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Ajendaha shirka dowladda iyo Mucaaradka ee Muqdisho oo la ogaaday

Jan 29(Jowhar)-Guddiyada wada-hadallada Xukuumadda Federaalka & Golaha Mustaqbalka Soomaaliyeed oo shir farsamo ku leh caasimadda ayaa isku raacay in ajandayaasha shirka madaxda DFS & Golaha Mustaqbalka 1-da Febraayo ay noqdaan; Doorashooyinka, Dastuurka, Midnimada, Dagaallada-xoraynta & Abaaraha.

Minneapolis agents placed on leave after officer-involved shooting

Minneapolis agents involved in shooting placed on leave
Alex Pretti was shot dead by ICE agents in Minneapolis on Saturday

A City Holding Its Breath: After the Shooting in Minneapolis

The candles at the makeshift memorial flicker in a Minnesotan wind that bites the cheeks and carries the smell of old snow and burning sage. Photographs, a nurse’s scrub top, a worn baseball cap—small reliquaries of a life now reduced to memory—crowd a fire hydrant at the corner where the city erupted into outrage.

They are for Alex Pretti, a 37‑year‑old intensive‑care nurse, who was shot dead after a clash between federal agents and protesters last weekend. The footage that put the moment on millions of screens shows camouflaged officers pinning a man to the pavement. In the rush and shock of that image, questions about force, protocol and truth began to multiply, louder than the sirens that have come to haunt Minneapolis this month.

Two Agents on Leave, a City on Edge

Within days, a US Customs and Border Protection spokesperson confirmed what many had assumed: the two agents captured on the video have been placed on administrative leave. “This is standard protocol,” the agency said. It’s a quiet phrase meant to soothe; it does not soothe.

Nearby, a small group of nurses from Hennepin County Medical Center stands vigil in scrubs and winter coats. One, who asked to be named only as Mara, wipes her eyes and says, “Alex was the kind of nurse who’d ask you about your kids and then sneak you a cookie. That’s what hurts—this was a caregiver, not a threat.”

What the Videos Show—and What They Don’t

At first the public was fed a different narrative. An initial Department of Homeland Security statement suggested Pretti approached federal agents with a weapon. The administration’s hardline adviser Stephen Miller amplified that claim, even calling Pretti a “would‑be assassin.”

But the footage contradicted the early line. It shows officers had already removed a sidearm from Pretti before multiple shots were fired at point‑blank range. The discrepancy has pierced the usual political defenses and created a rare bipartisan swell of anger—among Democrats who have denounced the tactics, and among some Republicans who fear the political costs.

An Operation Under Scrutiny

The incident is not an isolated flashpoint. It is part of a broader federal surge in cities across the country: Los Angeles, Chicago, Minneapolis and others have seen visible, heavily armed immigration enforcement actions under programs sometimes dubbed “Operation Metro Surge.” In Minneapolis, officials say roughly 3,000 federal agents were deployed at the height of the operation.

Tom Homan, the administration’s so‑called border czar, has been dispatched to Minneapolis with a stated brief to “recalibrate tactics” and mend fences with local leaders. He met with Mayor Jacob Frey, Governor Tim Walz and city police, and emerged calling the meetings a “productive starting point.” The mayor says he asked for the surge to end “as quickly as possible.”

From Broad Sweeps to Targeted Enforcement?

One senior administration official told reporters that federal strategy would shift away from the broad, public neighborhood sweeps that have provoked so much anger, toward more targeted arrests. “We’re going to change how we operate here,” the official said off the record, echoing the president’s publicly stated intention to “de‑escalate a little bit.”

For people in the neighborhoods where these operations have taken place, talk of “recalibration” offers little balm. In the Cedar‑Riverside district—a neighborhood stitched together by East African markets, Somali cafes and the hum of Minneapolis’ immigrant life—residents describe a sense of invasion.

“They came in like they were at war,” said Amina Hassan, who runs a small store selling spices and tea. “Neighbors are scared to go out. Kids are asking if officers will ‘take’ their fathers.”

Voices from the Streets and the Halls of Power

Protesters have filled city squares nightly. Some bring drums and pots—“noise demonstrations,” as one organizer called them—others bring photographs and candles. At a recent town hall, the mood was raw: Representative Ilhan Omar called for ICE to be abolished and for accountability in DHS; an attendee sprayed an unknown liquid toward her, a chilling reminder of how quickly protest can tip into danger.

Across the political aisle, unease has surfaced. Some Republican lawmakers, mindful of narrow majorities ahead of the next elections, are pressing for transparent investigations. The chief federal judge in Minnesota warned of contempt proceedings over ICE’s failure to comply with court orders related to detainee hearings.

“This has become a crisis of governance,” said Dr. Leah Montrose, a policy analyst at a national immigration think‑tank. “There’s a mismatch between aggressive federal posture and the legal and procedural frameworks meant to constrain force. When clarity isn’t provided quickly, public trust erodes fast.”

