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Hamas says Gaza ceasefire stalled by Israeli violations

Gaza truce cannot proceed with Israeli violations - Hamas
Gaza's health ministry has reported that 377 Palestinians have been killed by Israel since the ceasefire came into effect

A fragile silence: the ceasefire that breathes but does not live

On the cracked asphalt leading to the Allenby Bridge, at the edge of the Jordan Valley, an idling convoy of trucks looks like a promise paused. Drivers clutch tea cups, elders count cigarettes, and the sun climbs on an ordinary morning that has become anything but ordinary for the people who depend on what those trucks carry.

“We have been waiting long enough to believe in a crossing,” said Mariam Abu Saleh, a Gaza-based aid coordinator who once managed food distribution in her neighbourhood and now coordinates remotely from Amman. “Every time the trucks move a little, hope moves with them. Every time the trucks stop, a whole community freezes.”

The cause of that freeze is the precarious truce brokered under U.S. auspices and announced on 10 October. It halted overt combat, for now, between Israeli forces and Hamas fighters in Gaza — a pause that has offered breath to a territory devastated by a war that erupted after the 7 October attack on Israel. But breathing does not mean healing, and the truce’s second act is held hostage to accusations and counter-accusations.

One phase, many conditions

At the heart of the disagreement is a disagreement about implementation. Hamas has said repeatedly that the agreement cannot move into its second phase while Israel continues what it calls “violations” of the deal. Under the initial terms, Palestinian militants would release remaining captives — living and dead — and Israel would ease restrictions, reopen crossings like Rafah with Egypt, and allow a significant increase in humanitarian supplies into Gaza.

So far, the human ledger looks both like progress and an unfinished equation. Nearly 2,000 Palestinians have been released from Israeli detention and the bodies of hundreds more returned. Of the hostages taken into Gaza, all have been freed save for one body. Yet, according to Gaza’s health ministry — figures the UN regards as reliable — at least 70,366 people in the territory have died in the course of the conflict. Since the ceasefire came into effect, the ministry reports 377 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli action; Israeli military tallies note three soldiers killed during the same window.

“Numbers tell a story of their own, but they do not tell the whole story,” cautioned Dr. Amal Nasser, a public-health expert who has tracked wartime mortality in Gaza for a decade. “Each statistic is a family. Each figure is a classroom emptied. A ceasefire that does not deliver medicine, fuel and structural safety is a pause, not a remedy.”

Allenby bridge: a practical opening, a political test

This week, Israeli officials said that the Allenby (King Hussein) Bridge crossing — the main land route between Jordan and the Israeli-controlled West Bank — would allow aid trucks destined for Gaza to proceed after security inspections. Israel had closed the crossing to aid after a Jordanian truck driver fatally shot two Israelis at the border in September. Passengers were mostly allowed through days later; humanitarian shipments were not.

“Aid trucks will proceed under escort and security, following a thorough security inspection,” one Israeli official said in a terse statement. The words were practical, dry, meant to reassure — but in Gaza they read as a tentative lifeline.

For years, Rafah has been the human artery between Gaza and Egypt; reopening it fully was central to the ceasefire’s initial steps. “Rafah is not just a crossing point,” said Hossam Badran, a member of Hamas’s political bureau, in a sharply worded statement. “Under the agreement Israel should have reopened Rafah and allowed a significant increase in the volume of aid. They have not. The second phase cannot begin as long as the occupation continues its violations.”

Lines drawn on the map, lines drawn in sand

One of the trickiest practical issues has been troop positions. Under the truce, Israeli forces pulled back to a so-called “Yellow Line,” although operational control over large swathes of the territory persists. On Sunday, Israel’s military chief, Lieutenant General Eyal Zamir, called that demarcation “the new border line.”

Words like “border” and “occupation” carry heavy political freight. “To my neighbours, to my children, a yellow line on a map is not peace — it is a border tattooed by a soldier,” said Omar al-Khateeb, a teacher in Khan Younis whose house still bears the marks of airstrikes. “Lines on maps do not feed hospitals.”

Badran publicly denounced Zamir’s remarks as evidence of bad-faith compliance: “The statements clearly reveal the criminal occupation’s lack of commitment to the ceasefire agreement,” he said. The accusation highlights a deeper problem: agreement texts on paper can hinge on perceptions of intent and good faith in execution.

What the second phase promises — and why it matters

The second stage of the plan is more than a security choreography. It envisages disarming Hamas, the further withdrawal of Israeli forces, the establishment of a transitional Palestinian authority, and the deployment of an international stabilization force. For Israel, the phase cannot begin until the remains of the last captive, identified as Ran Gvili, are handed over.

Hamas has framed disarmament as something that can occur — but only within a political transformation it deems meaningful. “We will hand over weapons to the government of a future Palestinian state once the occupation ends,” Badran said. That is a conditionality that reaches beyond military steps into the realm of statehood and sovereignty.

Voices from the ground

“My brother was taken in October,” said Salma, who asked to be identified by first name for safety reasons. “We saw him on a grainy clip and we prayed. When they came back — most of them — we buried them. The ceasefire brought his classmates back, but it did not bring back our roofs or our schools.”

International mediators — Egypt, Qatar and the United States among them — find themselves as anxious stewards of a fragile blueprint. “Diplomacy needs leverage to work,” said Ambassador Rachel Adler, a veteran mediator who has worked on Middle East ceasefires. “Mediators can cajole, but without both sides accepting the text in practice, words remain an instrument of delay.”

Why the world should care

This is not a local argument only. It is a test of how the international community manages ceasefires in an era of urbanized conflict, asymmetric power, and an increasingly volatile regional balance. Will international bodies accept piecemeal progress — more aid here, a guarded withdrawal there — or demand that steps be completed in a coherent sequence to prevent a relapse into violence?

And there is a human cost to indecision. Hospitals in Gaza are skeletal echoes of their former selves. Generators and fuel are lifelines. Schools double as shelters. Without consistent and substantial aid, public health, sanitation, and the fragile economy tilt toward collapse.

