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Jamaica reports first fatalities as Hurricane Melissa batters island

First deaths from Hurricane Melissa reported in Jamaica
Map showing Tropical Cyclone Melissa's location as of 29 October, 3.00 am GMT/Irish time

When the sea turned loud: Hurricane Melissa’s wake across the Caribbean

The morning after, the Caribbean looked as if someone had tried to scrub it clean with a savage hand: roofs peeled back like tin can lids, coconut palms flattened into tangled green brooms, streets that were once pulsing with market life transformed into rivers that swallowed cars and memories alike.

From Kingston to Santiago de Cuba, from the hills of southern Haiti to the low-lying cays of the Bahamas, people were left standing amid the wreckage asking the same quiet question: how did this happen so fast?

A violent spin across familiar seas

Hurricane Melissa roared across the Caribbean with sustained winds reaching roughly 195 kilometres per hour (about 121 mph), according to the US National Hurricane Center. For Jamaica, that translated into a storm that, by some measures, matched the ferocity of storms not seen since 1935.

It did not move like a quick visitor. Melissa crawled, lingered and punished — a slow, grinding test of roofs, infrastructure and nerves. That slowness is not incidental. Warmer seas — the very oceans that make this region a tourism magnet — are pouring extra energy into hurricanes, amplifying winds and, crucially, rainfall. The result: deeper floods, higher surges, more landslides.

Numbers that don’t tell the whole story

Official tallies are still being reconciled, but the figures are grim: at least 30 people dead or missing in Haiti, with civil defence reporting at least 20 dead in the south — among them 10 children — and 10 missing. Jamaica confirmed four deaths after floodwaters washed victims ashore in St Elizabeth, and dozens of homes have been destroyed across the island.

Roughly 25,000 people sought refuge in emergency shelters in Jamaica, and the island’s tourism sector — bustling only months ago — suddenly found itself balancing hospitality and humanitarian need, with about 25,000 tourists still in-country as the storm passed.

On the ground: voices from the islands

“We woke up to the sound of the roof being torn away,” said Lisa Sangster, a 30-year-old communications specialist from Kingston, her voice raw on a call. “My sister described water rising past her knees in minutes. We saved what we could — our medications, a few photos. Everything else is gone.”

In rural Saint Elizabeth, local government minister Desmond McKenzie painted a picture of communities underwater. “It has been a devastating event,” he said. “Several hospitals have been damaged; roads are impassable. Recovery will take time.”

“We are safe and trying to stay calm,” said Lionnis Francos, a rheumatologist stranded in El Cobre, Cuba, after floodwaters and a landslide blocked the road. “Rescuers reached out but couldn’t get across. They asked us to remain put until they can clear a path.”

In Port-au-Prince and the southern departments of Haiti, where deforested slopes and fragile drainage amplify nature’s cruelty, people spoke of sudden flash floods ripping through settlements. Emmanuel Pierre, head of Haiti’s civil defence, confirmed dozens of fatalities and appealed for fast, practical help.

Everyday compassion in a crisis

“A neighbour carried my son on his shoulder like a hero,” recalled Mathue Tapper, 31, from Kingston. “We are lucky in the city, but the people out west—out by the coast—are facing the worst of it. It hurts to watch.”

How governments and aid groups are responding

Relief efforts are already mobilizing. The United Nations announced plans for an airlift of some 2,000 relief kits from a regional hub in Barbados once flights resume. The Jamaican Red Cross was distributing drinking water and hygiene supplies even as communications remained patchy and electrical grids failed.

“We have rescue and response teams heading to affected areas along with critical lifesaving supplies,” said a US State Department statement, noting coordination with regional partners. The Vatican offered prayers. The UN appealed for calm and cooperation as damage assessments continue.

  • Estimated shelters occupied in Jamaica: ~25,000 people
  • Relief modules ready for airlift from Barbados: ~2,000 kits
  • Reported dead or missing in Haiti: ~30
  • Reported deaths in Jamaica: 4

Cuba: battered during a bitter time

Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel described “extensive damage” on an island already grappling with its worst economic crisis in decades. In eastern provinces, streets flooded, homes collapsed, and prompt community action — neighbours ferrying the elderly, locals salvaging heirlooms — made the difference between life and deeper loss.

State media reported rescue teams struggling to reach at least 17 people trapped by a landslide and floodwaters. Electricity and communications outages hampered external support, a reminder that phones and satellites cannot replace relief workers on the ground.

Why the Caribbean suffers so sharply

There are natural explanations — hurricanes are seasonal actors here — and human ones. Decades of development on vulnerable coastlines, weakened ecosystems, and, in places like Haiti, rampant deforestation, have left communities with fewer defenses against water and wind.

“Human-caused climate change is making all of the worst aspects of Hurricane Melissa even worse,” said climate scientist Daniel Gilford. “Warmer sea-surface temperatures increase the potential energy available to storms; slower-moving systems drop more rain.” The IPCC and regional climatologists have been sounding the alarm that, while the frequency of very intense hurricanes may vary, their destructive potential is rising.

Beyond the headlines: culture, resilience, inequality

Walk a street in Kingston or Havana now and you’ll see the same resilient choreography: neighbours opening doors for each other, volunteers ferrying generator fuel, church halls becoming clinics. But you’ll also see the stark inequalities — the beachfront resort with a security detail and the informal settlement two blocks away trying to bail water with buckets.

Tourism dollars can prop up an economy in good times, but in a storm they can leave nations juggling two goals: protect visitors and protect citizens. That tension plays out in airports, hotels, and shelter lines.

What comes next?

Assessments will take days; rebuilding, months to years. There will be needs that money alone cannot fix: grief, trauma, the daily fear every rainy season now carries. And there will be policy choices — invest in reforestation and robust drainage, upgrade hospitals and communication networks, rethink where we build new homes.

Will the lessons from Melissa stick? Will governments and international partners use this as a call to action to strengthen early warning systems and community resilience? Or will these scenes fade into news cycles until the next storm arrives?

How you can help — and why it matters

If you are moved to act, reputable relief organizations are coordinating immediate needs: clean water, shelter, medical supplies and cash transfers to families. Donations that empower local groups and buy locally sourced supplies often get aid moving fastest.

And as a global community, we must ask bigger questions: how do we confront the warming planet we share, and how do we make sure the most vulnerable aren’t always left to pay the bill?

Melissa will move on, as hurricanes do. The work that remains — of healing, rebuilding, and reimagining a safer, fairer Caribbean — will last long after the headlines. Will we be ready?

