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  • Italian activists escalate Mediterranean port protests over Gaza genocide

    Italian activists escalate Mediterranean port protests over Gaza genocide

    A broad coalition of pro-Palestinian activists, grassroots labor unions and solidarity organizers has launched a coordinated national mobilization in Italy, centered on the strategic Mediterranean port of Gioia Tauro in Calabria, to disrupt military supply chains they say support military actions in Gaza. The May 29 protest, branded “Global Intifada Disarm,” combined coordinated on-shore demonstrations at ports, logistics hubs and military-linked factories across the country with a symbolic maritime action, as five vessels from the Thousand Madleens to Gaza initiative sailed to Gioia Tauro to amplify their demands.

    The maritime component of the action launched a day early, when protest boats departed the nearby coastal town of Cetraro and navigated toward Gioia Tauro – one of the busiest and most logistically important container ports in the entire Mediterranean region. Speaking from one of the protest vessels, Antonio Viteritti of grassroots organizing group La Base Cosenza accused the Italian government, national institutions, and global shipping giant Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC) of complicity in the crisis in Gaza by enabling military-related cargo transit through the port. Viteritti told reporters that 16 containers of dual-use ballistic steel, a material capable of being repurposed for missile manufacturing, have been held on Gioia Tauro’s docks for months, and that authorities have failed to issue a response to repeated calls to halt the shipment’s departure. He also reminded observers that two separate weapon shipments bound for Israel were seized at the same port one year prior to the 2025 action.

    Two days before the national mobilization, BDS Italy – the Italian branch of the global Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement – shared intelligence with allied trade unions and local activist networks that the container ship MSC Manasvi was scheduled to dock at Gioia Tauro to collect eight of the high-scrutiny ballistic steel containers. In what organizers framed as a major victory for direct action, the ship remained anchored offshore for multiple hours before ultimately turning back to open ocean without taking possession of the controversial cargo.

    This confrontation builds on months of escalating scrutiny over military and dual-use cargo transit through Gioia Tauro. Earlier in 2025, the “No Harbour for Genocide” campaign, backed by BDS Italy, first raised public alarms about a shipment of Indian-origin ballistic steel being transported on MSC-operated vessels, as first reported by Italian investigative outlet Altreconomia. MSC is not only one of the world’s largest container shipping firms, but also operates the primary container terminal at Gioia Tauro, putting it at the center of controversy over the port’s cargo management practices.

    Following those initial reports, Italy’s Finance Police and national Customs Agency carried out formal inspections of eight containers at the port on March 18, launching technical evaluations to classify the material as intended for civilian, dual-use, or full military applications. After the inspections concluded, Five Star Movement Member of Parliament Stefania Ascari submitted a formal parliamentary question demanding the Italian central government issue public clarification on the status of the shipment and the rigor of port control protocols.

    Peppe Marra, regional secretary of the grassroots USB union in Calabria, emphasized that sustained public pressure and media attention remain critical to preventing covert movement of military cargo to Israel through Italian infrastructure. Marra argued that continuous scrutiny prevents containers from being moved under cover of darkness at a later date, a practice he suggested may have occurred without public detection in the past. His comments echo widespread concerns across labor and solidarity groups over a lack of transparency and accountability in the management of Italy’s strategic port infrastructure and commercial cargo movements.

    Calabrian activists have framed their campaign against military supply chains as inherently connected to broader struggles for economic justice in southern Italy, linking the complicity they see in military activity to longstanding patterns of labor exploitation and systemic inequality across the Mezzogiorno. “The Mediterranean is not Israel’s, it is ours. It belongs to all those communities in the Global South that struggle every day for dignified work, quality healthcare, safe territories that are increasingly affected by climate change, and above all for a world free from war,” explained Roberto Panza of La Base Cosenza, speaking aboard one of the protest vessels. Panza added that the Global Intifada Disarm campaign calls for coordinated local action to disrupt military supply chains globally, including systematic mapping of all ports and cargo carriers moving military or dual-use materials.

    The May 29 national mobilization is the latest in a growing wave of pro-Palestinian solidarity action across Italy that began with the start of the Gaza crisis and the launch of the Global Sumud Flotilla last autumn. In recent months, mass demonstrations, university occupation campaigns, dockworker work stoppages and community solidarity initiatives have spread across every region of the country, drawing participation from students, rank-and-file workers and grassroots labor organizations. Organizers report growing cross-sector convergence between traditional labor rights struggles and pro-Palestinian solidarity mobilization, a trend on clear display at Gioia Tauro, where activists tied their opposition to the Gaza crisis to demands for full transparency over military and dual-use cargo moving through Italian public infrastructure.