Questions we carry forward

As the Allenby bridge opens to aid — if only partially — the world watches a truce that can either be stitched into lasting calm or unravel again under small violations and big distrust. Which will prevail: the patience of those waiting at the crossings, or the impatience of political agendas?

Ask yourself: when a ceasefire is announced, do we measure it by the absence of bombs or by the return of normal life? If the latter, this truce remains a work in progress, one whose success relies on more than promises and press statements; it requires sustained access to food, medicine, shelter and the dignity of return.

In the end, the story of this ceasefire will be written in the detail of deliveries — trucks crossing borders, babies receiving vaccinations, a classroom reopening — and in the courage of negotiators to press hard on both sides to honour what they agreed. Until then, the silence along the crossings is less a victory and more a fragile, breath-held truce.

U.S., Greenland Pledge Mutual Respect as Ties Deepen

US and Greenland pledge to show a 'mutual respect'
Greenlandic Minister for Foreign Affairs Vivian Motzfeldt met with US ambassador to Denmark, Kenneth Howery

On Greenland’s Edge: An Island of Ice, Identity and Geopolitics

Nuuk looked like a watercolor this morning — soft light pooling between corrugated tin roofs, the harbor dotted with fishing boats, a dog trotting along the quay with the casual air of someone who has watched centuries of ships come and go. Yet beneath that timeless scene there was a new, modern tension: the American ambassador to Denmark had flown in, and in the rooms where policy is spoken in polite Danish and blunt Greenlandic, conversations about sovereignty, security, and respect were being painstakingly rehearsed.

“We need a conversation that rebuilds trust,” said a Greenlandic minister I met outside the government house, pulling her collar against a wind that smelled faintly of diesel and cod smoke. “Eighty years of cooperation doesn’t erase the shock people felt when a president mused about buying our home.”

Why Greenland Matters — and Why It Hurts to Be Talked About Like Real Estate

The island is vast — roughly 2.16 million square kilometers, dominated by an ice sheet that still blankets about 80% of its landmass — yet sparsely populated, home to roughly 56,000 people. For decades it has been a quiet player in a noisy game: the location of Thule (Pituffik) Air Base, a key node in North American early warning systems; a place where Arctic warming is reshaping coastlines and livelihoods; and a repository of minerals and potential fossil fuels that have suddenly jumped to the top of strategic shopping lists.

It was when ideas about “buying” Greenland bubbled into public view that the island’s people recoiled. “You don’t put a price on where your grandparents were buried,” a fisherman told me, his hands still smelling of sea and smoke. “That’s not how we talk about land.”

President Donald Trump’s public suggestion in 2019 — that the United States could acquire Greenland — was a diplomatic grenade. Denmark and Greenland both said no; Greenlanders were outraged. The aftershocks linger. So when Kenneth Howery, Washington’s new ambassador to Denmark and a co-founder of PayPal, made his first visit to Nuuk for the U.S.-Greenland Joint Committee, the mood was cautious but purposeful. The committee issued a statement that spoke of “mutual respect” and the desire to “build on momentum,” yet those are words more salve than solution for many locals.

“Mutual Respect” — A Short Statement, a Long Road

“We reaffirmed our commitment to a strong and forward-looking relationship based on mutual respect,” read the joint communiqué. To a diplomat’s ear, that is precisely the kind of phrase that lubricates ongoing cooperation. To a Greenlander’s ear, it can ring hollow unless followed by real policy changes.

“Respect starts with listening,” said Dr. Aqqaluk Petersen, a political scientist at the University of Greenland. “It’s not enough for outsiders to decide what is best for us while treating us as a strategic asset. We want partnerships — not purchases.”

There are concrete reasons for the U.S. interest. Greenland’s geography places it on the shortest aerial route between parts of Europe and North America; it hosts early-warning radar infrastructure that helps detect ballistic missile launches; and melting Arctic ice is opening sea lanes and access to untapped resources. Those realities have made Arctic territories the subject of renewed attention from Washington, Moscow, Beijing — and other capitals.

Faces of Nuuk: People, Place and Pride

Walk through downtown Nuuk and the politics are not abstract. Children in bright parkas leap over puddles; an elder mends a net on a bench; a café hums with students arguing about language policy. Greenlandic (Kalaallisut) pushes up alongside Danish signage. The cultural confidence is new, fragile, and fiercely guarded.

“We are not a pawn,” said 27-year-old Inuuteq, who works in a Nuuk tech start-up. “We want investment. We want security. But you can’t treat us like an object. We’re trying to build our own economy, and that means hard choices.”

Greenlandic self-rule, introduced in stages with major reforms in 1979 and again with the Self-Government Act in 2009, has handed Nuuk more authority over internal affairs while Denmark retains control of foreign policy and defense. The arrangement is complex: Greenland manages many domestic matters but remains tied to the Kingdom of Denmark, with Copenhagen supplying a sizable annual block grant that supports public services.

Economic Realities and Environmental Dilemmas

Natural resources loom large in any discussion about Greenland’s future. Mineral deposits — from rare earth elements to uranium and potentially hydrocarbons — promise economic opportunity, yet they also threaten social and environmental upheaval.

“Resource development must be guided by our values,” said a community elder from Qeqertarsuaq, who asked not to be named for fear of political fallout. “We cannot sell tomorrow for short-term gains today.”

At the same time, warming in the Arctic is not some distant phenomenon. Greenland’s ice melt contributes to global sea-level rise, and the consequences ripple across continents. Local hunters notice shifting migration patterns of seals and whales; municipal planners scramble to adapt infrastructure to thawing permafrost. These environmental changes are a global warning and a local emergency.

Geopolitics, Indigenous Rights and the Global Arctic

What happens in Nuuk matters far beyond the fjord. The Arctic is a stage for broader tensions: great-power competition between the United States, Russia and China; new shipping routes that could shorten transit times between Asia and Europe; and debates over who gets to shape the future of climate-vulnerable places.