Ukraine Reports Russian Strike Damaged Children’s Hospital, Officials Confirm

Ukraine says children's hospital hit in Russian attack
A view of the aftermath of a Russian strike on a children's hospital in the Dnipro district of Kherson (Credit: Kherson Regional Military Administration)

The Morning After: When a Hospital Becomes a Battlefield

They arrived at the children’s hospital not as caretakers but as witnesses: a paramedic with dust in her hair, a volunteer carrying sandwiches, a stunned grandmother clutching a toy that had survived the blast. In Kherson, sunlight caught on shards of glass like a scatter of tiny, merciless stars — windows blown inward, stretchers upturned, medical instruments lying where their users had been pulled away.

“The enemy opened fire on a children’s hospital in Kherson,” said Ukraine’s ombudsman Dmytro Lubinets, his voice tight with the sort of anger that has become routine in this war. “Nine people were wounded — among them four children and three medical workers.”

Video and photographs released by city officials show a scene that reads as a contradiction: the gentle trappings of pediatric care — stickers on walls, a chart with a child’s name — interrupted by chaos. Bloodstains darken the floor beneath a toppled IV stand. A nurse’s badge lies half-buried in plaster dust.

“I have cared for children through measles and broken bones, but never in a room that smelled like smoke and fear,” said a pediatric nurse at the hospital who asked to remain anonymous. “We are supposed to be a place of safety. Today, that is gone.”

Kherson’s Quiet Warfront

Kherson is not a distant front. The city, briefly under Russian control in 2022, now sits on the uneasy edge of a divided landscape — the Dnipro river carving a line between neighborhoods and front lines. From the river’s banks, residents watch drones and shells arc across the sky. From the hospital windows they watch for ambulances that may never arrive in time.

This attack is one more in a pattern that has exhausted the vocabulary of outrage. Russia denies targeting civilians, saying it aims only at military infrastructure; Ukrainian officials and independent observers counter that medical facilities and civilian infrastructure have been repeatedly struck. “Targeting medical institutions and civilian infrastructure is not warfare — it’s purely terrorism and a grave violation of international humanitarian law,” Ukraine’s Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said, summing up a sentiment felt by many across the country.

Power Outages, Winter Worries: Odesa Feels the Shock

As Kherson tended its wounds, a different part of southern Ukraine went dark. Russian strikes on the Odesa region’s energy infrastructure left roughly 27,000 households without power, the Ukrainian energy company DTEK reported. “The damage is significant. Repairs will take time,” the company said, bracing residents for disruptions that could last beyond simple, replaceable fixtures.

Odesa has been through this before. Previous campaigns of strikes on energy lines and substations have plunged millions into darkness during the cold months, turning kitchens into stoves and neighborhoods into living rooms without heat. Each outage is not only an inconvenience; it is a threat multiplier, especially as winter closes in.

“You can’t take a child’s temperature with frozen fingers. A premature baby in an incubator is suddenly a life-or-death calculation,” said an energy-sector analyst in Kyiv, speaking on condition of anonymity. “This is strategic targeting with humanitarian consequences.”

Small Numbers, Big Consequences

Numbers in these moments are heavy with meaning. Nine wounded at a hospital feels like a headline — but the human arithmetic continues in quieter ways: a class of children left without a school nurse, a grandmother who must fetch coal and water, a pharmacy that runs out of pediatric analgesics.

  • Wounded in Kherson hospital attack: 9 (including 4 children and 3 medical workers)
  • Households without power in Odesa region after strikes: ~27,000
  • Frontline geography: Dnipro river forms a de facto divide through southern Ukraine

Return Fire, Cross-border Echoes

War is never a single, isolated thing. Kyiv says it continues a campaign of retaliatory strikes; Moscow reported its own claims. In Russia’s Belgorod region, Governor Vyacheslav Gladkov reported that a drone strike had killed at least one person and wounded three in the border village of Shebekino. Meanwhile, Russia’s defence ministry claimed its forces had taken the village of Vyshneve in Dnipropetrovsk region — assertions Kyiv contests and outside observers often scrutinize.

“Every act becomes an argument for the next,” said an independent security expert in Lviv. “You have kinetic escalation, then political framing, then humanitarian fallout. The spiral is mechanical.”

What It Means When Hospitals Are Targets

Why does a hit on a children’s hospital feel different from other acts of war? Because hospitals are meant to be sanctuaries, physical embodiments of a social compact: even in conflict, we protect the most vulnerable. When that compact is broken, it ripples outward — eroding trust, forcing displacement, and straining the capacity of a health system already stretched thin.

Humanitarian law — the Geneva Conventions and their protocols — is explicit about the protection of medical facilities and personnel. Yet, in contemporary conflicts around the world, from the Middle East to Africa, attacks on hospitals have become tragically frequent. The international community has mechanisms for condemnation and, at times, accountability, but enforcement is often slow and politically fraught.

So we are left with a question that sits uncomfortably in the throat: what does it mean for the world to watch a hospital die in the public eye? Does condemnation suffice when lives hang in the balance?

A Human Ledger

In Kherson, people keep a different sort of ledger. They count neighbors who returned after evacuation orders, lovers who carry each other’s groceries across checkpoints, volunteers who load ambulances with blankets. A woman who runs a small bakery near the river handed over a carton of buns to hospital staff as if to say: we are still here.

“You bake, I stretch my hands — and we hold the line together,” she shrugged, flour still under her nails. “For our children, we try.”

Beyond the Headlines: What Can the Global Community Do?

There are no easy answers. Pressure from diplomats and sanctions from governments have a role, as do investigations into potential war crimes. Humanitarian organizations are the first responders in moral and practical terms. But the bleeding edge of this conflict exposes a larger global trend: the weaponization of civilian infrastructure and the erosion of shared norms that once made hospitals untouchable.

As readers around the world, what responsibility do you carry? How do we translate sympathy into sustained attention, into policies that protect civilians and penalize breaches of international law? Can aid be routed more quickly? Can blackouts be mitigated with international support for grid repair? These are technical questions with moral implications.

Closing: The Small Acts That Keep a City Alive

Back at the Kherson children’s hospital, a young doctor wiped a cuff of blood from her sleeve and straightened the bedsheet. “We will reopen the pediatric ward tomorrow if we have to,” she said, glancing at a list of injured children. “We will clean the walls, paint new stars, and try to make a hospital again.”

