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Judge finds ICE denied Minnesota detainees access to attorneys

Minnesota sues Trump administration over ICE operations
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said 'thousands of poorly trained' ICE agents had poured into the state

When Access to a Lawyer Becomes a Luxury: Inside Minnesota’s ICE Surge

On a cold January morning in Minneapolis, lawyers huddled outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building with steaming cups of coffee and crisp legal pads, their breath hanging in the air like the questions they could not yet answer. They had come prepared — folders full of case files, a list of numbers, a calendar packed with hearings — only to be told that many of their clients had already been moved, sometimes hours earlier, sometimes without a forwarding address.

It is an image that refuses to leave the mind: skilled advocates left in the lobby while people they represent are shuffled through a system so opaque that even those who run it lose track. Last week, a federal judge in Minneapolis stepped into that breach. Judge Nancy Brasel issued a temporary—but urgent—order requiring U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to stop sweeping detainees out of Minnesota in a manner that, the court found, “all but extinguish[es] a detainee’s access to counsel.” The order will remain in effect for 14 days as the case proceeds.

A surge that scattered people and lawyers alike

The case centers on a recent enforcement initiative dubbed Operation Metro Surge. According to filings and testimony reviewed by the court, ICE deployed thousands of agents to the region, detained thousands of people, and used facilities not intended for long-term custody. What emerged in litigation was not merely a logistical mess but a pattern: detainees routinely moved quickly and silently out of state; phone calls were restricted or monitored; attorney-client visits became difficult or impossible.

“We had clients who literally vanished from our docket,” said Maya López, an immigration attorney who has represented detainees in Hennepin County for seven years. “One day I prepare for a bond hearing; the next, I’m told they were transported to a facility three states away with no notification. How do you mount a defense, how do you prepare a family, when people are relocated like chess pieces?”

The plaintiffs — a class of noncitizen detainees — argued their constitutional access to counsel had been infringed. In court, ICE acknowledged that detainees have a right to counsel but defended its practices, pointing to resource constraints and operational priorities. Judge Brasel did not find that explanation convincing. “Defendants allocated substantial resources to sending thousands of agents to Minnesota,” she wrote, “and cannot suddenly lack resources when it comes to protecting detainees’ constitutional rights.”

What the judge ordered — and why it matters

The temporary court order is straightforward on paper but seismic in effect. It requires ICE to stop rapidly & covertly transferring detainees out of the state; to permit private attorney-client visits; and to allow detainees confidential phone calls with their lawyers. For lawyers who had been running in circles, it was at once relief and vindication.

“The right to counsel is not optional,” said Skye Perryman, president of Democracy Forward, the nonprofit that filed the suit on behalf of detainees. “You can’t detain people in a building never meant for long-term custody, put them in shackles, move them in secret, and call that due process.”

Advocates say the case lays bare a broader problem: enforcement strategies that prioritize rapid arrests and removals over procedural fairness and oversight. In practice, that can mean families lose contact with loved ones, legal claims go unfiled, and courts lack the information needed to ensure people’s rights are protected.

Lives in transit: stories behind the headlines

Listen to the people, and the legal language becomes visceral. There is Amina, a mother who called her sister from a detention center phone and heard static on the line. By the time her lawyer could track her, she was in a facility three states away, her case calendar a blank space. “They moved her like luggage,” Amina’s sister told a reporter. “She could not tell us where she was. My children ask for their mother. What do we tell them?”

There is also Jacob Ramirez, a community organizer who spent the night in the cold outside the federal building representing volunteers checking on detainee welfare. “People think this is far away from them,” he said, rubbing his hands against his coat. “But the neighbors who bring soup, the kids who go to school here — they are connected. When counsel is cut off, the whole community feels it.”

And then there are the attorneys who learned ingenuity the hard way: establishing circle-of-trust contacts at detention centers, building phone trees, and even coordinating with social workers to piece together where someone might have been taken. “It’s detective work,” said an attorney who asked not to be named. “But it shouldn’t have to be.”

Context and consequences

On a structural level, the Minnesota case raises questions about how modern immigration enforcement balances speed and scale against legal safeguards. Enforcement surges are not new; they are often framed as necessary for public safety. But judges and civil-rights advocates increasingly warn that surges can lead to corners being cut.

Consider some of the stakes:

  • Legal representation dramatically improves outcomes in immigration proceedings: studies show that noncitizens with lawyers are far more likely to obtain relief or avoid deportation than those without counsel.
  • Transparency and consistent tracking of detainees are essential to prevent family separation and to allow oversight of detention conditions.
  • Rapid transfers complicate access to medical care, delay case processing, and can undermine the integrity of the legal process itself.

These are not abstract risks. They affect parent-child bonds, employment and housing stability, community trust in institutions, and the United States’ ability to live up to its legal commitments.

Bigger questions: What kind of system do we want?

We can read the court’s order as a narrow injunction concerned with access to counsel, but the ripples run deeper. What obligations do enforcement agencies have when carrying out large-scale operations? How do we ensure accountability when power is concentrated and actions are shrouded behind logistical rationales?

Ask yourself: is speed worth the cost of due process? When systems trade notice and transparency for operational advantage, who bears the harm? The detainees shuffled across state lines are not faceless statistics — they are parents, workers, dreamers, neighbors. Their access to legal counsel is the hinge on which fairness swings.

Looking ahead

The immediate relief provided by the judge’s order is only temporary. The litigation will continue, and the broader policy debates will not be resolved in two weeks. But the spotlight on Minnesota has already pushed questions into public view: whether enforcement strategies can be retooled to preserve legal access, and whether oversight mechanisms are robust enough to catch and correct abuses.

“This isn’t about being soft on enforcement,” Maya López said. “It’s about being faithful to the rule of law. We can have enforcement and we can have fairness — the two are not mutually exclusive.”

