Feb 09(Jowhar)-Magaalada Riyaad, waxaa si rasmi ah loogu kala saxiixday Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) ama is-afgarad ku saabsan iskaashiga dhinaca gaashaandhiga oo ay yeeshaan Wasaaradaha Gaashaandhiga ee Boqortooyada Sucuudi Carabiya iyo Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya. Heshiiskan ayaa ujeedadiisu tahay in kor loo qaado iskaashiga dhinaca milatariga, amniga, iyo tababarada si loo xoojiyo xasilloonida gobolka.
Muhiimadda Heshiiska
Heshiiskan ayaa yimid kaddib wadahadallo dhawr ah oo ay yeesheen madaxda amniga iyo difaacalabada dal, wuxuuna qayb ka yahay qorshaha ay Soomaaliya ku doonayso inay ku dhisato ciidamo xooggan, halka Sucuudiguna uu rabo inuu door firfircoon ka qaato amniga Badda Cas iyo Geeska Afrika. Iskaashigan ayaa la filayaa inuu albaabada u furo taageero farsamo iyo mid ciidan oo Sucuudigu siiyo qalabka difaaca ee Soomaaliya.
Inkasta oo aan labada dal faahfaahin rasmi ah ka bixin heshiiska oo lakala saxiixay inta ay socotay munaasabadda dabaal-dega iyo bandhiga ciidanka dalka Boqortooyada, hadana waxaa la filayaa in is-afgaradkani hordhac u yahay heshiisya dhawr ah oo dhawaan qallinka lagu duugi doono.
Soomaaliya ayaa jawaab ka sugaysa codsi rasmi ah oo ku saabsan taakulo ciidan iyo agab oo ay ka codsatay Boqortooyada oo ay ku jiraan diyaarado dagaal, kuwaas oo jawaabtooda la sugayo marka Madaxweynaha Soomaaliya uu la kulmo madaxda Boqortooyada Sucuudiga.
Sucuudiga ayaa diyaar u ah inuu Soomaaliya ka taageero agabka iyo tababarka ciidanka, waxaana dalkaas ku sugan wafdiyo ay kala hoggaaminayaan Wasiirada Gaashandhiga Axmed Fiqi iyo Amniga Cabdilaahi Fartaag.
Waxyaalaha ay Soomaaliya ka filayso Sucuudiga waxaa safka hore kaga jira ku qalabaynta ciidanka cirka Soomaaliya diyaarado dagaal.
The incidents happened on what was the first full day of competition
The Morning After: Milan’s Glitter, Its Frayed Edges
Milan woke to a strange kind of hush — the kind that arrives after bright fireworks and darker disruptions. On the city’s gleaming boulevards and in the narrow lanes near the Duomo, volunteers in neon vests swept confetti and handed out hot espresso to early-arriving fans. Down in Cortina’s snow-sprinkled chalets, gondolas and chairlifts hummed with athletes and coaches preparing for the day’s events.
But along the margins of that celebratory bustle were scenes that felt ripped from a different script: smashed glass, the smell of smoke lingering in alleys, and a stretch of the national rail system mysteriously crippled, stranding commuters and attendees alike. The first full day of competition at Italy’s Winter Games — a moment meant to showcase the country’s cultural pride and organizational skill — was instead split between jubilation and a bristling political moment.
When Protest and Pageantry Collide
Some 10,000 people took the streets of Milan to protest — a crowd mobilized around housing affordability, environmental concerns connected to the Games, and wider grievances about the way cities change under the weight of mega-events. For many the march was peaceful, a noisy but orderly expression of dissent. For others, it ruptured into chaos.
“We came here because rents are eating us alive,” said Lucia, a 32-year-old barista who joined the demonstration with a cardboard sign. “I love sport, I love my city, but I don’t love seeing neighborhoods turned into short‑term rentals and luxury boxes overnight.”
Police say a fringe group of roughly 100 people broke off from the main march and hurled firecrackers, smoke bombs and bottles at officers. Water cannon were deployed. Six people were detained. City authorities described the troublemakers as a tiny minority whose actions jeopardized months of preparation, while protesters countered that heavy-handed policing can inflame tensions.
“We weren’t expecting to be treated like criminals,” said Matteo, who works in a nearby furniture shop and has lived in Milan his whole life. “But I also don’t agree with throwing things at police. That’s not how you build support.”
Sabotage on the Rails
As if to amplify the drama, engineers and commuters in northern Italy were jolted by deliberate damage to the rail network near Bologna. Railway operators reported three separate incidents at different locations that caused delays of more than two hours on high-speed, Intercity and regional services. No group immediately claimed responsibility for the sabotage.
“A cable cut like that is dangerous — it’s a risk to life and a blow to logistics at a time when precision matters,” said a Trenitalia worker who asked not to be named. He described technicians racing into the night to repair signaling and power systems so athletes, staff and spectators could move between Milan and the mountain venues.