In the shadow of missiles and power cuts, people still make choices that bind them to each other: collecting water, sharing a heater, refusing to let fear define their day. Those small acts — they are stitches in a fabric that, like any city, can be torn, but also mended. For now, the world watches. For now, a hospital that was hit is still a hospital, because the people inside refuse to let it be anything else.

Powerful storm batters Jamaica, inflicting damage at unprecedented levels

Storm devastates Jamaica at 'levels never seen before'
Storm devastates Jamaica at 'levels never seen before'

When the Rain Wouldn’t Stop: Haiti’s New Flood Toll and a Nation’s Old Wounds

The number sits cold and stark: at least 20 people dead after torrential rains from a recent hurricane ripped through southern Haiti, slamming rivers into towns and turning roads into ribbons of mud. It’s a headline that travels quickly across the globe — brief, brutal — but it barely captures the soaked lives, the overturned homes, the days-long wait for help, and the quiet fear settling in the mouths of people who have already lost so much.

“We thought the worst was behind us,” said Mireille Jean, a mother of three who huddled with neighbors on the concrete floor of a church in Les Cayes, wiping silt from her hands. “But the water keeps coming back in memory. It keeps coming in the night.”

On the Ground: Small Towns, Big Losses

Walk through any of the affected communities and the scene is at once intimate and terrible: mattresses stiff with dried mud, children in damp clothing, chickens wandering where a courtyard used to be. In Jérémie, locals used ropes and makeshift rafts to ferry the elderly out of houses that had been underwater for hours. In some coastal hamlets, fishing boats—lifelines for families—were smashed against reefs and docks or washed miles inland.

“We lost our boat, our nets, and our last savings,” said Alain Toussaint, a fisherman, his voice low and hoarse. “How do we feed our children now?”

Local emergency coordinators say roads that link villages to hospitals and supply depots are frequently impassable, complicating rescues and supplies. One civil protection worker told me, “When a river jumps its banks here, the map we depend on becomes a myth.”

Not Just Water: The Anatomy of a Disaster

Haiti is no stranger to storms. But the violence of this flooding laid bare a confluence of factors that turn an intense rain event into catastrophe: steep, denuded hillsides; homes built in floodplains because there’s literally nowhere else to go; precarious infrastructure; and a chronic shortage of robust early-warning systems.

Only a sliver of Haiti’s original forest remains—estimates vary, but many experts place forest cover at well under 5% of the island’s original canopy—meaning soils are less able to absorb rainfall and landslides become likelier. Add eroded slopes and unregulated construction, and you have the slow-motion setup for fast-moving water.

Climate scientists have been warning that warming oceans produce more moisture and can intensify the heaviest storms. “The physics is simple,” said Dr. Samira Bello, a climatologist familiar with Caribbean weather trends. “Warmer air holds more water vapor. When that vapor condenses, the rainfall can be off the charts. But vulnerability is the multiplier. Where social and environmental fragility exist, the storm does not need to be extraordinary to be devastating.”

Numbers That Tell a Story

At least 20 fatalities have been confirmed so far by local authorities; dozens more have been reported missing or are unaccounted for. Thousands of people have been displaced, sleeping in makeshift shelters or crowded into public buildings. Hospitals report surge admissions for hypothermia, trauma from collapses, and gastrointestinal illnesses linked to contaminated water.

Haiti’s population is about 11.6 million people, concentrated in both dense urban areas and scattered rural communities, many of which lack reliable infrastructure. Poverty rates remain high, and public services are stretched thin — a reality that turns weather events into social crises.

Immediate Needs

  • Clean water and water purification supplies to prevent waterborne disease outbreaks
  • Emergency shelter materials and blankets for families sleeping in the open
  • Food assistance and cash support so families can repair and replace lost assets
  • Medical teams and supplies to treat injuries and prevent the spread of infections
  • Clearing of roads and restoration of communications networks to reach isolated communities

Voices in the Flood

Across the makeshift camps, you hear a mix of anger, fatigue, and stubborn hope. “This rain is not only water,” said Father Jean-Baptiste, who is coordinating a small relief effort from his parish hall. “It is history. It returns old wounds and makes them fresh.”

And then there are the quiet practical pleas: for a truck to bring drinking water; for a roof to keep the next storm out. “We need jobs, real drainage, places for our children to play that are not flood zones,” said Nadège Laurent, a community organizer. “Aid helps today. Resilience is what will keep us safe tomorrow.”

Why This Matters Beyond Haiti

When a hurricane barrels into Haiti and leaves death and displacement behind, it is the culmination of global and local factors: global heating that fuels extreme weather; economic systems that leave some nations with fragile infrastructure; local governance challenges born of decades of political upheaval and underinvestment. In short, tragedies like this are local in impact but global in causation.

What happens in Haiti matters to the international community not just because of humanitarian obligation, but because the same patterns repeat in places from Mozambique to Puerto Rico. Investment in adaptation and resilient infrastructure can reduce the human cost of storms. Early-warning systems, reforestation, and planned relocation away from the most exposed floodplains are not silver bullets—but they are tangible, difficult, necessary work.

Moving Forward: Aid, Accountability, and Reconstruction

International NGOs are mobilizing, national authorities are pleading for logistics support, and communities continue to improvise. Yet aid alone cannot rebuild what is essentially a system that has been eroded over decades. “We need sustained funding, but we also need local leadership and good governance,” said Sophie Martel, a humanitarian coordinator with long experience in the Caribbean. “Too often, responses are episodic. The flood recedes, coffins are lowered, and the world’s attention moves on. But the conditions that allowed the deaths remain.”

There are small but meaningful successes: community groups teaching flood-resistant building techniques, reforestation projects gaining traction in some areas, and local radio stations broadcasting weather alerts in Creole. These efforts whisper a more hopeful future—one in which Haitians have more control over their environment and destinies.

What Can Readers Do?

That question matters. It’s easy to feel far away and helpless. But there are concrete ways to respond:

  1. Donate to reputable relief organizations that have an on-the-ground presence and transparent funding practices.
  2. Support advocacy for climate finance mechanisms that prioritize adaptation for vulnerable countries.
  3. Learn about and amplify Haitian-led initiatives focused on resilience and recovery.

And perhaps most importantly: insist that the conversations about climate responsibility include the nations that bear the brunt of warming they did little to cause. Ask your elected leaders how they plan to back global actions with money, technology, and long-term support.

Leaving the Water Behind

In the days after the storm, community leaders pace through wet streets, tallying losses and measuring what can be salvaged. A boy ducks under a makeshift tarpaulin and stares at the sky — as if it might stop raining just by being looked at hard enough. Around him, people begin to plan, to clear, to rebuild, to argue about priorities in a voice that is equal parts tired and resolute.