As the legal clock ticks, lawyers will keep knocking on detention doors — and families will keep waiting by the phone. For a democracy that prides itself on legal process, the outcome in Minnesota will resonate well beyond its courthouse walls.

It asks us, quietly and insistently, to decide what we’re willing to sacrifice in the pursuit of order: efficiency, perhaps — but not the right to be heard.

Xamze oo xalay la kulmay Deni iyo Madoobe

Feb 14(Jowhar)-Ra’iisul wasaaraha dalka Xamze Cabdi Barre ayaa xalay fiidkii kulamo gaar gaar ah lakala yeeshay madaxweynayaasha maamulada Puntland iyo Jubaland Siciid Deni iyo Axmed Madoobe.

US lawmakers seek Peter Mandelson’s testimony on Jeffrey Epstein ties

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

A Letter, a Legacy, and the Strange New Geography of Scandal

When a crisp envelope crosses an ocean these days, it does not merely carry paper; it carries headlines, hashtags and the kind of political oxygen that can smother reputations. This week, a terse letter from two Democratic members of the United States House of Representatives landed with that sort of gravity at the feet of Peter Mandelson — the veteran British politician who until recently held the most prestigious diplomatic posting London offers to Washington.

The ask was simple and uncompromising: give a transcribed interview to the House Oversight Committee about Jeffrey Epstein and the web of relationships around him. The letter, signed by Representatives Robert Garcia and Suhas Subramanyam, distilled suspicion into a pointed request. As they put it: “While you no longer serve as British Ambassador to the United States and have stepped down from the House of Lords, it is clear that you possessed extensive social and business ties to Jeffrey Epstein and hold critical information pertaining to our investigation of Epstein’s operations. Given the appalling allegations regarding Epstein’s conduct, we request that you make yourself available for a transcribed interview with Committee staff regarding the crimes of Jeffrey Epstein and his co-conspirators.”

That paragraph, printed and reprinted across screens from Whitehall to Capitol Hill, sits at the center of a story that is at once old and eerily new: the unfolding accountability for the transnational networks of power that once seemed beyond scrutiny. It is not a small thing when a former British ambassador is asked, in effect, to explain contacts tied to one of the most notorious criminals of recent memory.

Who is Being Asked — and Why It Matters

Peter Mandelson is not an unknown. A towering figure in Labour politics for decades, he helped craft the New Labour era and has been a familiar presence in the corridors of power in both London and Brussels. Appointed as ambassador by Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Mandelson’s Washington posting was immediately framed by supporters as a signal that Britain wanted seasoned hands in the capital at a fraught moment for transatlantic relations.

But this is also the unforgiving age in which who you socialised with — who you sat beside at dinners, who you allowed into your orbit — is now public material for investigations and reputational audit. Epstein, who died in a New York jail in 2019 as he faced federal sex trafficking charges, left behind not only criminal allegations but networks of business, social and political ties that have been subjected to painstaking scrutiny ever since. Ghislaine Maxwell, a central figure in the Epstein saga, was convicted in 2021 of sex-trafficking offenses; Epstein himself had been the subject of prior criminal convictions and a widely criticised 2008 plea deal.

“This is not merely about names on a guest list,” said a former congressional counsel who has followed the Epstein probes closely. “Committees want to understand how patterns of behaviour perpetuated by powerful people were enabled — and that requires testimony from people who were in the room.”

Backlash in Britain — and a Test for Leadership

The letter’s consequences ricocheted quickly back to London. Opponents of Prime Minister Keir Starmer seized on the request as fresh ammunition, asking whether the Prime Minister had exercised good judgment in nominating Mandelson for such a high-profile role — and demanding accountability. Calls for Starmer to stand down have not been mainstream, yet the political heat is real: appointing a figure now asked to assist a US criminal probe invites questions about vetting, political calculation and moral hazard.

“It’s about competence and trust,” said an opposition MP who asked not to be named. “If you appoint someone to represent the country in Washington, you have a responsibility to anticipate the risks that person carries — including past associations that may become political flashpoints.”

Downing Street has so far remained circumspect. Mandelson’s own representatives have been contacted for comment; official spokespeople have reiterated that the government takes any request for cooperation with US authorities seriously. The drama, however, plays differently on the city streets of London and the brownstone-lined avenues of Washington.

Scenes from Two Cities

In the tidy cafes behind Westminster Abbey, baristas who voted for different parties sip coffee and exchange views that blend the personal with the political. “You grow up seeing these people at official functions,” said a local civil servant. “You expect that a diplomat will have a wide Rolodex. But there’s a difference between trading notes with people of stature and being linked to someone accused of preying on minors.”

Across the Potomac, in Georgetown’s tree-lined lanes where embassy flags flutter, neighbours hear the news with a mix of weary familiarity and renewed curiosity. “Washington is used to scandals,” said a Georgetown resident who runs a small bookshop. “But this one is different because it’s transatlantic: it makes you think about how the rich and powerful travel in global circles that can be opaque to ordinary citizens.”

What Congress Wants — and What It Could Reveal

Committee letters like the one sent to Mandelson are rarely ceremonial. The House Oversight Committee has investigation powers that can include transcribed interviews, documentary subpoenas and public hearings. Whether Mandelson consents, declines or is compelled to participate is another matter — and a stage on which diplomacy and domestic politics will collide.

“Even when people aren’t citizens, congressional committees can still seek their testimony — especially when it pertains to crimes that occurred on US soil or involved US citizens,” said a law professor specialising in congressional investigations. “The value of such testimony is not just in naming names; it’s in drawing the threads that reveal patterns of complicity, enabling behaviours, and institutional failures.”