  • Israeli parliament advances bill to dissolve itself and trigger early elections

    Israeli parliament advances bill to dissolve itself and trigger early elections

    Israel’s political landscape has been thrown into fresh turmoil after the country’s parliament, the Knesset, took a major step toward self-dissolution that would bring national elections as early as September, months ahead of the originally scheduled October 27 vote. The bill, put forward by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s ruling coalition, passed its first reading late Monday in a landslide vote: 106 lawmakers backed the proposal, with no objections registered from the floor.

    The push to dissolve the sitting parliament came directly from ultra-Orthodox political factions that form part of Netanyahu’s governing alliance. United Torah Judaism, a bloc made up of two separate ultra-Orthodox parties, received orders from Dov Lando, spiritual leader of the faction Degel HaTorah, to move forward with dissolving the Knesset. Lando’s directive stemmed from deep and growing anger among ultra-Orthodox communities over the coalition’s failure to pass a sweeping law that would maintain draft exemptions for ultra-Orthodox young men, a longstanding privilege the community has defended fiercely.

    The debate over ultra-Orthodox military conscription has escalated to a breaking point against the backdrop of Israel’s ongoing military campaign in Gaza and heightened tensions along borders with Iran and Lebanon. For decades following Israel’s founding in 1948, ultra-Orthodox men have almost universally been exempted from mandatory military service. But senior Israeli military leaders have warned repeatedly that continuing the full exemption amid ongoing high-intensity conflicts would severely undermine the Israel Defense Forces’ operational capacity, creating a critical manpower gap at a time of heightened national security risk.

    If the bill completes its legislative process — which requires two additional parliamentary readings before final approval — elections could be held anywhere between September 8 and October 20, adjusting the previously fixed date of October 27. Factional disputes have already emerged over the ideal election date within the ultra-Orthodox community: United Torah Judaism is pushing for a September 1 vote, while Shas, the second ultra-Orthodox party in Netanyahu’s coalition, has requested September 15.

    Israel’s Central Elections Committee has already flagged logistical challenges for a September 15 vote, noting that the date falls during a stretch of back-to-back Jewish religious holidays. A vote on this date would force a one-day delay in both vote counting and the publication of official results, the committee warned. The election oversight body has itself become a flashpoint for political tension in recent months. Orly Adas, the committee’s long-serving former director, stepped down in May, explaining her resignation was an effort to prevent partisan efforts to undermine the committee’s independent authority.

    Supreme Court President Yitzhak Amit echoed these concerns in remarks delivered Monday, issuing a stark warning against any attempts to cast doubt on or tamper with election outcomes. “If anything can be faked, why believe anything at all?” Amit asked, adding that the spread of baseless claims of electoral fraud poses “a threat to the very existence of the electoral process and to the functioning of the democratic system.”

    For Netanyahu, the coming election comes at a time of steep political decline in public opinion polling. A recent poll published by Ma’ariv Friday projected that Netanyahu’s current ruling coalition would only secure up to 52 seats in the 120-seat Knesset, far short of the 61-seat majority required to form a new government. Last week, Channel 13 News reported that Netanyahu is weighing a controversial move to ban the United Arab List (Ra’am), an Arab-Israeli political party, from participating in the upcoming vote, with plans to designate the faction as a terrorist organization. Political analysts broadly view the proposed ban as a strategic maneuver to block opposition parties from forming a governing coalition: Arab-Israeli parties including Ra’am could hold the decisive swing seats that allow opposition blocs to build a majority, giving them outsized influence over who becomes Israel’s next prime minister.

  • SXSW festival slammed for not defending Piker and Uygur after UK ban

    SXSW festival slammed for not defending Piker and Uygur after UK ban

    A major controversy is roiling the inaugural SXSW London festival after the UK government barred two high-profile American progressive political commentators, Cenk Uygur and Hasan Piker, from entering the country to speak at the event — and the festival’s muted response to the entry ban has sparked widespread outrage, multiple speaker withdrawals, and accusations of abandoning free speech principles.

    Both Uygur and Piker were scheduled to deliver talks at SXSW London and had also been invited to speak at the prestigious Oxford Union. Uygur was set to lead a session titled *Techno-Feudalism is Here. Who Are the Lords?*, while Piker’s planned appearance centered on the topic How the American Left Learned to Speak the Internet. The UK Home Office rejected the pair’s Electronic Travel Authorisations, justifying the decision with the vague claim that their presence in the UK would not be “conducive to the public good”.

