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
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
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?
Denmark’s PM to discuss Greenland with Rubio during Munich meeting
At the Munich Crossroads: A Quiet Storm Around Greenland
When Mette Frederiksen stepped off the plain-cloth car at the Munich Security Conference, the winter light felt brittle and bright against her wool coat. Cameras swirled, diplomats gathered like birds on a wire, and somewhere between espresso kiosks and corridor briefings the word “Greenland” hummed like a misfired fuse.
“We will speak with our American partners about Greenland,” Frederiksen told reporters, her voice even but edged with a diplomat’s impatience. “It is not a bargaining chip; it is a people and a place.” Her team confirmed she planned meetings with U.S. officials on the sidelines of the talks — part routine, part damage control, and part strategic planning.
The scene in Munich this year feels less like a polished summit and more like a junction where old alliances and new anxieties collide. The Arctic — long the province of scientists, indigenous communities, and cautious militaries — has become a map of competing interests: melting ice, newly accessible mineral wealth, shorter shipping lanes, and an intensifying choreography between capitals from Washington to Beijing.
Why Greenland Matters — Beyond Headlines
Greenland is not a simple plot in a geopolitical chess game. It is an island of sweeping fjords, tiny towns painted in bright enamel, a population roughly the size of a small town (about 56,000 residents), and an ecological clock that ticks faster than the rest of the planet. But it also sits on a set of reserves — rare earth elements, zinc, uranium and other critical minerals — that the world increasingly prizes.
Ask a Greenlandic fisherman in Nuuk about the global interest and you will hear a different cadence. “We never asked to be famous,” said Annika Kleist, who runs a guesthouse and certifies whale-watch tours in the harbor. “People talk about minerals and ice, but our life is fjords, dogs, coffee and long winters. We need respect and real partnership, not auction signs.”
Strategically, Greenland is a sentinel in the North Atlantic. As ice retreats and new sea routes open, the island’s airfields and maritime approaches become far more than local infrastructure — they are nodes in a network of power that reaches from NATO command centers to Asian markets. That explains why the U.S. — which in recent months has signaled an interest in expanding its influence in the region — is pressing for a stronger role.
Conversations in Munich: Tension, Diplomacy, and the Art of Reassurance
On the ground in Munich, Frederiksen’s agenda is twofold: to reassure her Greenlandic citizens and to hold a line with allies. The Danish prime minister’s message echoes through the halls: Europe must do more to safeguard its own interests. “We cannot rely on a single partner to guarantee our security,” she said in a hallway interview, invoking a steady refrain heard across capitals since 2022 — the need for greater European defense capacity.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who is leading the American delegation, framed his presence differently. “We are here to ensure open seas and secure supply chains,” he said before boarding his plane. “Allies must pull their weight for the security of the north and for the prosperity of our economies.” The language is familiar: burden-sharing, deterrence, and the push to modernize defenses in a geopolitical era that many experts now call multipolar.
Yet beneath the official statements there is unease. The so-called “Greenland moment” — a period of pointed U.S. interest in increased control or influence over the island — rattled trust. Even if the most confrontational proposals have been shelved, the fissures remain. European publics, particularly in Germany and the Nordic countries, are asking if the security umbrella is permanent or conditional.
Military Moves and Arctic Missions
Denmark has not been passive. Copenhagen participates in a NATO Arctic mission and has committed F-35 fighters and other assets to patrol northern airspace. A U.S.-Denmark-Greenland working group has been convened to air strategic concerns, though officials publicly acknowledge that many discussions will remain classified. The point is clear: the Arctic is no longer peripheral.
As one NATO official put it quietly in Munich, “We are updating old maps. The ocean and the ice now carry consequences for Europe’s safety and global trade. That changes how you posture and where you put your aircraft.”
Voices from Home: Greenlanders Weigh In
Back in Nuuk, the conversation is more intimate and complicated. “We want investment, not imperial gestures,” said Aron Petersen, a schoolteacher who skis in summer and boats in winter. “Who decides what happens to our land? That should be our community, our council, not a distant negotiation between capitals.”
Indigenous leaders have long warned against decisions made without their consent. In 2009 Greenland gained more autonomy from Denmark, and aspirations for greater self-determination are woven into daily life. Coffee shops, municipal meetings, and even funerals echo with the same refrain: the people of Greenland wish to be central, not an afterthought.
There is humor, too. In a Nuuk market, an old hunter laughed when asked about foreign interest: “If outsiders want our rocks, let them come with good bread. But they must remember the sea decides, not paperwork.” It was half joke, half proverb — a reminder of how local culture measures incoming forces.