In the years since Epstein’s arrest and death, dozens of civil suits, investigative reports and journalistic exposés have attempted to map the architecture of his activities. They have revealed troubling facts: a 2008 plea deal that many legal observers called deeply inadequate; an arrest and indictment in 2019 that reignited public fury; and a litany of accusers who have said that Epstein exploited his wealth and connections to traffic young women and girls. The broader narrative is about power, secrecy and the limited accountability of elites.

Beyond the Headlines: Questions for a Global Audience

Why should this matter to someone in Cairo, Nairobi, São Paulo or Sydney? Because what’s unfolding is not merely a British political story or an American inquiry. It is part of a global conversation about how societies police the corridors of influence, how democratic institutions protect the vulnerable, and how transnational networks of wealth are regulated — or not.

Are reputations being reassessed in light of new standards of accountability? Can systems built to privilege the powerful be restructured so they no longer reward secrecy? And perhaps most urgently: how do we ensure that demands for answers do not become exercises in political score-settling, but rather genuine efforts to prevent future harm?

“People want facts,” said a human rights advocate. “They want to know who knew what, and how decisions were made. That’s the only way to rebuild confidence in institutions.”

Where This Might Lead

The next act in this story could take many forms. Mandelson may choose to cooperate; he may decline; Congress might escalate its requests. Whatever happens, the ripple effects will be felt in political circles, in the public square and, perhaps, in the quiet offices where diplomats weigh the long-term reputational consequences of affiliations made in earlier chapters of their lives.

For readers watching from afar, the moment is an invitation to reflect: how do we, as societies, reckon with the past behaviors of the powerful? How should leaders be vetted for roles that require moral as well as political judgment? And what does accountability look like when it crosses borders and legal systems?

These are messy questions without tidy answers. But one thing is clear: a single letter, carried across an ocean, has the capacity to reopen old wounds and force public reckoning. Will it lead to new transparency — or simply fresh rounds of partisan theatre? The next few weeks may tell us, and they will remind us that in an interconnected world, private networks can no longer be assumed private.

Merz proposes European nuclear shield, calls for reset with Washington

Merz eyes European nuclear shield in call for US reset
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, NATO Chief Mark Rutte, Danish leader Mette Frederiksen, and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky among world leaders at a meeting in Munich

A Quiet Storm in Munich

On a cold February morning, the Bavarian sky was the pale colour of newsprint and the halls of the Munich Security Conference thrummed with the low, purposeful hum of diplomacy—suits, scarves, nametags that carried the weight of capitals. It felt, for a few intense hours, like the world was concentrated into one conference center: a place where old alliances are inspected, new anxieties negotiated, and futures quietly sketched on folded napkins over coffee.

Amid that hum, Germany’s chancellor stepped up to the lectern and dropped a line that stopped conversation across rooms: Berlin has opened confidential conversations with Paris about a European nuclear deterrent. The words were crisp, even cautious, but their echo will be anything but. For Europe—still reeling from Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, tectonic shifts in global trade and a fraying relationship with its most powerful ally—this was not just a policy tweak. It was a challenge to the assumptions that have held Western security together since 1945.

What was said, and what it means

The announcement wasn’t theatrical. It was deliberate. Germany, a nation that constitutionally and legally has long restrained itself from acquiring nuclear weapons, framed the talks as “strictly embedded” within NATO arrangements and in keeping with existing obligations. But the subtext was clear: the continent is reconsidering how it defends itself.

“This is less about a new arms race than about sober contingency planning,” said an experienced European diplomat who asked not to be named. “We are trying to buy time: time to repair trust with Washington, time to convince domestic publics that our security will not be left to chance.”

France, of course, sits at the centre of this conversation. As the European Union’s only country with an independent nuclear arsenal, Paris carries a disproportionate share of the continent’s strategic weight. According to open-source estimates, France maintains roughly 200–300 nuclear warheads—far fewer than the United States or Russia, but still the umbrella that some in Brussels and Berlin now contemplate expanding into a broader European architecture.

Why now? The fraying transatlantic anchor

The backdrop to these talks is a transatlantic relationship that has looked less like a firm alliance and more like a marriage navigating a row. A YouGov survey of the six largest European countries delivered a jolt: favourability towards the United States has sagged to its lowest point since the poll began in 2016. Complaints from both sides—about trade, culture wars, and perceived unilateralism—have eroded the automatic assumption that Washington will always be the continent’s primary security guarantor.

“Europe’s strategy has to be two-fold,” said a defence analyst in London. “We need to keep NATO alive and thriving, while also making sure we aren’t waking up to discover our security is wholly contingent on Washington’s domestic politics.”

That anxiety is not merely abstract. In parliamentary cafes and university corridors in Berlin, conversations are haunted by scenarios that once seemed remote: a sudden decoupling of US military support, economic coercion, or another conflict that stretches America’s attention. Hence the push to ensure “no zones of differing security” open up across the continent—phrases that sound technical but point to a raw political fear.

Munich in microcosm: voices from the floor

Walk through Munich during the conference and you meet a cross-section of Europe—defence ministers, NGO activists, students from Kyiv, a Bavarian barista who makes the best espresso within ten blocks. The air is punctuated by bursts of optimism and the dull thump of fatigue.

“We come here with hats in our hands but boots on the ground,” said a Ukrainian researcher, who travelled to Munich to press her government’s case. “European security isn’t an abstract debate for Ukrainians—it’s the difference between a future and ruin.”

A local café owner, polishing a tray between shifts, offered a view that felt both blunt and human: “People here will fight for peace, but they do not want to be told peace is free,” she said. “It costs money. It costs choices.”

Greenland, the Arctic, and the geography of anxiety

Far from Munich’s polished rooms, another corner of the European security story plays out across ice and tundra. Greenland—nearly 2.2 million square kilometers of ice and strategic real estate—has become a flashpoint between allies. Conversations in Munich spilled into discussions with Danish and Greenlandic officials about sovereignty, development, and the creeping interest of powers who view the Arctic as the next strategic frontier.

