbags and hurried evacuations. In Jaén, the Guadalbullón ramped up, sweeping through Puente Tablas and reminding farmers—some who have worked the same plots for decades—of how quickly a season can be erased.

Alcácer do Sal, south of Lisbon, looked like a town inside a painting that had been left out in the rain. The Sado river had climbed onto the main avenue, submerging storefronts and the polished stone where elders once sat and discussed local politics. One resident, a retired teacher named Helena, stood on the pavement and said, “We talk about droughts and hot summers, and then the sky turns and comes down like that. It’s as if the moods of the weather have turned meaner.”

Transport and schools halted

Everyday life was choked off. Renfe, Spain’s state rail operator, cancelled almost all suburban, regional and long‑distance train services across Andalusia. With roads closed by landslides and floods, bus replacements were often impossible. Nearly all schools in Andalusia were shuttered—except those in the easternmost province of Almería, where the storm’s teeth had not yet bitten as hard.

Soldiers joined emergency teams; footage circulated of troops hauling people from rooftop terraces and shepherding families into dry buses. Police shared dramatic scenes of fields being submerged and cars floating helplessly in torrents.

Voices from the floodlines

“I woke to the sound of water like a freight train,” recalled a 34‑year‑old olive oil mill worker in Grazalema, who gave his name as Manuel. “We tied ropes to each other and helped guide our elderly neighbours. People are scared—but they’re also helping. That’s what keeps us going.”

A civil protection official, speaking at foresters’ shelter, explained the logistics: “We are rotating teams, prepositioning boats and pumps. But when the ground is saturated from previous storms, every valley is a potential floodplain. It’s a race against time.”

Environmental scientists say this pattern—back‑to‑back extreme storms—is not an accident. “Warmer air holds more moisture,” said Dr. Inés Moreno, a climatologist at a university in Madrid. “That allows for heavier downpours when conditions trigger them. What we’re seeing is consistent with the projections of a warming planet: more intense, less predictable rainfall events impacting the same regions repeatedly.”

History and context: a season of extremes

This winter has not been an outlier but rather part of a worrying trend. October 2024’s floods in eastern Spain were among the deadliest in decades, with more than 230 people killed—most in the Valencia region. Just weeks ago, Storm Kristin slammed into the Portuguese coast, killing five people and injuring hundreds. Those events already strained emergency services and left communities vulnerable when Leonardo arrived.

Insurance firms and local governments are asking hard questions: Are flood defenses adequate? Are early‑warning systems reaching elderly and rural residents? Are we investing sufficiently in nature‑based solutions—restored wetlands and river corridors that can act like sponges during intense rain?

Local color: how communities adapt and remember

There is a cultural thread in these places that tempers panic. In Andalusian villages, community centers and church halls morph almost overnight into support hubs. Neighbours roast coffee on stoves powered by generators and trade news of broken windows for news of dry blankets and clean drinking water. In Portugal, a practice that once saved families during forest fires—community solidarity networks—reappears as people ferry pets and babies to safety.

“We have songs about the weather, poems about drought, prayers for rain,” Helena, the retiree from Alcácer do Sal, said. “Now we need songs about rebuilding.”

What the future asks of us

How should societies respond to storms that are becoming more frequent and ferocious? Hard engineering—dams, levees, reinforced embankments—is part of the answer. So too are early‑warning systems, smarter land‑use planning, and the restoration of natural floodplains that can absorb peak flows.

But there’s a political dimension as well. Investment choices reveal priorities. Will governments fund short‑term emergency relief, or will they commit to long‑term adaptation that could reduce future tragedies? And at home, what responsibilities do households and businesses have to prepare?

Closing thoughts: a moment for reflection

Walking through one town after the water receded, a volunteer offered a simple line: “Water takes with it the small certainties of life—photos, recipes, the sound of children playing in the street. Our job is to stitch those certainties back together.”

Storm Leonardo is more than a headline. It is a reminder that landscapes are changing, human systems are vulnerable, and collective action—local, national, global—will determine whether these moments become rarer or more regular. What will you ask your leaders to do differently? What will you do in your own community when the rain next arrives?

Imprisoned Iranian Nobel Laureate Mohammadi Begins Hunger Strike

Jailed Iranian Nobel winner Mohammadi on hunger strike
Narges Mohammadi was arrested at a protest in the eastern city of Mashhad on 12 December

A Nobel Laureate in Solitary: The Quiet Revolt of Narges Mohammadi

There are moments when silence is louder than any chant. In a small cell in Mashhad, a city that is both a pilgrimage hub and a place of strict state control, Narges Mohammadi—winner of the 2023 Nobel Peace Prize—has gone on hunger strike. The act is simple and devastatingly deliberate: a refusal to eat until she is allowed the barest of human connections—phone calls, visits, and access to her lawyers.

“She has been on hunger strike for the last three days,” said Chirinne Ardakani, Mohammadi’s Paris-based lawyer, speaking to reporters. “She is demanding her right to make a phone call, have access to her lawyers in Iran and to be visited.”

