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Wararkii u danbeeyay khasaaraha dagaal Xooggan oo ka dhacay Baydhabo

Feb 04(Jowhar)-Warar dheeraad ah ayaa kasoo baxaya dagaal khasaare kala duwan sababay oo magaalada Baydhabo ku dhaxmaray ciidan uu hogaaminayo sarkaal lagu magacaabo Cabdiraxmaan Nishoow oo horay ugu tirsanaa saraakiisha Ciidanka Xooga ee qeybta 60-aad iyo kuwa maamulka Koonfurgalbeed Soomaaliya.

Madaxweyne Xasan oo hay’adaha dowladda faray iney shaqadooda ugu badan u weeciyaan Gurmadka Abaaraha

Feb 04(Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya, Mudane Xasan Sheekh Maxamuud oo maanta booqday Xarunta gurmadka degdeg ah ee Hay’adda Maareynta Musiibooyinka Qaranka.

Fifteen killed as Greek coastguard vessel collides with migrant ship

15 dead after Greek coastguard, migrant boat collide
Emergency personnel wait at the port following a collision between a Greek coastguard vessel and a boat carrying migrants

Morning on Chios: A Quiet Sea, Then a Sudden Horror

It was the kind of morning the Aegean gives when it wants to remind you how small you are: pale light slipping across olive groves, a soft wind smelling faintly of resin and salt, fishing boats slowly trimming their nets near the island’s jagged shoreline. Then came the sirens.

Fishermen on the western coast of Chios say they heard a thunderous impact and saw spray bloom like a broken sheet of glass. Lifeboats pushed off. Men and women who have long known the sea’s moods raced toward a scene that would quickly become one of Greece’s deadliest maritime tragedies in months.

What Happened

Greek police say a port police patrol vessel and a high-speed migrant boat collided off the coast of Chios yesterday, with at least 14 people killed. The coastguard reported that two of its members were taken to hospital and that 24 migrants were pulled from the water in the immediate rescue effort. Greek media outlets added a heartbreaking detail: among the injured were seven children and a pregnant woman.

“We issued a warning signal,” a coastguard spokesperson told local broadcasters, echoing accounts carried by the national public broadcaster. “But the vessel attempted to flee and a collision occurred.” A Greek air force helicopter joined the search for survivors, scouring the glittering blue for signs of life.

Voices from the Shore

“You could see small shoes drifting in the wake,” said Giorgos Katsaros, a fisherman who helped recover survivors at the pier. “A woman kept repeating a name, over and over. It was chaos—then a silence where people were counting the living and the dead.”

An exhausted nurse at the small hospital in Chios town described scenes that the island’s medical facilities are ill prepared for. “We do our best,” she said, speaking under the weight of fatigue. “We don’t often see so many children in a single incident.”

The Geography That Makes Chios a Crossroads

Chios sits like an attentive sentinel close to the Turkish coastline, its nearest point only a few nautical miles from Asia Minor. For decades, that narrow channel has been a highway for desperate, illegal, and sometimes deadly crossings — crowded dinghies, rubber boats, or high-speed skiffs attempting to bridge the stretch to safety and asylum in the European Union.

The island itself is a mosaic of serenity and tension: medieval mastic villages with stone alleys where elders gossip over thick coffee; seaside tavernas that serve fresh octopus grilled over wood fires; a coastline where tourists swim in summer and the sea tests the resolve of migrants year-round. Local residents describe a rhythm in which tragedies punctuate normal life with terrible regularity.

Numbers That Tell a Larger Story

This accident is not an isolated tragedy. The United Nations refugee agency reported in November that more than 1,700 people either died or went missing on migration routes to Europe in 2025, a grim reminder of the relentless human cost of these crossings. And the International Organization for Migration estimates that roughly 33,000 migrants have died or gone missing in the Mediterranean since 2014.

Those figures, horrifying in themselves, also mask stories: the people who leave with newborns swaddled, or teenagers clutching backpacks; the smugglers who spin promises of safety into engines and rubber; the families left behind in cities and camps across the Middle East, Africa, and Asia.

Why Do People Risk It?

Ask any refugee or migrant why they boarded a small boat, and you’ll receive answers that cut across politics and geography: escape from war and persecution, hunger and drought, a daughter’s future, debts that suffocate a household, or the slow violence of corruption and collapsed economies. For many, that narrow sea is a gamble forced by circumstances, not a choice of desire.

“We left because there was no life left,” a man who identified himself as Amir, speaking softly in the hospital hallways, told a reporter. “Better to try and perhaps drown than to stay and watch my children fade.”

Search and Rescue — Limited by Capacity and Politics

Greece’s coastguard and military have often been the first and only responders to incidents like this. But the resources available on islands like Chios are limited. Smaller ports, limited ICU capacity, and the logistical challenge of coordination at sea mean that response times and outcomes can vary dramatically.