“Greenland is small in population but very big in consequence,” a Nordic security adviser told me. “Control of airspace, sea lanes, resources—these are world-class headaches wrapped in local communities.”

Denmark and Greenland have said meetings with external powers have been “constructive” and that a working group will press on. For Greenlanders, the calculus is intimate: choices about autonomy, economic opportunity, and cultural survival sit beside the strategic chessboard of great powers.

Numbers, budgets, and the geometry of defence

Since 2022, European defence budgets have risen noticeably. Many NATO members moved toward the alliance’s 2% of GDP defence spending guideline—some to meet it, others to edge closer. The trend is not uniform, but the pressure is evident: electorates demand security without the drama of conscription or open militarisation, while politicians juggle inflation, energy crises, and social spending.

“You can’t rehearse deterrence on a spreadsheet,” an ex-general from a NATO country told me over lunch. “But you can’t pretend it doesn’t need funds, doctrine, and clear political will.”

What should readers take away?

There’s a simple truth beneath the diplomatic parlance: Europe is asking uncomfortable questions about independence and interdependence. How far should it go to build its own shield? How much can it rely on partners whose politics swing like weather?

These are not academic puzzles. They ripple through towns like Munich and Nuuk, through parliaments and kebab shops, through the lives of soldiers and the dreams of students. They force a reckoning with the old idea that peace could be managed by a handful of guarantee-givers in distant capitals.

Ask yourself: when institutions fray, where does responsibility move? To experts with models and graphs? To citizens who demand security and sovereignty? To neighbours who stand together, or to alliances that stretch across oceans?

The answer will not be found in a single speech or a single conference room. It will be forged, messy and political, in the years that follow. But in Munich this week, amid coats and coffee cups, the conversation turned from assumption to agency. That, in itself, is a lasting story worth following.

Bangladesh’s BNP poised for landslide win in national elections

Bangladesh's BNP heading for 'sweeping' election win
Counting in the Bangladesh showed the BNP heading for an overall majority

A New Morning in Bangladesh: Hopes, Hymns and the Heavy Footsteps of History

Before dawn in a quiet neighbourhood of Dhaka, shopkeepers rolled up corrugated shutters, tea-stall owners lit small stoves and the call to prayer threaded through the narrow lanes. Yet the city you think you know felt different — more taut, more watchful. Armoured vehicles glinted under sodium streetlights and uniformed patrols walked the pavements with a kind of ceremonial calm. For many, today was the day the country would try to breathe again.

This was not the first time Bangladeshi voters had gone to the polls. But these elections — the first since the convulsive uprising of 2024 that toppled the long-ruling party and sent shockwaves across South Asia — carried the weight of a nation asking itself whether it could remake its politics without sliding back into the old order.

Television Projections and the Numbers That Mattered

By evening, private broadcasters were painting a clear picture: the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, aligned with Tarique Rahman, looked set for a sweeping parliamentary majority. Jamuna and Somoy TV were projecting roughly 197 seats for the BNP — well past the 150-seat mark that signals an outright majority in the 300-seat parliament. An Islamist-led coalition, fronted by Jamaat-e-Islami, was shown with about 63 seats, a dramatic rise from previous elections but short of the dominant position it had sought.

These totals are broadcasters’ projections, not the Election Commission’s final word. Counting continued across 299 of the 300 constituencies where voting took place; one seat had complications on the day. A further 50 seats reserved for women will be filled from party lists, a mechanism designed to boost female representation in a country of roughly 170 million people.

“We’ve crossed every barometer in our internal counting,” said a senior election official for the BNP, speaking in a reverent, cautious tone. “But we have told the public to thank God in prayer rather than take to the streets.”

On the Ground: Voices, Sights and Small Acts of Courage

At a primary school that served as a polling station in the suburb of Mirpur, an elderly woman named Fatima Ali clutched her ballot and smiled with a mixture of exhaustion and relief. “I stood in line with my neighbour at sunrise,” she said. “This country has given me years of hardship and years of joy. I want my children to live in a place where different opinions are accepted.”

Nearby, a rickshaw driver wiped his hands on his lungi and offered a different calculus. “Security was heavy, and that makes people nervous,” he said. “But at least my family can sleep tonight knowing no one is burning tyres in the street.”

Campaigning had not been without blood. Police records from the run-up show five people killed and more than 600 injured in political clashes — figures that underline a bitterly polarized landscape. UN human rights experts warned before the vote of “growing intolerance, threats and attacks” and flagged a “tsunami of disinformation” that had swamped social media with competing narratives and conspiracy.

The Interim Steward and the Shadow of Exile

Since August 2024, Muhammad Yunus — the Nobel Peace Prize laureate famed for his microfinance work — has served as interim leader after the ouster of Sheikh Hasina. Yunus, who has advanced a sweeping democratic reform charter, urged restraint and unity as results began to arrive.

“We may disagree on the path,” he told a small press gathering after voting, “but we must never allow disagreement to become an excuse for violence.” With that, he pledged to hand over power to a legitimately elected government, emphasizing stability over spectacle.

Sheikh Hasina, meanwhile, condemned the election from hiding in India after being sentenced in absentia on charges related to crimes against humanity — a sentence she and her supporters call politically motivated. Her party, the Awami League, was barred from contesting these polls, a decision that continues to generate debate both inside Bangladesh and among international observers.

What Was on the Ballot — Beyond Candidates

Voters were not only choosing MPs. On the same day, Bangladeshis were asked to vote in a referendum on a sweeping constitutional reform charter drafted by Yunus’ interim government. If enacted, the package would impose prime ministerial term limits, create a new upper house of parliament, strengthen presidential powers and enshrine greater judicial independence.