That demand cuts to the core of what prison authorities often seek to extinguish: the ability of a dissident to speak back to the world. Mohammadi’s last known phone call to her family was on 14 December, her lawyer said. Her relatives only learned of the hunger strike when a recently released detainee relayed the news—an informal, fragile chain of information that underscores how tightly the authorities are controlling communication.

Why She Matters

Narges Mohammadi is not a marginal figure. For two decades she has pushed at the boundaries of Iran’s legal and political system, a relentless advocate for human rights, particularly for women. Her Nobel Prize was not merely a personal honor; it was a spotlight on a movement that has tried, again and again, to bend the arc of Iran’s future toward dignity and freedom.

“She has been a lighthouse for many of us,” a friend who has worked with her organization told me. “Even from behind bars, her words carry.”

Her activism reached a crescendo during the watershed 2022–2023 protests triggered by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini. Mohammadi, 53, openly supported the movement that spread through Iran and resonated around the world. In a country where the clerical establishment has ruled since the 1979 revolution, that support is now a perilous position to hold.

The Mechanics of Isolation

There is a cold logic to the state’s approach. Deny phone calls; cut off visits; place a dissident in solitary confinement—and the dissident’s voice starts to thin. Supporters contend that this is no accident but policy. Mohammadi’s foundation has described the authorities’ approach as conditional freedom: phone calls would be allowed only if she accepted “rules” set by prosecutors, an arrangement the foundation says makes a legal right dependent on “silence and self-censorship.”

Those “rules” are the kind of coercive instrument that turns a simple human contact—speaking with family—into leverage. “It’s emotional blackmail,” said an activist familiar with the family’s situation. “They are saying: speak only when we tell you to, or you will not be heard.”

Her Demands, Plain and Human

  • Immediate right to make phone calls
  • Access to legal counsel within Iran
  • Visits from family and supporters

These are not grand revolutionary demands. They are the basic cords that keep a prisoner tethered to the world. And yet, for Mohammadi, they have become causes for protest at the very center of state power.

Faces of a Crackdown

This case is not an isolated incident. Human rights monitors say the Iranian authorities have carried out a sweeping crackdown since the protests began—arrests measured in the tens of thousands. The US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) has estimated that more than 50,000 people have been arrested in connection with the unrest. That scale of detention reshapes families, communities, and the cultural fabric of the country.

Artists, intellectuals, and everyday citizens have been ensnared. Among those detained recently were screenwriter Mehdi Mahmoudian, co-writer on the film It Was Just an Accident—one of the year’s celebrated international films—and activists such as Abdollah Momeni and Vida Rabbani, who signed a statement condemning what they called an “organized state crime against humanity” during the crackdown.

“When they arrest a filmmaker or a women’s rights activist, they’re trying to erase stories,” said a human rights researcher in London. “They know stories breed empathy. Empathy breeds solidarity. Solidarity breeds movement.”

Mohammadi’s Private World—Publicly Sidelined

Mohammadi’s personal life sharpens the political stakes. Her twin children and husband live in Paris; her children accepted her Nobel Prize on her behalf in Oslo in 2023. She has not seen them in person for more than a decade. Imagine winning the world’s most recognizable prize while being forbidden even to embrace your own children. The image is heartbreakingly modern—global acclaim and private exile in a single life.

“My mother always used to say: ‘You can take away my liberty, but you cannot take away my conscience,'” one of her children told a journalist in Paris. “We hear her voice when we call, but these last weeks have been terrifying. We are asking only for the right to speak with her.”

What Does This Mean for the Rest of Us?

There are important lessons here that reach beyond Iran’s borders. Governments in many parts of the world—whether in closed systems or democracies—have learned the power of controlling narratives and isolating dissent. The tactics are different, but the aim is similar: silence voices that disturb the status quo.

So, what are we to do as global citizens? Watch? Protest? Donate? Share verified news? The answer is not simple. But the case of Narges Mohammadi invites us to think about the moral dimensions of connection: who gets to speak, who is allowed to listen, and whose stories are protected.

Endings Are Not Given; They Are Contested

In a world where images and headlines move faster than laws and consciences, Mohammadi’s hunger strike is both an act of protest and a plea. It is a reminder that democracy is not only electoral systems and parliaments; it is also the ability to call your lawyer, to speak with your loved ones, to be visible when you are vulnerable.

Whether her strike forces a concession or hardens the prison’s walls, it has already succeeded in reframing the conversation. It asks each reader: when someone chooses their body as a last instrument of resistance, how will the world respond?

For now, we wait. We listen. And we remember that even in the most systematic attempts to erase a voice, human connections—however fragile—find ways to echo outward. Will they hear her? Will we listen?

Man sentenced to life in prison for attempted assassination of Donald Trump

Man jailed for life for attempting to assassinate Trump
Ryan Routh was convicted by a jury last September of five criminal counts

Betrayal in the Bushes: A Close Call on a Florida Fairway

There is a strange hush that falls over a golf course when the palms stop swaying and the chatter dies. On the morning of 15 September 2024, that hush was the work of fear and precision, not wind. A man—later identified as 59-year-old Ryan Routh—had buried himself in the scrub and sawgrass near a greenside path at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, clutching an assault-style rifle and waiting for the man who would soon be sworn in again as the President of the United States.