Facts, Figures, and the Wider Picture

Two deaths in one month in the context of enforcement operations—a nurse, Alex Pretti, and earlier, Renee Nicole Good, a 37‑year‑old mother of three whose fatal shooting by an ICE officer occurred on 7 January—have intensified scrutiny. A Reuters/Ipsos poll suggested public support for the administration’s aggressive tactics was weakening, eroding the political argument for broad, visible displays of federal force in cities.

It’s worth asking: what does success look like in immigration enforcement? Arrest counts and removal figures are one measure. Community stability, trust in law enforcement, judicial compliance and the humane treatment of residents are others. Too often, policy debates focus on the former and neglect the latter.

What Comes Next?

Investigations now loom—internal administrative reviews, potential federal probes, and calls for independent inquiries. The White House says it will examine whether “additional force protection assets” should have been present during the operation and why they were not. The agents remain on administrative leave while those reviews unfold.

But for many in Minneapolis, answers are not enough. “We want change,” said Jose Ramirez, a union organizer who has been at several vigils. “Not just an investigation that ends with a bureaucratic shrug. We want oversight. We want to know how so many people came to be policed like this in our neighborhoods.”

Questions to Carry With You

  • When federal power meets local life, who sets the rules?
  • How should democracies balance enforcement with civil liberties and public trust?
  • Can policy be both effective and humane—and who decides what that looks like?

The answers will shape not just Minneapolis, but a national conversation about the tone and tools of enforcement in a deeply divided political moment. They will also shape the politics of an upcoming midterm season where parties worry about appearing too permissive or too heavy‑handed. For the grieving families and the neighborhoods holding candles by frozen gutters, political calculus can feel unbearably abstract.

As the city waits for reports, for resignations, for court rulings, and perhaps for justice, Minnesotans are left to conduct their lives in a new atmosphere of suspicion. The question that follows every vigil and every press conference is both practical and moral: what will we learn, and will we change?

In the end, the memorials gather more than flowers. They gather a community’s demand for clarity, for restraint, and for a system that recognizes the full humanity of those it purports to protect. Until those demands are met, the candles will keep burning.

Survey: U.S. social media scrutiny threatens tourism industry growth

A Hesitation at the Border: How a New Social Media Rule Could Quiet the World’s Doorstep

On a rain-thinned evening at Dublin Airport, a family huddled over a laptop, deliberating whether to cancel their summer plans to the United States. “It feels… intimate, what they’re asking for,” said Aoife, a mother of two, rubbing her forearm as if to shake off the unease. “My teenage son posts selfies and jokes. Do they need to see that? I don’t want to sign over his life to a screen.”

That hesitation, multiplied across millions of would-be visitors from visa-exempt nations, is what travel economists are now calling a real and measurable risk to the US tourism rebound. A new plan from Washington to make social media histories and other personal data mandatory for Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) applications—affecting citizens from 42 visa-waiver countries—has sent shockwaves through the travel industry. A recent industry survey suggests many would simply stay home.

Numbers That Stare Back

The World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC) surveyed prospective travelers who qualify for the Visa Waiver Program and found that roughly one-third—34%—said they would be “somewhat or much less likely” to travel to the United States in the next two to three years if social media screening becomes mandatory.

Put another way, the WTTC estimates the US could see as many as 4.7 million fewer international arrivals this year—a roughly 24% drop from recent average levels—and a potential hit to tourism spending of up to $15.7 billion. The group also warned that 157,000 tourism-sector jobs could be at risk.

Those are headline numbers, but behind them sit restaurants that depend on foreign diners, bed-and-breakfast owners in New England, surf schools in California, and tour guides in New Orleans. “People don’t think about how fragile this web is,” said Marco Santiago, who runs a boutique hostel in Miami Beach. “One policy tweak, and whole livelihoods wobble.”

Quick facts

  • The proposed rule would expand ESTA to require social media history covering the past five years.
  • Applicants would also provide phone numbers used in the last five years, email addresses from the past decade, family member details and biometric information.
  • The Visa Waiver Program covers 42 countries, allowing typically up to 90 days of travel without a visa.
  • In 2024, travel and tourism contributed about $2.6 trillion to the US economy and supported over 20 million jobs, generating roughly $585 billion in tax revenues (nearly 7% of the total).

Security Versus Welcome

On paper, the Department of Homeland Security argues this is about safety. “We’re living in a complex threat environment,” a DHS spokesperson told a reporter. “Enhanced vetting helps us identify risks earlier and protect American communities.”

That is not a trivial argument. Governments around the world routinely balance openness with national security. But critics say a broad sweep of social media and long-term communication records crosses into chilling territory—deterring legitimate travelers and casting a wider net than necessary.

“Using five years of social media data for everyone applying through ESTA is akin to asking every visitor to empty their pockets into a lamp post,” said Leila Ramírez, a digital privacy scholar at a university think tank. “There are smarter, targeted ways to find threats without alienating millions of tourists.”

