Home Blog Page 41

Xildhibaano iyo Senator laga ganaaxay kulamada wadajirka ee baarlamaanka

Feb 08 (Jowhar)-Kusimaha Guddoomiyaha Ahna Guddoomiye kuxigeenka labaad ee Golaha Shacabka Baarlamaanka BJFS Mudane Cabdullaahi Cumar Abshirow ayaa soo saaray go’aan rasmi ah oo la xiriira ka joojinta fadhiyada guud ee wadajirka ah ee labada Aqal ee Baarlamaanka Dalka iyo sidoo kale fadhiyada Golaha Shacabka.

Portugal’s presidential runoff begins as voters head to the polls

Polls open in second round of Portugal presidential vote
People voting in the second round of the election at the Portuguese embassy in Prague, Czech Republic, yesterday

Stormy Ballots: Portugal Votes in a Run-off as Gales and Politics Collide

The morning felt like the end of a long, bruising winter. Waves slammed the seawalls; gulls fought the wind above the harbor; and, in a small school gym converted into a polling station, a woman in a bright yellow raincoat shook her umbrella free of salt and mud before she stepped inside to vote.

Portugal opened its polling stations at 08:00 today for a presidential run-off that, on paper, looks decided. Yet the rhythm of democracy here has been anything but routine. The nation is holding its breath between two powerful currents: the steady advance of a veteran Socialist and the unnerving, if likely doomed, rise of a firebrand from the far right — all while the Atlantic keeps throwing its worst at the coast.

On the ground: a country voting through the storm

Polling crews reported a cautious but steady stream of voters through the morning. Around 11 million people — those at home and abroad — are eligible to cast ballots. First exit polls are expected around 20:00 local time, and although one opinion survey this week placed Socialist António José Seguro as high as 67%, the question many Portuguese are asking on the way to the ballot box is less about percentages and more about how a country recovers when weather and politics collide.

“I had to wait for the bus to show up,” said Marta, a teacher who lives near the mouth of the Mondego River. “My neighbor’s roof was ripped off last week — but I’m voting because these are the decisions that will shape how we rebuild.” Her voice carried both fatigue and determination; the lines between civic duty and personal survival are raw right now.

The storms, which have been sweeping in from the Atlantic since the start of the year, have been relentless. At least five people have died and vast stretches of land stand submerged or scarred. Preliminary government estimates point to roughly €4 billion in overall damage, with the agriculture and forestry sectors alone accounting for about €750 million in losses. More than 26,500 rescue workers have been deployed across the country in response.

Postponed ballots, pressed voters

Despite an overnight easing in the weather in many areas, authorities postponed voting in 14 of the hardest-hit constituencies — a delay affecting nearly 32,000 residents, who will vote one week later. The decision drew an immediate political reaction: André Ventura, the far-right candidate, urged a nationwide postponement, arguing that the scale of the crisis made it impossible to hold a fair election. His call was rejected.

Prime Minister Luís Montenegro described the storms as a “devastating crisis,” but argued that logistics could be overcome and that postponing the entire vote would set a dangerous precedent. Outgoing President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, who has weathered his own turbulent years in office, told reporters he had spoken with Ventura and urged that the electoral process proceed — noting that Portugal held its last presidential election even amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The stakes: beyond one election

This run-off is not only a contest between two men. It is a barometer of mood: whether a country traditionally anchored in moderation will drift toward the kind of nationalist, populist currents that have risen elsewhere in Europe. Ventura’s Chega party has polarized political conversation in Portugal, and even in a likely defeat his share of the vote will be closely watched as an indicator of how the far right fares in a European landscape where migration, inflation and cultural anxieties continue to produce volatile politics.

“The far right here is not a monolith,” said Dr. Maria Correia, a political scientist who studies Iberian politics. “Some voters are drawn by a message of security and national identity, others by anger at economic stagnation or a sense of being left behind. The storms complicate everything: they make tangible the consequences of policy choices on infrastructure and climate resilience. That changes the politics of the moment.”

For many voters, the calculus is personal and local. In the Alentejo plains, where cork and olive groves now lie submerged or torn, farmers are tallying immediate losses. In coastal towns, fishermen bemoan the ruined nets and battered boats. These are not abstract policy debates; they will shape livelihoods for years.