Haiti’s toll is counted in numbers for a moment, and then in the texture of daily life that must be put back together. Twenty lives lost is a number that should make us all uncomfortable — a prompt to ask how global systems can be changed so that fewer nations pay such an outsized price when the weather turns wild.

How will we respond when the next storm comes? Will we answer with the same short attention and short funding cycles? Or will this be a turning point toward deeper solidarity and smarter investment? The people in Haiti — and the planet — deserve the latter.

China Confirms Xi and Trump Will Meet in South Korea Tomorrow

China says Xi, Trump to meet in South Korea tomorrow
The meeting will take place on the sidelines of a summit of Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, which is taking place in the city of Gyeongju

A Meeting on the Edge of History: Xi and Trump Land in Gyeongju

The ancient stones of Gyeongju—pagodas, royal tomb mounds and the quiet reach of the Sea of Japan—never expected to play host to a 21st-century drama. Yet here they are: a warren of motorcades, bulletproof glass, translators’ booths and a choreography of handshakes that could reshape economies, alliances and a volatile peninsula.

On the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, China’s president and the United States’ president are scheduled to sit across a table tomorrow. It’s the kind of meeting that pundits live for and ordinary people watch with equal parts curiosity and suspicion. Will it produce a breakthrough or merely another line in the ledger of history?

What’s on the Table

The headlines will say “trade,” “tariffs” and “fentanyl,” and they won’t be wrong. Washington has long linked commercial tensions to broader geopolitical strain: tariffs imposed since 2018 still hang over hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of goods, while American authorities press China to clamp down on precursors and supply chains that feed a deadly flow of synthetic opioids.

“This isn’t just about levies and lists,” said Hana Park, a Seoul-based analyst at an economic think tank, over a steaming bowl of juk in a nearby guesthouse. “It’s about trust. Trade is the visible scoreboard, but what both sides really test is whether they can rely on one another when it matters.”

Behind closed doors, officials say the agenda stretches beyond customs duties. Climate cooperation, technology restrictions, and maritime security are almost certainly part of the conversation. Outside the halls, ordinary Gyeongju residents are trying to read the tea leaves.

Numbers that Matter

The U.S. and China trade in goods and services amounts to hundreds of billions of dollars each year; their economic relationship is woven through global supply chains that touch everything from smartphones to ship engines. And on the human-cost side of the ledger: U.S. health authorities have reported more than 100,000 overdose deaths in a year in recent recent years, much of the surge driven by fentanyl and its analogues—facts that give weight to Washington’s urgency in raising the issue.

Voices from the Ground

Outside the summit compound, market vendors adjusted their tarpaulins, watched the flags go up and offered a kind of patient skepticism. “We see leaders come and go,” said Mr. Kim, who sells dried persimmons near the Bulguksa temple. “If a meeting gives people work, good. If it only makes news, not so good.”

A taxi driver in nearby Pohang, eyes bright with the blunt pragmatism of someone who makes his living by the hour, summed up what many feel: “I don’t care about the speeches. I want cheaper parts for my car,” he said, laughing. “But sure—less tension makes business easier.”

Even so, residents are not naïve. A young postgraduate student, Minji, paused between study sessions to say, “One handshake won’t undo years of mistrust. But maybe it starts a different kind of conversation.”

Diplomacy’s Complicated Neighbour: North Korea

Mountains and a heavily fortified demilitarised zone separate the joy of Gyeongju’s heritage sites from the raw geopolitical stakes of the peninsula. That tension made a cameo in the summit drama: President Trump had hoped to secure an ad hoc meeting with North Korea’s leader, a reprise of the theatrical encounters of the past. It didn’t materialize.

“We tried to arrange timing,” Trump told reporters, keeping his characteristic bluntness. “I know Kim Jong Un. I’d like to meet.”

Pyongyang, for its part, did not publicly respond to the invitation. Earlier, the regime tested cruise missiles off its western coast in a message to what state media called its “enemies,” a reminder that diplomacy and saber-rattling often run in parallel.

To many observers, the arms tests are less a surprise than a constant variable. “North Korea uses strategic signaling to keep leverage, domestically and internationally,” said Dr. Elena Marquez, a Korea specialist at a London university. “Their characterization of a nuclear program as ‘irreversible’ changed the stakes years ago.”

Echoes of Panmunjom

It isn’t a blank slate. The memory of three summit meetings between Trump and Kim—most famously the impromptu handshake at Panmunjom where an American president briefly set foot on North Korean soil—still lingers. Those meetings produced photo opportunities, high drama, and ultimately an impasse over denuclearisation and sanctions relief. The fault lines from that failed bargain are still visible today.

Why Gyeongju Matters Beyond the Handshake

The setting is no accident. Gyeongju is an understated reminder that geopolitics sits atop layers of history. The city was once the capital of the Silla kingdom, a place where diplomacy, culture and trade mingled to create an extraordinary civilization. There’s a poetic symmetry to world leaders arriving in a town whose identity was forged by centuries of exchange.

But the practical implications are immediate. A thaw—or a worsening—between Beijing and Washington affects supply chains, global markets and regional alliances. It shifts strategies in capitals from Canberra to Ankara, from Tokyo to Toronto. A modest concession in tariff policy might lower costs for manufacturers; conversely, a breakdown could raise prices and accelerate companies’ plans to diversify production away from China.

What to Watch for Tomorrow

Expect terse public statements about goodwill and “in-depth” discussions. Expect no immediate miracle. Expect signaling—photos, a planned walk, short handshakes—that media outlets will parse for hours. And for those who live in border towns, ports, and factory towns across the Pacific, the outcome will be less about images than about downstream decisions: pricing, hiring, investment.

So ask yourself: what do you want diplomacy to deliver? Is it fewer headlines and more predictability? Stronger enforcement against flows of lethal drugs? A framework that makes technology competition less chaotic? There’s no single answer, but how the Xi–Trump encounter unfolds will tell us something about the direction the world’s two biggest powers are headed.

A Fragile Moment, A Global Ripple

When the leaders sit down, at least one thing will be clear: global affairs are rarely tidy. They are messy, human, full of trade-offs. But gestures matter—especially when the balance between conflict and cooperation can be narrowed by a conversation.

“Diplomacy is like pottery,” said an elder tour guide who paused beneath a ginkgo tree near the royal tumuli. “You cannot rush it; you must shape it gently. Sometimes it cracks. Sometimes it becomes something beautiful.”