There’s also a political dimension that complicates rescue efforts: EU border policy, bilateral agreements with neighboring countries, and frequent tensions over accusations of pushbacks and interdiction strategies all shape the contours of what happens when a small boat is spotted.

  • Immediate needs after shipwrecks: rapid medical triage, shelter, psychological support, and forensic care for the dead.
  • Longer-term needs: safe reception centers, routes for legal migration, and stronger international cooperation on search and rescue.
  • Systemic solutions: addressing root causes in home countries and disrupting criminal smuggling networks.

Neighbors, Officials, and the Everyday Human Cost

Locals gathered by the harbor spoke in low voices, hands busy threading together an understanding: grief that arrives without invitation, gratitude for those who helped, and anger at a world that frames these crossings as statistics rather than lives. “We are tired of burying children,” said Eleni Papadopoulou, a teacher, as she lit a candle in the church that evening. “This island has warm hearts, but our hearts are not enough.”

European officials routinely promise tougher measures to stem irregular migration and to bolster maritime surveillance. Yet every policy discussion seems to collide with the same human facts: people on the move, smugglers adapting, and a sea that remains indifferent to fear and need.

What Should We Ask Ourselves?

How do we balance border security with basic humanity? Is there a way to keep people from risking their lives without shutting them out entirely? When a ferry of grief pulls into a tiny island port, who is responsible for the living and the dead?

These are not just policy puzzles; they are moral tests. The Mediterranean is a mirror of global inequality, conflict, and climate pressure. It asks of us not only better systems and better policies, but better empathy.

Where We Go From Here

For now, Chios will tend its wounded and bury its dead. The island’s usual rhythms—market days, church bells, the smell of frying fish—will return. But the questions raised by this collision will not dissolve so quickly.

We can remember the names and faces behind the statistics. We can press for transparent investigations into what happened at sea and for safer legal routes for those seeking refuge. We can insist that the bright-blue Aegean — so beloved by holidaymakers — be treated as more than a border: as a shared space holding lives that deserve dignity.

What will you do with this knowledge? Will it become a headline you scroll past, or the prompt for conversation, action, compassion? The sea keeps asking, and the answers may well define us.

Extraordinary rains force thousands to evacuate homes across Spain

Spain evacuates thousands as 'extraordinary' rain strikes
The Guadalete river overflows its banks as it passes through the area of Las Pachecas in Cadiz

When the sky opened: Storm Leonardo and the soaked heart of Andalusia

There are moments when weather ceases to be background and becomes a character with a temper. On a wind-slashed morning in southern Spain, that character arrived as Storm Leonardo — an unrelenting, gray-green wall of rain that turned the whitewashed villages of Andalusia into islands of tile and stone surrounded by streaming water.

People here are used to dramatic skies. They measure their lives by harvests, fiestas and the slow shift of light across olive groves. But this was different. “I have lived in Ronda for 62 years,” said Carmen Márquez, a retired teacher whose home overlooks the gorge. “I have never seen it rain like this. It sounded like the sea was falling from the sky.”

A red alert and a landscape already near breaking point

Spain’s meteorological agency, AEMET, issued its most serious warning — a red alert — over wide parts of Andalusia, citing torrents that forecasters called “extraordinary.” Emergency services warned of floods and landslides as swollen rivers and already-saturated soils could not absorb another downpour.

In places such as the Sierra de Grazalema, a landscape famed for its limestone crags and verdant valleys, scientists and forecasters warned that Leonardo might deposit a volume of water equivalent to an entire year’s precipitation in a matter of hours. The Environment Ministry reported that January rainfall across Spain hit 119.3 mm — 85% above the 1992–2020 average, making it the second-wettest January of the 21st century. The ground, hydrologists say, had no appetite for more rain.

“The soil is already holding water like a sponge that can’t take another drop,” AEMET spokesman Rubén del Campo told reporters. “Riverbeds are fuller than normal, and any concentrated downpour could send systems over the edge.”

Life under Leonardo: evacuations, soldiers and silent stations

The storm’s effects felt immediate and practical. Thousands were ordered from their homes as a precaution. Children missed school across Andalusia — every province closed classrooms except Almería — while nearly all suburban, regional and long-distance trains were cancelled. Renfe, the state rail operator, warned there would be no bus replacements because key roads were unsafe or impassable.

Rescue teams turned to manpower and the sky: hundreds of soldiers were mobilised to back up civil protection crews; two aircraft and two helicopters kept tight circles over flood-prone river valleys, relaying live conditions back to control centers. Mobile phone alerts buzzed across the region: messages asking residents to move to higher ground, to avoid travel, to heed the advice of emergency services.

“We had families waiting outside the municipal hall at dawn,” recalled Javier Ortega, a volunteer with a local rescue group in Campo de Gibraltar. “People arrive with a bag and the look of someone who suddenly realises what matters most. No one wanted to stay in a ground-floor apartment when the water climbs.”