Italy’s high-speed rail network — served by operators like Trenitalia’s Frecciarossa and private company Italo — forms the backbone of intercity travel. Delays ripple quickly, turning a planned two-hour journey into an uncertain odyssey. For the Games, which depend on finely timed transfers and shuttle services, any disruption threatens schedules, hospitality plans and international optics.
Politics, Performance and the Price of Image
From the marble steps of Palazzo Chigi to small cafes in the Brera district, reactions were swift and polarized. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni publicly condemned the violence and the rail sabotage, framing the unrest as an affront to the host nation’s dignity. “There are those who want to mar Italy’s image,” a senior government source told reporters, echoing the prime minister’s rhetoric that media footage of clashes would overshadow the country’s efforts.
Opposition figures and civil liberties advocates warned against using the incidents to justify sweeping police powers. Italian law enforcement had recently received expanded authorities after violent confrontations at a hard-left protest in Turin left more than 100 officers injured. That event, and the new powers that followed it, still resonate in public debate.
“We must balance security with democratic rights,” said Dr. Elena Ferri, a political sociologist in Milan. “Mega-events always create friction: they accelerate urban change, concentrate resources, and expose social fissures. How a state responds — whether with dialogue or more repression — will be instructive for democracies worldwide.”
Voices from the Ground
Not everyone in the city shared the same view. At a small bakery by the Navigli, owner Paolo shrugged and stirred milk for cappuccinos. “I’m proud we’re hosting,” he said. “The volunteers, the athletes — it brings life back to our streets in winter. But people are exhausted. They see cranes outside the windows and ask where they fit into this new Milan.”
An activist with an environmental collective who gave her name as Sofia described why the protest drew such a diverse crowd. “We’re not protesting athletes or sport,” she insisted. “We’re protesting the model: how public money is funneled, how protected areas get compromised for temporary venues, how residents are priced out.”
What’s at Stake Beyond the Headlines
These clashes are more than a local skirmish. They are a concentrated example of global tensions playing out as cities vie to host international spectacles. From Tokyo to Rio, host cities have grappled with displaced communities, spiraling costs, and environmental trade-offs. The Winter Games in Milan-Cortina were sold as a chance to highlight sustainable alpine tourism and urban hospitality. The protests force a question: can megasporting events be retooled to empower local communities rather than marginalize them?
Consider these realities facing organizers and residents:
Logistics: The success of the Games hinges on transportation networks that already carry millions of passengers annually. Interruptions can have outsized effects on schedules and safety.
Housing: Short-term rental markets surge during events, often putting upward pressure on prices in already-tight cities.
Environment: Alpine terrains are sensitive; temporary infrastructure and increased tourism have long-term footprints.
Questions for the Reader
Is there a way to host global spectacles without sidelining everyday citizens? Can authorities protect both public safety and the right to protest? As you watch highlights of the races and ceremonies, whose stories are you seeing — and whose are missing?
These are not abstract questions. They reverberate in neighborhoods where families make hard choices about rent, in villages up the mountain where businesses hope for seasonal revenue, and in trains rolling slowly back to Bologna after a delay-filled night.
After the Smoke Clears
For now, the Games continue. Volunteers are still smiling at security checkpoints; athletes still focus on times and techniques; broadcasters still frame Italy as backdrop to athletic drama. But the echoes of last night will linger: a reminder that public celebrations can coexist uneasily with public discontent.
In the end, Milan’s story this week is a story about contradiction — about a city that can dazzle the world with fashion and hospitality, and yet still wrestle with the everyday pressures of housing, transit, and civic voice. How we reconcile those forces — with empathy, accountability, and honest public conversation — may be the true legacy of these Games.
Lieutenant General Vladimir Alexeyev was shot several times in an apartment block in Moscow on Friday
The Night a Shadow Crossed Moscow
It was a cold, ordinary night on the Volokolamsk highway — the kind of stretch where headlights blur into a long, indifferent ribbon and apartment blocks stand like watchful sentinels. At about 12 kilometers from the Kremlin, in a tidy building used to the low hum of city life, a senior figure in Russia’s military intelligence was hit three times with a silenced Makarov. The sound, one neighbour later recalled, was not much louder than a dropped tray — and yet it changed everything.
Lieutenant General Vladimir Alexeyev, 64, deputy head of the GRU, was rushed to hospital. Surgeons operated through the night. His wife, speaking into the narrow world of Russian war bloggers, said he had regained consciousness and could speak — a fragile, human detail in a story otherwise filled with badges, black vans and terse statements.
From Dubai to a Blindfold on a Tarmac
The case took an international turn as Russia announced that a man had been detained in Dubai and flown back to Moscow. The Federal Security Service (FSB) identified him as Lyubomir Korba, a man born in the Ternopil region of Soviet Ukraine in 1960 who now held Russian citizenship. Russian state media showed the familiar scene: masked officers leading a blindfolded figure off a small jet in the dark.
President Vladimir Putin publicly thanked Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan of the United Arab Emirates, a rare diplomatic olive branch in a tense year. The UAE, for its part, offered no public detail on how Korba was captured or handed over, leaving the mechanics of his arrest shrouded in official silence.