He was discovered by Secret Service agents who had been tracking the perimeter. They found him after hours hidden in thick foliage, a few hundred yards from where Donald Trump was swinging on the course. Routh fled, leaving behind an AR-style rifle, two bags containing what appeared to be metal plates resembling body armor, and a video camera trained on the fairway. He was arrested later that day.

A Life Sentence, a Courtroom Unraveling

On a humid afternoon in Fort Pierce, US District Judge Aileen Cannon handed down the heaviest possible penalty: life in prison. The sentence followed a jury conviction in September of five counts, most starkly the attempted assassination of a presidential candidate. Prosecutors had urged the court to impose life, arguing the plot was months in the making; Routh had asked for 27 years.

“It’s clear to me that you engaged in a premeditated, calculated plot to take a human life,” Judge Cannon told Routh during the sentencing. The line landed with a finality that left no room for equivocation.

From Truck Stop to Bushes

The evidence the government laid out was methodical and unnerving. Court filings say Routh arrived in South Florida about a month before the incident and spent nights at a truck stop while tracking the former president’s movements. He carried six cell phones, used false names, and—as prosecutors detailed—lay in wait for nearly 10 hours on the day of the attack.

“This wasn’t a spur-of-the-moment act,” said John Shipley, the lead federal prosecutor at the sentencing hearing. “It was carefully crafted and deadly serious. Without the Secret Service’s presence, Donald Trump would not be alive.”

The Man Who Defended Himself

Routh eschewed courtroom counsel and chose to represent himself at trial. The gambit did not shelter him. His opening statement wandered from the origins of the human species to the settlement of the American West—digressions that prompted the judge to gently, then firmly, bring him back to the facts at hand.

He pleaded not guilty. He later offered a rambling address at sentencing about foreign wars and his desire to be exchanged with political prisoners abroad. “I have given every drop of who I am every day for the betterment of my community and this nation,” he told the court, a line that sounded at once plaintive and detached from the severity of the charges.

In filings he denied the intent to kill, and expressed willingness to undergo psychological treatment for a personality disorder while imprisoned. Prosecutors countered that Routh had shown no remorse and was prepared to kill anyone who got in his way.

Pieces of Evidence, Pieces of a Life

Investigators catalogued a grim inventory: the abandoned rifle, body-armor-like plates, a camera aimed at the property, and the man who had spent hours in the humidity-laden brush. After the jury delivered its verdict, Routh twice tried to stab himself with a pen in the courtroom and had to be restrained by U.S. marshals. His daughter, distraught, shouted that he had hurt no one and vowed to free him.

  • Routh convicted on five counts: attempted assassination, three illegal firearm possession charges, and impeding a federal officer.
  • Secret Service agents located him only a few hundred yards from where the former president was golfing.
  • Routh had multiple phones and used fake identities to conceal his presence.

Voices from the Palm Beach Community

West Palm Beach is a place of summer colonnades, Cuban cafecito, and a parade of snowbirds who chase warmth from the north. But locals I spoke to said the incident pierced that veneer of leisure.

“You don’t expect to wake up to something like this here,” said Miguel Alvarez, who runs a small citrus stand near the Turnpike. “We see politicians, we see limos, but we never imagine guns in the bushes. It makes you sleep with the light on.”

An off-duty security officer who lives near the club, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the community has always been tightly vetted during high-profile visits, but admitted, “You can’t watch every tree. That’s the terrifying part. One person can change everything.”

What This Means in a Polarized Time

It is tempting to write this off as a single deranged act. But too often, isolated incidents are the visible tips of deeper currents—polarization, conspiracy-driven narratives, and a cocktail of grievance and access to weapons. The attempted assassination came two months after a bullet grazed Mr. Trump’s ear at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania—another jarring episode in a fraught election season that culminated in Trump’s return to the White House that November.

For many, the incident raised the same unnerving question: are our political disputes sliding toward permanent danger? “Political violence is not just an assault on a person,” said an academic who studies extremism and asked to remain unnamed. “It’s an assault on the legitimacy of the process. The message is that disagreement is no longer a civic conversation but a battlefield.”

Beyond the Headlines: The Human Aftermath

There are practical questions ahead. How do you reconcile the open, accessible optics of modern campaigning with a security apparatus designed for secrecy? How do community leaders and mental health professionals work to detect dangerous isolation before it hardens into violence?

“We need better pathways for people to get help without stigma, and for communities to be more resilient,” said a counselor who works with veterans and law enforcement families. “This isn’t just about guns or security protocols—it’s about belonging and intervention.”

Closing Thoughts and a Call to Reflection

The sentence brings legal closure: a man who admitted to neither murder nor a clear motive now faces the rest of his life behind bars. But what it leaves unsettled is broader and more insidious—how a democracy polices the edges of its discourse when the center cannot hold.

As you read this from wherever you are—urban or rural, near a coastline or deep inland—ask yourself: what kinds of safeguards do we owe one another? How do we balance free expression against the reality that words can be fuel for violent acts? This case is a small, chilling lens through which we can view those urgent questions.