    In a public post on X, Uygur framed the ban as a direct penalty for criticism of Israel. He noted that British officials labeled his factual observation that Israel influences U.S. policy through campaign donations to a large majority of Congress as antisemitic. “I didn’t get banned for criticizing the UK, but for criticizing Israel,” Uygur wrote. “They broke the irony record by saying it was because I said Israel might control other governments. I wonder if they’re going to ban themselves.”

    The Oxford Union, the other host of the two commentators’ planned events, immediately pushed back against the Home Office’s ruling, publicly condemning the entry ban and arranging a virtual livestream for Uygur and Piker to speak despite the travel restriction. SXSW London, by contrast, took a far more hands-off stance in its official statement released Monday: “Decisions on entry to the U.K. are a matter for the Home Office and the individuals concerned. SXSW London’s role is to convene a broad range of diverse voices and perspectives.”

    That neutral, hands-off response triggered immediate fury from Piker and other scheduled participants. On X, Piker excoriated the festival, writing, “sxsw was a minor part of my trip to the uk, they totally didn’t defend me or cenk at all, they’re actual fucking losers and i will never work with them for the rest of my life. if you bought a ticket expecting to see me you should demand a refund.” During a Monday evening livestream, he doubled down on the criticism, contrasting SXSW’s inaction with the Oxford Union’s pushback: “Oxford Union at least had the integrity to be like, this is fucking bullshit, what is the British government doing? South by Southwest was like, lol peace!”

    Multiple scheduled speakers have since pulled out of the festival in protest. Ash Sarkar, a journalist and contributing editor at UK progressive outlet Novara Media, publicly shared the email she sent to SXSW announcing her withdrawal, arguing that any event organizer that had accepted the Home Office interference without pushback failed to meet the basic standard of integrity in defending free expression against government overreach.

    Zara Rahim, a political advisor who was set to join Piker on his scheduled panel, also pulled out and called out the festival’s contradictory stance. Rahim noted that the panel’s core goal was to examine why the public distrusts political institutions, gatekeepers, and existing power structures that dictate which voices are considered legitimate in public discourse. She highlighted the sharp irony: SXSW was supposed to host a conference exploring the future of media, democracy, dissent, and political power, yet responded with extreme caution when one of its scheduled speakers was barred from the country entirely.

    This is not the first time SXSW has found itself at the center of high-profile controversy. In 2024, more than 80 artists withdrew from SXSW’s flagship U.S. event to protest the festival’s partnerships with the U.S. military and defense contractor RTX Corporation. Under pressure, SXSW ultimately reversed its decision, announcing that it would cut ties with military and weapons manufacturing sponsors for its 2025 event. The 2024 SXSW London event also faced widespread criticism and speaker withdrawals after it was revealed that former British prime ministers Tony Blair and David Cameron would make unannounced speaking appearances. Critics objected to the pair’s foreign policy records in the Middle East, particularly Cameron’s role as foreign secretary when the UK government backed Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.

    The entry ban itself has drawn condemnation from across UK political circles, with senior politicians framing it as an unacceptable attack on free speech and a deliberate crackdown on criticism of Israel. Green Party leader Zack Polanski accused the current Labour government of going to great lengths to silence opposition to the Israeli government, while former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn called the ban both an attack on the right to criticize Israel and an indictment of the UK government’s own “complicity in genocide” in Gaza.

  • Oxford Union president vows to platform Hasan Piker and Cenk Uygur in defiance of UK ban

    Oxford Union president vows to platform Hasan Piker and Cenk Uygur in defiance of UK ban

    For nearly 200 years, the Oxford Union has stood as one of the world’s most iconic platforms for provocative and unfiltered debate, with former British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan once hailing it as “the last bastion of free speech in the western world.” Today, that famous line is emblazoned outside the society’s campus bar, a constant reminder of the core principle the institution was built to defend – and this term, its president Arwa Elrayess is putting that principle to the test in a high-profile standoff with the British government.

    Elrayess, a Palestinian student, has issued a firm vow to push forward with a planned speaking event featuring American political commentators Cenk Uygur and Hasan Piker, after UK authorities barred the two men from entering the country. Originally scheduled to appear in person at the union and at London’s SXSW festival, the pair will now address Oxford students via livestream on Saturday 6 June, with the society refusing to scrap the event entirely.