Voices from the floodlines

“My son and I spent last night moving boxes to the attic,” said João Silva, a retired carpenter from the central coast, gesturing to a line of sandbags outside his house. “We don’t agree on who to vote for, but we agree we need leaders who can plan for storms like this, not just talk about them.”

At a shelter in a community center, volunteers handed out hot soup and wrapped people in donated blankets. A young volunteer named Inês watched as an elderly woman knitted by the heater. “It’s strange — people are tired, angry sometimes, but also kind,” she said. “This country knows how to stand up when it falls.”

Numbers that matter

Here are the key figures to keep in mind today:

  • Eligible voters: approximately 11 million (domestic and abroad)
  • Postponed constituencies: 14 — affecting nearly 32,000 voters
  • Storm fatalities reported: at least 5
  • Estimated total damage: ~€4 billion
  • Agriculture and forestry preliminary losses: ~€750 million
  • Rescue workers deployed: ~26,500

What to watch as night falls

Beyond the headline outcome — whether Seguro wins decisively or Ventura narrows the gap — there are subtler measures that will matter. Turnout in affected regions, the margin of victory in rural versus urban centers, and whether the postponed ballots change momentum when they are cast next week will all say something about political energy and resilience.

Internationally, observers will be attuned to how Portugal’s weather catastrophe intersects with political sentiment. Are voters more likely to back pragmatic, institution-oriented candidates after a disaster? Or do crises accelerate polarization, driving people toward extremes? The answers will ripple beyond Portuguese borders.

Facing forward

As the day folds into evening and the first exit polls come in, Portugal will confront a familiar mix of hope and weariness. Rebuilding after a storm — whether infrastructure, confidence, or political consensus — is a long haul. Decisions made at the ballot box today will influence how quickly that rebuilding begins, and who pays for it.

So what does democracy look like when a country is soaked, shivering and still in line to vote? It looks like Marta in her yellow raincoat. It looks like volunteers turning community centers into shelters. It looks like a nation arguing, nervously and loudly, about identity, leadership and the safety nets that matter most when the sea comes calling.

Will the storm change the outcome? Or merely the texture of a victory? Tonight, Portugal will start to answer that question — with the wind still rolling in from the Atlantic and the work of repair already underway.

El-Sisi:Aqoonsiga qayb ka mid ah Soomaaliya waxay halis u tahay xasilloonida G.Afrika

Feb 08 (Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha Masar Abdel Fattah El-Sisi ayaa Axadii mar kale xaqiijiyay diidmada Masar ee ku aadan ficil kasta oo wax u dhimi kara xasiloonida iyo madaxbanaanida Soomaaliya,

Trump denounces racist video yet refuses to apologize

Trump condemns but won't apologise for racist video
A spokesperson for Barack and Michelle Obama declined to comment on the issue

When a GIF Became a Reckoning: How a Viral Post Pulled the Veil Off American Dehumanization

Late one autumn night, a minute-long video blinked onto a feed watched by millions. It began as the sort of online stew that rarely gets anyone out of bed: conspiracy-laden claims about voting machines, cuts of campaign rallies, a soundtrack meant to tug partisan heartstrings.

And then, in the final frames, something else arrived — a flash of dancing primates with the faces of Barack and Michelle Obama superimposed. The effect was immediate. Fury. Shame. A dozen calls into a press office. Republicans and Democrats, allies and critics, in unison: this was wrong.

“It wasn’t just tasteless. It was textbook dehumanization,” said Dr. Aisha Ncube, a historian of race and visual culture at Wesley College, who has spent two decades studying the pictorial language used to otherize African-descended peoples. “There’s nothing new about comparing people of African ancestry to apes — it’s been a central pillar of white supremacist imagery for centuries. But seeing it surface from a seat of power is a different kind of alarm.”

From Meme to Crisis: The Timeline

The clip, shared on the president’s social platform, was up for roughly 12 hours before a staffer took it down. The White House offered a series of competing accounts: first, a defense that framed it as a harmless internet meme; then, an acknowledgment that an aide had posted it in error; finally, a terse public statement from the president condemning the image — without an apology.

“I didn’t see the whole thing,” the president told reporters, according to those who were there. “I looked at the first part. It was about the machines and how crooked it is.”

Whether or not he watched it in full, the damage was done. The video reignited old wounds while forcing a new conversation about the porous borders between fan-made content, official channels, and the responsibilities of the people who control them.