Donald Trump posted on Truth Social after the verdict: “This was an evil man with an evil intention, and they caught him.” The court has decided the man will not walk free again. The real work now is quieter, less sensational: rebuilding trust, reducing harms, and insisting that political dissent remain a contest of ideas, not a contest of force.

Russia Reports Progress in Abu Dhabi Talks with Ukraine

Russia says 'progress' in talks with Ukraine in Abu Dhabi
Employees repair sections of the Darnytska combined heat and power plant damaged by Russian air strikes in Kyiv

In Abu Dhabi’s heat, a fragile optimism—and the distant thud of war

The conference room in Abu Dhabi felt almost cinematic: broad windows, the low hum of air conditioning, and, beyond the glass, a city that folds modern towers into the quiet of the desert. Delegations sat at long tables, mobile phones face down, interpreters whispering into headsets. Yet a few thousand kilometres away, railway tracks smouldered and trains stood silent, their carriages nicked by shrapnel.

That dissonance—talk of ceasefires and diplomatic progress against the background of continuing attacks—has become the defining image of these negotiations. Russia, Ukraine and the United States gathered in the UAE to search for a way out of a conflict that began with the full-scale invasion of February 2022 and has stretched into a fourth year. For some it felt like the opening of a window; for others, a brief lull beneath a gathering storm.

“There is definitely progress”: Moscow’s message

Kirill Dmitriev, one of Russia’s lead negotiators, walked from the briefing room with a message tailored to camera lenses: “There is definitely progress, things are moving forward in a good, positive direction,” he told state media, according to a press release.

He did not stop there. With the bluntness that has come to characterize several Russian statements, he accused European governments of trying to “disrupt the progress” and singled out Britain by name. “The warmongers from Europe, from Britain, are constantly trying to interfere with this process, constantly trying to meddle in it,” Dmitriev said. “And the more such attempts there are, the more we see that progress is definitely being made.”

He also framed the talks as part of a wider thaw: active work, he said, was underway to restore economic links with the United States, including through a US-Russia economic working group. It was an image of diplomacy and normalisation—talks of business while bullets still fell.

Why diplomats gather while towns burn

It is a striking paradox: why convene peace talks in a place of luxury when front-line towns are under fire? The short answer: because diplomacy rarely pauses for ideal conditions. The longer answer is more uncomfortable. Negotiations—even tentative ones—can be a pressure valve. They create space for back-channel cooperation (on prisoners, humanitarian corridors, grain shipments), and they give the parties a stage to reset expectations.

“Talks are rarely a straight path to peace,” said Dr. Sofia Marquez, a conflict-resolution scholar who has worked in the region. “They are a mechanism to manage conflict, to reduce escalation, and sometimes to buy time.”

Back home, the war continues: a “massive” attack on railways

Minutes after pundits began dissecting Dmitriev’s comments, Ukraine’s Deputy Prime Minister Oleksiy Kuleba sent a different, grimmer note from his Telegram channel. He said Russia had launched a “massive” drone attack on the railway infrastructure in the northern Sumy region. Photographs accompanying his post showed charred rail cars and damaged power installations—clear signs that logistics, not just soldiers, remain a target.

“The enemy is trying to stop train traffic,” Kuleba wrote, calling the strikes “another act of terrorism” against Ukrainian logistics. In Ukraine, rail is the artery of civilian life and the spine of military supply. When trains stop, markets thin, medicine deliveries stall, and the rhythm of daily life is disrupted.

On the platform of a small Sumy station, an elderly stationmaster named Mykola—who asked that only his first name be used—swept debris with a broom that had seen better days. “Those drones do not care if it’s a hospital wagon or a freight car carrying grain,” he said. “We heard the buzzing and then the silence. Silence is worse than noise. It tells you the trains will not come today.”

Logistics as a battlefield

Targeting infrastructure is not new; in modern warfare, it is deliberately used to sap morale and restrict movement. Humanitarian groups warn that such tactics deepen civilian suffering. According to humanitarian agencies, millions of Ukrainians have been displaced since 2022, and the disruption of food, fuel and medicine routes compounds the crisis.

“Attacking logistics is a strategy of attrition,” said an independent security analyst who has tracked the conflict. “If you erode the opponent’s ability to sustain, their options narrow. But the blow is felt hardest by civilians.”

Between hopeful words and practical realities

So where does this leave ordinary people? For the diplomat in Abu Dhabi, progress might be measured in agreed language across a page; for the stationmaster in Sumy, progress is a train that arrives on time. For families in towns near the front line, progress is the repair of a power line or the reopening of a station where children can catch a school bus without fear.

In the corridors outside the negotiation rooms, aides shuffled papers and diplomats exchanged cautious smiles. Behind the faces of statecraft were implicit calculations: sanctions, economic ties, the optics for domestic audiences, the desires of allied capitals. All of these feed into the theatre of negotiation.

What’s at stake

  • Humanitarian relief: uninterrupted access to food, medicine and shelter for millions displaced.
  • Strategic infrastructure: railways, power grids and ports that sustain an economy at war.
  • Geopolitical alignments: the role of Europe and the US in shaping any settlement and the risk of broader confrontation.

Questions that linger: can words outpace weapons?