“There’s a pattern of big powers framing the Arctic as a strategic chessboard,” said Dr. Sigrid Hult, a defense analyst in Copenhagen. “But indigenous voices are central. Any long-term strategy that ignores Greenlandic agency will fail.”

That point is also an echo of a larger global trend: communities seeking decolonization of governance and economy, indigenous groups asserting rights over lands long governed by colonial powers, and nations scrambling to update defense doctrines in a changing climate. Greenland is at the nexus of all of those currents.

Paths Forward: Questions for the World

The conversations this week in Nuuk — between Ambassador Howery, Greenlandic ministers, and Danish officials — were not dramatic. They were the work of smoothing, clarifying, promising. But promises require proof. Greenlanders want concrete commitments: respect for their agency in any security or economic deals, investments in local defense capacity (which Denmark admits it has under-prioritized), and guarantees that resource development will follow environmental and social safeguards.

What would true partnership look like? Perhaps it includes:

  • Joint investment in local infrastructure and emergency services, not just bases;
  • Transparent, Greenland-led decisions on resource projects with benefit-sharing;
  • Collaborative climate adaptation programs informed by indigenous knowledge;
  • Clear mechanisms to ensure that military and strategic discussions include Greenlandic representatives.

Are those demands unreasonable? To many Greenlanders, they are simply the basics of dignity and self-determination.

Closing Thoughts: Listening as Strategy

Outside the committee rooms, Nuuk goes on. Children play; nets are mended; elders tell stories in kitchens where the smell of coffee mingles with the wind off the fjord. The island will continue to be desirable for reasons that go beyond spice-laden headlines — geography, resources, climate and strategic positioning. But more than anything, it is home.

As you read this from wherever you are, consider this: how should powerful states behave toward places that are small in population but large in consequence? Is “mutual respect” enough, or must it be backed by policies that recognize history, culture and rights? Greenland’s answer will shape not only its future, but how the world treats the places it wants most when the ice thins and the horizons open.

Ra’iisul wasaare Xamze oo la kulmay Madaxweynaha iyo Agaasimaha Guud ee hay’adda Caalamiga ee IRC

Dec 09(Jowhar)-Ra’iisul Wasaaraha Xukuumadda Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya Mudane Xamze Cabdi Barre ayaa maanta xafiiskiisa ku qaabilay Madaxweynaha iyo Agaasimaha Guud ee hay’adda Caalamiga ah ee Samafalka {International Rescue Committee (IRC), David Miliband, oo booqasho shaqo ku yimid dalka.

2025 poised to match second-hottest year ever, climate data shows

World will overshoot 1.5C temperature rise goal, UN says
The UN says the world is facing warming of around 2.5C

Heat on the Horizon: How the World Is Waking Up to a New Climate Normal

On a map of the globe, red is no longer an accent color. It has become the background—blotches of heat streaking from the Arctic down to tropical seas, from city skylines to remote farmland. This year, according to Europe’s Copernicus Climate Change Service, the planet is poised to register what many scientists call an almost unbearable truth: 2025 is lining up to be the second-warmest year ever recorded, effectively tied with 2023, and following a historic peak in 2024.

Numbers are clinical, but their meaning is visceral. Between January and November this year, the global temperature anomaly averaged about 1.48°C above pre-industrial levels. November alone sat at roughly 1.54°C above that baseline, with an average surface air temperature near 14.02°C. Those decimals don’t feel small when you’re standing ankle-deep in a flooded rice paddy, or when a hurricane-sized storm tears through a coastal town.

What the Data Tells Us

Copernicus synthesizes billions of measurements—satellites, ocean buoys, weather stations—building a continuous record that stretches back to the 1940s. Their latest monthly update paints a worrying arc: the three-year running mean for 2023–2025 is on course to exceed 1.5°C above pre-industrial times for the first time in recorded history.

“These are not theoretical thresholds scribbled on a graph,” said Dr. Elena Mendez, a climate systems analyst who studies extreme weather attribution. “They are markers of how often and how brutally the planet will swing from one disaster to another. A small change in average temperature magnifies storms, shifts monsoon patterns, and rewires local ecosystems.”

To put greenhouse gases in context: atmospheric carbon dioxide has climbed into the low 420 parts-per-million range, levels not seen in millions of years. That accumulation acts like a thermostat gone rogue—incremental increases that compound risk. The weather we’re getting is one we didn’t ask for but are rapidly learning to live with.

Lives Torn by Weather: Stories from the Frontlines

Numbers become human when you meet the people who pick up the pieces. In Leyte, in the central Philippines, fishermen still talk about the sea as if it were a person—unpredictable, fierce, and deserving of respect. “We’ve always known when the storm is coming by the birds and the smell of salt,” said Maria Santos, a 49-year-old fisher who lost her home in back-to-back typhoons last November. “Now the sky changes its mind in hours. We couldn’t save much. We lost cousins, boats, our mango trees.”

That string of storms in Southeast Asia left a grim toll. Officials estimate roughly 260 lives were lost in the Philippines alone, with vast swaths of Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand submerged by flooding. In a Bangkok suburb, a schoolteacher named Somchai recalls teaching under candlelight after power lines collapsed. “Children ask if the floods will take their school next,” he said. “They are learning geometry from wet benches while someone calculates the cost of rebuilding.”

These are not isolated incidents. Copernicus flagged the northern hemisphere autumn (September–November) as the third warmest on record, with particularly striking warmth in northern Canada, across the Arctic Ocean, and even in parts of Antarctica. Meanwhile, pockets of anomalous cold—like lingering chill over northeastern Russia—remind us that climate change doesn’t mean uniform warmth; it means greater volatility.