Who Does Russia Say Was Involved?
Russian investigators quickly painted a picture of a plot with multiple players. They named two alleged accomplices: Viktor Vasin, detained in Moscow, and Zinaida Serebritskaya, who they say escaped to Ukraine. Moscow accused Kyiv of ordering the attack through its intelligence services; Kyiv, through its foreign minister, Andrii Sybiha, flatly denied involvement.
Suspect extradited from Dubai: Lyubomir Korba (b. 1960, Ternopil)
Alleged accomplice detained in Moscow: Viktor Vasin
Alleged accomplice reported to have fled to Ukraine: Zinaida Serebritskaya
Independent verification of details remains difficult. International outlets mirrored the official footage and statements, but journalists on the ground and foreign diplomats emphasized the fog that still hangs over intelligence operations and their narratives.
A Man in the Machine
Alexeyev is not a minor figure. As deputy head of the GRU — Russia’s military intelligence apparatus that runs agents, special forces and clandestine cyber operations — he operated near the nerve centre of a service that has been central to Moscow’s strategy in the Ukraine war. He first entered public view in 2023, shown attempting to calm Yevgeny Prigozhin during the brief Wagner mutiny — a filmed, awkward act of damage control remembered now as a prelude to the mercenary chief’s death in a plane crash later that year.
“He understood how the gears worked,” said a former colleague who asked not to be named. “When people speak of generals, they imagine grand strategy. He was about the far messier, everyday craft of intelligence.” His wounding has been described by some Kremlin critics as a sharp, personal blow to the services that have helped run the war effort.
Shadow Battles: The Campaign Beyond the Front Line
This attack is best understood as a single flashpoint in a wider, shadowy campaign. Since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, a dense web of sabotage, cyberattacks, disinformation and targeted killings has grown between the two states — a modern hybrid war in which civilian neighbourhoods and diplomatic backchannels have become battlefields.
Russian officials say that since December 2024, three other officials of similar rank to Alexeyev have been killed in or near Moscow. Kyiv has at times claimed responsibility for strikes on Russian military leadership; at other moments it has remained publicly silent. The pattern has unnerved both Moscow’s security elite and ordinary residents who now scan their stairwells with a new vigilance.
“It’s like living next to a fault line,” said Olga, a pensioner who was watching television in an apartment several blocks from the scene. “You hope nothing happens and yet you cannot pretend the earth isn’t moving.”
Questions, Theories, and a Thinning Veil of Certainty
Who carried out this attack, and why, is the question that now hums in Moscow’s corridors. Russian authorities say the suspect acted on orders from Ukrainian intelligence. Ukrainian officials reject that claim, with Foreign Minister Sybiha suggesting the possibility of internal Russian infighting. “We don’t know what happened with that particular general — maybe it was their own internal issues,” he said.
To independent analysts, the answer is rarely singular. “These operations serve many purposes,” said Elena Markova, an independent security analyst in London. “They can be tactical — the removal of a particular operative — but they are also psychological operations meant to sow fear, undermine trust and signal capability. The fact that such an attack could occur so close to the Kremlin speaks to gaps in security and to the sophistication of whoever planned it.”
The Bigger Picture
On a global scale, this incident is a reminder that modern conflicts are no longer confined to trenches and tanks. Intelligence services operate transnationally, leveraging safe havens, commercial flights and legal grey zones. The alleged arrest in Dubai and the subsequent diplomatic thank-you between Moscow and Abu Dhabi illustrate how states are entwined in a complex web of cooperation and competition.
Meanwhile, the human toll of the conflict in Ukraine cannot be forgotten: since February 24, 2022, millions have been displaced and estimates — produced by a range of governments and NGOs — point to tens of thousands of casualties on both sides, with infrastructure and communities suffering deep, long-term damage.
What Now?
For Moscow, the immediate priorities are clear: stabilize, investigate and control the narrative. For the family of the wounded general, it is to hope for recovery in a world where the front line can appear in a stairwell. For citizens living in the shadow of those fronts, the attack raises a quieter, more unsettling question: how safe is any life, even so close to the seat of power?
“We are living in a different kind of war,” an anonymous security official told me. “Not just artillery and tanks — but infiltration, misdirection, and personal vulnerability. That’s what makes this so discomfiting.”
As you read this, consider the scale of the new battlefield: it stretches from the cyber-servers of Tallinn to the embassies of the Gulf, from the quiet corridors of apartment complexes to the corridors of power. What does it mean for governance, for diplomacy, for ordinary peoples’ sense of safety when the war can touch a living room, a hospital bed, or a quiet night on a highway?
We will watch, as journalists do, for verified facts — names confirmed, motives tested, evidence produced. For now, the image that lingers is of a blindfolded man on a tarmac, a wounded general in a hospital bed, and a city that thought itself insulated from the sharper edges of this conflict. The question is whether that illusion will last another night.