Television outlets projected that the charter received broad support from the electorate, though the Election Commission had yet to publish official tallies at the time of writing. The reforms are pitched as a fix for a political system Yunus described as “broken and vulnerable to dominance by one party.” Supporters say the changes will build checks and balances; critics fear they could be used to concentrate power in new ways.

Reflections from Experts and Everyday People

“This election is a hinge moment,” said a political scientist at a Dhaka university. “If the new parliament respects pluralism and the charter’s safeguards actually work, Bangladesh could reset its democracy. If not, the cycle of exclusion and protest will continue.”

A teacher in Chittagong added, “We want governance that delivers water, roads and schools more than slogans. The challenge is whether politicos can move from rhetoric to concrete reform.”

There is also the matter of inclusion. The 50 reserved seats for women signal progress, but many activists say that party lists often favour insiders over grassroots leaders. “Representation must be meaningful,” said a women’s rights advocate. “So far, the mechanism is a start, not the finish line.”

What Happens Next — Questions for Bangladesh and the World

What happens now will depend on far more than seat tallies. Will the incoming government welcome dissent? Will it engage with opposition voices that feel excluded? Can reforms be implemented transparently, or will they be hollow gestures? These are not just local questions; they echo across a world where democratic institutions are continually tested.

For ordinary Bangladeshis, daily life presses on regardless of political grandstanding. Vendors still sell samosas outside polling stations. Fishermen on the Meghna will cast nets tomorrow, as they have for generations. In living rooms and tea stalls, conversations will turn to governance — how schools are run, how hospitals are stocked, how the future for children will be secured.

“People are tired of being told to choose between two certainties,” said an independent journalist who covered the campaign. “They want accountability. They want an end to impunity. They want to be heard.”

Stay With the Story

This election is not an ending; it’s a pulse-point along a long, uncertain path. Will the new power holders lean into reform or revert to old habits? Will international observers and domestic watchdogs keep pressure on institutions that are supposed to be neutral?

As you read this, perhaps from another country, consider this: what responsibilities do global citizens have when democracy is fragile elsewhere? How do we balance respect for sovereignty with the urgency of human rights and inclusive governance? The people of Bangladesh have taken a dramatic step today. The rest of us would do well to listen, learn, and watch closely.

Russia and Ukraine Set to Meet in Geneva for Talks Next Week

Russia, Ukraine to hold talks in Geneva next week
Damaged cars at the site of a Russian attack in Odesa amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine

Geneva Again: Diplomacy at the Edge of the Frontline

There is a peculiar hush that falls over Geneva in February—an elegant city used to hosting summits about climate, banking and human rights now preparing to hold, once more, the fate of a faraway battlefield in its ornate conference rooms.

On 17–18 February, Russia and Ukraine will sit at the same table in a US-brokered meeting, officials from both capitals announced. It is another attempt to find a path out of a war that has scarred landscapes, families and international alliances for four long years. The details are familiar: hotly disputed territory, bruised egos, and a roster of red lines that neither side has been willing to cross.

Why Geneva? Why Now?

Geneva’s role as neutral ground has long been as much about optics as it is about logistics. “This city offers a certain gravitas and a space removed from the immediate pressure of the battlefield,” says Anna Weiss, a veteran conflict mediator who has clocked years in Swiss conference rooms. “But the venue doesn’t change the fact that these negotiations are played out against a backdrop of anguish and anger that no lipstick of diplomacy easily hides.”

The talks are being held in a trilateral format—Russia, the United States and Ukraine—after earlier attempts mediated by the US in Abu Dhabi. Those earlier rounds yielded little in the way of tangible progress. Both sides called them “productive,” but rhetoric and reality diverged: Moscow and Kyiv remain locked in a standoff over territory and political concessions, each accusing the other of negotiating in bad faith.

Lines in the Snow: The Core Disagreements

At the heart of the impasse is territory—who controls what, and under what conditions. Russia has insisted on sweeping concessions: withdrawal of Ukrainian forces from swaths of the Donetsk region and formal recognition of gains made since 2014 and 2022, including the annexation of Crimea. Ukraine, for its part, has rejected any unilateral pull-back as capitulation. The Kyiv delegation insists that any pause in fighting must be accompanied by ironclad security guarantees from Western partners to prevent a renewed offensive.

  • Russia currently occupies roughly one-fifth of Ukrainian territory, including Crimea and areas seized during the conflict.
  • Estimates suggest the human cost has been devastating—hundreds of thousands of soldiers, and tens of thousands of civilians killed—making this the deadliest conflict in Europe since the Second World War.

“You cannot separate territory from dignity,” a Ukrainian security adviser said quietly in a phone interview. “Ask any mother who has lost a son—which line matters to her? The maps mean lives.”

Delegations and the Personalities in the Room

Moscow will send Vladimir Medinsky to head its delegation, an appointment that signals a shift in tone. Medinsky, a former culture minister known for his hardline positions, led talks in Turkey that failed to bridge the divide. Ukraine confirmed that a delegation is preparing to travel to Geneva, while US officials, publicly and privately, have stressed urgency.

“The president has made it clear: the United States will press for a meaningful cessation of hostilities,” said an American diplomat on condition of anonymity. “But pressure doesn’t replace trust, and trust is the rarest currency in these talks.”

Voices from the Ground

Diplomacy on paper looks very different from the stored grief and stubborn normalcy in towns near the line of contact. In a small town on the edge of Donetsk, an elderly woman who refused to give her name sat outside a grocery and expertly peeled an apple.

“We have learned to live with sirens,” she said. “We wake slowly now—waiting for the sound, not for the day. If they return with papers and promises, I will listen. But I will not leave the house for words.”

A young volunteer medic from a village near Kharkiv told a reporter, “We’ve had ceasefires before. They hold for days, sometimes weeks. The problem is not drawing lines on a map; it is ensuring there is someone to stop killing when the lines are redrawn.”