Why a Degree Matters

One point on a thermometer feels abstract. But climate scientists and emergency managers translate that fraction of a degree into clearer, more immediate realities:

  • More intense and more frequent extreme rainfall events, leading to flash floods and landslides.
  • Stronger tropical cyclones fueled by warmer ocean surfaces.
  • Longer droughts and heatwaves in agricultural regions, threatening food security.
  • Accelerated melting of ice sheets and glaciers, pushing up sea levels and coastal erosion.

Politics, Power, and the Stalled Transition

In conference rooms from Dubai to Belém, the tug-of-war between ambition and economy plays out in real time. After a high-decibel consensus at COP28 in Dubai to begin a global shift away from fossil fuels, momentum has splintered. The recent COP30 gathering in Belém, Brazil, concluded with compromises that stopped short of an explicit global call to phase out oil, gas, and coal—an omission that delegates from fossil-fuel-producing nations welcomed, while many activists and frontline communities found it deeply disappointing.

“We can’t ask the rivers to wait while negotiators count political points,” said Joana Ribeiro, an Indigenous rights organizer working near the Amazon in northern Brazil. “Our waters are already changing temperatures, our fish are moving. Delays here are not abstract—they mean fewer harvests, less medicine, homes lost to erosion.”

At the same time, national leaders and industry reps argue for a slower timetable that protects jobs and energy security. “Transition requires careful planning,” said a government energy advisor who asked not to be named. “We must balance emissions cuts with livelihoods—especially in regions where coal or oil extraction supports local economies.”

The Bigger Picture: Justice, Innovation, and the Choices Ahead

So what does the world do with a three-year average that might finally puncture the 1.5°C ceiling? There’s no single answer. But there are clear paths—and costs for inaction. Rapid emissions reductions will require a mix of policy, finance, technology, and social planning: scaling up renewables, electrifying transport, retrofitting buildings, protecting and restoring ecosystems that store carbon, and investing in resilient infrastructure.

Those solutions also demand a moral framework: who pays, and who benefits? For low-income and Indigenous communities that contributed least to the problem but bear its brunt, “climate justice” is not a slogan; it’s survival. International financing, technology transfer, and legally enforceable commitments to support a just transition matter as much as any headline target.

Scientists, meanwhile, are sounding a practical alarm. “We have the tools to bend the curve,” said Dr. Arun Patel, an atmospheric physicist. “But time is not neutral. The earlier we act, the more options we keep open. Each year of delay closes a door on cheaper, less disruptive pathways.”

What You Can Do—and What I Keep Thinking About

Individual action alone won’t reverse global emissions, but it shapes culture and political will. Vote for leaders who are serious about climate policy. Demand transparency from corporations. Support local resilience projects—community storm shelters, mangrove restoration, floodplain zoning. And ask the uncomfortable questions: Whose jobs will change? Which regions will need international support? What does a fair transition look like for people who have never been asked to make sacrifices before?

When I spoke with Maria Santos in Leyte, her answer was simple and human: “We don’t want pity. We want plans. We want a fishing cooperative to replace what we lost, better storm shelters, and early warning systems that actually reach every barangay.”

This is where statistics meet politics, and where empathy meets engineering. The climate is changing, and the world is changing with it. The choice now is not whether to respond—it’s how, and how fast.

Will the next international summit find the courage to match the urgency scientists are mapping in rivers of numbers? Or will the planet be left to teach us the cost of delay? The answer will be written in heat, in hail, in harvests, and in the stamina of communities deciding how to move forward—together. What role will you choose to play?

Cambodia, Thailand border clashes escalate as civilian death toll rises

Cambodia, Thailand clash at border as civilian toll rises
Military vehicles parked near the Thailand-Cambodia border

Borderfire: A Day of Smoke and Sirens on the Cambodia–Thailand Line

The sun barely rose when the first reports came in: villages along the 817-kilometre stretch of border between Cambodia and Thailand were under fire again. Smoke threaded the paddy fields. Mothers wrapped children in sarongs and fled. Men who had tilled the same plots for decades grabbed what they could and ran toward roads choked with cars, motorbikes and livestock.

<p“This morning we woke to a sound like thunder,” said a woman who gave her name as Srey in a makeshift shelter near the border. “We thought it was a storm at first. Then people showed us the videos on their phones — drones, rockets. We left everything.”

How it all started (and why it won’t go quiet)

Both governments accuse the other of igniting the latest round of violence. Phnom Penh says it waited 24 hours to honour a ceasefire brokered earlier this year — a rare diplomatic intervention that, remarkably, was attributed to former US President Donald Trump. But, after evacuations and talks failed to end the strikes, Cambodia’s influential former leader Hun Sen announced that his country had been compelled to launch counterattacks.

“Cambodia needs peace, but Cambodia is compelled to counterattack to defend our territory,” Hun Sen wrote on Facebook, declaring that fortified bunkers and weapons gave Cambodian forces an advantage in defending against what he called an “invading enemy.”

In Bangkok, military spokespeople were equally blunt. “Thailand is determined to defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity and therefore military measures must be taken as necessary,” Rear Admiral Surasant Kongsiri told reporters, as officials described clashes across five border provinces and a navy operation in Trat province that they said would soon expel Cambodian soldiers.

Weapons, drones and the echo of history

The fighting has not been a skirmish over a single village; it’s been an exchange of heavy weaponry and high-tech tools of war. Both sides accuse the other of using artillery and rocket launchers — and Thailand says Cambodian forces dropped bombs from drones. Thailand, which possesses a larger and better-equipped military, has also used fighter jets to support ground troops.

For people on the ground, the weapons are not abstractions. “I could see the streak of metal in the sky,” a rice farmer named Somchai said, describing an airstrike that passed low over his field. “Our cows hid behind the trees. Then the ground shook.”

These border tensions are far from new. For more than a century, the two neighbours have sparred over territory, with un-demarcated points and disputes over ancient temples fueling nationalist fervour on both sides. The last major flare-up in July saw a five-day exchange of rockets and heavy artillery that killed at least 48 people and displaced roughly 300,000. In 2011, another week-long battle over temple grounds left scars and animosities that endure to this day.