Road closures and cancelled services left commuters stranded, shopkeepers locking shutters early and farmers watching their terraces and orchards worryingly: olive trees can survive heavy rain, but young fruit and soil erosion are another story. In small bars, where the community usually debates football and politics, talk shifted to river forecasts and whether the drainage culverts would hold.

Portugal braces, too — a reminder that weather ignores borders

Leonardo did not stop at the Iberian frontier. To the west, Portugal faced its own emergency: the country, still recovering from lethal floods last week that claimed five lives, placed swathes of its coast on orange alert and readied defenses along major rivers. Authorities deployed up to 3,000 troops and 42 inflatable boats with marine teams stationed near the rivers most likely to burst their banks.

“This is about response and also about prepositioning,” said Lieutenant Commander Ana Ferreira of the Portuguese armed forces. “We are not waiting for calls for help. We are where the water will be.”

In northern and central Portugal, forecasts also flagged heavy snowfall and strong winds. That unusual mix — blizzards in the interior, floods on the coast — underlined a fundamental truth of climate-driven weather systems: they can hit multiple sectors at once, complicating rescue and recovery.

Why the floods feel both local and global

Anyone who has watched the storms rolling in from the Atlantic over the past decade knows they are not just meteorological events — they are climate signals. Scientists say human-driven warming increases the atmosphere’s capacity to hold moisture (a relationship often summarised as roughly 7% more water vapor per degree Celsius of warming). That physics translates into heavier, sometimes more concentrated rainfall when conditions are right.

“We are not saying every storm is caused solely by climate change, but we are seeing a clear trend: extreme precipitation events are becoming more frequent and more intense,” explained Dr. Elena Ruiz, a climate scientist at the University of Seville. “When you combine saturated soils with a very moist air mass, you get precisely what we are witnessing: systems that have less place to put the water.”

Spain’s recent history has been sobering. In October 2024, the country endured some of its deadliest floods in decades, with more than 230 lives lost, mostly in the east. Those losses are not just statistics; they have reshaped communities, municipal budgets and the way planners think about river corridors, urban drainage and emergency shelters.

More than a storm: questions for a wetter future

As the rain eased and rescue teams tally damage, two questions hang in the Andalusian air: how to rebuild, and how to prepare. Will towns invest in floodplain restoration and upgraded drainage? Will transportation networks be reimagined so trains and buses are less vulnerable when the roads are underwater?

Local officials say there is a growing appetite for change. “We need to rethink infrastructure as something alive,” said María López, an official at the regional government, standing beneath a newspaper awning while rain slit the sky. “Concrete is not enough; we need wetlands, permeable pavements, smarter land use. It is expensive, yes, but the cost of doing nothing is higher.”

In the markets and plazas of Andalusia, recovery will be practical and intimate: drying out rooms, salvaging tiles, bringing in pumps, replanting terraces. But there is also a deeper cultural resilience — a willingness to gather, to talk over coffee and share resources. That communal muscle will be tested in the months ahead.

So what does a storm like Leonardo ask of us, beyond umbrellas and sandbags? It asks us to imagine a landscape designed for water, to invest in warning systems and to treat climate risk as part of everyday life. It asks, perhaps, whether our modern towns and transport networks can survive a pattern of weather that is becoming less predictable and more extreme.

As you read this, think of the plazas where children play, the orange trees by the roadside, the terraces cut into hillsides — and imagine how they fare when the sky decides to pour. What would you change in your town if the next downpour could be as fierce as Leonardo?

  • 119.3 mm — Spain’s January rainfall, 85% above the 1992–2020 average.
  • Over 230 — people killed in Spain’s October 2024 floods, according to official reports.
  • 3,000 troops and 42 inflatable boats — Portuguese emergency forces deployed ahead of worsening conditions.

Leonardo will pass. The rain will slow, the rivers will recede, and life will resume its orbit. But storms like this leave a memory and a ledger: a list of repairs, a count of losses, and a growing conviction that in a warmer world, weather is not simply something that happens to us — it is a force that demands our attention, our planning, and our care.

Norwegian Crown Princess’s Son Firmly Denies Rape Allegations

Son of Norway's crown princess denies rape charges
Marius Borg Hoiby is on trial in Oslo

A Winter Trial and a Kingdom Watching

On a brisk morning in Oslo, the city felt unusually small. Cameras lined the sidewalks like an uninvited parade; commuters glanced up from their phones; a hush—part curiosity, part unease—fell over the courthouse steps. Inside, Marius Borg Høiby, 29, sat for the first day of a trial that has sent ripples through Norway’s royal household and into living rooms across the country.

This is not a tale of crowns or coronations. It is a story of a son, a family, a legal system and a nation trying to reconcile privacy with public accountability. It is also, as historian Trond Noren Isaksen warned before the hearings, “the most serious crisis to hit the Norwegian royal family in peacetime.”