    The clash began when UK Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood revoked Uygur’s electronic travel authorisation, ruling that his presence in the United Kingdom would not be “conducive to the public good.” Uygur, for his part, says the ban stems from his public criticism of Israel. In a post on X, he explained that the UK government labeled his widely shared claim that Israel influences the U.S. Congress via campaign donations as antisemitic, even as it acknowledged his statement was factually grounded. “Don’t know if facts will soon be banned in Britain,” he wrote. “I didn’t get banned for criticizing the UK, but for criticizing Israel. They broke the irony record by saying it was because I said Israel might control other governments. I wonder if they’re going to ban themselves.”

    Piker, who spoke at the Oxford Union last year, noted his 2024 address focused on “the dangers of conflating Judaism and Zionism & how this foments antisemitism.”

    In an exclusive interview with Middle East Eye published Monday, Elrayess issued a sharp rebuke of the government’s decision, doubling down on the union’s commitment to holding the event. “The Oxford Union was founded on one principle: that ideas are challenged through debate, not silenced by decree,” she said. “We have never turned a speaker away because of their political beliefs nor have we sought a permission slip from the state. We will not start now.” Reaffirming that the event would not be canceled, she added, “Free speech does not require a visa.”

    Elrayess, who has personal experience with the censorship of pro-Palestinian speech, framed the standoff as a defense of the institution’s 201-year legacy. Founded in 1823 by students rebelling against official campus censorship, the Oxford Union has a long history of defending controversial speech that draws political backlash. In 1933, the union passed an anti-war motion that earned a blistering condemnation from Winston Churchill, who called the body “abject, squalid, shameless” and “nauseating.” In 1964, civil rights leader Malcolm X delivered a legendary address defending the principle that “extremism in the defence of liberty is no vice; moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue.” More recently, the union made headlines when O.J. Simpson spoke just after his acquittal on murder charges, and the UK government blocked broadcasts of a speech by Sinn Fein politician Gerry Adams. Just this year, the society drew widespread condemnation from right-wing British media after its members voted overwhelmingly to declare Israel “an apartheid state responsible for genocide.” It also faced criticism earlier this year for extending an invitation to far-right activist Tommy Robinson for an Islam-related debate, a decision that tested the society’s commitment to hearing opposing views.

    The government’s entry ban has already drawn sharp criticism from across the British political left. Green Party leader Zack Polanski has accused the new Labour government of “doing everything possible to silence criticism of the Israeli government.” Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn echoed that criticism, denouncing the ban as “an attack on the freedom to criticise Israel, as well as the UK government’s own complicity in genocide.”

    For Elrayess and the Oxford Union, the livestream event this weekend will be a tangible demonstration of whether Macmillan’s decades-old description of the society as a bastion of free speech still holds true today.

  • ‘Everybody hates you’: Trump yells at Netanyahu over Lebanon escalation

    ‘Everybody hates you’: Trump yells at Netanyahu over Lebanon escalation

    A sharp diplomatic rift between former U.S. President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been exposed by multiple U.S. officials, who have detailed a profanity-filled phone call where Trump lashed out at Netanyahu over Israel’s planned new offensive on Beirut, Lebanon. The confrontation came on the heels of Iran’s decision to pause ongoing indirect peace talks mediated by international actors, a move Tehran made directly in response to Netanyahu’s public announcement of plans to renew strikes on the southern Beirut suburb of Dahieh, a stronghold of the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah.

    Citing two anonymous senior U.S. administration officials, news outlet Axios first reported that Trump unleashed a torrent of harsh criticism against Netanyahu during the conversation, steamrolling the Israeli leader and warning that any further military escalation in Lebanon would push Israel into complete international isolation. According to the officials’ accounts, Trump went so far as to call Netanyahu “fucking crazy” and bluntly stated that “everybody hates Israel” over the planned offensive. He repeatedly emphasized that his interventions were shielding Israel from global backlash, telling Netanyahu “I’m saving your ass. Everybody hates you now. Everybody hates Israel because of this.” At one point in the heated exchange, sources say Trump yelled the question “What the fuck are you doing?” in frustration at Netanyahu’s refusal to back down from the attack plans.