It is reasonable to wonder whether a negotiated path can proceed while military pressure continues. Can trust—already thin—be built across a negotiation table when the other side admits to striking vital civilian infrastructure? Negotiations without enforcement or verification mechanisms risk becoming sterile exercises in posturing.

“The key test of talks is whether they change behaviour on the ground,” said Dr. Marquez. “If what happens in Abu Dhabi is followed by de-escalation measures—agreed corridors, monitored ceasefires—that’s one thing. If it’s just talk while power lines are bombed, then words mean little.”

Invitation to reflect

As a reader, what do you expect from such talks? Do you place your faith in diplomacy even when it seems to run in parallel with violence? Or do you see the very act of negotiating as a necessary bridge, however imperfect?

There are no clean answers. But what stands out is human resilience: stationmasters sweeping platforms, negotiators drafting clauses, families rerouting lives as they can. The story in Abu Dhabi—and in Sumy, and in so many places in between—is not only about power politics. It is about people trying to keep life afloat in the smallest, most ordinary ways.

And as diplomats speak of “progress” under desert skylines, somewhere a train driver checks the rails and waits, hoping those words will one day translate into movement that brings people home.

Dagaalka Koofur Galbeed oo saameeyay shirkii maanta ee Golaha Wasiirada Soomaaliya

Feb 05(Jowhar)-Kulanka golaha wasiiradda Faderaalka ayay maanta hareysay iska horimaadyada ka dhacay shalay iyo saakaba magaalada Baydhabo, iyadoo xubno katirsan golaha wasiiradda oo labo daraf kala metalaya ay golaha dhexdiisa isku qabsadeem.

U.S. Withdraws 700 Immigration Officers From Across Minnesota

US removing 700 immigration officers from Minnesota
Following the drawdown, 2,000 immigration officers will still be present in Minnesota

Minneapolis After the Raid: A City Holding Its Breath

There’s a hush over parts of Minneapolis this week that feels less like peace and more like waiting — the brittle kind of pause after a siren fades but before the next one begins. The federal government announced it would remove 700 immigration enforcement officers from Minnesota, a drawdown meant to calm a city roiled by highly charged operations and two fatal shootings that touched off outrage across the country. Yet officials say the reduction is partial; roughly 2,000 officers will remain in place, and the man sent to manage the effort vows he won’t leave “until we get it all done.”

“We’re not retreating,” Tom Homan, the senior official tapped to oversee the crackdown, told reporters. “There are now more officers taking custody of criminal aliens directly from the jails. That requires fewer personnel on the streets.”

What Happened — And What the Numbers Mean

Before the recent operation, federal immigration presence in Minnesota was small — about 150 officers. In recent weeks that number swelled dramatically, a show of force that drew immediate attention and sustained protest. Then came two shootings during enforcement actions that killed Renee Good and Alex Pretti, both 37 and both Minneapolis residents; both deaths have been widely criticized and are central to why the operation became a national story.

The administration says it will pull back 700 officers “immediately,” but the remaining force — roughly 2,000 personnel by officials’ count — still represents a major federal footprint for a Midwestern state that had been lightly patrolled by immigration agents until now. For many locals, the math doesn’t translate into comfort.

Numbers, Policy and Rhetoric

“Pulling out 700 is window dressing if 2,000 stay,” said Dr. Lina Ortega, an immigration policy researcher who has studied enforcement operations in urban centers. “The scale is the point. You can’t compare presence of 150 agents to several thousand without noting the chilling effect on immigrant communities and the strain on local policing.”

ICE’s enforcement arm, Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO), is part of a national system that manages detentions and deportations and employs thousands across the United States. Pledges from the president to pursue “mass deportations” — words Homan echoed when he said the administration “fully intends to achieve mass deportations during this administration” — have amplified fear and resistance in immigrant neighborhoods from coast to coast.

On the Ground: Voices and Tensions

Walk through the neighborhoods where protests clustered and you’ll hear people speak not in abstract policy terms but in the language of family and fear. A corner grocery owner who asked to be identified only as Maria described the mood: “People come in whispering. They ask me if I’ve heard anything. They’re scared to go to work, scared to drive their kids to school. This isn’t about law or order for us. It’s about being able to breathe.”

At a makeshift memorial near one of the scenes, candles and hand-lettered signs sit beside a pile of winter gloves and a well-thumbed paperback. Neighbors trade stories: a nurse who says she saw the operation from the hallway across the street; a retiree who says he heard shouts before a car sped away. “You learn your city in pieces like this,” the retiree told me. “You see what happens when power moves in and the people who live here are collateral.”

Federal officials, for their part, have framed the operation as targeted and necessary. “We’re focused on public-safety threats,” an ICE official said on background, declining to be named. “We do not target families or lawful residents. We’re attempting to remove individuals who have serious criminal histories.”

Community Reaction

  • Protesters and civil-rights groups have demanded transparency, investigations and the withdrawal of federal forces.
  • Local officials have criticized the tactics and the body count, calling for independent inquiries into the shootings.
  • Some residents, often from neighborhoods hit hardest by violent crime, voiced mixed feelings — empathy for the grief and anger at the loss of life, but also concern about whether federal presence might reduce violent offenders on the streets.