Voices from the Ground

In a café near Paris’s Gare du Nord, a couple planning their honeymoon paused at the idea that their Instagram could be screened by a foreign state. “We’re thinking of Vegas or New York,” said Louis, stirring his coffee. “But if everything is scrutinised, what’s left of a carefree trip? I don’t want to be judged by old posts.”

Across the Pacific in Tokyo, a small-group tour organizer, Yuko Tanaka, worries about ripple effects for inbound tourism agencies. “American cities have so much to offer—food, culture, museums. But clients are nervous. I’ve had two groups cancel this month already,” she said. “We’re seeing the same pattern: a fear of intrusion.”

Back in the U.S., Mark Henderson, a restaurateur in Savannah, Georgia, paints the problem plainly: “International guests are our lifeline during shoulder seasons. If they stop coming, we’ll cut staff, cut hours, and maybe close. That’s not an abstraction—those are neighbors and friends.”

Wider Trends and Global Resonance

This debate about digital vetting taps into larger currents: the normalization of surveillance, the bargaining between privacy and perceived security, and the uneven recovery of post-pandemic travel. Since the pandemic’s worst days, international travel has roared back. In 2024, travel and tourism poured trillions into the US economy and supported millions of jobs. Yet that recovery remains fragile; consumer confidence, visa wait times, and policy shifts can all steer demand.

Consider this: if millions of people decide the American welcome feels conditional or invasive, travel patterns will shift—sometimes permanently. People might opt for destinations that openly court their business. Emerging tourism markets in Southeast Asia, Eastern Europe, and parts of Latin America could soak up travelers who once came to the US.

What’s at stake for communities

  • Small businesses reliant on foreign spending—hotels, tours, restaurants—face reduced foot traffic and revenue.
  • Local job markets could shrink; an estimated 157,000 US tourism jobs are potentially vulnerable.
  • Academic exchanges, conventions, and business travel patterns could be disrupted, affecting universities and corporations alike.

Questions to Ponder

When does sensible screening become a barrier to cultural exchange? How do we weigh the safety of citizens against the intangible value of openness—strangers meeting on a street in Brooklyn, a study abroad student experiencing American life, or a grandmother finally seeing her grandchild? And who gets to decide where that line is drawn?

Policy decisions rarely happen in a vacuum. The WTTC’s warning is not merely a plea for tourists; it is a wake-up call to policymakers that the soft power of American hospitality—its museums, diners, cities, coastlines and parks—translates into hard economic terms. Gloria Guevara, the WTTC president, summed it up bluntly: “Security at the US border is vital but the planned policy changes will damage job creation.”

Possible Paths Forward

There are alternatives beyond blanket data grabs. Experts suggest targeted risk-based assessments, transparency about how data is used and retained, sunset clauses on data collection, and independent oversight. These measures could shore up both security and trust.

“Trust is a currency,” said Ramírez. “You can extract every detail from a traveler’s online life, but once trust erodes, people spend that currency elsewhere.”

So what should you do if you were thinking of visiting the United States? Maybe keep planning. Travel decisions are personal and layered. But also ask your elected representatives what safeguards exist: How long will data be kept? Who has access? What recourse do travelers have? These are not bureaucratic niceties—they’re the ledger of our shared freedoms in an age of surveillance.

In the end, the stakes are not only measured in billions of dollars and hundreds of thousands of jobs. They’re measured in the casual, human contact of two strangers sharing a table, a student wide-eyed at a museum, a tour guide’s laugh echoing down a city street. Will policies make those moments rarer or protect them? The answer may determine not just the direction of tourism statistics, but the tone of international exchange itself.

Budapest Mayor Faces Charges for Staging Banned Pride Parade

Budapest mayor charged for organising banned Pride parade
Last year's parade saw a record turnout

The Day Budapest Showed Up

On a warm June afternoon, the city of Budapest looked like a living mosaic. Rainbow flags whipped along Andrássy Avenue, confetti clung to the cobbles near the Chain Bridge, and the scent of kürtőskalács—a chimney cake still steaming from a nearby stall—mingled with the laughter of strangers who had become comrades for the day.

More than 200,000 people, organisers would later estimate, swelled the streets in a single, defiant parade that felt less like a protest and more like a communal vow. This was not a fleeting holiday moment. It was a deliberate, full-throated pushback against a political tide that has been gathering over several years: Hungary’s steady erosion of LGBTQ rights under the government of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.

Why This Moment Mattered

The atmosphere was ecstatic, but the stakes were starkly legal and deeply political. The Orbán administration had framed its restrictions as measures to “protect children.” Those words—soft, paternal, and persuasive to some—had been woven into the law and, according to critics, into constitutional changes meant to make the bans harder to overturn.

When Budapest city hall announced it would step in as a co-organiser, the move was a gamble. City officials said they hoped municipal involvement would blunt the effect of national statutes and provide legal cover to allow citizens to march. The state saw it differently: police issued a ban, prosecutors followed, and the national rhetoric grew sharper. “There will be legal consequences,” the prime minister warned at the time.