Who Felt It First

In Chicago’s Hyde Park neighborhood, where Barack Obama’s political life unfurled, people watched the clip with an edge of personal pain.

“We grew up playing basketball under murals of the Obamas,” said Maria Lopez, a 34-year-old teacher who has lived blocks from the former president’s South Side neighborhood. “To see them reduced like that — it hits your gut. It wasn’t political to me. It was a moral thing.”

Farther afield, Republican Senator Tim Scott, a prominent Black lawmaker and occasional ally, posted on social media: “Praying it was fake because it’s the most racist thing I’ve seen out of this White House.” His words were echoed by others across the aisle who demanded accountability.

Why This Matters Beyond One Image

At first glance, a crude GIF might seem like small potatoes in a larger political war. But images, especially demeaning ones, do far more than offend. They shape narratives, normalize cruelty, and—over time—erode the dignity of entire groups.

“Dehumanization is a primer for violence and exclusion,” warns Derrick Johnson, president of the NAACP. “When those in high office amplify imagery that strips people of their humanity, it lowers the threshold for discriminatory policy and social cruelty.”

Studies in social psychology back this up. Research has repeatedly shown that when groups are portrayed as less than human, empathy wanes and support for punitive measures rises. This isn’t abstract; it translates into policy, policing, and public sentiment.

History Isn’t Nostalgia

The arc of racist caricature runs long and ugly. From 19th-century pseudoscientific drawings to 20th-century propaganda, imagery that equated Black people with animals was used to rationalize slavery, segregation, and colonial conquest. To many scholars, the GIF was a small, digital echo of those historical tropes.

“This is what happens when centuries of iconography migrate into new media,” said Prof. Lionel Hart, a visual culture expert. “Platforms speed things up, but the meaning is the same.”

Inside the White House: A Tale of Mixed Messages

What followed inside the corridors of power was as revealing as the post itself. Only a handful of senior aides reportedly have direct access to the president’s account; those privileges are treated like keys to the vault. Yet, within a day, the White House narrative fractured—first defending the clip as a playful nod to pop culture and then backpedaling as pressure mounted.

“There was an attempt to dismiss it as a harmless parody, but the public reaction made the cost immediately clear,” said a White House staffer who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “Not every meme is inocuous. Part of our job is to vet the content people are asked to share.”

That conversation—about gatekeeping, judgment, and the speed of modern communications—will not simply disappear when the news cycle moves on. The president’s social posts routinely set the agenda, and that gives them outsized consequences for markets, foreign policy, and cultural tone.

Procedures and Personality

There are practical questions too. How many hands touch a presidential post? What internal standards exist for images and claims shared to a platform with nearly 12 million followers? And who bears responsibility when harm follows?

“Institutions need stronger protocols,” advised Elena Park, a digital communications consultant who has advised several political offices. “When content can reach tens of millions within minutes, you can’t treat social channels like personal megaphones.”

The Larger Picture: Why Symbols Matter

What makes this episode resonate is not only whose faces were used but what such imagery signifies. Dehumanization has been a recurring instrument in the political toolbox across eras and geographies, deployed to justify disenfranchisement, segregation, and exclusion.

Are we willing to tolerate leaders amplifying images that feed those old mechanics? Or do we hold higher standards for those who govern? The questions are not rhetorical. They demand answers from voters, from institutions, and from any citizen who values a polity grounded in mutual respect.

Moving Forward: Accountability and Memory

Calls for apologies and firings rose in the aftermath. Religious leaders, civil rights organizations, and many everyday citizens demanded a reckoning. Some Republicans privately urged damage control. Others asked for clear consequences.

“Let it haunt them,” Ben Rhodes, a former aide to President Obama, wrote online. “History will remember the gestures that built bridges and the ones that burned them.”

Whether this moment will be a footnote or a turning point depends on the responses that follow. Will protocols be tightened? Will there be a substantive reckoning with the systemic imagery that underlies such flippant attacks? Or will the clip be swept into the torrent of disposable outrage that now defines our online life?

What Can Readers Do?

Every consumer of media has a role. Pause before sharing. Ask where an image comes from. Demand better from leaders. Teach younger generations to identify and reject imagery that strips away human dignity.