The Politics Behind the Move

President Trump, in an interview following the unrest, hinted that the response might shift in tone. “I learned that maybe we could use a little bit of a softer touch. But you still have to be tough,” he told NBC’s Nightly News.

The change in tone came after the president replaced a combative Customs and Border Protection commander with Homan, a more policy-focused figure who promised a conditional drawdown tied to improved cooperation with state and local authorities. For the administration, the calculus appears to be political and procedural: tamp down the optics without abandoning the administration’s broader immigration agenda.

Why This Matters Beyond Minnesota

Consider this: a local enforcement action can quickly become a national story because it sits at the intersection of immigration, policing and civil liberties — themes playing out in cities worldwide. From demonstrations in Europe over asylum policies to debates in Asia about border control, governments are balancing security, humanitarian concerns and public perception.

In the United States, the Minneapolis episode underscores a broader fault line: who has the right to police, and when federal action overrides local norms and community trust. “What we’re seeing is the nationalization of local enforcement,” said Jamal Reed, a criminal-justice reform advocate. “That tends to escalate tensions because communities feel they’ve lost the right to negotiate their own safety.”

What Comes Next — Questions the City Must Answer

Investigations into the two deaths are ongoing, and many questions remain unanswered: Were proper procedures followed? What oversight was in place? How do communities reconcile the stated goal of public safety with the trauma of loss in operations meant to enforce the law?

And for the rest of us, there are broader questions worth asking: How do democracies balance border control with human dignity? When is a “softer touch” merely a pause in momentum rather than a change of heart? How do we measure the real outcomes of sweeps that are billed as targeting “criminal aliens,” when every identity has ripple effects through families, workplaces and schools?

Closing Thoughts

Minneapolis right now is both a cautionary tale and a living, breathing community trying to heal. The removal of 700 officers is not a retreat as much as a recalibration — and the 2,000 who remain are a reminder that policy decisions are never abstract. They land in kitchens and on front porches. They are felt in the silence of a grocery store and the defiant chant of a protester.

As this story unfolds, keep an eye on the investigations, on how local leaders negotiate with federal counterparts, and on the quiet ways communities mend. And ask yourself: what kind of enforcement makes a city safer for everyone — not just on paper, but in the lived experience of its people?

Dagaal maalinkii labaad ka socdo magaalada Baydhabo iyo xaaladda oo cakiran

Feb 05(Jowhar)-Dagaal ayaa ka socda magaalada Baydhabo maalintii labaad, kaasi oo u dhexeeya ciidamada maamulka Koonfur-galbeed & ciidan la sheegey in ay taabacsan yihiin Wasiirka Xannaanada Xoolaha DFS, Xasan Eeley oo isagu dagaalka ku eedeeyey Madaxweyne Laftagareen.

Son of Norway’s crown princess admits excesses, denies rape claim

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

A Storm at Skaugum: Norway’s Royal Scandal and the Quiet Voices Behind the Headlines

On a cold morning outside Oslo, the stately silhouette of Skaugum looked no different than a dozen other photographs: manicured lawns, a flagpole at half-mast, and an architectural calm that has long symbolised continuity in Norway’s constitutional monarchy. Inside a courtroom, however, the quiet was different — tense, fractured, and alive with accusation. At the centre of it all is a young man who has grown up under an unusual glare, accused of crimes that could upend a royal household and force a nation to reckon with power, privacy and consent.

The case, in brief

Marius Borg Høiby, 29, the eldest son of Crown Princess Mette-Marit from a partnership before her marriage to Crown Prince Haakon, stands accused of multiple serious offences, including four counts of rape and numerous assaults. He has pleaded not guilty to the most serious allegations and faces a potential sentence of up to 16 years in prison if convicted.

These are not just legal questions; they are questions about a family that straddles the private and public in complicated ways. Marius — who was raised alongside his half-siblings Princess Ingrid Alexandra and Prince Sverre Magnus but holds no official royal role — has told the court and the country about a lifetime of living in someone else’s spotlight.

From spotlight to courtroom

“I’ve been photographed since I was three,” he told the Oslo district court in a moment of visible emotion. “I’m mostly known as my mother’s son, not anything else.”

He described a life that spiralled into substance abuse and reckless behaviour, a confession that doubled as explanation: “There was an extreme need for recognition,” he said, tracing it to the glare of media attention that framed his childhood and adolescence.

Norwegian reports and the court record show he has acknowledged long-standing struggles with alcohol and drugs — words that land differently from a public figure than from a private citizen. For many readers, such admissions will stir empathetic recognition; for survivors and prosecutors, they will be read through a much harder lens.

Allegations, testimony and the slippery business of memory

The trial has been marked by wrenching testimony. One woman who testified described a night at Skaugum in December 2018 that began consensually but then — she says — blurried into a “big black hole.” She alleges that images on Mr Høiby’s phone showed sexual acts while she was unconscious and that she later suspected she had been drugged. “I couldn’t believe it. It felt like a betrayal,” she told the court through visible distress.