The Charges and the Pleas

The indictment is long: 38 counts in total. On opening day, Høiby pleaded not guilty to the most severe accusations—four counts of rape and one count of domestic violence. He conceded guilt, however, on a cluster of lesser charges: one count of offensive sexual behavior, driving too fast and driving without a valid license, among other infractions. Under Norwegian law, defendants can also plead partial guilt; in this case, Høiby admitted to being partially liable for aggravated assault and reckless behavior.

“He will not be handled tougher or milder because he is part of this family,” prosecutor Sturla Henriksbøe told the court, underscoring a principle Norway likes to believe in: the impartiality of its justice system.

Defense counsel Ellen Holager Andenaes pushed back with equal force, not over the merits of the evidence but over the climate surrounding the case. “The press coverage—which the defendant sees as 10,000 press articles written about him… He has experienced books being written about him, and more are coming,” she told the judges, suggesting that fair treatment had been compromised by relentless media glare.

The Possible Penalties

If convicted on the most serious counts, Høiby faces multiple years behind bars. Yet the courtroom is not just about potential sentencing; it is about how a state holds its citizens to account when those citizens happen to be linked to institutions that are symbolic as well as private.

Family Ties and Public Duty

Høiby’s mother, Crown Princess Mette-Marit, has been forced into an awkward public contrition of a different kind. Days before the trial, she apologised for maintaining contact with Jeffrey Epstein after his 2008 conviction—an admission that reopened old wounds and invited fresh scrutiny. The apology was terse but significant: a rare acknowledgment of poor judgement from a person who occupies a space between the private and the ceremonial.

Crown Prince Haakon, who will not attend the proceedings, issued a statement that mixed familial love with civic distance. “We love him. He is an important part of our family. He is a Norwegian citizen, so he has the same responsibilities as everyone else, as well as the same rights,” he said, also expressing sympathy for the alleged victims: “We think about them. We know many are going through a difficult time.”

Outside Voices: A Nation in Conversation

Oslo’s cafes have become informal salons for the issue. At one table near the courthouse a barista paused when asked about the mood. “People are torn,” she said. “There’s loyalty to the family, but there’s also a demand for fairness—especially from younger people.”

Opinion polls reflect that ambivalence in numbers. A poll for Verdens Gang reported support for keeping the monarchy down to 61% from 72% the previous year, while a Norstat survey for NRK put support at about 70% in January of the same cycle. Those figures may seem contradictory, but they reveal a public that is both steady in institutional affection and sensitive to scandals that call the institution’s moral standing into question.

Context: A Royal Family Under Strain

To understand why this trial resonates so strongly, it helps to look at the wider context. King Harald, Europe’s oldest reigning monarch at 88, scaled back public duties in 2024 after health complications that included treatment for an infection and the insertion of a pacemaker. Crown Princess Mette-Marit herself lives with pulmonary fibrosis and has been on a waiting list for a lung transplant. Princess Märtha Louise stepped back from official engagements in 2022 to pursue private ventures—choices that have sometimes unsettled traditionalists.

These personal trials, combined with headlines about relationships and controversial public projects, mean the royal family now navigates a more scrutinised, more skeptical public stage than in decades past.

What This Trial Asks Us

How do you balance compassion for a family member with a collective demand for justice? When a person connected to national symbolism stands accused, does the institution itself suffer—or does it in some ways make the state’s commitment to the rule of law more visible?

Local Color: Oslo in Winter

Outside the courtroom, Oslo displayed its ordinary textures: a tram jingling past, a grandmother walking a dachshund, a group of students huddled over textbooks. A market vendor selling brunost (brown cheese) offered a spare comment: “We want fairness. We also don’t want the monarchy to vanish because of one difficult case.” His voice held both affection for tradition and a pragmatic wish to see institutions tested, not toppled.

The Larger Picture

This trial is not simply a family drama on public display. It intersects with broader global conversations about power, privilege and the media’s appetite for scandal. In an era when social media accelerates reputational damage and courts wrestle with privacy protections, Høiby’s case becomes a lens through which we consider the architecture of justice.

Norway’s constitution is clear: the king is the ceremonial head of state while political authority rests with parliament and government. Yet symbolism matters. When a monarchy is under strain, popular support can shift quickly, as those polls hint. Will the institution weather this moment? Will the family and the nation emerge with greater trust in their systems or with deeper skepticism?

Closing Questions

As the trial unfolds, we might ask: What does accountability look like in a democracy that prizes equality? Can a society maintain affection for an institution while demanding that those connected to it be held to the same standards as any citizen?

These are not rhetorical questions for Norway alone. They are questions for any country where private lives and public symbolism collide—questions that will continue to reverberate long after the courthouse empties and the cameras move on.

Dr. Maryan Qaadim oo loo doortay gudoomiyaha guddiga madaxa-banaan ee xuquuqul insaanka

Feb 04(Jowhar)-Dr. Maryan Qaasim ayaa maanta loo doortay Guddoomiyaha Guddiga Madaxa-bannaan ee Xuquuqul Insaanka Qaranka Soomaaliya, kaddib doorasho ka dhacday caasimadda Muqdisho.