Morgan McSweeney has come under pressure from Labour MPs for his role in appointing Peter Mandelson as UK Ambassador to the US
A Resignation That Feels Like an Earthquake
On a raw February morning the corridors of power seemed thinner, the atmosphere more brittle. Morgan McSweeney, the Cork-born strategist who helped shepherd Keir Starmer and Labour back into Downing Street, handed in his resignation as chief of staff — and with it, a chapter of political calm burst wide open.
This was not a neat, managerial departure. It arrived amid leaked files, a police inquiry and a swarm of questions about judgment, vetting and accountability. At the heart of the storm: the decision to nominate Peter Mandelson as Britain’s ambassador to Washington, despite newly published material that highlighted troubling links between Mandelson and the late Jeffrey Epstein.
From County Cork to No.10 — A Story of Ambition and Loyalty
Morgan McSweeney’s rise would read like a political biography: born in Macroom, Co. Cork in 1977, he left for London at 17, cut his teeth in Labour ranks after being inspired by the Good Friday Agreement and slowly became indispensable. Internships at Labour HQ, a stint running the Labour Together think tank to push the party away from the hard-left, and a central role in the election campaign that delivered one of the largest parliamentary majorities in modern British history — these are the landmarks of a career built on restless energy and strategic nous.
“Morgan was the engine,” a long-time Labour organiser who worked alongside him told me. “He was the one who made the campaign feel inevitable. He thinks like a campaigner: tidy, focused, outcome-first. That’s why this hurts.”
The Appointment That Unraveled
The US files revealed on 30 January offered a new seam of trouble. According to material now public, there were exchanges suggesting that Mandelson — a Labour veteran and minister during the financial crisis — had a pattern of communications with Epstein that raised alarms about judgment and influence. Those revelations rekindled memories of a scandal that has never quite left the public imagination.
Police have opened an investigation into potential misconduct in public office, focused on whether sensitive market information was improperly shared during turbulent financial years. For a government that has spent the past 18 months trying to repair its image and claim higher ethical standards, the headlines could not have come at a worse time.
The Parting Statement — Ownership, Remorse, and a Call for Reform
McSweeney did not duck responsibility. In a statement released alongside his resignation, he acknowledged advising the Prime Minister to nominate Mandelson. He said that was the wrong decision and that the appointment had damaged both the party’s standing and public trust in politics. He also urged a fundamental overhaul of vetting procedures.
“I advised the appointment — and I take responsibility for that advice,” he is reported to have said. “We owe it to the people harmed by Epstein’s crimes to listen, and we owe it to the public to make sure this never happens again.” Whether readers take that as sincere contrition or a well-timed escape valve depends on whom you ask.
“It’s partly courage, partly damage control,” said a senior civil servant within Whitehall. “When you’re that close to the centre and the story blows up, people fall on swords. That’s how the machine is designed. But the real question is what changes are coming to make the machine safer and more trustworthy.”
Reactions, Reprisals and the Politics of Blame
Across party lines, the fallout has been immediate. Opposition voices cheered the departure as vindication of their criticism; some on the left and in Labour’s own ranks said McSweeney’s resignation was overdue. Others suggested it was designed to draw a line under the episode and buy the Prime Minister breathing space.
“This is a reminder of how fragile public trust is,” said a former ethics adviser at a Westminster watchdog, speaking on condition of anonymity. “Resignations alone don’t rebuild faith. You need transparent processes, independent oversight and swift, visible reform.”
Immediate political consequences: McSweeney’s exit leaves a vacuum at the heart of No.10’s political operation and forces a personnel shuffle.
Institutional consequences: calls for vetting and due diligence reform are growing louder.
Diplomatic consequences: the possibility of revealing private messages about UK strategy toward the US President threatens international relations.
On the Ground: Voices from Cork to the Commons
In Macroom, a town that has watched its native son climb the greasy pole of London politics, the reaction was mixed. “We’re proud of him for getting there,” said a coffee shop owner who remembers McSweeney as a teenager with a scholarship and a glint in his eye. “But nobody is untouchable. If you get something wrong, you own it.”
At Westminster, colleagues spoke of loyalty. “He has been by Keir’s side through thick and thin,” said a former aide. “There is respect for what he did during the campaign and in opposition. But respect can coexist with disappointment. The optics were dreadful.”
What Comes Next — Personnel, Process and the Bigger Questions
The immediate practical question is who steps into the chief of staff role. Vidhya Alakeson, deputy chief of staff, was mentioned in discussions; others will be quietly interviewed behind closed doors. But the larger question is whether this will force systemic change.
Vetting, once a back-office technicality, has been propelled into the political spotlight. The scandal underscores how appointees’ private connections and past associations can become national crises when not properly assessed. It’s a problem not limited to the UK — nations around the world have wrestled with the balance between political judgment and bureaucratic safeguards.
Are governments now functionally required to publish more of their internal deliberations to rebuild trust? Should there be an independent pre-appointment scrutiny body for senior diplomatic roles? These are not academic questions. They are operational decisions that will shape the public’s confidence in institutions.