Tomorrow’s meeting will not settle everything. But in a world of fast-moving crises and entrenched rivalries, even a small step can set a new rhythm. Watch closely. The ripples will be felt far beyond the ancient stones of Gyeongju.

Madaxweyne Xasan oo gaaray dalka Jabuuti

Okt 29(Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya Mudane Xasan Sheekh Maxamuud iyo wafdi uu hoggaaminayo ayaa si diiran loogu soo dhoweeyey caasimadda Dalka aan walaalaha nahay ee Jabuuti.

Storm Melissa Strikes Cuba Just Hours After Ravaging Jamaica

Melissa hits Cuba hours after devastating Jamaica
The Rio Cobre bursts its banks near St Catherine in Jamaica

After the Eye: Jamaica, Cuba and the Wake of Hurricane Melissa

The morning after felt like a country holding its breath. In Kingston, the air was heavy with the scent of salt, soaked plywood and gasoline. Streets that yesterday thrummed with radio DJs and roadside markets were littered with corrugated tin and palm fronds. Mango trees lay broken like discarded umbrellas. Houses that had stood for generations now gaped, their insides exposed to a gray sky.

“It has been a very difficult early morning,” Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel wrote on social media as Melissa battered Cuba’s southern coast, urging people to stay sheltered while officials counted losses. The scene in Jamaica was no less stark. Prime Minister Andrew Holness warned of damaged hospitals, flooded parishes and a long road to recovery: “There will be a lot of work to do,” he told an international broadcaster, reflecting the grim reality on the ground.

The Facts: A Storm of Uncommon Ferocity

Meteorologists say Melissa was not an ordinary hurricane. At its fiercest over Jamaica, Melissa packed sustained winds estimated as high as 297 km/h, a velocity that places it among the most intense Atlantic storms on record. An analysis of NOAA data found that the storm matched the atmospheric pressure recorded in the notorious 1935 Labor Day Hurricane—about 892 millibars—making Melissa one of a tiny number of storms to reach such depths of pressure.

The Miami-based National Hurricane Center (NHC) reported Melissa weakened to a still-dangerous Category 3 as it moved into Cuban territory, but the imprint left in Jamaica—especially in parishes such as St Elizabeth—was immediate and devastating. Officials said more than 500,000 residents were without power and entire coastal districts were “underwater.”

AccuWeather ranked Melissa as the third most intense hurricane observed in the Caribbean in modern records, behind Wilma (2005) and Gilbert (1988). The World Meteorological Organization issued a stark warning of storm surges up to 4 meters, a reality that in low-lying coastal zones quickly becomes lethal.

Numbers that Matter

  • Estimated evacuations in eastern Cuba: ~735,000 people
  • People ordered to move to higher ground in Cuba: ~500,000
  • Jamaicans reported without power in some areas: >500,000
  • Tourists in Jamaica at the time: ~25,000
  • UN-organized airlift planned: 2,000 relief kits from Barbados
  • Initial storm-related deaths reported across the region before Jamaica hit: 7 (3 in Jamaica, 3 in Haiti, 1 in the Dominican Republic)

On the Ground: Stories from Streets and Shelters

“Parts of our roof were blown off and other parts caved in and the entire house was flooded,” said Lisa Sangster, a Kingston resident whose courtyard now served as a sort of informal receiving station for neighbors. “Outside structures like our outdoor kitchen, dog kennel and farm animal pens were also gone, destroyed.”

In St Elizabeth, often called Jamaica’s breadbasket, farms lay submerged, sugarcane bent like reeds. “We plant to feed the island,” said Desmond McKenzie, a local MP who described the parish as “underwater.” “The damage to Saint Elizabeth is extensive. It’s going to affect food supply and livelihoods for months if not years.”

At an emergency shelter in Santiago de Cuba, volunteers handed out roasted breadfruit, bottles of water and makeshift blankets. There, an elderly woman named Ana clutched a photograph of her grandchildren and said, “We have faced storms before, but the noise of this one felt like the sea wanted to come in and take us.” These are the small human details that don’t make the early, stark headlines: the way neighbors pull tarpaulins over a ruined roof, the hush at once-boisterous rum shops, the decision to leave a family cat behind because there wasn’t room in the evacuation truck.

Why This Storm Feels Different

Climate scientists are blunt: storms like Melissa are becoming more frequent, more intense and—crucially—slower moving. A hurricane that creeps, dumps more rain and prolongs battering winds over the same piece of land. The result is catastrophic flooding, landslides in the highlands and the collapse of fragile infrastructure.

“Human-caused climate change is making all the worst aspects of Hurricane Melissa even worse,” said climate scientist Daniel Gilford. “Warmer seas feed greater energy into these storms. They hold more moisture, travel slower, and strike with a violence our communities are increasingly ill-equipped to absorb.”

Caribbean leaders have, for years, implored wealthy, high-emitting nations for more than momentary aid: for climate finance, for debt relief, for the kind of long-term investment that helps islands rebuild stronger and adapt for the future. After Melissa, those calls will only grow louder.

Questions We Should Be Asking

  1. How can small island states build resilient infrastructure when budgets are squeezed and storms become costlier?
  2. Are tourism-dependent economies sufficiently protected when the very weather that brings visitors can also dismantle livelihoods overnight?
  3. What does “reparations” look like in practical terms—grants, technology transfer, debt swaps for resilience projects?

Immediate Response and the Long Road Ahead

Relief efforts are mobilizing. The Jamaican Red Cross was distributing water and hygiene kits even as roads remained impassable in many places. The United Nations announced plans for an airlift of relief kits once flights could resume, and other international partners have promised aid to Cuba, Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

But aid is only the first step. Rebuilding will require coordinated planning, heavy investment in resilient housing, restoration of power grids and a transformation in how these nations manage land and coastal development. “We need resources not just to patch roofs, but to fundamentally rethink our infrastructure,” said Dr. Marisol Reyes, a Caribbean disaster risk expert. “Otherwise, storm after storm will simply wash away whatever we reconstruct.”

What You Can Do—And What This Means for the Planet

Watching images of Melissa’s aftermath, it’s natural to feel helpless. Yet there are concrete ways to respond. Donate to credible relief organizations operating locally. Support policy efforts aimed at climate justice. Remember that climate events in distant places are not isolated tragedies; they are signals of a warming planet that touches agriculture, migration and global supply chains everywhere.

How do you imagine your community holding up if a similar storm came? What would you prioritize—shelter, power, food security? The answers matter, because resilience isn’t just built by governments; it’s built by neighborhoods, families and the everyday decisions we make about preparedness and solidarity.