Trump Signs Funding Bill, Ending U.S. Government Shutdown

Trump signs spending bill ending US government shutdown
US President Donald Trump, center, joined by members of the House and Senate, during the bill signing

A Pause, Not a Solution: Inside the Short Shutdown That Revealed Deeper Fault Lines

On a brisk morning at the White House, a pen scratched across paper and a four-day federal hiccup quietly became yesterday’s news.

President Donald Trump signed a spending bill that reopened much of the government, putting an abrupt end to a partial shutdown that, though short, laid bare a tangle of political crossfire: immigration enforcement, use of federal agents in American cities, and a House majority that is no longer monolithic.

The House passed the measure by the narrow margin of 217 to 214. Twenty-one Democrats joined with Republicans to move the package forward while the same number of Republicans held out, unwilling to back the bill without broader reforms to the Department of Homeland Security. The scene in the chamber could have been plucked from a tense courtroom drama—alliances shifting, demands rising, the clock ticking.

Why the shutdown happened — and why it mattered

At the center of the standoff was a dispute over funding and oversight of the federal agency that carries out immigration enforcement. Democrats insisted on new guardrails after a wave of troubling incidents involving heavily armed, sometimes unidentifiable agents conducting operations in American cities. The flashpoint came after a pair of fatal encounters in Minneapolis that many say crystallized public unease.

“People are afraid to open their doors when they don’t know who’s knocking,” said Maria Hernandez, a Minneapolis resident who lives a few blocks from where protests have swelled. “We want to be safe. We want accountability. That’s not too much to ask.”

Congressional leaders in the Senate threaded together a compromise: five outstanding appropriations bills would be cleared through September to keep most agencies running, and a short, two-week continuing resolution would keep DHS funded while lawmakers hashed out a longer-term agreement. The stopgap buys time—but it is hardly a cure.

Body cameras, concessions, and continuing controversy

Under pressure from lawmakers and national outrage, Homeland Security officials announced an immediate policy change: federal agents involved in city operations would begin wearing body cameras, with plans to expand the requirement more broadly. For many activists and families of the victims, the pledge is only a first step.

“Cameras don’t fix everything,” said Jamal Carter, a community organizer in Minneapolis. “But they change the narrative. When you can’t name the person who detained your neighbor, you lose a basic sense of justice. These measures are overdue, but they’re also small. Real reform isn’t just about footage—it’s about rules, training, and consequences.”

The stakes feel high. Government shutdowns, even brief ones, cascade through communities: national parks close, small vendors lose weekend revenue, scientists pause critical work, and thousands of federal employees either get furloughed or must work without pay. In the 2018–2019 federal shutdown—the longest in modern history—about 380,000 federal workers were furloughed or worked without pay for 35 days, and the Congressional Budget Office later estimated the economy lost roughly $11 billion in output, with about $3 billion considered permanently lost.

Politics, policy, and the price of pause

President Trump framed the bill at his signing as a victory for fiscal restraint and public safety. “This package trims wasteful spending and backs programs that protect the American people,” he said in brief remarks before signing the legislation.

Democratic leaders, however, warned that the short-term funding merely postpones an inevitable clash. “We bought two weeks to continue a fight that must be resolved in a way that protects civil liberties and ensures federal agents are accountable,” said a senior House Democrat. “This should not be a reset button for business as usual.”

Conservative opponents who voted against the deal did so for a different reason: several argued the bill did not go far enough in rolling back federal overreach or in enacting the stronger border controls they favor. “We will not support a temporary bandage when long-term security is at stake,” said Representative Evan Cole, who opposed the measure.

Inside Washington, the calculus is grimly familiar. Short-term continuing resolutions allow the government to keep running, but they also prolong uncertainty for agencies that need reliable, year-long budgets to plan staffing, contracts, and community programs. For cities dealing with the fallout from high-profile enforcement actions, the uncertainty is immediate: will Congress mandate body cameras? Will it limit how and where federal agents operate? The clock now ticks down 14 days.

Voices from the street

At a corner cafe two blocks from the Minneapolis precinct where protests have been most visible, conversations mix grief with weary skepticism. “You see the cameras and the press, and then things settle back into normal,” said Elijah Boateng, a nurse who volunteers at a veterans’ clinic. “We keep asking: who is watching those who watch us?”

For immigrants and asylum seekers, the threats feel personal. “Every time there’s a raid, my heart stops,” said Rosa, who moved to the U.S. from Guatemala and asked that her last name be withheld. “I don’t know what the law says. I know I have a son. I know I wake up scared.”

What comes next — and what to watch for

Over the next fortnight, lawmakers must negotiate a full-year DHS funding bill. Key items to watch include:

  • Oversight measures: Will Congress require more detailed reporting of federal operations in cities and more transparent identifiers for agents?
  • Body-camera policy: Will the initial announcement be formalized into binding requirements, including data storage, access, and public transparency?
  • Funding priorities: How will money be allocated between border security, immigration processing, and community-based programs?