    The officials added that Trump also publicly accused Netanyahu of ingratitude, a remark widely interpreted as a reference to Netanyahu’s ongoing ongoing corruption trial in Israel and Trump’s previous public calls for the Israeli leader to receive a full pardon. Immediately after the call, Trump moved quickly to de-escalate the situation, posting an announcement on his social media platform clarifying that no U.S. troops would be deployed to Beirut, and any U.S. military assets already en route had already been ordered to turn back. He also claimed he had held a productive discussion with Hezbollah representatives to work out the terms of a full ceasefire, writing “They agreed that all shooting will stop – That Israel will not attack them, and they will not attack Israel.”

    Initial responses to the ceasefire proposal from regional stakeholders have revealed mixed positions. Hassan Fadlallah, a Hezbollah member of the Lebanese parliament, released a public statement Monday confirming the group supports a comprehensive ceasefire across all of Lebanese territory, noting that such an agreement should be followed by a full withdrawal of Israeli military forces from all occupied Lebanese territory. Fadlallah also made clear that Hezbollah rejects any partial truce deal that would spare Beirut from Israeli strikes in exchange for Hezbollah halting attacks on northern Israel. Shortly after Fadlallah’s statement, the Lebanese presidency officially confirmed that Hezbollah had agreed to the U.S.-brokered proposal for a mutual halt to all hostilities across the entire country.

    Netanyahu, however, has refused to back down from his original stance. In a post on the social platform X, the Israeli prime minister confirmed he had spoken with Trump, and reiterated that “if Hezbollah does not cease attacking our cities and citizens – Israel will attack terror targets in Beirut. This stance of ours remains unchanged.”

    Regarding Iran’s decision to suspend indirect peace talks, Trump initially offered a dismissive response, telling reporters “I don’t care if they’re over, honestly…I really don’t care. I couldn’t care less.” Later, speaking to NBC News, Trump added that he had not received any direct communication from Iran since the suspension, and suggested that a period of diplomatic silence could be beneficial. “I think we’ve been talking too much if you want to know the truth. I think going silent would be very good, and that could be for a long time,” he said, adding “It doesn’t mean we’re going to go and start dropping bombs all over there. We’ll just go silent. We’ll keep the blockade. Blockade is a piece of steel.” He subsequently walked back the suggestion that talks were permanently halted, posting on social media that negotiations with Iran were continuing “at a rapid pace.”
    This report was originally published by Middle East Eye, an outlet that provides independent, in-depth coverage of the Middle East and North Africa region.

  • Al-Aqsa imam warns against Israeli bill to ban Muslim call to prayer

    Al-Aqsa imam warns against Israeli bill to ban Muslim call to prayer

    A controversial Israeli bill that would codify restrictions on the Islamic call to prayer, known as the adhan, has cleared a critical legislative hurdle, drawing sharp condemnation from senior Muslim religious leaders and Palestinian communities who frame the measure as an attack on their religious identity and a violation of international law.

    On Sunday, the Ministerial Committee for Legislation — the body that vets whether proposed bills move forward for a preliminary vote in Israel’s parliament, the Knesset — advanced the legislation. The bill was submitted by far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Zvika Fogel, chair of the Knesset’s National Security Committee, and while it has secured committee backing, it still requires approval from the full Knesset, with no vote date scheduled as of yet.

    Under the terms of the proposed law, the installation and operation of loudspeakers for religious calls to prayer would be banned by default, with permits granted only at the discretion of Israeli authorities. Approval would hinge on a set of criteria including volume limits, required noise reduction infrastructure, a mosque’s geographic location, proximity to residential neighborhoods, and the perceived impact on local residents. If permit conditions are violated, police would gain the authority to immediately order loudspeakers shut off, with repeated violations leading to equipment confiscation and steep financial penalties: unpermitted loudspeaker use would carry a fine of 50,000 Israeli shekels (approximately $17,719), while violations of permit terms would incur a 10,000 shekel fine (around $3,545).

    Sheikh Ekrima Sabri, the imam of Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque — one of the holiest sites in Islam and a flashpoint of longstanding Israeli-Palestinian tension — labeled the latest legislative push a dangerous escalation of repeated, previously unsuccessful efforts to curtail the adhan. “The current attempt to ban the Muslim call to prayer has taken a dangerous turn by legalising the banning of the call to prayer through issuing a law to prohibit it,” Sabri stated on Monday. He emphasized that Israeli authorities have no legitimate standing to classify the centuries-old religious practice as unwanted noise or a public nuisance, arguing “The disturbance and noise come from the war machines of the aggressors.”

    The bill’s backers have defended the proposal as a necessary public health and quality of life measure. Ben Gvir has claimed that excessive noise from muezzins (the religious figures who recite the adhan) harms the well-being of Israeli residents, saying, “In many places, the noise of the muezzin is unreasonable and harms the quality of life and health of residents. This is a phenomenon that cannot be tolerated.”