Defence lawyers pointed to inconsistencies in earlier statements and emphasised that Mr Høiby denies any rape, saying that sexual encounters were consensual. The line between consensual sex and sexual assault often hinges on memory, awareness and capacity — issues that courts around the world are grappling with daily.

“The court must weigh testimony against evidence, understanding that trauma is not neat and that memory is complex,” a legal scholar familiar with Norwegian criminal law told me. “We should resist simple narratives in favour of careful, humane adjudication.”

Ripples through the palace

The repercussions have been immediate. For a monarchy that enjoys high approval ratings in Norway — often hovering above 60% in periodic polls — this scandal has been described by some analysts as the most serious crisis in modern times for the royal family.

The Crown Princess and Crown Prince have not attended the trial. The palace confirmed Mette-Marit postponed a private trip abroad; she is also publicly known to be managing a serious lung condition that may require a transplant in the future. There are also fresh, uncomfortable headlines about Ms Mette-Marit’s past friendship with the late Jeffrey Epstein, a revelation that has compounded scrutiny of the family.

A longtime Oslo resident who lives near the palace told me, “You grow up with this family on postcards and schoolbooks — they’re part of our civic wallpaper. When something like this happens, it feels personal.”

Local colour and the national conversation

Outside the courtroom and beyond the palace gates, conversations in cafés and tram carriages have been quietly heated. Over steaming cups of coffee and cinnamon buns, people trade facts, rumours and moral positions.

“We talk about dignity and fairness,” said an undergraduate student in political science. “We also talk about how the media treats people who are not clean-cut public figures. Where’s the line between accountability and spectacle?”

Norway is a country proud of its social safety nets and egalitarian ethos, but the case throws into sharp relief how privilege — even informal, familial privilege — can complicate access to justice and social judgment. It raises questions most societies are confronting: how to protect victims, how to hold the accused accountable, and how to care for people who exhibit self-destructive behaviour without blurring the line between explanation and exculpation.

Bigger than one household

The trial in Oslo connects to broader global conversations. According to the World Health Organization, about one in three women worldwide have experienced physical or sexual violence in their lifetime — a stark reminder that these are not isolated incidents but part of systemic patterns. Meanwhile, research on children of celebrities and powerholders shows higher rates of mental-health struggles and substance abuse tied to exposure and expectation.

“Power dynamics matter everywhere,” said a sociologist who studies elites. “Whether it’s a palace or a boardroom, those with influence create environments where lines can be crossed — sometimes overtly, sometimes invisibly.”

Questions for readers

What do we owe survivors who come forward? How do we ensure a fair trial when the accused are public figures? Can empathy for mental-health struggles coexist with accountability for harm?

These are not rhetorical exercises. They shape policy, media ethics and everyday attitudes about consent and responsibility. They also shape how a nation sees its institutions and the people who embody them.

What happens next

The trial is scheduled to run for several weeks. Cameras are barred from publishing the names of alleged victims — a legal protection designed to preserve anonymity and dignity. Meanwhile, public opinion will continue to ebb and flow, buffeted by testimony, leaked facts and the inevitable cultural conversations that follow such cases.

What remains constant is the human toll. At the centre of legal filings and headline-making imagery are real people — victims, accused, family members and friends — whose lives will be changed no matter the verdict. As Norway watches, the world is reminded: institutions may be resilient, but they are inhabited by fragile, complicated human beings.

“We must remember to look past our desire for scandal,” a longtime court reporter said to me. “Justice takes time. So does healing.”

And as you read this, consider where you stand in the balance between empathy and judgment. How do we build systems that protect the vulnerable without discarding the presumption of innocence? How do we hold the powerful to account while offering paths to rehabilitation? The answers are messy, but they are worth pursuing — and the conversation in Oslo is only one, loud summons to begin.

Ukraine, Russia and U.S. Negotiators Report Constructive, Fruitful Talks

Ukraine, Russia, US negotiators hold 'productive' talks
Several rounds of diplomacy between the sides, including the last round of talks in Abu Dhabi, have failed to strike a deal on ending the conflict

Between a Table and a Marketplace: Abu Dhabi Talks While War Rages

They sat around a U-shaped table beneath the cool, anonymous lights of an Abu Dhabi conference room — Ukraine, Russia and the United States — while, outside, another kind of light flashed across the sky over eastern Ukraine: missiles, the jagged punctuation of a war that refuses to be paused for diplomacy.

Photographs released by the United Arab Emirates showed faces both determined and tired. At the table, U.S. envoys including special representatives were flanked by high-profile intermediaries. In the press pack and in living rooms in Kyiv and Moscow, people watched with the old, weary hope that words might replace bullets.

What happened in the room

Kyiv’s chief negotiator described the first day as “substantive and productive,” saying the talks zeroed in on “concrete steps and practical solutions.” Officials framed the meeting as an attempt to find pragmatic ways to slow bloodshed, exchange prisoners and stabilize certain front-line areas without forcing Kyiv into territorial concessions.

Yet the Kremlin’s line remained clear and uncompromising. Moscow continues to press for territorial recognition of areas it controls and wants Ukrainian forces pulled back from key sectors — demands Kyiv rejects as a nonstarter. A Kremlin spokesperson said Russian troops would keep fighting until Ukraine “made decisions” that could end the conflict, underscoring the yawning gaps between negotiating tables and battlefields.