In the weeks to come, the true toll of Melissa will become clearer—how many roofs were lost, how many small businesses will never reopen, how many school terms will be disrupted. For now, the Caribbean mourns and starts the work of holding itself together: neighbors handing out hot food, volunteers clearing debris, governments tallying damage and the world watching—and, one hopes, learning.

Agaasimaha Cusub ee Waaxda Warfaafinta Madaxtooyada oo Xilka La Wareegay

Okt 29(Jowhar)-Agaasimaha Guud ee Madaxtooyada Qaranka Mudane Cabdixakiim Maxamed Yuusuf ayaa xilka u kala wareejiyey Agaasimaha cusub ee Waaxda Warfaafinta iyo Xiriirka Warbaahinta Mudane Cabdicasiis Xasan Maxamed(Golfyare) iyo Agaasimihii hore Mudane Maxamed Aadan Maxamed.

Former Brazilian President Bolsonaro Files Appeal Against Prison Term

Brazil ex-leader Bolsonaro appeals prison sentence
Former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro had been disqualified from seeking public office until 2030 over his unproven fraud allegations against the country's voting system

Bolsonaro’s Appeal: A Country on Edge, a Story of Power, Pain and Possibility

There’s a peculiar quiet in Brasília these days, the kind that sits heavy in the air between the marble colonnades and the pastel apartment blocks—an exhausted silence not of peace but of waiting. Outside the Supreme Court, vendors fold plastic chairs, and a woman sells strong, sweet coffee to passersby who keep their heads down. Inside, a legal drama that could shape Brazil for years to come is being rewound, appealed and relitigated, line by line.

The headline: an appeal filed

Yesterday, lawyers for former president Jair Bolsonaro submitted an appeal against a 27-year prison sentence handed down by Brazil’s Supreme Court for what judges deemed an attempted overthrow of the democratically elected government after the 2022 ballot. The appeal accuses the court’s ruling of “ambiguities, omissions, contradictions and obscurities”—legal phrases that can mean the difference between immediate incarceration and another round in the tribunal’s slow gears.

“We are asking for clarity and due process,” said one of Bolsonaro’s attorneys, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “The decision as written leaves too many questions for a man who has always maintained his innocence.” Whether that plea will soften the court’s resolve is uncertain—Supreme Court justices are not bound by a timetable to take up the appeal, which means this procedural move could sit on a judge’s desk for weeks or months.

What he was convicted of

The case presented by prosecutors paints a grim tableau: an alleged plot that went beyond street protests and online disinformation. The blueprint, according to the prosecutors, envisaged not only the forced removal of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, but also assassination of key figures, including the president, his vice, and even one of the Supreme Court justices who would later help decide Bolsonaro’s fate.

Prosecutors say the conspiracy faltered not because of changing convictions among plotters but because it lacked the crucial support of senior military officers—the very people historically seen as the arbiters of Brazil’s political interventions. “It takes more than fervor to topple a constitutional order,” a senior prosecutor told me. “You need boots on the ground, command structure, and that never materialized.”

From campaign wounds to court proceedings

The man at the center of this storm is no stranger to spectacle. Bolsonaro, now 70, survived a near-fatal stabbing while campaigning in 2018—an event that left him with lasting medical complications. Recently diagnosed with skin cancer and hospitalized for severe bouts of hiccups and fainting, he remains under house arrest since August, shielded by Brazilian law from being jailed until all appeals are exhausted. His medical fragility adds another, very human layer to what otherwise reads like a political thriller.

“He is frail,” said Dr. Maria Souza, a physician familiar with his case. “And yet his presence, even from a hospital bed or a gated condo, fractures public life. People rally behind health narratives the way they rally behind ideological ones.”

Local color: life in the shadow of national convulsions

Walk through neighborhoods in Rio, São Paulo or the capital and you’ll see the domestic side of this national drama: small shops with Bolsonaro posters next to Lula stickers; barbers who refuse to speak about politics aloud; Sunday markets where arguments bloom like the local fruit. “It’s exhausting,” said Ana, a hairdresser in Brasília, clapping her hands as she scissored. “Everyone has an opinion and everyone is right, and we’re tired of choosing sides.”

For the vendors in the shadow of the government esplanade, the stakes are both political and economic. “If the country is unstable, business stops,” said João, who sells pastel and chimarrão by a busy intersection. “We need the tourists. We need the festivals. We need quiet.”

Politics, law and the long game

The legal path ahead is labyrinthine. Brazilian law protects convicted defendants from incarceration while appeals are pending—meaning Bolsonaro’s destiny will hinge on paperwork, procedural appeals and possibly the strategic art of delay. Law scholars, including Thiago Bottino of the Getulio Vargas Foundation, point out that while it is rare for the Supreme Court to reverse its own rulings wholesale, the court has adjusted sentences in the past. “We should not mistake rarity for impossibility,” Bottino told reporters. “Judges are human; they correct, refine and sometimes recalibrate.”

If the appeal fails, Bolsonaro could request home detention on health grounds—a precedent that has been used in recent cases. Former president Fernando Collor de Mello, for instance, was permitted to serve nearly nine years of sentence at home on similar health claims.

Political ripple effects

Beyond the courtrooms, the political chessboard is rearranging. Bolsonaro has been barred from running for public office until 2030 because of prior rulings about his conduct around the 2022 elections. Yet his political machine and a core of fervent supporters remain potent, and there is feverish speculation about who might inherit that mantle in the 2026 contest. Names being bandied about include São Paulo’s governor and even former first lady Michelle Bolsonaro.

  • Tarcísio de Freitas — a possible conservative heir among regional power brokers.
  • Michelle Bolsonaro — a name that carries personal loyalty for parts of the electorate.

Meanwhile, President Lula, who turned 80 this week, has announced he will run for a fourth term in 2026. The former metalworker and union leader who once looked politically spent has staged a steady recovery in public esteem, buoyed in part by recent foreign policy maneuvers that cast him as a defender of Brazilian sovereignty in the face of international pressure.

Global eyes and geopolitical friction

This is not merely a domestic story. International reactions have been vocal and, occasionally, raw. Former US President Donald Trump criticized the proceedings, elevating the dispute into a flashpoint of transatlantic political theater. Trade tensions and diplomatic saber-rattling—tariffs and sanctions—have been floated in the background, turning a domestic legal fight into an international tug-of-war over norms and influence.