  • Check sources before you share: where did the image originate?
  • Contextualize: understand the history behind dehumanizing imagery.
  • Speak up: contact elected officials and platform operators when content crosses lines.

In the end, digital artifacts like this GIF force a reckoning not just with one community or one administration, but with ourselves. What stories do we want to normalize? What histories do we want to repeat—accidentally or on purpose?

If the last few days taught us anything, it is that a single post can wake a nation. What will we choose to do when it does?

China’s Breakthrough in Directed Energy Weapons: The Compact Microwave Driver Threatening Satellite Networks

China has recently made headlines with the development of a compact microwave driver that could potentially power a weapon capable of taking down satellite networks like SpaceX’s Starlink.

How will Ireland bolster online protections to keep children safe?

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

Rewrite the following news content into a completely original, vivid, and immersive blog post of at least 800 words, tailored for a global audience.

Golaha Wasiirada Hirshabelle oo ka shirey arrimaha abaaraha

Feb 08 (Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha Dowladda Hirshabeelle Mudane Cali Cabdullaahi Xuseen (Cali Guudlaawe) ayaa maanta shir-guddoomiyey kulanka Golaha Wasiirrada Dowladda Hirshabeelle oo intiisa badan diirada lagu saaray xaalada abaarta dalka.

TV host offers reward in plea to find missing mother

'We will pay,' TV host says in plea for mother's return
Savannah Guthrie, accompanied by her siblings Annie and Camron, made the appeal in a video message

A Desert Plea: The Search for Nancy Guthrie and a Family’s Quiet Desperation

On the outskirts of Tucson, beneath the stoic arms of saguaros and a sky that seems too big for small human dramas, a family lives in the thin, bright limbo between hope and dread.

Savannah Guthrie—familiar to many as the steady, early-morning anchor on NBC’s Today—appeared on social media this week with a plea that felt, in its private grief, startlingly public. Flanked by her brother and sister, she posted a short video asking for help in finding her mother, Nancy Guthrie, 84, who vanished after being dropped off at home on the evening of January 31.

“This is the only way we will have peace,” Savannah said, the words carrying an urgency that outshrieked the clip’s quiet. “This is very valuable to us and we will pay.” Those were the lines that made headlines; the context that hums behind them is a portrait of an aging parent, limited mobility and a family suddenly confronting the worst-case scenario.

What authorities have said — and what remains unknown

Local and federal investigators have responded to the case. The Pima County Sheriff’s Department, working alongside the FBI, has concluded that the circumstances point toward an abduction. Sheriff Chris Nanos has characterized Nancy Guthrie as frail, with extremely limited mobility, and has said officials do not believe she could have left her residence unassisted.

Despite the breadth of the response, detectives have not publicly identified suspects or persons of interest. The FBI has offered a $50,000 reward for information leading to Nancy’s recovery or the arrest and conviction of anyone responsible. President Donald Trump, who has been publicly briefed on the matter, said this week: “I think we could have some answers coming up fairly soon.”

Timeline at a glance

  • January 31: Nancy Guthrie is dropped off at her residence near Tucson by family after dinner.
  • February 1: Relatives report Nancy missing at around noon.
  • Investigators determine the circumstances indicate a kidnapping; no suspects publicly identified.
  • FBI announces a $50,000 reward for information.

Neighbors, prayer vigils and the hum of a small city

In the neighborhoods that slope down from the Rincon foothills, where winter mornings hold a crystalline hush, people say they’ve noticed an unusual quiet. “She used to walk her dog down the block,” a neighbor who asked not to be named told me. “You could see her on the porch in the afternoons, knitting or reading. It didn’t seem possible.”

At the corner church, a woman folding bulletins said the congregation had already begun lighting candles. “We brought casseroles,” she said. “When something like this touches a family, the whole block feels it.” The community in Tucson is a weave of traditions—Sonoran breakfast joints, Spanish-language radio, and a public square where strangers become sharing faces. That intimacy makes the uncertainty sharper.

Vulnerability and a larger pattern

What makes this case particularly wrenching is not only the celebrity of one of the family members, but the extreme vulnerability of the missing woman. National data make this more than a local story: the FBI’s National Crime Information Center regularly logs hundreds of thousands of missing-person reports each year, and a notable fraction involve older adults or people with cognitive or physical impairments.