Final Notes — Trust, Memory and Political Survival
Politics is a brutal test of endurance. Morgan McSweeney’s departure is both a personal fall and a symptom of a broader crisis: a party that won decisively less than two years ago now grappling with self-inflicted wounds, a veteran figure exposed to a scandal tied to one of the darkest figures of recent history, and a public that watches, increasingly sceptical.
So what should we ask ourselves? Do we demand immediate structural reform, or do we temper our appetite for upheaval with a realistic appraisal of how quickly institutions can change? How much should a leader be judged for the recommendations of trusted lieutenants?
For now, the story is unwinding. But it’s not just about one man’s fall from favour; it’s about how democracies manage messy human ties, how they protect the vulnerable whose voices were long ignored, and how they rebuild the brittle bridge between citizens and those who govern them. That, perhaps, is the true test of leadership.
A draft 28-point plan backed by US President Donald Trump would require Ukraine to offer territorial and security concessions to Russia
At the Edge of Winter and War: Kyiv’s Push for a Leader-Level Breakthrough
On a gray morning beside the Dnipro, where the river moves like a patient promise through Kyiv, urgency is a kind of weather. Inside a modest office that looks out over the water, Ukraine’s diplomatic team is quietly insisting that the next acts in this four-year tragedy must be written at the highest level: face-to-face, leader to leader.
“The hard stuff can only be sorted where leaders can look one another in the eye,” a senior Ukrainian diplomat told me, tapping a desk map as if the lines might change under his fingertips. “We have a list, and most of it is technical. But the remaining points? They’re political, raw and symbolic.”
That rawness explains the bluntness of the claim that has echoed from Kyiv’s corridors: only one person on the world stage, according to some Ukrainian officials, has the leverage to pull Moscow and Kyiv across the table and across the final hurdles—former US President Donald Trump.
Momentum, Midterms and the Tight Calendar
Momentum is a fickle thing. It arrived in Abu Dhabi this week in the form of another round of trilateral talks between the US, Ukraine and Russia, and in a prisoner exchange that saw 314 soldiers walk free—the first such swap since October. Yet when negotiators left the table, there was no declaration of a deal or a final text.
“We don’t have an impasse so much as a narrow, difficult pass,” said a Western negotiator who asked not to be named. “Most items on the 20-point framework are agreed or close. The rest are what historians will call the ‘hard symbolism’—land, sovereignty, and how to guarantee peace.”
Part of the race against time is domestic political: the US congressional mid-terms loom in November, and with them the specter of shifting priorities in Washington. Kyiv wants to convert conversations into binding commitments before electoral currents further complicate an already fragile window.
What’s Left on the Table
The sticking points are as visceral as they are legal. Moscow still demands control—formal or de facto—over territories it has fought to hold, including large swaths of Donetsk. Kyiv refuses to give up what many Ukrainians call the non-negotiable: the territorial integrity of their country and the return of the Crimean Peninsula.
Then there is Zaporizhzhia, Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, sitting in occupied territory and serving as a chilling bargaining chip. “We will not trade our safety for a headline,” said a senior Ukrainian energy official. “Control over Zaporizhzhia cannot be part of a deal that endangers millions.”
For Kyiv, any arrangement must include robust security guarantees after a ceasefire. That is where the Americans—and the shape of American politics—become central. Washington, officials say, is ready to anchor a security “backstop” and even ratify guarantees in Congress, but it is not offering boots on the ground. Instead, the proposed verification architecture would rely on drones, sensors and satellites operated by a coalition of willing states.
What Ukraine wants
Full withdrawal of Russian forces from occupied Ukrainian territories
Return of Crimea and non-recognition of Russian sovereignty over the peninsula
Control and safety guarantees for critical infrastructure, notably Zaporizhzhia
Western security guarantees and a verification mechanism without foreign occupation
On the Streets: The Human Ledger of War
In Kramatorsk, a shopkeeper named Oksana stood outside her shuttered storefront and pointed to a line of scarred buses along the avenue. The scars were not metaphoric; they were scorch marks and twisted steel from the KAB bombs that reduced whole blocks to black skeletons.
“We want peace,” she said, fingers hooked around a thermos, breath clouding in the cold. “But not at the price of telling our children their home was sold.”
Across Kyiv, where blackout curtains are as common as winter coats, households have learned a new rhythm—charge devices during the day, light candles early, and measure warmth like a precious commodity. Officials say some regions have endured blackouts lasting up to 20 hours as energy and logistics nodes come under repeated attack.
Ukrainian leaders have catalogued the onslaught: in recent weeks Kyiv’s security services reported more than 2,000 attack drones, some 1,200 guided aerial bombs and over a hundred missiles launched into Ukrainian cities and towns. Whether every figure can be independently verified, the scale—combined with targeted hits on power stations—paints a grim portrait.
Sanctions, Sovereignty, and the Risk of Deals Without Kyiv
There are also quiet fears that major deals could be cut without Ukrainian consent. Talk in diplomatic circles of investment packages and ambitious post-war reconstruction sums—figures that some claim have reached into the trillions—has raised the hackles of Kyiv officials.