A Mayor in the Crosshairs

In the aftermath, prosecutors filed charges against Budapest’s opposition mayor, Gergely Karácsony, accusing him of organising and leading a public gathering despite the police ban. The district prosecutor’s office has asked that a court hand down a fine in a summary judgment—no full trial—though the precise amount sought has not been disclosed.

Karácsony, who once stood as a rising figure in Hungary’s opposition, responded to the charges on social media with the kind of defiant poetry that has become his public trademark: “I went from a proud suspect to a proud defendant,” he wrote. “They don’t even want a trial… because they cannot comprehend that here in this city, we have stood up for freedom in the face of a selfish, petty, and despicable power.”

Under the law, organisers could face up to a year in prison for convening a banned rally. Participants themselves risked fines—up to roughly €500 each—though police announced in July they would not pursue sanctions against attendees.

Voices from the Crowd

Walking the route after the parade, I spoke to people whose lives this moment touched in very different ways.

“I brought my sister,” said Zsófia, a 27-year-old teacher. “She’s only just come out. I wanted her to see she’s not alone.” Her voice was steady, but her hands trembled slightly around a paper cup of coffee. “They try to make us invisible with laws. Today was about being visible.”

An older man, white-haired and wearing a well-pressed coat, watched from a bench near the Danube. “When I was young, people hid,” he said. “My generation thought we’d go forward, not back. This is painful, but the city is brave.”

A legal scholar I met near Deák Square—Dr. Anna Kovács, a constitutional law professor—called the case a test of whether local democracy can hold its ground against national centralisation. “This is not simply about a parade,” she told me. “It’s about whether municipal autonomy has any force left in Hungary.”

Context: A European Struggle

Over the past decade, Hungary has been a flashpoint in Europe for debates over the rule of law, media freedom, and minority rights. International bodies, including parts of the European Union’s institutions and human-rights organisations, have repeatedly criticised Budapest for measures targeting independent courts, the press, and NGOs.

What distinguishes the recent chapter is how the language of “child protection” has been leveraged to curtail LGBTQ visibility and rights. It’s a frame that has been used elsewhere in the region, and it resonates with voters who worry about social change. Yet for many Hungarians, it reads as a thinly veiled justification for exclusion.

“They dress up discrimination as concern,” said Márk, a psychologist who volunteers with a youth support group. “That’s very effective politically—but it breaks trust in institutions. Young people see that and they get desperate.”

What This Says About Power—and Resistance

There is something almost cinematic about the image of a city that chooses to co-organise an event expressly to challenge national law. On one level it is a legal play; on another it’s a moral claim. It says: our city will not allow this to be defined in someone else’s words.

But legal games can be costly. The prosecutor’s move to seek a fine and avoid a trial signals an eagerness to close the matter quickly and quietly. It also sends a message to other local leaders: step out of line and face consequences.

“You can fine a politician,” Dr. Kovács said, “but you cannot fine away an entire movement.”

Global Echoes

Across the world, the Budapest story fits into broader narratives: the push-and-pull between national majorities and local minorities, the increasing use of constitutional amendments to lock in political priorities, and the politicisation of education and childhood as rhetorical battlegrounds. Democracies everywhere are contending with similar pressures—how to balance majoritarian rule with protections for minorities, how institutions can guard rights when political winds shift.

So I ask you: when a city stands between a citizen and the state, should it be applauded or punished? When the law and the conscience collide, who gets to say which wins?

What Comes Next

The prosecutor’s request for a summary judgment could result in a fine, leaving the issue unresolved in a larger legal sense. A full trial would have offered a more public airing of constitutional claims, municipal autonomy, and civil-society rights. Politically, the case will be a barometer for how far the central government will push and how much resistance is possible.

Back on the streets of Budapest, the mood has shifted from euphoria to a steady, resolute energy. People who marched say they will keep showing up—at town halls, in classrooms, at the ballot box. “This city has always been proud,” said Zsófia as a tram rattled past. “We’re not done.”

Whether that pride can withstand legal pressure, or whether it will be quietly eroded by fines and court decisions, is a question that reaches beyond Hungary’s borders. It is a test that concerns anyone who believes rights should be more than a bargaining chip in political theatre.

So look at the photos, read the headlines, but also listen to the voices. Ask yourself: what kind of city, what kind of country, do you want to live in? And when the law feels like it’s bending toward exclusion, what will you do—and where will you stand?

Taliyaha ciidanka Xoogga dalka oo loo magacaabay Jeneraal Ibraahim

Jan 29(Jowhar)-Golaha Wasiirrada Xukuumadda Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya ayaa cod aqlabiyad ah ku ansixiyay soo jeedinta Wasaaradda Gaashaandhigga ee magacaabidda Taliyaha cusub ee Ciidanka Xoogga Dalka Soomaaliyeed, kaas oo loo magacaabay Jeneraal Ibraahim Maxamed Maxamuud. Waxa uu bedelayaa Jeneraal Odowaa Yuusuf Raage.