Experts Weigh In

Analysts warn that any short-term pause without a durable security framework risks repeating past failures. Dr. Laila Mirza, a scholar of post-conflict reconstruction, argues that guarantees must go beyond diplomatic platitudes.

“Security guarantees mean verifiable troop withdrawals, independent monitors with real teeth, and economic lifelines for affected communities,” she says. “Otherwise, you create a frozen conflict that festers—worse than open fighting because it corrodes hope.”

Historic Echoes and Global Stakes

This is not just a regional negotiation. The contours of these talks touch on international law, alliance politics and the very norms that have underpinned the post-1945 order. A successful agreement could recalibrate relations between an ascendant Russia and a wary West. A failure could harden rival blocs and embolden other revisionist actors.

“What happens in Geneva sends a signal to capitals across the world: whether military force can be rewarded, whether borders can be redrawn by guns,” says Michael Durant, a former NATO analyst. “If the talks produce a stable ceasefire and a credible path to restoring sovereignty, that’s a win for diplomacy. If they don’t, it normalizes a dangerous precedent.”

What Could a Deal Look Like?

There is no single blueprint. But informed observers sketch a few likely components:

  1. Phased troop withdrawals verified by international observers.
  2. Security guarantees—possibly multilateral and temporary—to deter renewed offensives.
  • Roadmaps for the return of displaced people and economic reconstruction funds tied to verification.
  • Negotiated status arrangements for contested regions that respect human rights and self-determination norms.

Each of these has pitfalls. Any arrangement that is seen as etching in territorial changes risks delegitimizing the process in the eyes of many Ukrainians. Conversely, failing to address Russia’s security concerns could doom any accord to the scrapheap.

Beyond Geneva: The Human Arithmetic

Why should distant readers care? Because behind every line on a map are refrigerators emptied of photographs, cemeteries that increase by one every week, and economies shackled to the ebb and flow of violence. The ripple effects extend to global grain markets, energy prices and refugee flows that touch millions beyond Eastern Europe.

“We keep talking about strategy and statecraft,” said a volunteer teacher from a town outside Mariupol. “But people here are waiting to sing again in schoolyards, not for treaties to fill textbooks. How will your leaders tell their children about this—proudly or with shame?”

Can Geneva Deliver?

Geneva will offer a stage and mediators will provide the choreography. But the actors must bring something new: flexibility, internal consensus, and a willingness to trade maximalist rhetoric for pragmatic guarantees. The world will watch, but those who know the cost best—the families in makeshift cemeteries, the bus drivers turned resupply volunteers, the grandparents keeping their grandchildren safe—will be the real judges.

Will the talks in Geneva be the opening of a genuine path to peace, or merely another interlude before the guns begin again? The answer rests not only on the words spoken in conference rooms but on whether those words are backed by actions people on the ground can trust. As you read this, consider: What would you ask of leaders trying to end a war that has already taken so much?

When delegates take their seats on 17 February, they will carry with them more than negotiators’ briefs. They will carry the unsent letters, the burned photographs, the sleeping children—human details that no clause, however carefully worded, can erase. The question for Geneva is whether diplomacy can meet those human realities where they are, and not simply redraw the maps of power.

Madaxweyne Xasan oo ka qeybgalay shir madaxeedkii 2aad ee Talyaaniga Iyo Afrika

Feb 13(Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha JFS Mudane Xasan Sheekh Maxamuud ayaa ka qeyb galay Shir Madaxeedka labaad ee Talyaaniga iyo Afrika oo ay martigelisay Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Dimuqraadiga ah ee Itoobiya.

Qaramada Midoobay oo ku eedeysay RSF inay dambiyo dagaal ka geysatay El-Fasher

Feb 13(Jowhar)-Warbixin ay soo saartay xafiiska xuquuqul insaanka ee Qaramada Midoobay ayaa lagu sheegay in kooxda taageerada Degdegga ah ee Sudan RSF ay ka fulisay dambiyo dagaal iyo dambiyo ka dhan ah bini’aadantinimada markii ay la wareegeen magaalada El-Fasher ee galbeedka Sudan sanadkii hore.

Investigation Probes Alleged Discriminatory Emergency Response to Los Angeles Wildfires

Probe into possible discriminatory response to LA fires
Wildfires in the city of Altadena killed 19 people in January 2025

Smoke Over Altadena: A Community Waited — and the Alarms Came Too Late

When the first tongues of flame licked over the ridgeline outside Altadena in January 2025, they moved with a dispassionate speed that felt almost personal. Ash fell like gray snow on porches. Neighbors who had shared barbecues and potlucks for decades suddenly found themselves strangers to each other’s fate: one block evacuated, another left to its own devices.

By the time the last ember cooled, 31 people had died across Los Angeles, 19 of them in Altadena. Most of those victims were concentrated on the west side of town — a neighborhood with deep roots in the city’s African American community. That painful imbalance is now the subject of a formal probe launched by California’s attorney general.

“Did Race Decide Who Got the Warning?” — An Investigation Begins

“My office will investigate whether race, age or disability played a role in how emergency warnings were issued in west Altadena,” Attorney General Rob Bonta announced, his voice measured but unforgiving. “Preliminary reports suggest residents in the historically Black neighborhood received evacuation alerts hours after other parts of Altadena were warned.”

Those delays, if proven, may have been a decisive factor in the death toll. Residents and community leaders have whispered it for months: a pattern in which warnings, resources and attention arrived with different urgency depending on zip code. Now, the state will follow the paper trails, the emergency logs, the radio dispatches, and the phone records.

On the Ground: Stories of Waiting, Running, and Loss

Walk through west Altadena today and you hear the same things: the smell of scorched chaparral, the clang of a community trying to rebuild, and the flat, tired repetition of lines like “We asked, but no one came.”