The Alzheimer’s Association estimates that millions of Americans aged 65 and older live with conditions that can make them vulnerable to getting lost or being exploited. When mobility is limited, a person cannot simply walk away from danger; they depend on others for movement, care and protection. That reality alters the calculus of danger and diminishes the margin for error.

Money, morality and the role of public attention

Savannah Guthrie’s statement that her family is willing to pay to secure her mother’s return crystallizes a fraught ethical and practical question: when a loved one is taken, does money speed a reunion—or does it make a bad situation worse?

“Paying a ransom can be the quickest path to getting someone back, but it also can incentivize more kidnappings,” an investigator — speaking on background — told me. “Law enforcement has to weigh short-term relief versus long-term public safety.” The FBI and local law enforcement typically discourage paying ransoms, both because it may fund criminal activity and because it can complicate ongoing investigations.

At the same time, the reality of a family whispering “we will pay” in a video for the nation to see is visceral. It tells you how raw grief can be when the person you love has become prey, and how the usual channels—police, neighborhood networks—sometimes feel painfully slow.

Why the spotlight matters—and how it changes things

When a case involves a public figure, attention intensifies. That can be a double-edged sword: tips may increase, resources may be redirected, but so can misinformation, speculation and unwanted commentary. For the family, there is the ordeal of living grief on a public stage. For investigators, there is the challenge of managing leads, separating signal from noise.

“The media attention helps, but it also makes every rumor a public event,” a retired detective who has worked missing-person cases told me. “You have to filter. You have to work.”

Questions this case forces us to ask

How do communities protect their most vulnerable? How should families balance the need for immediate action against the longer arc of justice? What does it mean when wealth and fame make a private agony very public, and does that spotlight help or hinder recovery?

Those are not questions with easy answers. But they are questions worth asking as we watch this story unfold. The image that lingers is simple: three siblings on a video, making a human, private offer—money, bargaining, the soft plea for a mother to come home—set against a rugged, indifferent landscape.

If you have information that could help, law enforcement asks you to contact the Pima County Sheriff’s Department or the FBI immediately. Small acts—an overheard detail, a memory of a passing vehicle, a scrap of neighborhood gossip—can shift a case from cold grave to warm hope.

And for everyone watching from afar: how would you act if a loved one vanished in the middle of the night? It’s a startling, humbling question—and Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance demands more than headlines; it demands our attention, our empathy and, perhaps, our action.

Madaxweyne Xasan Sheekh oo la kulmay Dhiggiisa dalka Masar

Feb 08 (Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya, Mudane Xasan Sheekh Maxamuud, ayaa soo dhaweyn heer sare ah loogu sameeyay Qasriga.

Wasiirka Tacliinta Sare ee dalka Jabuuti oo Muqdisho soo gaaray

Feb 08(Jowhar)-Wasiirka Wasaaradda Waxbarashada, Hidaha iyo Tacliinta Sare ee Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya, Mudane Faarax Sheekh Cabdulqaadir, ayaa Garoonka Diyaaradaha Aadan Cadde ee magaalada Muqdisho

EU ready to 'enhance' operations to protect sea traffic

EU poised to bolster maritime operations to safeguard commercial shipping lanes

0
Smoke on the Horizon: Europe Races to Guard the Sea Lanes as a Middle East War Ripples Across the Globe There is a new kind...
As it happened: UAE says consulate attacked by drone

UAE Says Drone Struck Its Consulate, Live Coverage Underway

0
I’m missing the original news content you want rewritten — could you paste it here or confirm which report you mean (publication and date)?...
Cheltenham roar returns, festival battles falling crowds

Roar Returns to Cheltenham as Festival Struggles with Declining Attendance

0
The Roar, the Rivers of People, and the Price of a Pint: Cheltenham’s Festival in 2026 There is a sound that arrives with the first...
Iran's FM says talks with US 'no longer on the agenda'

Iran’s foreign minister says negotiations with US are off the table

0
Smoke over the Gulf: When a Waterway Became the World’s Pressure Point There are images that lodge in the mind: black smoke curling from storage...
Jailed Erdogan rival clashes with judge as trial begins

Imprisoned Erdogan Opponent Sparks Clash with Judge at Trial Start

0
Silivri’s hush: a mayor, a mock cell and a nation holding its breath The morning air outside the Silivri courthouse tasted of sea salt and...