Approximately 300 Amazon Jobs in Ireland Threatened by Global Layoffs

300 Amazon jobs in Ireland at risk as part of global cuts
Amazon's fulfillment centre at Baldonnell Business Park in Dublin

Morning in Dublin: a city that thrums with tech — and the hush of uncertainty

The rain had stopped by the time I walked past the glass-fronted offices clustered along Dublin’s River Liffey, the skyline still glittering from a city that has spent decades reinventing itself as a hub for global tech. Commuters with umbrellas tucked under arms paused for coffee, business cards and the quiet rituals of an urban workday. For many, today’s coffee tasted a little like apprehension.

Word rippled through the corridors: Amazon, the Seattle-born leviathan whose Irish operations employ nearly 6,500 people, announced a wave of corporate cuts — part of a broader cull of 16,000 roles globally. In Ireland, government sources and local reporting suggest roughly 300 positions could be at risk. For a community built on international investment, this feels both familiar and unnervingly new.

Numbers that land like stones

Let’s lay out the arithmetic plainly:

  • Amazon confirmed 16,000 corporate job cuts today — the latest chapter in a plan that could reach about 30,000 since last October.
  • Amazon’s worldwide workforce sits at about 1.58 million, meaning these corporate cuts affect a small sliver of the global headcount but nearly 10% of its corporate staff.
  • In Ireland, some 6,500 people work for Amazon; RTÉ and local sources estimate roughly 300 of those roles may be impacted.
  • By way of contrast, Ireland’s development agencies reported healthy inbound investment recently — the IDA cited 323 investments in 2025 with potential to create 15,300 jobs, and Enterprise Ireland announced over 12,600 new roles in 2025.

Numbers tell a story, but they leave out the faces behind them. A human resources memo can be parsed by analysts; the people affected cannot be reduced to a spreadsheet.

Voices from the street and the office

“We built lives around meeting schedules and project cycles,” said “Maeve,” an Amazon staffer in Dublin who asked that her surname not be used. “You don’t expect your job to be the thing you rely on one week and then wake up to see a memo about strategic changes the next.”

Across town, at a small café near the Docklands, I met a former retail manager who now works in logistics technology. He sighed and pushed his tea around the cup. “This city has always been adaptable,” he told me. “But adaptability has a cost — bills, family commitments, mortgages — the human cost. Government support matters when a global contract shifts.”

A spokesperson for the Department of Enterprise in Dublin said the government had received a notification of proposed collective redundancies and underscored Ireland’s continued appeal to multinational firms. “Many companies are making staffing adjustments in response to global market pressures,” the spokesperson said. “Ireland remains competitive for foreign direct investment, as our recent IDA and Enterprise Ireland numbers show.”

Inside Amazon, leadership described the moves as painful but necessary. “We’re focused on simplifying structures and removing unnecessary layers so teams can move faster and own outcomes,” a company note read. “We recognize the impact on people and are committed to supporting those affected.”

Union, policy and community reactions

Trade union representatives warned that the cuts will ripple beyond those directly dismissed. “Every corporate job in a tech hub supports cafes, taxis, caretakers and dozens of services,” said a union organizer in Dublin. “When firms scale back, whole local ecosystems feel the shock.”

Local entrepreneurs, meanwhile, urged calm and a longer view. “Short-term pain, perhaps,” said an accelerator founder in Grand Canal Dock, “but Dublin’s ecosystem is resilient. People here create startups from layoffs as often as they mourn them.”

Why now? Pandemic over-hiring, AI and changing strategy

There’s an accounting of causes that has become familiar over the past two years: a hiring spree during the pandemic when online shopping surged; a subsequent recalibration as spending patterns normalized; and now, a new layer — the rapid ascent of artificial intelligence and automation.

“Companies during Covid expanded headcount to meet extraordinary demand,” explained an AI researcher at Trinity College Dublin. “Now they’re integrating automation into workflows — not only in warehouses with robotics, but in corporate teams where AI can handle repetitive tasks or speed up coding and analysis. That changes the calculus of how many people are needed for certain roles.”

Executives have been honest about this. Amazon’s leadership previously signalled that AI-driven efficiencies would change the mix of roles in corporate settings. Yet how those efficiencies are deployed — and where displaced workers can find new work — is a question that sits at the heart of public debate.

Beyond the headlines: what does this mean for Ireland and the world?

Look beyond the individual layoffs and you see larger patterns: globalization’s double edge, the fragility of jobs tied to multinational strategies, and the speed at which technology can reshape work. Ireland has thrived as a magnet for foreign direct investment, but dependence on a handful of large employers can be a vulnerability when global strategy shifts.

So what are the options? Policy responses range from immediate support to medium-term resilience-building:

  • Rapid redeployment services and retraining tailored to digital skills
  • Stronger local safety nets and wage supports during transitions
  • Incentives for multinationals to keep headquarters functions and R&D onshore
  • Investment in homegrown companies to diversify the employment base

“We can’t stop technological progress, but we can choose how societies share its benefits,” an economics professor I spoke with noted. “Policymakers need to be as agile as firms are becoming.”

What happens next?