These debates are not merely procedural; they are about the character of state power in daily life. They ask whether the tools of enforcement can be wielded in ways that preserve public safety without eroding civil liberties—and whether bipartisan compromise is still possible in an era of deep polarization.

So what should you, the reader, watch for? Look beyond the headlines to the details: the language of any compromise, the oversight mechanisms included, and the voices left at the margins. Ask whether the temporary fix strengthens institutions or simply postpones the hard choices. And consider this: when a government pauses, communities keep moving. The question is whether lawmakers will use that pause to heal a fracture—or to paper over a crack until it widens again.

In the end, the pen that ended the shutdown did more than reopen offices and reopen parks. It reopened a negotiation about power, accountability, and what kind of country Americans want to be. For those directly affected—from workers who lost pay in the brief closure to families seeking answers after deadly encounters with federal agents—the next two weeks will matter in ways beyond spreadsheets and soundbites.

“We all want safety,” Maria Hernandez told me as she folded a protest sign into the back of her car. “But not at the cost of our dignity. That’s the line we have to defend.”

Wiil uu dhalay madaxweynihii Liibiya Qadaafi oo la dilay

Feb 04(Jowhar)-Wararka laga helayo dalka Liibiyw ayaa sheegaya in Sayf al Qaddaafi oo ah wiilka u dhalay Madaxweynihii hore Mucammar Qaddaafi lagu dilay iska-horimaadyo ka dhacay galbeedka Liibiya.

Netanyahu tells Witkoff Palestinian Authority will not govern the Gaza Strip

US envoy to meet Putin for talks on ending war in Ukraine
Steve Witkoff is due to meet the Russian president in

In Jerusalem’s corridors of power: a blunt message and the quiet arithmetic of rebuilding Gaza

The sun had scarcely climbed above Jerusalem’s limestone roofs when officials filed out of a closed-door meeting, carrying a message that cut through the diplomatic fog: the Palestinian Authority will not have a role in governing Gaza after the war — not “in any way,” according to a terse statement from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office.

It was not only what was said but how it landed. In a city where every word ricochets, the insistence felt like a line drawn in the sand: reconstruction, administration and the future of Gaza would follow terms set by Israel — and not by the Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority (PA).

What was decided — and what remains disputed

The office of the prime minister framed the meeting as decisive. “The Prime Minister clarified that the Palestinian Authority will not be involved in administering the Strip in any way,” the statement read. Netanyahu also reiterated demands that have become near-ritual: the disarmament of Hamas, demilitarization of the Gaza Strip, and the fulfilment of wartime objectives before any reconstruction can begin.

On the other side of the debate, the technocratic National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG) — a temporary body set up under a US-mediated ceasefire framework to handle day-to-day matters — insists it is focused squarely on humanitarian relief and restoring basic services.

“We are about water, electricity, health clinics, schools — not flags or politics,” the NCAG posted on its X account after Israel’s complaint that one of the committee’s draft logos contained a symbol associated with the PA. “That’s the conversation that matters.”

Why the logo mattered

It might sound trivial: a logo on a letterhead. But symbols matter profoundly in this region where emblems are shorthand for legitimacy and control. Israeli officials seized on the image as proof of an unspoken link between the NCAG and the PA — a link they say they will not accept.

“It’s not an academic debate,” said Miriam Kaplan, a Jerusalem-based analyst who has followed Palestinian governance issues for two decades. “Logos become narratives. A small stamp on a document can be read as a reassertion of authority. For Israel, that is a non-starter right now.”

At Rafah and beyond: humanitarian corridors and political frontiers

The visit by the US envoy, Steve Witkoff — the second meeting with Netanyahu in under a fortnight — came on the heels of the Rafah crossing with Egypt reopening, a critical relief valve for Gaza’s besieged population of around 2.3 million people.

International aid agencies had long lobbied for that opening. “Every day the crossing is closed, people in Gaza edge closer to catastrophe,” said Lina Haddad, a humanitarian coordinator who has worked along the Egyptian-Gaza border. “Medical supplies, fuel, food — these are not abstract issues. They determine who lives or dies.”

But humanitarian corridors and political control are not the same thing. Israel has made clear it will not allow Hamas to retain its weapons, nor will it accept an administratively independent PA stepping into Gaza without disarmament guarantees.

“There is immense pressure to move quickly on reconstruction,” said a senior diplomatic source, speaking on condition of anonymity. “But no reconstruction deal will survive if security questions aren’t answered to Israel’s satisfaction.”

Voices from the region: fear, skepticism and weary pragmatism

In Ramallah, where the PA government sits, reactions were almost uniformly cautious. “We are not trying to supplant anyone. Our interest is to see people living in dignity,” said a PA official who declined to be named. “But who speaks for Gaza’s people matters.”