“Any negotiation about our land, our borders, or our sovereignty without us is not just bad diplomacy; it’s illegal,” said a foreign ministry adviser. “Recognition of the occupation would be legally void and morally unacceptable.”
Ukraine has itself moved to tighten the screws on companies that supply components used in Russian drone and missile production, adding to accumulating sanctions that target foreign intermediaries from the Gulf to East Asia.
Can Global Architecture Hold a Fragile Peace?
When people speak of security guarantees, they mean more than words. They envision something that feels enforceable—an Article Five-like assurance that an attack on Ukraine would trigger a collective response. Western leaders have shied away from exactly such language, preferring instead layered mechanisms: rapid-response logistics, pre-positioned supplies, and legal treaties that could deter aggression without putting foreign troops in harm’s way.
“The world has learned that deterrence does not only come from tanks,” said Dr. Lina Hartmann, a security analyst in Berlin. “It comes from integrated monitoring, from diplomatic credibility, and from the economic costs that will follow any breach.”
Toward a Vote, Toward a Future
Behind closed doors, officials have sketched tentative calendars: a draft deal by March, a referendum in Ukraine perhaps aligned with elections in May. Such a timetable is fraught with risk—both practical and political—but it underscores the desire to pin down a future before the international winds shift.
“We are trying to run a marathon while building the road under our feet,” one Kyiv diplomat said. “It is messy, it is dangerous, and yet it is necessary.”
So where does that leave the ordinary citizen? For many, the calculus is immediate: heat, light, safety for children. For others, there is a deeper question—can a nation rebuild trust after land has been lost and neighbors displaced? How do you forge security guarantees that feel real to someone who remembers shelling at dawn?
These are not merely bargaining chips on a table. They are the contours of people’s lives, the outlines of towns, the memory of loved ones lost and of homes that may or may not be returned. As delegates polish papers and leaders weigh photographs of maps, the people of Ukraine are living the consequences.
And that is why many here press the point that a final settlement must be made where heads of state can commit with their names on the line. Who will be present at that table? Which nations will lend their instruments—legal, technical, and moral—to keep a fragile peace? Those answers will tell us whether this season of negotiation is a true turning point or merely a pause between storms.
Will international architecture—and American political will—be enough to hold the lines drawn? Only time, and perhaps a few courageous conversations in Miami, Abu Dhabi, or Kyiv, will tell.
Feb 08 (Jowhar)-Kusimaha Guddoomiyaha Ahna Guddoomiye kuxigeenka labaad ee Golaha Shacabka Baarlamaanka BJFS Mudane Cabdullaahi Cumar Abshirow ayaa soo saaray go’aan rasmi ah oo la xiriira ka joojinta fadhiyada guud ee wadajirka ah ee labada Aqal ee Baarlamaanka Dalka iyo sidoo kale fadhiyada Golaha Shacabka.
People voting in the second round of the election at the Portuguese embassy in Prague, Czech Republic, yesterday
Stormy Ballots: Portugal Votes in a Run-off as Gales and Politics Collide
The morning felt like the end of a long, bruising winter. Waves slammed the seawalls; gulls fought the wind above the harbor; and, in a small school gym converted into a polling station, a woman in a bright yellow raincoat shook her umbrella free of salt and mud before she stepped inside to vote.
Portugal opened its polling stations at 08:00 today for a presidential run-off that, on paper, looks decided. Yet the rhythm of democracy here has been anything but routine. The nation is holding its breath between two powerful currents: the steady advance of a veteran Socialist and the unnerving, if likely doomed, rise of a firebrand from the far right — all while the Atlantic keeps throwing its worst at the coast.
On the ground: a country voting through the storm
Polling crews reported a cautious but steady stream of voters through the morning. Around 11 million people — those at home and abroad — are eligible to cast ballots. First exit polls are expected around 20:00 local time, and although one opinion survey this week placed Socialist António José Seguro as high as 67%, the question many Portuguese are asking on the way to the ballot box is less about percentages and more about how a country recovers when weather and politics collide.
“I had to wait for the bus to show up,” said Marta, a teacher who lives near the mouth of the Mondego River. “My neighbor’s roof was ripped off last week — but I’m voting because these are the decisions that will shape how we rebuild.” Her voice carried both fatigue and determination; the lines between civic duty and personal survival are raw right now.
The storms, which have been sweeping in from the Atlantic since the start of the year, have been relentless. At least five people have died and vast stretches of land stand submerged or scarred. Preliminary government estimates point to roughly €4 billion in overall damage, with the agriculture and forestry sectors alone accounting for about €750 million in losses. More than 26,500 rescue workers have been deployed across the country in response.
Postponed ballots, pressed voters
Despite an overnight easing in the weather in many areas, authorities postponed voting in 14 of the hardest-hit constituencies — a delay affecting nearly 32,000 residents, who will vote one week later. The decision drew an immediate political reaction: André Ventura, the far-right candidate, urged a nationwide postponement, arguing that the scale of the crisis made it impossible to hold a fair election. His call was rejected.