Lines on a Global Map — What This Means for the Rest of Us
Munich is never just a European story. The questions raised there ripple across oceans: How do alliances survive when political winds shift? What happens to international norms when strategic assets are in precarious, depopulated places? And how will warming seas redraw trade routes and military calculations?
For analysts like Philip Gordon of the Brookings Institution, the stakes are about unity. “A fragmented transatlantic alliance weakens deterrence and opens space for rivals to play divide-and-rule,” he said at a panel this week. “Europe needs to buy defense capacity and political autonomy; otherwise the strategic void will be filled by others.”
Readers might ask themselves: do we understand the Arctic as merely a resource frontier or as home to resilient communities whose lives will shape, and be shaped by, global decisions? The answer matters.
Looking Forward: Possibilities and Pitfalls
As talks continue in Munich and follow-up meetings are scheduled, the choreography will shift. Expect proposals for joint Arctic stewardship, investments in Greenlandic infrastructure, and renewed calls for European defense spending — but also negotiation pains. The United States, keen on securing supply chains and forward basing, will press. Denmark will insist on sovereignty and consultation. Greenlanders will demand a seat at the table.
There is no single script for what comes next. But if the Munich conversations teach us anything, it is this: geopolitics often arrives not as a sudden invasion but as a series of small decisions, corridor talks and working groups that together reshape lives thousands of miles away.
So what will we choose as a global community — competition or cooperation, extraction or partnership? The answer will not be written in Munich alone. It will be written in Nuuk’s town halls, in Danish parliament sessions, and in the quiet choices of miners, fishermen, politicians, and diplomats. And perhaps most importantly, it will be written by the people of Greenland themselves.
Madaxweyne Xasan Sheekh oo gaaray magaalada Addis Ababa
Feb 13(Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya Mudane Xasan Sheekh Maxamuud iyo wafdi uu hoggaaminayo ayaa si diiran loogu soo dhoweeyay magaalada Addis Ababa ee caasimadda dalka Itoobiya.
EU leaders urge swift action to compete with US and China
A castle, 27 leaders and a continent at a crossroads
On an overcast morning in Limburg, the stone of Alden Biesen Castle seemed to drink in the drama of the day. Flags fluttered ionlessly; security vans threaded the lanes like dark beetles. Inside the ornate rooms where knights once plotted and feasts were held, the 27 leaders of the European Union gathered not for ceremony but for survival—at least that was how many here described it.
“This isn’t a photo opportunity,” one diplomat whispered to me as ministers shuffled through the echoing corridors. “It’s a test of whether Europe can still choose the future it wants, or whether it will be shaped by others.”
The summit’s short agenda reads like a map of anxieties: keep energy bills from strangling industry, mend and deepen the internal market so goods and services flow like blood, and mobilize investment at a scale that can counter the economic pull of the United States and China. The rhetoric is familiar. The stakes feel new.
Energy: the practical and existential problem
Walk past the castle gates and you meet the local realities—steel towns where furnaces once roared, family-run chemical plants whose chimneys are now quiet more often than owners would like. “Energy is not an abstract,” said Pieter, a third-generation steelworker from the Liège region. “It’s the lights in our factory, the jobs for my neighbours. When the bills climb, everything else starts to wobble.”
He’s not alone in that alarm. EU industry faces electricity prices that are, by several measures, more than double what similar companies pay in the United States and China. Those cost gaps are not theoretical: higher input bills mean lower margins, fewer investments, and the very real risk that entire supply chains relocate beyond Europe’s borders.
“If we want factories here in ten years,” said a European industrialist I spoke with in a hastily arranged meeting room, “we must fix the energy market—price it, transmit it, and plan it together.” His tone carried the blunt calculation of someone watching months of investment decisions hinge on kilowatt-hours.
What’s really broken
At the heart of the debate are two linked problems. First, energy pricing and grid integration remain fragmented across member states—patchwork rules, capacity constraints, and divergent subsidy schemes create winners and losers. Second, the green transition itself, while necessary, increases short-term costs unless managed collectively: renewable deployments need infrastructure, batteries, and new market rules.
“We cannot ask companies to shoulder the transition by themselves,” said an EU energy adviser. “The only sustainable route is a unified, functioning energy market that reduces price spikes and directs investment where it’s most needed.”