“Brazil’s stability matters to the world,” said Lucia Gomez, a Latin America analyst. “It’s a top-10 economy by GDP, a primary food exporter, and a key player in climate diplomacy. What happens here reverberates from commodity markets to foreign capitals.”

What to watch next

So where does this leave the country and its citizens? The appeals process will be the hinge point: if the court stands firm, a new chapter of punishment and long-term disqualification from office opens. If the court revisits the sentence, a political recalibration could follow. Either way, the human toll—the polarization, the anxiety, the daily weariness of ordinary Brazilians—will not be erased by legal prose.

Ask yourself: what does accountability look like in a democracy hurt by its own wounds? Can a country both heal and hold leaders to account without sliding into deeper factionalism? And for those who have watched the January 2023 storming of government buildings from the sidelines—how will they reconcile civic duty with political passion?

These are not rhetorical questions for the court alone. They are questions for every citizen who wakes up to the news and wonders what kind of country they want to hand to the next generation. For now, Brazil waits—cup in hand, crowded around radios and smartphones, listening for the next chapter to be read aloud.

Climate change drives surge in heat-related deaths, new report finds

Heat-related deaths rise due to climate change - report
Between 2010 and 2022, an estimated 160,000 premature deaths yearly were prevented by shifting away from fossil fuels

When Heat Becomes a Chapter in Someone’s Life

The heat rolls in like a familiar, unwanted guest—the kind that settles into the bones of a city and doesn’t leave until something gives. In 2024, that guest arrived with a global invitation: mean annual temperatures exceeded 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels for the first time. For families in coastal towns, for market vendors in African capitals, for the elderly living alone in European apartment blocks, that number is not an abstract milestone. It is the reason ambulances are busier, crops fail earlier, and a generation of children are spending more time with insect repellent than with textbooks.

“On our hottest days, I see more grandparents coming into the clinic with dizziness and chest pains,” says Dr. Amina Sissoko, a nurse in Bamako. “Heat changes how people breathe, how they sleep, how they feed their children. It’s like the weather rewrites our health overnight.”

The Human Cost: More Than Statistics

The new Lancet Countdown report — the ninth of its kind — reads like an urgent medical file for the planet. Heat-related deaths have surged 23% since the 1990s, now tallying more than 546,000 lives lost every year. Wildfire smoke, itself a child of hotter, drier seasons, was linked to a record 154,000 deaths in 2024. And while dengue might sound like a problem for a single region, the global potential for its transmission has climbed 49% since the 1950s as mosquitoes find new territories warmed to their liking.

“These numbers are not just data points for academics,” says Dr. Elena Rodrigues, a public health researcher who studies climate-driven disease. “They are hospital beds, grieving families, and health systems stretched beyond capacity.” She pauses, thinking of small towns where clinics have no air conditioning. “Adaptation is health care. It’s emergency planning. It’s investing in cooling centers and mosquito control before the crisis arrives.”

Breath and Smoke: How Air Pollution Steals Years

Air pollution looms as a second, quieter killer in this story. The report estimates 2.5 million deaths a year are linked specifically to pollution from burning fossil fuels. To put that in human terms: entire cities’ worth of lives erased every year by the smoke and particles we produce for energy and transport.

“When you can taste the smoke, you already have a problem,” says João Silva, a riverboat pilot in Pará, Brazil, whose family has watched the Amazon’s fire season grow longer over the last decade. “We cough on the riverbanks. Children miss school. The elders are the first to go sick.”

And yet, there is a stubborn contradiction: between 2010 and 2022, an estimated 160,000 premature deaths were averted annually through shifts away from fossil fuels. That is proof that the arc can bend—if policy and practice move faster than profit-driven inertia.

Politics, Profits, and the Pressure to Backslide

Behind the health statistics lies a political drama. The report warns of “political backsliding”—a retreat from commitments, a fragmentation of will—that threatens to condemn millions to a future of preventable illness and early death. Oil and gas companies, emboldened by rising profits and uneven global commitments, have continued to expand production plans to levels three times what a livable planet could sustain.

“When governments hesitate and corporations expand, the price is paid in hospitals and in harvests,” says Priya Menon, a policy analyst with an environmental health NGO. “This is also a story of inequality: wealthier countries and actors are better positioned to protect themselves, while poorer communities face the brunt of exposure.”

Local Action: Where Hope Takes Root

Despite the grim headlines, the report also highlights where momentum exists. Cities, hospitals, and community groups are often the laboratories of pragmatic adaptation. From heat-health early warning systems in Mediterranean towns to community-driven reforestation in Indonesia, some initiatives already demonstrate how public health and climate policy can join hands.

  • Cooling centers and public awareness campaigns reduce heat-related hospital admissions.
  • Targeted reductions in fossil fuel use have already prevented thousands of premature deaths annually.
  • Local mosquito-control programs and urban planning can slow the spread of dengue and other vector-borne diseases.

“We acted when people started fainting in the marketplace,” recalls Fatima Rodríguez, a city planner in a midsize Latin American city. “We painted roofs white, planted trees, opened daytime public spaces with shade and water. It saved lives. Change can be local and immediate.”

A Snapshot from Ireland: Heat, Hospitals, and Children

The link between temperature and health is not a problem limited to the tropics. Research published in 2024 by Ireland’s Economic and Social Research Institute, funded on behalf of the Climate and Health Alliance, provides a clear mirror. From 2015 to 2019, emergency hospital admissions for temperature-affected diseases were 8.5% higher on hot days (22–25°C) compared to moderate days. The largest increases were for circulatory, respiratory and infectious diseases—and notably among children aged 0–14.

“People assume temperate countries are insulated from climate health risks,” says Prof. Ciarán O’Donnell of the ESRI team. “But heat stresses bodies and systems everywhere. Health systems must be ready, whether in Dublin, Dakar or Delhi.”

Looking Toward Belem: COP30 and the Moment of Truth

As global leaders prepare to assemble in Belém for COP30, the Lancet Countdown report is a clear call to action: reduce emissions, support adaptation, and anchor health at the core of climate policy. The upcoming talks on adaptation are a critical opportunity to translate promises into programs that protect the most vulnerable.

What would meaningful progress look like? It would mean richer nations honoring finance pledges, fossil-fuel producing companies halting expansion plans, and health ministries integrating climate risks into national care strategies. It would mean aligning public health with climate justice.

“If there is one thing the past year has shown, it’s that health is the lens through which climate policy should be judged,” says Dr. Rodrigues. “Longevity, quality of life, and the ability to thrive hinge on whether we act now.”