Prime Minister Luís Montenegro described the storms as a “devastating crisis,” but argued that logistics could be overcome and that postponing the entire vote would set a dangerous precedent. Outgoing President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, who has weathered his own turbulent years in office, told reporters he had spoken with Ventura and urged that the electoral process proceed — noting that Portugal held its last presidential election even amid the coronavirus pandemic.
The stakes: beyond one election
This run-off is not only a contest between two men. It is a barometer of mood: whether a country traditionally anchored in moderation will drift toward the kind of nationalist, populist currents that have risen elsewhere in Europe. Ventura’s Chega party has polarized political conversation in Portugal, and even in a likely defeat his share of the vote will be closely watched as an indicator of how the far right fares in a European landscape where migration, inflation and cultural anxieties continue to produce volatile politics.
“The far right here is not a monolith,” said Dr. Maria Correia, a political scientist who studies Iberian politics. “Some voters are drawn by a message of security and national identity, others by anger at economic stagnation or a sense of being left behind. The storms complicate everything: they make tangible the consequences of policy choices on infrastructure and climate resilience. That changes the politics of the moment.”
For many voters, the calculus is personal and local. In the Alentejo plains, where cork and olive groves now lie submerged or torn, farmers are tallying immediate losses. In coastal towns, fishermen bemoan the ruined nets and battered boats. These are not abstract policy debates; they will shape livelihoods for years.
Voices from the floodlines
“My son and I spent last night moving boxes to the attic,” said João Silva, a retired carpenter from the central coast, gesturing to a line of sandbags outside his house. “We don’t agree on who to vote for, but we agree we need leaders who can plan for storms like this, not just talk about them.”
At a shelter in a community center, volunteers handed out hot soup and wrapped people in donated blankets. A young volunteer named Inês watched as an elderly woman knitted by the heater. “It’s strange — people are tired, angry sometimes, but also kind,” she said. “This country knows how to stand up when it falls.”
Numbers that matter
Here are the key figures to keep in mind today:
Eligible voters: approximately 11 million (domestic and abroad)
Agriculture and forestry preliminary losses: ~€750 million
Rescue workers deployed: ~26,500
What to watch as night falls
Beyond the headline outcome — whether Seguro wins decisively or Ventura narrows the gap — there are subtler measures that will matter. Turnout in affected regions, the margin of victory in rural versus urban centers, and whether the postponed ballots change momentum when they are cast next week will all say something about political energy and resilience.
Internationally, observers will be attuned to how Portugal’s weather catastrophe intersects with political sentiment. Are voters more likely to back pragmatic, institution-oriented candidates after a disaster? Or do crises accelerate polarization, driving people toward extremes? The answers will ripple beyond Portuguese borders.
Facing forward
As the day folds into evening and the first exit polls come in, Portugal will confront a familiar mix of hope and weariness. Rebuilding after a storm — whether infrastructure, confidence, or political consensus — is a long haul. Decisions made at the ballot box today will influence how quickly that rebuilding begins, and who pays for it.
So what does democracy look like when a country is soaked, shivering and still in line to vote? It looks like Marta in her yellow raincoat. It looks like volunteers turning community centers into shelters. It looks like a nation arguing, nervously and loudly, about identity, leadership and the safety nets that matter most when the sea comes calling.
Will the storm change the outcome? Or merely the texture of a victory? Tonight, Portugal will start to answer that question — with the wind still rolling in from the Atlantic and the work of repair already underway.
Feb 08 (Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha Masar Abdel Fattah El-Sisi ayaa Axadii mar kale xaqiijiyay diidmada Masar ee ku aadan ficil kasta oo wax u dhimi kara xasiloonida iyo madaxbanaanida Soomaaliya,
A spokesperson for Barack and Michelle Obama declined to comment on the issue
When a GIF Became a Reckoning: How a Viral Post Pulled the Veil Off American Dehumanization
Late one autumn night, a minute-long video blinked onto a feed watched by millions. It began as the sort of online stew that rarely gets anyone out of bed: conspiracy-laden claims about voting machines, cuts of campaign rallies, a soundtrack meant to tug partisan heartstrings.
And then, in the final frames, something else arrived — a flash of dancing primates with the faces of Barack and Michelle Obama superimposed. The effect was immediate. Fury. Shame. A dozen calls into a press office. Republicans and Democrats, allies and critics, in unison: this was wrong.
“It wasn’t just tasteless. It was textbook dehumanization,” said Dr. Aisha Ncube, a historian of race and visual culture at Wesley College, who has spent two decades studying the pictorial language used to otherize African-descended peoples. “There’s nothing new about comparing people of African ancestry to apes — it’s been a central pillar of white supremacist imagery for centuries. But seeing it surface from a seat of power is a different kind of alarm.”
From Meme to Crisis: The Timeline
The clip, shared on the president’s social platform, was up for roughly 12 hours before a staffer took it down. The White House offered a series of competing accounts: first, a defense that framed it as a harmless internet meme; then, an acknowledgment that an aide had posted it in error; finally, a terse public statement from the president condemning the image — without an apology.