Amazon is expected to publish quarterly results next week. Internally, leaders warned there could be more adjustments; externally, the company has already signaled the closure of its remaining Fresh groceries and Go stores, stepping back from certain physical retail bets.

For the people in Dublin — and the thousands around the globe affected by these corporate steps — the weeks ahead are likely to be a mix of uncertainty and determination. Will displaced employees find roles in other tech firms? Will the state accelerate training and relocation supports? Or will cuts push more people toward freelance and startup worlds, adding new lines to Ireland’s entrepreneurial story?

These questions aren’t merely academic. They shape where families live, what children learn, and how communities stitch together meaning and stability in a fast-moving economy.

Closing thoughts: a city, a company, a choice

As I walked back along the river, a busker played an old Irish tune beneath a sky rinsed clean. The melody felt like a small act of defiance — beauty pressed into everyday life. Dublin has ridden successive waves of global change — from famine to flight to the Celtic Tiger and the tech boom. Each era left scars and scaffolding. Each forced choices about who benefits and who bears the burden.

The Amazon cuts are more than corporate housekeeping. They are a prompt to ask how societies prepare citizens for rapid technological shifts, how governments anchor global capital to local wellbeing, and how workers can be supported to move from uncertainty to new possibility. What do we, as a global community, owe the people who turn the gears of a digital economy?

In a world that prizes speed, may we also prize care. Slán go fóill — goodbye for now — but not forever. The work ahead is collective, and the stories we tell about these moments will shape what comes next.

Ethiopian Airlines oo hakisay duulimaadyadii ay ku tagi jirtay waqooyiga gobolka Tigray

Jan 29(Jowhar)-Shirkadda diyaaradaha Ethiopian Airlines ayaa hakisay duulimaadyadii ay ku tagi jirtay waqooyiga gobolka Tigray, kaddib markii xiisad amni oo sii xoogaysanaysa ay ka dhalatay iska-horimaadyo u dhexeeya ciidammada dowladda federaalka iyo kuwa maamulka gobolka.

Trump accuses Minneapolis mayor of courting danger in recent policy moves

Trump accuses Minneapolis mayor of 'playing with fire'
ICE agents continue to conduct immigration enforcement raids in Minneapolis

Minneapolis at a Crossroads: When Federal Raids Meet Neighborhood Vigilance

There is a hum in the winter air of Minneapolis that sounds different from the usual low, urban roar. It is the noise of armored vans idling on side streets, the clack of boots along brick sidewalks, the anxious murmur of neighbors watching their phones for encrypted chatter, the small, steady sound of candles being placed on curbs.

For weeks, the city has felt like a pressure cooker. Federal immigration sweeps — part of a campaign known to some as Operation Metro Surge — have met neighborhood resistance, and the result is not just headlines but grief and an intensifying civic conversation about enforcement, safety and who gets to decide how a city protects its people.

Two deaths that changed everything

Everyone I spoke with in south and southwest Minneapolis referenced the same names with the same soft fury: Renee Good, a mother of three, and Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive care nurse. Their deaths — both at the hands of federal officers — have been the spark that ignited months of protests, vigils and an unblinking public scrutiny of how immigration enforcement is being carried out in American cities.

“We lit candles for Renee and Alex for a reason — because they were people who belonged to us,” said Elena Martinez, 42, who moved to the neighborhood two years ago. “It’s not theoretical to us. This is our family, our nurses, our neighbors.”

The sequence of events is dizzying and painful. Officers from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Border Patrol have been conducting operations that community monitors describe as aggressive: midday caravan arrests, canvassing homes in groups of six to eight agents, and, in earlier weeks, wide street stops that left residents feeling singled out simply for walking down the block.

From broad sweeps to more targeted operations — or so officials say

Inside the White House, the rhetoric has oscillated. At times, the message has been conciliatory. At others, it has become sharp and critical of local leaders. Federal officials announced leadership changes in the field — bringing in a veteran enforcement figure to shift tactics from broad sweeps to what they called “traditional, targeted operations.” But for many on the ground, the distinction feels academic when the outcomes are the same: families disrupted, arrests made, and in the worst cases, lives lost.

“They pulled back for two days and everyone relaxed,” said Patty O’Keefe, who volunteers as a community observer in south Minneapolis. “Then the vans came back, but they were quieter — more like they were looking for names on a list. You still didn’t feel safe.”

It is difficult to measure the exact cadence of raids because local volunteers who track ICE and Border Patrol activity say federal surveillance of their communications has pushed them into smaller, encrypted channels. This fragmentation makes it hard to know how many arrests are happening, when, or why.

Confrontation on the streets

What cannot be hidden is the rising tension between tactical units in black tactical gear and the local communities that have mobilized against them. Demonstrations, once localized, have rippled outward — to city squares, statehouses and into other towns — as people carry photos of the dead and signs demanding accountability.

“You don’t need to be against enforcing the law to see the problem here,” said Amir Hassan, a 29-year-old organizer with a local immigrant-rights coalition. “We’re saying: do it the way other cities do — with warrants, with transparency, with respect for civil rights.”