A Question for the Reader

When was the last time you thought of climate change as a public health emergency rather than an environmental one? If you live in a cool climate, how will your city adapt when heatwaves arrive more often? If you live where mosquitoes were once seasonal, will your neighborhood be ready for what comes next?

We can treat these questions as curiosities—or as a checklist for the next election, community meeting, or school assembly. The choices we make—about energy, urban design, and public health investment—will write the next chapter.

At stake are millions of lives, counted now in heat-stressed beds and smoky mornings, but felt forever in the quiet of those who survive and the rooms of those who do not. The science is in. The solutions are partly known. The rest requires courage, money, and a willingness to treat health as a compass for policy. Will we follow it?

Trump says Gaza ceasefire holds despite ongoing Israeli strikes

Trump says Gaza ceasefire holds despite Israel's attacks
A man carries a child, who was injured in an Israeli airstrike, into a hospital in Gaza City

When a Ceasefire Stumbles: Smoke, Silence and a Fragile Promise in Gaza

The sky over Gaza is a peculiar kind of bruise — sometimes the blue is there, stubborn and ordinary, and sometimes it’s streaked with the grey smoke of a strike. Walk through the narrow lanes of a refugee camp like Bureij and you hear a different rhythm: children calling to each other, the distant hum of a generator, and the low, stunned hum of conversation about who survived the night.

Three weeks after an American-brokered ceasefire was supposed to draw a line under two years of a conflict that has reshaped lives and landscapes, that line flexed and frayed. Local health authorities reported at least 26 people killed in new Israeli strikes — bodies pulled from a house in Bureij, a car in Khan Younis, and a building in Gaza City. Israeli officials said those strikes were in response to an attack they attribute to Hamas. The air was thick with accusation: each side calling the other the breaker of the truce, the other the provocateur.

The day the truce was tested

“They hit back because they had to,” US President Donald Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One, speaking plainly about an episode he described as retribution for an attack that may have killed an Israeli soldier. “Nothing is going to jeopardise” the ceasefire, he added, even as new strikes unfolded.

From the ground, the picture is messier and human. “We were sleeping,” said Amal, a mother of four who lives in Bureij and asked that only her first name be used. “A plane came, a big noise, then screaming. My neighbor’s daughter was taken to the hospital — she has burns. We had hope when the ceasefire began. Every new strike takes that hope away.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said he had ordered “powerful attacks” in response; Israeli military spokespeople described the latest moves as targeted responses to alleged violations. Hamas denied responsibility for several reported incidents and insisted it remained committed to the ceasefire. The bedrock problem — trust — remains missing.

Bodies, hostages and the politics of proof

One of the most wrenching threads in the truce negotiations has been the handling of hostages and the return of bodies. Under the deal, Hamas handed over 20 living hostages; yet the handover of bodies has been contentious. Israeli officials accuse Hamas of stalling or manipulating partial remains, saying forensic checks revealed duplicates and staged discoveries. Hamas’s armed wing, meanwhile, says relentless bombardment and ruined neighborhoods make it difficult to locate remains.

“We are dealing with rubble where buildings have been levelled,” Hazem Qassem, a Hamas spokesman, said in a statement that echoed through social media channels. “The movement is determined to hand over the bodies once they are located.”

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum in Israel has pressed the government to be firm, calling for decisive action when agreements are flouted. “For families waiting for answers, every delay is a wound,” said Miriam Levi, who co-ordinates a support group for relatives of the missing. “They want closure, not political theatre.”

Numbers that don’t tell the whole story

Numbers are blunt instruments. They give scale but not shape. According to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures, 1,221 people were killed in the October 2023 attack by Hamas. Gaza’s health ministry — which is run by the territory’s authorities and whose figures are considered reliable by the UN — reports at least 68,531 deaths during Israel’s subsequent assault. Those figures are harrowing; what they don’t capture is the daily arithmetic of survival — the lost incomes, the classrooms turned to shelters, the children who have forgotten the sound of a school bell.

“Statisticians count. We count rations, not just deaths,” said Omar Khalil, an aid worker who coordinates food distribution for a small NGO in Gaza City. “But counting deaths is necessary: you must know the scale to respond. Still, the numbers should push us beyond statistics to action.”

Local color and the human geography of grief

In Gaza, ordinary cultural rhythms persist even under the shadow of devastation. You see it in the small, stubborn comforts: the tea poured from a metal pot, the rhythm of a mother sweeping a threshold, the halting jokes shared over a shared loaf of bread. At a makeshift clinic, an elderly man hums a religious hymn as nurses tend to shrapnel wounds. In Bureij’s alleys, children scrawl chalk drawings on broken walls and play with a deflated soccer ball — a small defiance.

“We want to rest,” said Youssef, a 28-year-old who lost his home in Khan Younis. He speaks for many. “We want a day without sirens. Not much to ask for.”

Who mediates a broken conversation?

The ceasefire was brokered by the United States and other international intermediaries—an effort to halt immediate bloodshed and open the door to longer-term negotiations. Yet ceasefires are often fragile because they attempt to freeze a conflict without resolving the underlying political drivers: displacement, governance, security guarantees, and questions of accountability.

“Ceasefires are windows, not doors,” said Dr. Lina Haddad, a political scientist focused on conflict mediation. “They offer an opportunity to build trust, to open humanitarian corridors, to begin reconstruction. But if they’re not followed by a serious political track, they become temporary pauses between storms.”

What does the world do now?

When ceasefires wobble, the consequences ripple outward. Humanitarian agencies struggle to plan deliveries; displaced families put down temporary roots in UN shelters; and regional actors watch nervously as local incidents become international flashpoints. The challenge is not just to stop the next bomb, but to provide a credible roadmap for rebuilding and reconciliation.

So what would shape a lasting peace? Greater transparency in monitoring violations, safe and dignified avenues for returning hostages and remains, sustained humanitarian access, and an inclusive political dialogue that addresses displacement and security. Simple? Not at all. Necessary? Yes.

As you read this, ask yourself: how do we weigh immediate security needs against long-term justice? How do humanitarian impulses square with political realities? And how can people across the world, far from Gaza’s narrow streets, meaningfully support a ceasefire that becomes a foundation rather than a pause?

A final image

Imagine a child in Gaza releasing a paper boat into a puddle. It drifts, clumsy and bright, and for a few seconds it is free. That single, small freedom — the ability to imagine a future without fear — is what a true ceasefire should offer. The recent strikes tested that possibility. The work now is to turn testing into building, and building into something that keeps children’s paper boats afloat.

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