Evacuations, shelters and a quiet panic

Authorities on both sides say they have evacuated hundreds of thousands of people from border districts. Shelters are filling up in town halls, schools and temple grounds. The makeshift camps don’t smell of defeat so much as determination: boiling rice, plastic water bottles, children tracing circles in the dust.

“We’ve been through this before,” said Dara, a teacher now running a shelter in a community center. “We know what to do — but that doesn’t make it easier. The children ask when they can go home. What can I tell them?”

Cambodia’s Defence Ministry accused Thai forces of “brutal and unlawful actions,” claiming nine civilians were killed since the clashes resumed and 20 were seriously injured. Thailand’s military reported three soldiers dead and 29 people injured. Numbers are fluid; both sides release figures that reflect their own narrative and priorities, and in the chaos of displacement, verifying casualties and damage is difficult.

On the edge: daily life in limbo

At the shelters, people trade stories of close calls and lost possessions — a wedding dress, a family photograph, a small motorbike that was all a family could afford. Volunteers hand out rice sacks and blankets, while medics set up triage stations for those injured by shrapnel, stress or the cramped living conditions.

“We’ve had people fainting from dehydration, and others from shock,” a volunteer nurse said. “We are doing what we can, but supplies run out quickly. When the fighting comes so close it becomes a small, constant panic.”

The larger picture: more than a local skirmish

Ask yourself: why do border disputes that began over old maps and temples still combust in 2025? It’s not simply about cartography. It’s about identity, pride, strategic advantage and the politics of distraction. Nationalist sentiment can be stoked by politicians on both sides. Military capability disparities make small incidents spiral: Thailand’s armed forces are larger — in personnel, budget and hardware — and this imbalance feeds fears and calculations about escalation.

Experts caution that localized fighting rarely stays localized when national narratives are involved. “When leaders frame a conflict as defending national honour, it becomes existential,” said Dr. Maya Phan, a Southeast Asia analyst. “That makes compromise very hard, because leadership risks losing domestic legitimacy if they are seen as conceding.”

There are also geopolitical currents. A ceasefire brokered earlier this year by a high-profile outside player briefly cooled the flames, illustrating how third-party mediation can offer a pause. But when the underlying disputes over sovereignty and territorial control remain unresolved, any truce is brittle.

A human toll that outlasts headlines

Beyond the strategic calculus are the human stories that will remain long after the last shell is fired. Children who can no longer attend school will have lost months of learning. Farmers who miss planting seasons lose their income and their ability to feed their families. Psychological scars and trauma ripple out across generations.

“It’s not just the homes — it’s the rhythm of our lives,” a grandmother said as she handed a steaming bowl of rice to a child at a shelter. “We live with the land. When it is gone, we are not the same.”

Where do we go from here?

There are no easy answers. Diplomacy will need to pair with a genuine commitment to demarcation, equitable resource sharing and mechanisms that prevent local incidents from spiralling into full-scale war. Civil society — the volunteers, teachers and medics at the shelters — will need continued support from national governments and international agencies to care for the displaced.

For readers watching from afar: imagine what it is to have your life packed into a plastic tote and your future announced as uncertain. Could your country settle a century-old map dispute without the guns coming back out? How do communities rebuild trust after they have been told, repeatedly, that the other side will come for them?

Between spinning political narratives and the grit of ordinary people, the story along this border is, at its heart, about what we choose to protect: lines on a map or the lives rooted in the land those lines cut through. The answer will determine not only whether the ceasefire holds, but what kind of peace will follow — one stitched together by mutual respect, or one that simply waits for the next flare-up.

For now, the shelters multiply like a patchwork of resilience, and the border hums with an uneasy silence, punctuated by the distant rumble of artillery and the quiet, human sound of people trying to live.

12 Urur Siyaasadeed oo soo gudbiyay musharixiinta uga qeyb galeyso doorashada degmooyinka Muqdisho

Dec 09(Jowhar)-Gudoomiyaha gudiga doorashooyinka Federaalka Cabdikariim Axmed Xassan oo saaka ka hadlayay Muqdisho ayaa sheegay in guddigiisu ay si buuxda u gudanayaan waajibaadkooda shaqo ee loo xilsaaray.

Australia to enforce nationwide social media ban for under-16s

Australia social media ban for under 16s to take effect
Ten of the biggest social media platforms will be required to block Australians aged under 16 or be fined

Australia draws a line on childhood and screens — and the world is watching

At midnight in Canberra, Australia flicked a switch that will change millions of small routines: the scrolls in school corridors, the early-morning TikTok dances, the private group chats parents watch from the other room. New legislation now makes Australia the first country to require social platforms to ban anyone under 16 from many mainstream apps — or face fines large enough to make Big Tech sit up and take notice.

From 00:00 local time (1pm Irish time), ten of the largest platforms were told to block accounts belonging to Australians under the age of 16 or risk penalties of up to A$49.5 million (roughly €28 million). The move is straightforward in its wording but complicated in its living effects. It asks platforms to police age the way playground teachers used to — with a heavy, digital hand.

A simple rule, messy reality

On paper, the rule looks tidy: under-16s off the major social apps. In practice, it confronts a thicket of questions. How do you know someone’s age on the internet? What about privacy? What happens to teenagers who have already built social lives and creative followings online? And who decides which services are “major” enough to be covered — and which fly under the radar?

To make the law work, platforms say they will use a mix of techniques: asking for uploaded ID, querying linked payment details, analyzing user behavior to estimate age, or running selfie-based age estimation tools. Some will rely on “age inference,” an algorithmic nudge that guesses a person’s years from how they act online. Others will push users to prove their birthday with documents.

“We’re not in favour of children being left alone on platforms designed for adults,” said a child psychologist in Melbourne. “But asking kids to hand over identity documents to access their friends is not a neat solution either. There are trade-offs, and families will feel them.”