Federal prosecutors have pushed back. In public statements they said multiple arrests were made of people who allegedly assaulted or obstructed federal officers, and officials insisted enforcement would continue. A senior federal official described the incoming leadership’s plan as a recalibration — less about broad street sweeps and more about individual targets — yet stressed that no arrests would be blocked by local politics.

Where law, politics and local governance collide

The clash has reopened old constitutional and political questions. How much authority does the federal government have to operate in cities that assert sanctuary policies? Who ultimately decides the acceptable level of force? And what are the limits of municipal discretion when federal law enforcement believes there is a public-safety need?

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey has been clear on one point: “Our police are tasked with keeping people safe — not enforcing federal immigration laws,” he wrote on social media, echoing a position embraced by many city officials across the country. But even as local leaders call for restraint and collaboration, Presidents and federal attorneys have warned that sanctuary postures cannot contravene federal statutes, threatening to withhold funds in some cases.

“We’re playing with fire,” one high-level official said in a blunt post to social media, a line that landed like a splash of cold water in an already heated debate.

Mourning, memory and the small practices of resistance

At night, makeshift memorials accumulate on street corners. Candles melt in the cold. Notes are taped to lampposts. Neighbors hold hands and sing hymns. A nurse leaves a bouquet every morning at the corner where Alex Pretti fell. A schoolteacher, who asked to be identified only as “Maya,” knits scarves for families who fear deportation; she leaves them at community centers with attached cards that read: “For when the wind gets cold and we don’t know what tomorrow will bring.”

“This city has so much care in it,” she said. “That’s what scares the agents. They can’t understand why people would risk their own safety to stand on the sidewalk and witness.”

Questions that go beyond Minneapolis

What happens in one city reverberates across many. The tactics, the rhetoric and the responses we see now are part of a national pattern: the federalization and, some argue, the militarization of certain domestic law-enforcement functions; the politicization of public safety budgets; and the precarious lives of millions whose status in the country is contested.

Consider the scale: ICE and Border Patrol operate across every state, and while exact figures fluctuate, federal immigration agencies have long recorded tens of thousands of arrests annually. Sanctuary policies are uneven — dozens of major cities and many counties have adopted varied limits on cooperation with ICE. The current flashpoint in Minneapolis raises a broader question: do localized sanctuary policies change the calculus of federal enforcement, or do they simply rename where the friction will occur?

What comes next?

There are no easy answers. Federal leaders say arrests will continue. Local leaders urge restraint. Community groups have organized observers, legal hotlines and rapid-response networks to track arrests and to provide immediate legal and emotional support. Lawsuits are moving through the courts. Public trust — already frayed — is being tested.

“We deserve a process that is humane and lawful,” said Dr. Leila Krum, a sociologist who studies policing and immigration. “But we also need transparency: show your warrants, show your lists, explain your criteria. Otherwise you create terror and suspicion, and that’s a poor foundation for public safety.”

As you read this, you might think: what would I do if federal agents knocked on my door, or rolled up to my street? What does safety look like for a city with conflicting mandates from different levels of government? These are not hypothetical questions for the people of Minneapolis — they are urgent, daily, lived realities.

For now, the city holds its breath and lights a candle. It watches armored vans and records license plates. It files legal challenges and organizes vigils. It grieves. And it asks, quietly but insistently: can enforcement and dignity ever coexist?

Mareykanka oo dib u bilaabaya gargaarka uu siiyo Soomaaliya kadib fadeexadii Dekeda Muqdisho

Jan 29(Jowhar)-Dawladda Mareykanka ayaa dib u fasaxday gargaarkii bani’aadamnimo ee ay siinaysay Soomaaliya, kaas oo loo marsiin doono Hay’adda Cuntada Adduunka ee WFP, kadib hakad ku yimid maalmihii la soo dhaafay.

Colombian plane crash kills 15, including prominent politician

Politician among 15 dead in Colombia plane crash
There were 13 passengers and two crew members aboard (stock image)

When a Short Flight Became a Tragedy: A Mountainous Silence Near the Venezuela Border

The morning had been ordinary in Cúcuta — vendors arranging plantain and coffee, the distant drone of traffic on the Simón Bolívar bridge, children hustling to school — until a routine regional flight failed to return. By midday, the calm had hardened into a knot of grief: a Satena Beechcraft 1900, carrying 15 people, had plunged somewhere in the serrated hills between Cúcuta and Ocaña. There were no survivors.

Satena, Colombia’s state-run carrier that links remote towns to city hubs, operates flights that many communities rely on like arteries of daily life. The Beechcraft 1900 is a modest workhorse — a twin-prop turboprop built to carry up to 19 passengers across short distances and touch down on airstrips that larger planes cannot reach. It is small, familiar, and, for many, indispensable.

The Scene and the Search

Contact with the aircraft was lost just before it was scheduled to touch down in Ocaña, around lunchtime. Colombia’s civil aviation authority confirmed that all 13 passengers and two crew members perished. The government quickly mobilized Air Force helicopters and ground teams, but recovery is a slow, treacherous business in these parts.