In Gaza’s displaced-person camps and neighborhoods, where the war’s scars are still raw, the sentiment is less interested in high politics than in basics. “We want lights in the evenings. We want our children back in school. We want the ambulance to arrive when needed,” said Amal, a 34-year-old mother of three who has been sleeping in a UN-run shelter. “Symbols mean little when your house is rubble.”

A larger geopolitical choreography

Beyond the immediate arrangements in Gaza, there is movement on another front: the United States is expected to hold talks with Iran later in the week, with several Arab capitals — Ankara, Cairo, Muscat and Doha — nudging the process along. Reports suggest the meeting could take place in Turkey, part of a broader push to manage regional tensions that intersect with Gaza’s fate.

Diplomacy here is never linear. Local governance questions feed into regional negotiations and vice versa. Who administers Gaza after the war is as much about domestic politics as it is about the broader balance of influence between Tehran, Washington, Cairo and other regional players.

Law and order in Europe: the Denmark case

Meanwhile, a very different set of consequences played out in Copenhagen, where two young Swedish men were sentenced to lengthy prison terms for a grenade attack on Israel’s embassy neighborhood in October 2024. A court convicted one 18-year-old to 12 years and a 21-year-old to 14 years on charges that included terrorism and attempted murder; no one was physically injured in the attack, which damaged a terrace near the mission in the upscale Hellerup district.

“They threw the grenades with the intention of seriously frightening the Israeli and Danish populations — the attack therefore constitutes a terrorist act,” police said in a statement at the time of the trial. Prosecutors also linked the perpetrators to a criminal network in Sweden alleged to have been acting as an armed wing for a Middle Eastern militant group.

These cross-border ripples — recruitment, violence, and shadowy networks — underscore how the Middle East’s conflicts reverberate in unexpected places, pulling in youths, criminal gangs and diasporic communities far from Gaza’s narrow strip of land.

A new voice in Arabic — and what it signals

Back in Israel, another change is unfolding on the information front. The Israel Defense Forces has announced that Major Ella Waweya, a 36-year-old Muslim officer from Qalansawe, will replace Lieutenant Colonel Avichay Adraee as the army’s chief Arabic-language spokesman.

Adraee’s voice — sometimes sardonic, sometimes loaded with biblical or Quranic references — has been a hallmark of the conflict’s social-media ecosystem. His alerts and videos are followed closely by Arabic-speaking audiences who often see them as harbingers of military action.

Major Waweya’s appointment has a symbolic charge. “As a child, she watched Arab media and discovered the Israeli narrative,” an IDF source said. Her role signals a tactical shift: to reach Arab audiences with a different cadence, perhaps a different tone.

“Representation matters,” observed Professor Nader Saad, who studies media and conflict. “But so does credibility. She will need to build trust among audiences who may be skeptical of any military spokesman.”

What should readers take away?

These developments — a refusal to involve the PA in Gaza’s governance, the rise of a technocratic committee, regional diplomatic maneuvers, prosecutions in Europe and a change in military messaging — are threads of the same tapestry. They reveal a region trying to stitch together security, legitimacy and humanitarian need amid deep mistrust.

Ask yourself: when rebuilding a place that has seen so much destruction, who gets to decide what normal looks like? And how will the voices of ordinary people — the ones actually living amid the rubble — be heard in those decisions?

In the end, the true test will be whether policies produce functioning hospitals, steady power, schools that reopen and roads that connect people to jobs and goods. Symbols and diplomacy will do their part, but survival in Gaza will be measured in the small, mundane returns of daily life — and in whether those returns prove durable.

14 killed after Greek coastguard vessel collides with migrant boat

17 found dead in migrant vessel off Crete - coastguard
The Greek coastguard said two survivors are in a critical condition in hospital (stock image)

A Collision in the Aegean: Night, Sea and the Cost of a Desperate Crossing

Just before dawn, the silhouette of Chios rose from the blue-gray water like an island still half-dreaming. Fishing boats bobbed in the harbour, the smell of grilled octopus and strong coffee drifting from a taverna that had been open all night. By the time the first coastguard report flashed across the island, the sea had already taken another toll: 14 people dead, dozens more shaken and injured, and a small town once again confronting a tragedy that has become disturbingly familiar.

The collision, Greek authorities said, involved a port police patrol vessel and a high-speed small boat carrying migrants. It happened off Chios, a Greek island a stone’s throw from the Turkish coast — one of the narrowest and most dangerous seams in the migration map where people fleeing war, poverty or persecution try to reach Europe. According to the coastguard, 24 migrants were rescued, two coastguard members were hospitalized, and seven children and a pregnant woman were among the injured.

What Happened

Details remain patchy as the search continues, but the outlines are painfully clear. A coastguard patrol spotted a small, fast-moving boat in the early hours and issued a warning signal. Local media and officials said the vessel attempted to escape. The boats collided; chaos followed. A Greek air force helicopter was dispatched to search for survivors.