“I didn’t see the whole thing,” the president told reporters, according to those who were there. “I looked at the first part. It was about the machines and how crooked it is.”
Whether or not he watched it in full, the damage was done. The video reignited old wounds while forcing a new conversation about the porous borders between fan-made content, official channels, and the responsibilities of the people who control them.
Who Felt It First
In Chicago’s Hyde Park neighborhood, where Barack Obama’s political life unfurled, people watched the clip with an edge of personal pain.
“We grew up playing basketball under murals of the Obamas,” said Maria Lopez, a 34-year-old teacher who has lived blocks from the former president’s South Side neighborhood. “To see them reduced like that — it hits your gut. It wasn’t political to me. It was a moral thing.”
Farther afield, Republican Senator Tim Scott, a prominent Black lawmaker and occasional ally, posted on social media: “Praying it was fake because it’s the most racist thing I’ve seen out of this White House.” His words were echoed by others across the aisle who demanded accountability.
Why This Matters Beyond One Image
At first glance, a crude GIF might seem like small potatoes in a larger political war. But images, especially demeaning ones, do far more than offend. They shape narratives, normalize cruelty, and—over time—erode the dignity of entire groups.
“Dehumanization is a primer for violence and exclusion,” warns Derrick Johnson, president of the NAACP. “When those in high office amplify imagery that strips people of their humanity, it lowers the threshold for discriminatory policy and social cruelty.”
Studies in social psychology back this up. Research has repeatedly shown that when groups are portrayed as less than human, empathy wanes and support for punitive measures rises. This isn’t abstract; it translates into policy, policing, and public sentiment.
History Isn’t Nostalgia
The arc of racist caricature runs long and ugly. From 19th-century pseudoscientific drawings to 20th-century propaganda, imagery that equated Black people with animals was used to rationalize slavery, segregation, and colonial conquest. To many scholars, the GIF was a small, digital echo of those historical tropes.
“This is what happens when centuries of iconography migrate into new media,” said Prof. Lionel Hart, a visual culture expert. “Platforms speed things up, but the meaning is the same.”
Inside the White House: A Tale of Mixed Messages
What followed inside the corridors of power was as revealing as the post itself. Only a handful of senior aides reportedly have direct access to the president’s account; those privileges are treated like keys to the vault. Yet, within a day, the White House narrative fractured—first defending the clip as a playful nod to pop culture and then backpedaling as pressure mounted.
“There was an attempt to dismiss it as a harmless parody, but the public reaction made the cost immediately clear,” said a White House staffer who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “Not every meme is inocuous. Part of our job is to vet the content people are asked to share.”
That conversation—about gatekeeping, judgment, and the speed of modern communications—will not simply disappear when the news cycle moves on. The president’s social posts routinely set the agenda, and that gives them outsized consequences for markets, foreign policy, and cultural tone.
Procedures and Personality
There are practical questions too. How many hands touch a presidential post? What internal standards exist for images and claims shared to a platform with nearly 12 million followers? And who bears responsibility when harm follows?
“Institutions need stronger protocols,” advised Elena Park, a digital communications consultant who has advised several political offices. “When content can reach tens of millions within minutes, you can’t treat social channels like personal megaphones.”
The Larger Picture: Why Symbols Matter
What makes this episode resonate is not only whose faces were used but what such imagery signifies. Dehumanization has been a recurring instrument in the political toolbox across eras and geographies, deployed to justify disenfranchisement, segregation, and exclusion.
Are we willing to tolerate leaders amplifying images that feed those old mechanics? Or do we hold higher standards for those who govern? The questions are not rhetorical. They demand answers from voters, from institutions, and from any citizen who values a polity grounded in mutual respect.
Moving Forward: Accountability and Memory
Calls for apologies and firings rose in the aftermath. Religious leaders, civil rights organizations, and many everyday citizens demanded a reckoning. Some Republicans privately urged damage control. Others asked for clear consequences.
“Let it haunt them,” Ben Rhodes, a former aide to President Obama, wrote online. “History will remember the gestures that built bridges and the ones that burned them.”
Whether this moment will be a footnote or a turning point depends on the responses that follow. Will protocols be tightened? Will there be a substantive reckoning with the systemic imagery that underlies such flippant attacks? Or will the clip be swept into the torrent of disposable outrage that now defines our online life?
What Can Readers Do?
Every consumer of media has a role. Pause before sharing. Ask where an image comes from. Demand better from leaders. Teach younger generations to identify and reject imagery that strips away human dignity.
Check sources before you share: where did the image originate?
Contextualize: understand the history behind dehumanizing imagery.
Speak up: contact elected officials and platform operators when content crosses lines.
In the end, digital artifacts like this GIF force a reckoning not just with one community or one administration, but with ourselves. What stories do we want to normalize? What histories do we want to repeat—accidentally or on purpose?
If the last few days taught us anything, it is that a single post can wake a nation. What will we choose to do when it does?
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