“We have received with concern the information about the air accident… where my colleague Diógenes Quintero, Carlos Salcedo and their teams were traveling,” said Wilmer Carrillo, a local parliamentarian. Quintero serves in Colombia’s chamber of deputies; Salcedo was running as a senate candidate in the upcoming elections. The loss of political figures adds another twist to the already painful tally — their campaigns, aides, and families now asked to grieve under a public microscope.

A military source, who requested anonymity, told me that weather and topography were complicating factors. “The winds can change in a heartbeat in the cordillera,” they said. “One moment it’s clear, the next, cloud and rain hide the ridge lines. That is our biggest obstacle right now.” Nearby residents reported seeing thick, low-hanging clouds sweep down the valleys as search-and-rescue aircraft scoured the area.

Mountains, Weather, and the Shadow of Conflict

Northern Colombia’s borderlands are stubbornly beautiful and relentlessly difficult: steep slopes, braided rivers, and sudden microclimates that can bewilder pilots. The region has also been a mosaic of power — a patchwork where state institutions, guerrilla groups like the National Liberation Army (ELN), and criminal networks have long jostled for control.

“This is a borderland of fragility,” said Ana Morales, a security analyst based in Bogotá. “Since the demobilization of the FARC in 2016, the ELN and other groups have expanded in some rural corridors. That doesn’t mean every crash is connected to insecurity. But it does mean access for rescue teams can be complicated, and local populations live in a state of constant uncertainty.”

The ELN is often described as Colombia’s largest remaining guerrilla group since the FARC’s demobilization. Estimates vary, but analysts commonly place its strength in the low thousands. Its presence in some sectors of Norte de Santander — the department that includes Cúcuta and Ocaña — has long shaped life and movement across the landscape.

Faces and Voices at the Edge

At the municipal hospital in Cúcuta, the corridor outside the emergency ward filled with people seeking news. A woman in a bright shawl clutched a photograph and stared at its edges as if the picture might tell her more than the officials were willing to say.

“My cousin flew for work all the time,” she told me, voice steadied by anger more than tears. “He left early like any other day. Now everything is waiting — the phone, the messages, the line at the cemetery. We don’t understand how a plane disappears so close to home.”

A taxi driver who ferries migrants and traders between border towns shrugged when I asked how often he saw flights canceled for weather. “More than you think,” he said. “Pilots change plans. People miss connections. But we still take to the roads — longer, but at least you can see where you’re going.” The roads themselves are not always safe either; infrastructure gaps push many to rely on the small planes that connect remote places to government services, health care, and courts.

Questions of Safety, Infrastructure, and Politics

Accidents like this prod uncomfortable questions: How resilient is Colombia’s regional aviation network? Are checkpoints, radar, and rescue protocols adequate for terrain that seems to conspire against human plans? Aviation safety experts note that small commuter aircraft operating in mountainous environments face heightened risks — rapid weather shifts, limited navigational aids, and short runways are recurring hazards worldwide.

“These are not glamorous flights,” said Javier Ortega, a retired aeronautical engineer who has worked on Andean operations. “But they are essential. Improving safety is not just about buying newer planes — it’s about investing in weather stations, pilot training on mountain flying, and quicker, more coordinated emergency response.” Ortega pointed to rising global investments in GPS approaches and satellite-based weather forecasting as tools that can make short, regional flights safer.

And there is the political context. Colombia’s elections are approaching, and the disappearance of a senate candidate and a sitting deputy on the same flight elevates the tragedy to a national conversation about security, public investment, and the nature of campaigning in remote regions. How do politicians reach voters across geographies defined by peaks and power vacuums? How do authorities protect not just the lives of citizens but the instrument — transport — that binds the country together?

What We Are Left To Do

As the sun slid behind the mountains that evening, search teams continued under fading light. The Air Force said recovery efforts were underway, and local authorities urged communities to remain patient as they awaited official confirmations. For families, patience is an excruciating thing: waiting by the phone, checking regional radio, holding onto any scrap of information that could end the uncertainty.

How do we mourn in a landscape that so often forces people to move — migrants, politicians, and ordinary workers alike? How do communities stitch themselves back together when the threads that tie them — small planes, local politics, and informal economies — snap in an instant?

There are no easy answers. What is clear is the human scale of the loss: a plane that once promised a half-hour connection between towns instead became an absence that will be felt in kitchens, markets, and campaign headquarters for years. The mountains keep their secrets a little longer, and a nation waits for the difficult work of recovery and explanation.

In the days to come, investigators will comb for causes, officials will issue statements, and perhaps concrete measures will be proposed to prevent the next disaster. Meanwhile, the people of Cúcuta and Ocaña — and the families of the dead — will live with the ache. For those of us watching from afar, perhaps the question to ask is not simply who was lost, but what we owe to the borderlands and the fragile systems that serve them. How do we make sure the small flights that connect lives are as safe and dependable as the people who depend on them deserve?

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