“We gave the warning,” a coastguard official told reporters, voice tight with the kind of exhaustion that follows rescue after rescue. “The small craft tried to evade us. Then the impact. We did everything we could to pull people from the water, but the sea gives and it takes.”

On the Shore: Voices and Small Scenes

On the waterfront, shopkeepers and fishermen gathered, trading nervous glances more than facts. “I heard the noise of engines, then the horns,” said Giorgos, a fisherman who has pulled refugees from the water before. “You can’t imagine how quiet it is when someone sinks. It’s like the sea is swallowing the voices.” He paused, then added, “I have grandchildren. I think of them. These are children too.”

A nurse at the Chios hospital, who asked that her name not be used, described the wounded arriving in a blur — one mother clutching a child, a woman with a swollen belly, a man shivering and unable to speak. “We are used to seeing trauma,” she said, but the weariness in her voice betrayed something deeper. “Used to it isn’t the same as okay.”

The Human Toll: Numbers That Don’t Capture Faces

Numbers help orient us, but they cannot carry the weight of names, birthdays or the lullaby a mother hummed as waves closed over a boat. Still, facts are necessary. Authorities confirmed 14 dead and 24 rescued in this single incident. The UN refugee agency reported in November that more than 1,700 people died or are missing in 2025 on migration routes to Europe in the Mediterranean and in the Atlantic off the coast of West Africa. The International Organization for Migration (IOM) notes that roughly 33,000 migrants have died or gone missing in the Mediterranean since 2014.

  • 14 people killed in the Chios collision
  • 24 migrants rescued
  • 2 coastguard members hospitalized
  • 7 children and 1 pregnant woman reported among the injured
  • UN: 1,700+ dead or missing on routes to Europe in 2025 (reported)
  • IOM: ~33,000 deaths/missing in Mediterranean since 2014

Why So Many Risks?

The short answer is complex. Smugglers use speedboats and overcrowded inflatables to move people across short but perilous distances. Weather can turn fatally fast. Enforcement pushes routes to more dangerous paths. Political decisions — at national and regional levels — squeeze legal avenues for asylum so tightly that desperation becomes the only option for many.

“When safe pathways close, people take dangerous ones,” said Dr. Maria Kotsari, a migration researcher who has worked with NGOs in the Aegean. “We see a pattern: tighter borders, more clandestine crossings, higher profits for smugglers, and the same tragic outcomes. It’s a policy paradox with human beings trapped in the middle.”

Local Colour and Daily Life on Chios

Chios is not only a waypoint on migration routes. It’s a place of mastic trees and medieval villages, of fishermen mending nets in the late afternoon sun, of elders playing backgammon in the shade of plane trees. The island’s economy blends tourism with traditional trades. Yet, in recent years, its quiet coves have also served as reluctant theatre for Europe’s migration drama.

“We wake up to sea, and the sea brings stories,” said Eleni, owner of a seaside kafeneio. “Sometimes they’re stories of survival, sometimes of sorrow. We pour coffee and listen. We do what we can. But people think islands are far away from the problems. They are not.”

Wider Implications: Europe and the World

This collision is not just another bulletin; it is a refracted part of a larger light — the ongoing struggle over migration policy, humanitarian responsibility, and how nations choose to balance security with compassion. Across Europe, debates rage about deterrence measures, the role of rescue at sea, and who bears responsibility for processing and protecting those who arrive.

“Rescue at sea is not optional,” argued an international maritime law expert who asked not to be named. “Search and rescue is a legal obligation under maritime law, but beyond that lie political choices: will Europe invest in legal pathways, in better search-and-rescue coordination, in addressing root causes? Or will it rely on enforcement that pushes people into riskier hands?”

Questions to Hold

What kind of world do we want to live in — one where borders are walls, or one where borders also have lifelines? How do we balance legitimate concerns about irregular migration with the moral and legal duty to save lives at sea? And what does it say about our collective imagination that people still risk everything for the hope of safety?

Aftermath and the Work Ahead

On the quay, volunteers and police continued sorting belongings, documenting names, and comforting survivors. Local charities prepared blankets and tea; a priest walked the pier, offering words to those who would listen. The search for missing people went on, and grief had already begun to ripple through families on both sides of the water.

“We must not let numbers numb us,” said a UN representative by phone. “Each statistic is a person. Each death calls for both mourning and action. We must improve rescue coordination, open safe routes, and invest in conflict prevention. Otherwise, the sea will keep giving up the same stories.”

For readers far from the Aegean: imagine the sound of waves, the ache of waiting, the fragile hope that pushes people into tiny boats. Ask yourself what responsibility lies not only with governments, but with all of us — as voters, neighbors, human beings. How will you respond when the next headline arrives?

The sea around Chios will remain beautiful, indifferent and, occasionally, brutal. For now, the island holds another memorial: names pinned to a board outside the harbour office, candles on a low wall, and the quiet work of people trying to turn sorrow into a reason to change course. What would it take, you wonder, to make that change real?

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