Voices from the neighbourhood

In a small cafe near Bondi Beach, Maria, a mother of two who works nights, folded her hands around a warm cup and explained why she welcomed the change. “My 12-year-old learns so much from content — but they also find algorithms that push the worst bits: body shame, bad advice, quick dopamine bursts. If this law helps me breathe a little as a parent, I’m grateful,” she said.

Across town, Jamal, a 17-year-old skateboarder who posts trick videos to build his profile, felt differently. “I made a small following and it’s how I get gigs now. I get that kids need protection, but rules that blanket everyone don’t fix the real problem. They just move it.”

At a high school in Adelaide, teachers described a complicated classroom reality: students who are now more anxious, yet more savvy about online privacy tricks. “We’ve got kids who are masters at getting past rules — using VPNs, fake birthdays, sibling accounts,” said an educator. “You can erect a fence, but kids find the gaps.”

Big Tech pushes back — and adapts

Technology companies did not accept the new rule without a fight. Several argued the law violates free expression and that forced age checks could be abused or leak sensitive data. Some platforms will comply by trying to estimate ages rather than requiring documents. One high-profile executive called the policy a dangerous precedent for internet control, warning of unintended consequences.

Platforms have also argued economically: while advertising to children may not be lucrative now, under-16 users are the pipeline of future audiences. Companies fear globalization of rules like Australia’s — once a major market sets a regulatory standard, others often follow.

Numbers that matter

The Australian government notes that social media use among kids is high: 86% of Australians aged 8 to 15 used social media before the ban took effect. Globally, researchers have flagged worrying trends — rising rates of anxiety and disordered sleep among teens, and increasing scrutiny over algorithms that favour engagement over wellbeing. At the same time, social platforms are showing signs of structural stagnation: growth has plateaued in several markets, and time-on-platform metrics have fallen in recent years.

Those figures are part of the calculus governments now face: protect a generation and risk disrupting social patterns — or leave things to a market that has repeatedly proved reluctant to self-regulate.

How the law will be enforced — and evaded

Practical enforcement will look like a patchwork. Platforms will decide how to detect age. Some will ask for identity documents, others will infer. Critics warn that any system that centralizes sensitive youth data could create new vulnerabilities.

  • Age inference: algorithms make probabilistic guesses based on behavior and content interaction.
  • Age estimation: photo-based tools try to determine age from faces — an approach fraught with bias.
  • Document checks: uploading passports or driver’s licences raises privacy concerns and inequity issues for younger users without official ID.

“Every method has a cost,” said a privacy advocate in Brisbane. “If we demand IDs, we penalize kids who don’t have them and create databases that hackers would love. If we rely on algorithms, we bake in bias.”

Is this the start of a global wave?

Australia’s move has been framed by some analysts as a bellwether. Officials from Denmark to Malaysia have signalled interest in stricter protections for minors online, and some U.S. states are reconsidering trust-and-safety features that once protected young users.

“Countries are watching to see what happens if a major democracy forces platforms to choose: comply or pay big fines,” said an internet policy researcher. “If the system works — and stays secure — other governments will take notes.”

Wider questions, larger currents

Beyond the technical mechanics lies a human question: what kind of childhood do we want to protect? This is not merely a debate about apps; it is a collision of parenting, commerce, technology, and civic values. Some see the law as overdue — a hard boundary in an age that blurred boundaries. Others see it as an blunt instrument that could push kids into shadowier corners of the web.

Ask yourself: would you trade a bit of constant connectivity for a quieter adolescence? And who should be trusted to make that decision — parents, platforms, lawmakers, or kids themselves?

What comes next

Legal challenges are already brewing. A High Court challenge overseen by a libertarian politician remains pending, and several platforms are exploring technical and legal responses. Meanwhile, families and schools will adapt, making choices that combine workaround savvy, technological literacy, and new rules at home.

One thing is clear: this moment is not just Australian. It is a conversation the whole world is having about the cost of early exposure to attention-hungry systems — and who pays for the fix. Whether this policy becomes a model, a cautionary tale, or a starting point for more nuanced regulation will depend on how it is applied in real lives — in kitchens, bedrooms, and classrooms across the planet.

We will be watching. Will the fence keep out what we fear, or simply reroute a generation? The answer will shape the next decade of growing up online.

Mucaaradka oo si kulul uga hadlay xarriga iyo Barakicinta lagu hayo shacabkii daganaa Dab-damiska

Dec 09(Jowhar)-Madasha Samatabixinta Soomaaliyeed ayaa si adag u canbaareysay xadgudubyada ay ciidamada amniga iyo mas’uuliyiin dowladeed ka geysteen xaafadda Dab-damiska, halkaas oo ay ku jiraan boob, hanjabaad, jir dil, iyo xarig ka dhan ah dad danyar ah oo horey looga barakiciyey guryahooda.

Thai Strike in Cambodia Kills a Soldier and Several Civilians

Thailand strikes Cambodia, killing soldier and civilians
Cambodian soldiers ride a motorbike as local residents evacuate following clashes along the Cambodia-Thailand border

When the Border Roared: Life and Loss Along the Thailand–Cambodia Frontier

The night the shells came back, the sky over the border looked like a bruise. Villagers in the borderlands—where rice paddies blur into scrub and an ancient temple crowns a limestone outcrop—said they could see the flash, hear the thump, and taste the dust in the air. Within hours, entire families were on the move again, clutching documents, sandals, and the small, stubborn things you can carry when homes are no longer safe.

“We thought it was over,” said Pannarat Woratham, a 59-year-old farmer from Surin province in Thailand, her voice still vibrating with the strain of too many hurried departures. “This is the second time since July. The children cry. Even the temple bells sounded strange.” She fled in the afternoon to a wat—the centuries-old Buddhist temple that has become a sanctuary for the displaced—and watched neighbors arrive, one by one, with bedding and tears.