Who was at the table — and why it matters

What’s notable about these talks is not only the attendees but the posture. The United States has stepped into the role of broker with unusual discreetness, positioning itself between two parties with bitter grievances and profound asymmetries of power, land and narrative. Photos from the session showed U.S. envoys seated centrally, an image that speaks to Washington’s continued influence — and its hard calculus about how to balance pressure on Moscow with support for Kyiv.

“Our aim was to focus on what can be done now, not to rush to impossible compromises,” said one Western diplomat who asked not to be named. “You negotiate the achievable first.”

On the ground: a market and the human cost

If diplomacy is a slow mechanism of repair, violence remains instantaneous. As the talks began in Abu Dhabi, a crowded marketplace in eastern Donetsk was struck. Local officials reported the use of cluster munitions, with at least seven people killed and more than a dozen wounded.

“I ran out with my shopping bag still half filled,” said Olena, a 62-year-old vendor from Druzhkivka, who fled the scene. “There was smoke and people calling names. We think peace is a dream, because our everyday looks like this.”

The Donetsk regional governor’s office said Russia shelled market areas and dropped aerial bombs. Both Moscow and Kyiv maintain they do not target civilians; yet the civilian toll continues to mount. The scale of suffering is measured in statistics, in casualty lists and in empty chairs at family tables.

Numbers that haunt negotiations

President Volodymyr Zelensky — speaking to foreign media this week — said that, since the full-scale invasion in 2022, Ukraine has lost roughly 55,000 soldiers on the battlefield, and many more are listed as missing. Russia currently occupies about 20% of Ukraine’s territory when Crimea and parts of the Donbas are included, and military analysts estimate Moscow gained roughly 1.5% more of Ukrainian land during 2024 alone.

Those figures are not mere data points. They shape public mood. Polls show a majority of Ukrainians oppose any deal that would hand territory to Russia, a political reality Kyiv says it cannot ignore.

The core impasse: land, sovereignty and a nuclear plant

At the heart of the stalemate lie thorny, existential issues. Moscow seeks recognition of territorial gains and the withdrawal of Ukrainian troops from substantial swathes of Donetsk — including cities Kyiv regards as essential bulwarks. Ukraine argues any settlement must respect its sovereignty and refuses unilateral troop pullbacks.

Then there is Zaporizhzhia, Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, sitting uneasily in territory under Russian control. International experts warn the plant remains a potential catastrophe waiting to happen if military operations continue nearby, and the question of its security is a diplomatic landmine.

“Nuclear facilities change the equation completely,” said Dr. Sofia Marin, an energy security analyst. “You’re no longer just talking about territory or population centers — you’re negotiating around a hazard that could have transnational consequences.”

Money, weapons and the pragmatic margins of compromise

Parallel to the talks, financial levers are being readjusted. The European Union moved to allow Ukraine to use a new €90 billion loan to buy a greater share of weapons from allies like the United Kingdom — provided those allies contribute financially to the borrowing costs. This is a pragmatic signal: Europe will keep providing the means for Kyiv to defend itself, while recalibrating how burdens are shared.

“This is about sustaining the military and economic resilience that makes any future agreement credible,” one EU official said. “It also reflects political realities: allies want access, but they must pay their share.”

At the same time, Kyiv has accused Moscow of exploiting last week’s U.S.-backed energy truce to stockpile munitions and then launch a record ballistic missile barrage. These tactical narratives — who used pauses to re-arm, who abused ceasefires — undermine trust and complicate the work of mediators.

What’s next — and what should we hope for?

Talks are expected to resume. Kyiv’s lead negotiator will report back to President Zelensky, and participants say they hope to secure a fresh prisoner exchange “in the near future.” But the big questions remain. Can diplomacy nibble away at suffering while preserving Kyiv’s territorial integrity? Can the international community contain an escalation that would make negotiations moot?

Ask yourself: when you read about summits and statements, can you picture the street where someone purchased bread just hours before an attack? Can a policy paper fully account for the human voice behind every statistic?

These negotiations are not merely the chess of states. They are a test of whether the global community can protect civilians, preserve institutions, and prevent the normalization of land-grab warfare in Europe. They ask us whether pragmatism will prevail over maximalist demands, and whether the mechanics of diplomacy can keep pace with the dynamics of conflict.

“Negotiations are hard because war makes people fragile and fearful,” a Ukrainian aid worker told me. “We need agreements that keep people alive today and offer a future worth living in tomorrow.”

Closing thoughts

As this chapter in Abu Dhabi closes and the next opens, the picture remains mixed: a commitment to talk — and a relentless reminder why the talks matter. For families in Druzhkivka and markets across Donetsk region, a pause in rhetoric is only meaningful if it translates to safety.

Diplomacy, in the end, is a craft as much as a hope. It starts with a table and a willingness to listen, but it must end with less blood on the ground. Will the world lean hard enough into that work? For now, we watch, we count, and we grieve — and we keep asking the hardest question: what price are we willing to pay to keep tomorrow from becoming yesterday’s tragedy?

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.

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