Old divisions, new urgencies: debt, trade and ‘Made in Europe’
France arrived at the castle with a manifesto in its pocket: more shared borrowing for large-scale investment and a “Made in Europe” approach that would channel public procurement towards products with robust European content. The ambition is clear—bigger projects, strategic autonomy, less dependence on foreign supply chains.
Germany, meanwhile, counsels caution. Its officials argue that piling on common debt risks long-term fiscal fragility and that the real lever is boosting productivity—ramping up R&D, streamlining regulations, and securing trade deals that open markets rather than locking them down.
“We keep circling the same choices,” said a senior German official. “Do we build with borrowed money, or do we go after structural reforms? Both are valid, but we first need clarity on results and responsibilities.”
Across the table, proponents of closer fiscal integration argue that half-measures won’t be enough when competitors are mobilizing entire financial systems to back industry. “Investment at this scale requires pooling risk,” a French economic adviser told me. “It’s not ideological; it’s practical.”
Voices from the wider economy
A small software entrepreneur in Berlin, Yasmin, worries about access to capital. “If interest rates are high and grant programs are small, we won’t scale here,” she said, balancing a croissant on a paper plate. “Talent is global. If the money isn’t here, the people and ideas will follow it.”
Meanwhile, in a corner of Flanders outside the summit, a ceramics factory owner named Luc—who runs a business that has supplied cookware to three generations of Belgian kitchens—sounded like someone bargaining for time. “We want to decarbonize, but not overnight,” he said. “We need a bridge—financial support, predictable pricing—so we can invest without losing our business.”
Consensus? Or a new form of selective cooperation?
There is a frankness in the castle halls that masks long-standing fault lines. Some leaders insist that an EU-wide push is possible; others say the club is too diverse to move at one speed. One proposal gaining currency is not unanimity but flexibility: if all 27 cannot agree, a coalition of willing member states would move ahead together.
“We have options besides paralysis,” noted a small-state leader. “Enhanced cooperation allows a subset to pilot reforms that others can join later if they wish. It’s a way to break deadlocks.”
But that path raises its own questions: will selective action create a Europe of different speeds where richer states accelerate and poorer ones lag—further fragmenting the single market it aims to save?
Looking beyond rhetoric: deadlines and the weight of time
Many in Alden Biesen were explicit: talk is cheap and time is not. A handful of leaders suggested a June summit as a moment to convert debate into binding decisions or, failing consensus, to trigger the mechanism of reinforced cooperation. “We cannot afford another year of motion without movement,” a Baltic president told me while scribbling notes.
Experts invited to the summit warned of a slow, collective decline if reforms are postponed. “This is not a spectacle,” said a former central banker who traveled to the castle to brief delegates. “It’s about creating the conditions for prosperity—stable energy, deep markets, and affordable capital. Delay is a tax on our future.”
Why this matters to the global reader
It’s tempting to treat European politics as parochial, but what plays out in Alden Biesen ripples beyond canals and vineyards. Europe commands large export markets, controls vital science and technology clusters, and is a partner—or competitor—in supply chains stretching across oceans. Its fortunes will shape investment flows, emissions trajectories, and geopolitical balances.
So ask yourself: do you want global industry to be diversified, resilient, and governed by shared rules? Or do you prefer a world where critical capacity is concentrated in a few economic blocs, subject to strategic pressures? The answer matters for consumers, workers, and policymakers alike.
After the castle doors close
The summit may conclude with modest declarations, perhaps a roadmap or a promise to return. Or it may mark the opening of a more serious push—collective borrowing, a revamped energy market, and targeted industrial policies. Either way, the scene at Alden Biesen feels less like a single meeting than like a crossroads moment.
As Pieter the steelworker put it before he left to start his shift: “We’re not asking for miracles. We’re asking for a plan that keeps our lights on and our kids working.”
And as readers around the world watch, the choice Europe makes will be about more than balance sheets—it will be about what kind of continent it wants to be: an inward-looking museum of past glories, or a living, adaptable economy ready to compete and collaborate on a turbulent global stage. Which path would you choose for the future?
Qaar kamid ah Culimada ugu waaweyn dalka oo baaq culus u diray madaxda sare ee dalka
Feb 13(Jowhar)-Culumada Soomaaliyeed, gaar ahaan kuwa ugu waaweyn uguna saameynta badan, ayaa baaq culus u diray siyaasiyiinta Soomaaliyeed ee talada dalka haya, iyagoo ku boorriyey in la muujiyo hoggaan ku dhisan dulqaad, tanaasul iyo xal u helidda xaaladaha taagan.