The Numbers That Make Reality

Facts can feel cold next to the human stories, but the numbers here do not lie. Thai officials say around 35,000 people in Thailand were evacuated after the latest flare-up along the border. Cambodia’s information ministry reported at least four civilian deaths in the provinces of Preah Vihear and Oddar Meanchey, and said roughly a dozen others were wounded, including a journalist struck by shrapnel.

The Thai military confirmed the death of one soldier and said 18 others were injured during renewed fighting. These figures come on the heels of an earlier bout of violence this summer: five days of heavy clashes that left 43 people dead and forced roughly 300,000 men, women, and children to move away from flashpoints on both sides of the frontier.

  • 35,000 people evacuated in Thailand (official evacuation figures)
  • 4 Cambodian civilians reported killed by shelling
  • Approximately 10 civilians wounded, including a journalist
  • 1 Thai soldier killed; 18 soldiers wounded
  • Earlier clashes (five days) killed 43 people and displaced about 300,000

What Really Lies Beneath: Temples, Maps, and Memory

To understand why so many lives hang on the question of a few hectares of scrub and old stone, you have to travel back a century. The border between Thailand and Cambodia—or Siam and French Indochina, as it once was mapped—was drawn, more often than not, by colonial surveyors and paper. The maps they produced left behind a legacy of ambiguity that blossomed into recurring confrontation.

The famous temple of Preah Vihear, perched on a ridge and visible for miles, is both a world heritage site and an emotional epicentre. Cambodia claims the temple, and a 1962 International Court of Justice decision largely affirmed that claim, but surrounding areas remain contested. Local people, for whom the land is both livelihood and village, feel the consequences acutely.

“When you talk about this place with locals, they don’t speak in legal briefs. They speak about the season’s flooding, the cow that won’t calve, whether the paddy will survive another night without water,” said Dr. Somchai Anurak, a regional security analyst based in Bangkok. “But those very fields and hills are the theatre for a larger game—of national pride, of political face-saving, even geopolitics—where civilians become expendable variables.”

From Tanks to Temples: The Morning of the Air Strikes

Military spokespeople on both sides traded briefings and accusations as the skirmishes reignited. The Thai army said it launched air strikes in self-defence, insisting its aim was precision attacks on Cambodian military targets along the line of clash. “The Thai air power is being used only against Cambodian military targets,” a Thai army spokesman told reporters, adding that strikes were “highly precise and aimed solely at military objectives with no impact on civilians.”

Cambodia’s defence ministry painted a different picture, alleging that Thai forces used tanks and fighter jets in Preah Vihear and Oddar Meanchey and accused Bangkok of firing rockets near centuries-old temples. “They entered our village with tanks,” said Hul Malis, a woman from Prey Chan in Banteay Meanchey who fled with neighbours just minutes before reported incursions. “We are running. We are so scared.”

What Refuge Looks Like

The village temple—an oasis of shade, incense, and murmured sutras—has become an improvised shelter in places like Surin and Oddar Meanchey. Monks hand out rice and instant noodles. Local NGOs set up makeshift medical tents. Children in bright T-shirts play near leaning umbrellas while adults whisper about the latest order from a town official: leave, return, wait.

“Our phones ring all night. People ask where to go. We try to tell them: go to the school, go to the wat,” said Lina, a volunteer with a grassroots relief group in Oddar Meanchey. “It is always the same: your life is arranged around the weather, the harvest, and then—suddenly—around the sound of artillery.”

Diplomacy, Hatreds, and Fault Lines

The ceasefires and declarations brokered by regional players and international powers have helped, briefly. ASEAN, China, and other mediators nudged a respite this summer, and there have been public proclamations of restraint. Yet confidence-building measures have repeatedly unraveled—undermined by trench politics at home and strategic signalling abroad.

Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim urged both nations to halt hostilities and pursue diplomacy; his plea echoed across international channels. Thailand’s prime minister, Anutin Charnvirakul, responded tersely that no external party should tell Thailand to stop and added, “If you want things to stop, tell the aggressor to stop.” His words framed the dispute in a zero-sum clockwork of accusation and defiance.

A Wider Picture

This is not just a bilateral quarrel. Across Southeast Asia and the globe, other dormant lines of conflict—historical, ethnic, or cartographic—flare from time to time. Where state narratives meet local lives, the human cost escalates quickly. The border clashes here are a reminder that unresolved historical wounds can still roil modern politics and everyday existence.

What does it mean for a child who has lost a classroom to shelling? For a farmer who cannot tend his season’s rice? For an elderly villager who cannot walk to the nearest clinic? These are the questions that should press on the conscience of diplomats as they count maps and sign agreements.

What Comes Next?

For now, people are counting and tending and waiting for the next signal. Authorities are tallying evacuations and monitoring refugees. Humanitarian groups are trying to get aid across. Journalists—scarce and often pressured—are piecing together a picture that never fully matches the lived reality on the ground.

Will a new round of diplomacy bring a durable settlement? Can ASEAN or an international coalition broker not just a pause but a path to demilitarised borders, mine clearance, and economic cooperation that benefits communities on both sides? Or will this become another chapter in a book of recurring grief?

As the sun sets over paddy fields and ruined walls, the question hangs heavy: whose map will the people live by—the one nations sign in capital rooms, or the one etched by the rhythms of harvest, temple festivals, and the daily courage of those who simply want to sleep through the night?

Change begins with attention. If you were to send one message—to leaders, to neighbours, to yourself—what would you ask for the families under those temple roofs tonight?

Tsunami warnings in Japan downgraded after powerful offshore earthquake

Japan tsunami warnings downgraded after major earthquake
A tsunami warning flashes over live footage of a waterfront area, on a television screen in Sapporo, in northern Japan

A night the sea remembered: Hachinohe wakes to a 7.5 tremor

It was just after 11pm when the ground under northeastern Japan decided it had a story to tell. A 7.5-magnitude earthquake — sheer numbers that make even hardened reporters pause — rolled beneath the ocean about 80 kilometres off Aomori prefecture, waking towns from the coast to the low hills and sending a column of sirens into the long northern night.