“We saw the smoke first,” said Marion Cole, who has lived on Mariposa Avenue for 28 years. “My husband called 911. We waited for a code red. We waited for an alert. The east side — they were told to go. We sat on our porch until the sky went orange and the sirens were still on the other side of the canyon.”

Volunteers set up card tables at the church parking lot, dishing coffee and listening. A barber, whose shop escaped but whose friend’s home didn’t, boiled down the moment with a single, aching line: “We trusted the system. The system didn’t trust us back.”

Who Gets the Text?

Emergency alerts are supposed to be automatic — county sirens, text blasts, door-to-door notices in some neighborhoods. But in the chaos of multiple simultaneous fires, the sequence of who received a “go now” and who received nothing at all has become a central question.

“We need to examine decision-making: who prioritized areas, why certain alert vectors were used, and whether language or disability access played a role,” said an emergency management expert at a California public university. “These are not just bureaucratic questions. They are life-and-death.”

Hydrants Without Water, Reservoirs Left Empty

In Pacific Palisades — an enclave of wide streets and ocean views — residents watched firefighters struggle against two separate indignities: hydrants that sputtered and then failed, and a municipal reservoir that lay inexplicably empty as flames closed in.

“We ran out of water,” a career firefighter who asked not to be named for fear of reprisal told me. “You can train for wind and slope and structure, but you cannot fight a fire when your hoses are dry.”

These failures have fueled a broader narrative of mismanagement. Questions about infrastructure upkeep — from pipelines to storage tanks — are now tangled with claims that staff shortages and budget choices left the city vulnerable.

Budget Cuts, Political Heat

Mayor Karen Bass has faced intense criticism for approving budget reductions to local fire services in the months before the infernos. Critics say those cuts, even if modest on paper, translated into slower response times and fewer resources at a moment that demanded everything.

“This is not a partisan issue; it’s a preparedness issue,” said a community organizer who helped coordinate relief in Altadena. “People are angry because this felt preventable.”

Supporters of the mayor say budgetary decisions are complex and that staffing and equipment alone can’t guard against this new era of megafires. But the optics of empty hydrants and a drained reservoir — images that traveled fast on social media — have hardened public sentiment into suspicion.

More Than Fire: A Story About Inequality

Wildfires rarely exist in a vacuum. They are born of climate trends — hotter, drier weather and earlier spring melts — and they are shaped by human decisions about land use, infrastructure, and emergency systems.

California’s fire seasons have lengthened dramatically over recent decades. Experts point to a combination of warming temperatures, bark beetle infestations, and decades of forest management practices as drivers. The result: fires that are faster, larger, and less predictable.

But the difference in who gets warned and who doesn’t often tracks lines drawn by history: wealth and whiteness on one side, underinvestment and marginalization on the other. The Altadena inquiry asks whether that history translated into policy choices during the moment of crisis.

Questions the Inquiry Will Ask

  • Were standard alert procedures applied uniformly across all Altadena neighborhoods?
  • Did digital and non-digital communication channels fail specific populations more than others?
  • Were resource allocations — staffing, water supplies, on-scene command — distributed equitably?

Why This Matters Beyond One City

Look beyond Los Angeles and you see echoes: from Mediterranean Europe to Australia, communities are grappling with fires that reveal fractures in social safety nets. The Altadena story is local, yes, but it also points to a global problem: when climate shocks arrive, existing inequalities can turn natural disasters into human catastrophes.

“We talk about resilience as bricks and barriers, but real resilience is about networks — who gets help, who is listened to, who gets a warning at 3 a.m.,” said a social scientist who studies disaster equity. “If you ignore social geography, you will lose lives.”

Rebuilding Trust, Not Just Houses

In neighborhoods where generations have lived, rebuilding is as much about relationships as it is about stucco and roofing. People want answers. They want to know that someone analyzed what went wrong and changed the systems that failed them.

“We need transparency,” said Pastor Lillian Harper, who turned her basement into a temporary shelter last winter. “Not platitudes. Not headlines. Real accountability and a plan so our grandchildren don’t face the same neglect.”

What You Can Do — and What We Should Ask Ourselves

As the investigation unfolds, the rest of us — readers, citizens, policymakers — should ask: How do our warnings reach the most vulnerable? Where are our hydrants and reservoirs being tested? Who in our communities sits on the margins of emergency planning?

We can push for simple, pragmatic reforms: multilingual alerts, regular water-system audits, community liaisons embedded in fire response protocols, and funding models that prioritize equity as much as efficiency.

But there is a deeper question: when disaster reveals the seams beneath our civic fabric, do we sew them back stronger — or simply patch the tear until the next storm?

The attorney general’s investigation will take time, and facts will emerge that reshape our understanding of those terrible January nights. For now, as Altadena counts its dead and replants its trees, the community is asking for something beyond any immediate fix: recognition, accountability, and a promise that when the next warning must be issued, no one will be left waiting on the wrong side of an alert.

Three killed as powerful storm batters regions of France and Spain

Three dead after storm hits France and Spain
A car is destroyed after a tree fell on it during Storm Nils in France

The morning after Nils: wind-whipped streets and lives rearranged

When dawn peeled back the night, the south of France looked like a place that had been rearranged by a careless hand. Branches the size of trunks lay strewn across boulevards. Shuttered cafes that the night before hummed with after-dinner conversation now sat under a sky the color of pewter. In Perpignan, a wheel of a street market lay half-buried in mud. In La Réole, emergency crews ferried a bewildered woman from her flooded home. Across the border in Spain, Barcelona’s glass and steel shoulders bore the scuffs of wind-driven debris. And in Portugal, a viaduct sagged, its foundations undermined by swollen waters.

The storm, given the name Nils by French forecasters, tore through the western Mediterranean corridor with an intensity officials described as “unusually strong.” By Tuesday morning authorities had confirmed three fatalities and dozens of injuries across France and Spain, while thousands of households remained in the dark. The scale of the disruption read like a weather map crossed with a ledger: uprooted trees, collapsed roofs, washed-out roads, cancelled flights and ferries, and trains that never began their runs.