Minnesota Ends Immigration Crackdown Following Statewide Policy Reversal

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President Donald Trump’s border czar has announced the end of aggressive immigration operations in Minnesota that triggered large protests and nationwide outrage following the killing of two US citizens.
Thousands of federal agents including Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers have in recent weeks conducted sweeping raids and arrests in what the administration claims are targeted missions against criminals.
“I have proposed and President Trump has concurred that this surge operation conclude,” Trump official Tom Homan told a briefing outside Minneapolis. “A significant drawdown has already been under way this week and will continue through the next week.”
The operations have sparked tense demonstrations in the Minneapolis area, and the fatal shootings of Renée Good and Alex Pretti less than three weeks apart last month led to a wave of criticism.
Mr Homan raised the prospect that the officers would deploy to another location but gave no details, as speculation is rife about which city might be targeted next.
“In the next week, we’re going to deploy the officers here on detail, back to their home stations or other areas of the country where they are needed. But we’re going to continue to enforce immigration law,” he said.
Campaigning against illegal immigration helped Mr Trump get elected in 2024, but daily videos from Minnesota of violent masked agents, and multiple reports of people being targeted on flimsy evidence, helped send Mr Trump’s approval ratings plummeting.
The case of Liam Conejo Ramos, aged five, who was detained on 20 January 20, also stoked anger.
‘Trump’s leadership’
Tom Homan raised the prospect that the officers would deploy to another location but gave no details
After killings of Ms Good and Mr Pretti, the Republican president withdrew combative Customs and Border Protection commander Gregory Bovino and replaced him with Mr Homan who sought to engage local Democratic leaders.
Minneapolis is a Democratic-run “sanctuary” city where local police do not cooperate with federal immigration officials.
Opposition Democrats have called for major reforms to ICE, including ending mobile patrols, prohibiting agents from concealing their faces and requiring warrants.
If political negotiations over ICE fail in Washington, the Department of Homeland Security could face a funding shortfall starting Saturday.
Customs and Border Protection and ICE operations could continue using funds approved by Congress last year, but other sub-agencies such as federal disaster organization FEMA could be affected.
Mr Homan said that some officers would stay behind in Minnesota but did not give a figure.
“The Twin Cities, Minnesota in general, are and will continue to be, much safer for the communities here because of what we have accomplished under President Trump’s leadership,” Mr Homan said at the briefing on the outskirts of Minneapolis and neighbouring St Paul.
He said more than 200 people had been arrested in the course of the operation for interfering with federal officers, but gave no estimate for the number of immigration-linked arrests and deportations.
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Japan Detains Chinese Fishing Vessel, Arrests Its Captain
When a Fishing Boat Becomes a Diplomatic Spark
A gray morning at sea, the kind that smells of diesel and thick brine, is not where most world-changing headlines are born. Yet off the jagged silhouette of the Goto archipelago, 166 kilometers south‑southwest of Meshima island, a routine fisheries inspection turned into an arrest and a fresh strain on an already brittle relationship between Tokyo and Beijing.
Japanese fisheries officials say they ordered a Chinese fishing vessel to stop for inspection. It did not comply. It fled. By evening, the boat’s captain had been detained and the vessel seized — a sentence that reads like maritime bureaucracy but that ripples through geopolitics.
A small incident with big echoes
“The captain was ordered to stop for an inspection by a fisheries inspector, but the vessel failed to comply and fled,” a Japan Fisheries Agency statement said. “Consequently, the vessel’s captain was arrested on the same day.”
The arrest occurred well inside Japan’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ), a buffer that extends up to 200 nautical miles — roughly 370 kilometers — from a nation’s coastline and grants coastal states rights over marine resources. The boat was about 166 kilometers out, or roughly 90 nautical miles, comfortably within Japanese jurisdiction under the law of the sea.
For locals in the Goto islands, the moment had a familiar ring. “We see Chinese boats often, sometimes skirting the edge, sometimes closer,” said Hiroshi Tanaka, a fisherman who grew up in the archipelago. “But an arrest like this — it brings memories of 2010 back. People here remember how loud and ugly that got.”
Memory lanes and minefields: Why 2010 still matters
The islanders’ unease is not just nostalgia. In 2010, a similar arrest of a Chinese fishing captain near the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyu area escalated into a full-blown diplomatic crisis between Tokyo and Beijing. Vessels, paperwork, and pride suddenly became proxies for deeper, unresolved tensions: history, sovereignty, and strategic rivalry in the East China Sea.