For residents of Hachinohe, the seismic intensity read as an “upper 6” on Japan’s familiar 1–7 scale: the sort of shaking that throws people from their feet, topples heavy furniture, and rains glass and tiles from walls. The Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) registered the quake at a depth of roughly 54 kilometres and, in the immediate aftermath, warned of tsunamis possibly reaching three metres along parts of the northeast coast.

A rapid wave of alerts, then cautious relief

Authorities ordered roughly 90,000 people to evacuate coastal zones from the northern island of Hokkaido down through Aomori and Iwate prefectures. Ports reported measured surges — tide gauges recording between 20 and 70 centimetres — and early tsunami warnings were later reduced to advisories as predicted wave heights eased.

“We told everyone to grab the essentials and head uphill immediately,” said a Hachinohe hotel worker, speaking quietly as staff checked guests and corridors. “I saw our reception desk slide across the floor. People were shaken, but conscious. We helped the elderly out first.” Public broadcaster NHK cited hospital staff saying a number of injured people had been taken in, though the most acute fear of large-scale casualties had not materialised by late afternoon.

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi appeared before press and offered a short, steady accounting: “As of now, I am hearing that there have been seven injuries reported,” she told reporters, emphasising that the government was monitoring the situation closely. At a briefing, a JMA official warned that aftershocks and possibly stronger events could unfold over coming days, putting the region on a one-week “megaquake” advisory — a protocol born of bitter experience.

Life on edge: communities, trains and the fragile comfort of routine

Take away the trains and much of daily life in Japan, and you feel the country’s pulse change. East Japan Railway suspended some services around the affected area; commuters who had planned long trips rerouted or stayed put as staff worked to check tracks and bridges. For many locals, the suspension was a sharp reminder of March 11, 2011 — a 9.0 quake that created tsunamis and a cascade of disasters that still lives in memory.

“The trains are the arteries of our town,” said an older woman standing outside Hachinohe station, wearing a thick navy coat against the evening chill. “When they stop, you know something big has happened. We call our neighbours, we check on the elderly. That’s how it has to be.” There is a resiliency in that everyday exchange: neighbourhood associations, volunteer firefighters and community centres that roll into action because they have had to, before.

Utilities reported no irregularities at regional nuclear power plants operated by Tohoku Electric Power and Hokkaido Electric Power — a fact that, in this part of the world, is always newsworthy. Initial reports of thousands of households without power were later revised to the hundreds, as crews restored lines and systems.

Voices from the shore: fishermen, children, volunteers

On the coast, where fishing boats bobbed nervously and nets lay in dark heaps, a fisherman named Kenji wiped salt from his hands and watched the horizon with a practised calm. “My father told me about the 2011 tsunami,” he said. “We have new sirens, new evacuation routes. But when the sea moves like that at night, you think of everything: your boat, your house, the people.” He spoke of the way coastal communities crouch together at moments like this — sharing shelters, sharing food, sharing the burden of anxiety.

At a crowded evacuation centre, volunteers handed out rice balls and hot tea. A young volunteer coordinator pushed an armful of blankets toward an elderly man and explained where to charge phones. “Sometimes the small things are everything — warmth, light, a phone that works,” she said. “We practice drills so that when there’s a real quake, people don’t freeze.” These acts of care, repeated countless times across Japan, are as much part of the country’s earthquake culture as the technique of securing shelves or strapping down appliances.

Context: why Japan feels every tectonic whisper

Japan sits in the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” a seam of seismic and volcanic activity that runs around the Pacific basin. It experiences a tremor at least every five minutes on average; roughly 20% of the world’s earthquakes of magnitude 6.0 or greater occur in and around Japan. These are not abstract figures here — they shape building codes, school curricula, the way cities are designed and the habits people pass down through families.

The disaster management lessons from 2011 still shape national policy. The meltdown at Fukushima Daiichi after that quake and tsunami prompted wholesale reviews of nuclear safety, evacuation planning, and disaster communication. One practical outcome is the “megaquake” advisory system, which prompts authorities and residents to stay alert for days after significant tremors.

What to watch now: aftershocks, infrastructure checks, human costs

In the hours and days after a major earthquake, three main concerns rise to the surface: the pattern of aftershocks (which can themselves be damaging), the integrity of critical infrastructure — roads, rail, ports, power — and the human toll: displaced households, mental strain, and the slow work of repair. Emergency responders will be monitoring coastal tide gauges, checking bridges and rail lines, and doing door-to-door assessments in hard-hit towns.

  • Expect aftershocks: the JMA cautioned that stronger quakes could follow in the coming days.
  • Watch for localized power outages: utilities reported initial outages but were restoring service.
  • Pay attention to advisories: tsunami warnings may be upgraded or downgraded as conditions evolve.

Seismologists remind us there is no absolute safety from the earth’s convulsions, only layers of preparedness. “We cannot prevent earthquakes,” said a seismologist at Tohoku University. “But careful planning, infrastructure investment and community drills reduce harm. Japan has built systems that work, but nature always tests them.” That test, again, is being conducted tonight in Aomori and along the coast.

Beyond the tremor: what this says about resilience

As you read these words from afar, quiet questions surface. How do we live with systems that are at once marvels of engineering and constantly under threat? How do communities rebuild not only infrastructure but trust and a sense of safety? In Hachinohe’s evacuation centres and the volunteers who hand out tea, there is a template for a kind of practical optimism: we prepare, we respond, we remember — and we try to be kinder to one another in the hours that follow.

Natural disasters are local in their impact and global in their lessons. They ask us to reckon with the limits of prediction, the value of preparedness, and the simple human dignity of looking out for a neighbour. Tonight, the northeast coast of Japan is counting its lucky stars and its losses in equal measure. In the days to come, the work of repair and listening will begin — brick by brick, story by story, tea by hot tea. Will we, as a global community, learn the same lessons before the next siren sounds?

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