On the ground: stories that make statistics real

France — toppled trees, a ladder, a fatal strike

In southwestern France, where plane trees line avenues and vineyards spill like patchwork across hills, the violence of the storm surprised many.

“I’ve never seen anything like it,” said one Perpignan resident, still shaking hours after a tree had nearly crushed his car. “Two seconds more and it would have.”

Local authorities reported that a truck driver was killed when a tree smashed through his windscreen. The following day, emergency services confirmed a second death: a person who fell from a ladder while working in their garden amid the chaos. Images from towns like La Réole showed streets ankle-deep in water and volunteers helping to haul flood-weary possessions onto higher ground.

Electric crews from Enedis — France’s main distributor — described a marathon effort to reconnect homes. “Enedis has restored service to 50% of the 900,000 customers who were without electricity,” the company reported. Some 3,000 workers had been mobilised to clear fallen lines and repair damaged substations, but high water and blocked roads slowed the fight to bring lights back on.

Spain — walls, roofs and lives shaken

Across the Pyrenees, in northern Spain and around Barcelona, the storm left a similar wake of destruction and dismay. A roof over an industrial warehouse collapsed under the onslaught of wind and rain; a woman working inside was killed. Dozens more were reported injured as masonry came down and drivers were trapped in flooded underpasses.

“The noise was like a train passing through the building,” said an employee at an industrial estate near Barcelona, speaking as she clutched a blanket around her shoulders. “We ran without thinking. The roof gave way in an instant.”

Public transport ground to a halt in many places. Flights were cancelled, ships were held in harbors, and long-distance trains were delayed or rerouted. For commuters and travelers, the storm meant sudden, intrusive disruption — a reminder of how tightly our modern lives depend on thin threads of infrastructure.

Portugal — a bridge that did not hold

In Portugal the violence of water was the dominant story. Flooding undermined a viaduct, causing partial collapse and prompting immediate investigations into structural safety. Though there were no widespread reports of fatalities there, the images of buckled concrete and mud-smothered fields made clear how quickly routine routes can become dangerous.

The ledger: numbers that matter

Here are the immediate figures that help frame the human stories in a wider context:

  • Confirmed fatalities: 3 (across France and Spain)
  • Households without power at peak: approximately 900,000 in France
  • Enedis crews mobilised: around 3,000 workers
  • Power restored by morning after storm: about 50% of affected customers
  • Number of injuries reported in Spain: dozens (official counts ongoing)

Numbers are blunt instruments, but they point to a larger truth: this was more than a local squall. It reached into everyday life, into commerce, schools and hospital routines, and raised questions about readiness and resilience.

Why storms like Nils feel different

Ask meteorologists and they’ll tell you storms are not new. What has changed, they say, is the frequency and the footprint. “We’re seeing more intense downpours concentrated over shorter timeframes,” an atmospheric scientist who studies Mediterranean weather patterns explained. “That puts pressure on drainage, on river basins, and ultimately on communities that were built for a different climate reality.”

For locals, the problem is immediate and practical. Old drainage systems were never designed for torrents that fill streets within minutes. When rivers swell beyond their beds, the weakest points — low bridges, neglected culverts, and older bridges — are the first to fail.

And then there is the human factor: people who resist leaving their homes, businesses reluctant to close for fear of lost revenue, and infrastructure that is expensive and slow to upgrade. “We cannot simply move all essential services underground or build new power lines overnight,” said a municipal engineer in Bordeaux. “The challenge is prioritising where to invest so we reduce the next disaster’s toll.”

Voices from the aftermath

Emergency volunteers, firefighter crews, municipal workers and everyday neighbors have been the unglamorous backbone of the response. One volunteer in La Réole, a retired carpenter named Jean, put it this way: “When you see your neighbor’s furniture floating past your gate, you cannot stand by. We bring boats, sandbags, and coffee. It is what people do.”

Health services are stretched, and hospitals in affected areas have been operating under contingency plans. Schools in flooded towns closed their doors, leaving parents scrambling for childcare while they coordinate repairs and insurance claims.

Insurance companies will tally the cost in the weeks ahead; economists will watch for ripple effects on local economies. But for now, the human accounts are what linger: the smell of wet paper and wood in a salvaged home, the children who turned a puddle into a football pitch despite the gloom, the small businesses that opened a day later with a broom and a smile.

Looking ahead: questions for our warming world

What does a storm like Nils ask of us? How do we shore up our towns and cities, our power networks and our transport arteries against a future where the weather surprises us more often and harder?

These are not just engineering questions. They are questions about how we live together: where to place housing, how to support vulnerable neighborhoods, how quickly to modernise aging grids and drainage systems, and who pays when catastrophe arrives.

Will this week be remembered as an unfortunate anomaly, or as another data point in a trend that nudges public policy toward bolder investments and stricter planning? The answer will depend partly on political will, partly on budgets, and partly on whether communities themselves can build layers of local resilience.

What you can do now

For readers wondering how to help or prepare, here are a few practical steps that matter in any flood- or wind-prone region:

  • Keep an emergency kit: flashlights, batteries, water, medications and important documents in a waterproof pouch.
  • Know your local evacuation routes and the thresholds for alerts in your area.
  • Secure outdoor furniture and clear gutters; small actions can reduce damage in a sudden storm.
  • Check whether your home insurance covers flood or wind damage and what the claims process requires.

As recovery begins, we will hear many more stories: of resilience, of frustration with delayed repairs, and of quiet acts of kindness. In the end, storms like Nils test more than infrastructure — they test the bonds between neighbours, the responsiveness of institutions, and our collective capacity to learn and adapt. What will we choose to learn?

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