“Maritime incidents have a way of ballooning,” said Dr. Keiko Mori, a maritime law scholar at a Tokyo university. “On the water, one captain’s choices can become national symbolism. An inspection and arrest are legal acts, but they can be interpreted politically in ways that neither side wants.”
Local color at the edge of contested waters
On Meshima, where narrow streets revolve around tiny markets and the cry of gulls punctuates dawn, people talk quietly about the global forces that touch their lives. A shopkeeper named Yumi brought out tea and said, “We are used to foreign trawlers. We worry about our catch, not headlines. Still, when governments tangle, it is our food and our kids who feel it.”
Fishing here is not just work; it is identity. Boats with painted names bob in harbors ringed by concrete sea walls. People judge weather with a look at the swell and recall the old Japanese adage: the sea gives, the sea takes. Now it gives a story that will be read in capitals far from these coves.
The political backdrop: a sharper edge to Tokyo-Beijing ties
This arrest did not happen in a vacuum. It comes months after Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi — who, as the story goes, became Japan’s first woman prime minister last October and just won a resounding victory in snap elections — suggested Japan might intervene militarily if China attempted to seize Taiwan by force. Those comments have tilted an already delicate relationship.
Beijing has reciprocated with a mix of diplomatic pressure and signaling: summoning Tokyo’s ambassador, advising Chinese citizens to reconsider travel to Japan, and conducting joint flights with Russia. In December, China’s J‑15 jets from the Liaoning carrier reportedly locked radar on Japanese aircraft in international airspace near Okinawa — incidents that raise the stakes beyond fishing disputes.
Trade levers, too, have been used. China has tightened controls on some exports to Japan, including items with potential military applications, reviving fears about access to critical materials like rare-earth minerals. Even cultural touchstones have been affected: Japan’s last two giant pandas were returned to China recently, a symbolic moment for people who follow such softer strands of diplomacy.
Numbers and realities
Consider some context: Japan hosts roughly 60,000 U.S. military personnel, a fact frequently cited when Tokyo speaks about deterrence and regional security. Japan’s EEZ spans roughly 4.47 million square kilometers, one of the world’s largest — a maritime expanse that invites both commerce and conflict. Small-scale incidents, when frequent, can create an environment of mistrust that chips away at economic ties worth hundreds of billions annually.
Analysis: Law, leverage, and the thin line of escalation
“Legally, Japan can board and inspect foreign fishing vessels in its EEZ if it has reason to suspect violations,” explained Professor Daniel Reyes, a maritime security analyst. “But in the political theatre of the Indo‑Pacific, these legal actions are rarely received purely as legal.”
Experts warn of a twofold danger: normalization of confrontations at sea, and the weaponization of trade and sentiment on shore. “When rhetoric escalates, routines — inspections, seizures, even air intercepts — become pivots in a larger strategy,” said Reyes. “And strategies like that are not always predictable.”
For the ordinary people who live by the ocean, the concerns are practical and immediate: Will restrictions on Japan-bound tourism hit local economies? Will tightening export controls on materials choke industries? Will younger islanders still find work in fisheries if political pressures push fleets away?
What this moment asks of us
At its core, the episode is a reminder that globalization is not a smooth, frictionless surface but a network of nerves. One tug — a political remark, a fishing arrest, an aircraft lock-on — can send a shudder across economies, families, and futures.
As readers, we can ask: How should nations balance enforcement of maritime law with the art of de‑escalation? How do small communities survive when the currents of geopolitics surge past their harbors?
“We want peace,” said Tanaka, the fisherman. “We want our nets full and our kids safe. Politics happens in Tokyo and Beijing, but the sea is where we live with the consequences.”
Where to from here?
The immediate aftermath will be diplomatic notes, internal reviews, possibly more boards and inspections. But if history is any guide, leaders will need both resolve and restraint: resolve to protect rights and resources, restraint to avoid turning routine enforcement into a casus belli.
And for the rest of us — neighbors, consumers, policymakers — the episode is a small, stark lesson: in a world of interlocking interests, even a single fishing vessel can illuminate the fragile architecture that holds great-power relations together. How we tend that architecture may define the seas — and the future — for generations to come.
- Where: 166 km SSW of Meshima island, Goto archipelago (inside Japan’s EEZ)
- Action: Chinese boat seized; its captain arrested after refusing inspection
- Context: First seizure by Japan’s fisheries agency since 2022; follows heightened tensions after remarks on Taiwan by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi
- Broader stakes: territorial disputes, military posturing, trade controls, and local livelihoods