    Palestinian citizens of Israel, who would bear the direct brunt of the new regulations, have widely condemned the proposal, rejecting the claim that the adhan constitutes a noise problem. They argue the legislation is just the latest example of the current Israeli government’s systematic efforts to erode Palestinian religious and cultural identity across territories under Israeli control.

    A key unresolved question remains: whether the new rules would apply to Al-Aqsa Mosque, located in occupied East Jerusalem. Israel formally annexed East Jerusalem in 1980, a move that has never been recognized by the international community. Consistent with international law, most of the global community regards East Jerusalem as occupied Palestinian territory, holding that an occupying power cannot claim sovereignty over the area and is barred from implementing permanent legal or structural changes to the occupied territory. Sabri emphasized this principle, noting that as an occupying power, Israel “has no right to alter the existing status quo of the occupied territory” and “has no right to enact laws that contradict the laws that were in effect in the country before its occupation.”

    Efforts to restrict the adhan in Israel are not a new development. In 2017, a nearly identical bill targeting loudspeaker use for the Islamic call to prayer passed a preliminary Knesset reading but was never enacted into law. Most recently, at the end of 2024, Ben Gvir already issued a directive ordering Israeli police to block mosques from broadcasting the adhan, repeating his claim that the practice disturbs Jewish residents.

  • Watch: Massive hailstones pound Denver in powerful storm

    Watch: Massive hailstones pound Denver in powerful storm

    On Monday, a powerful and unanticipated severe weather system swept across Denver and its adjacent surrounding regions, leaving a trail of disrupted daily life in its wake. The storm system brought with it a triple threat of dangerous weather conditions: roaring high-speed winds, torrential downpours that saturated roadways and low-lying areas, and exceptionally large hailstones that reached the approximate diameter of standard golf balls.

    Local residents captured dramatic footage of the extreme weather event, showing thick hailstones pummeling residential rooftops, vehicle windshields, and public spaces across the city. The sudden onset of the storm caught many commuters and outdoor-goers off guard, forcing rapid evacuations to shelter and causing widespread temporary traffic disruptions on major metropolitan arteries.

    As of initial reports from local weather authorities, assessment teams are beginning to survey the extent of property damage across the region, with early indications pointing to impacts on thousands of vehicles and structures in the hardest-hit neighborhoods.

  • DR Congo airport reopens in Ebola-hit area as suspected cases drop

    DR Congo airport reopens in Ebola-hit area as suspected cases drop

    Nearly two weeks after flight restrictions were imposed to slow the spread of an ongoing Ebola outbreak in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, the key airport serving the epidemic’s epicentre has resumed regular commercial operations, as health officials confirm a sharp drop in the number of pending suspected cases. This outbreak, caused by the rare Bundibugyo strain of the Ebola virus, was formally declared a major public health emergency by the DRC government on May 15, just days after the first cases were detected in the conflict-affected Ituri province. Within 48 hours of the declaration, the World Health Organization elevated the event to an international public health alert, triggering a coordinated global response to contain the virus before it could spread more broadly beyond national borders.

  • Houthis and Al-Shabaab conspiring to choke Red Sea routes

    Houthis and Al-Shabaab conspiring to choke Red Sea routes

    Stretching between the Horn of Africa and the Arabian Peninsula, the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden basin stands as one of the world’s most critical maritime trade arteries, carrying nearly 30% of all global container traffic between Asia and Europe via the Suez Canal. What was once already a region roiled by decades of conflict is now facing a new and alarming threat: two ideologically opposed militant organizations are quietly forging opportunistic cooperative ties, sharing military expertise and equipment that risk expanding instability far beyond their existing borders.

    According to United Nations expert panels and U.S. intelligence assessments, Yemen’s Houthi insurgency (officially the Ansar Allah movement, which controls large swathes of northern Yemen and maintains the capacity to disrupt Red Sea shipping) and Somalia’s Al-Shabaab—widely recognized as al-Qaeda’s most powerful active affiliate—have been exchanging logistical and military support, despite the absence of a formal binding alliance. The two groups hold starkly opposing ideological views: the Houthis adhere to Zaydi Shiism, while Al-Shabaab follows a hardline anti-Shia Sunni extremist doctrine. Yet shared strategic and material interests have overcome these divides, marking a worrying new shift in regional security dynamics.

    First reports of emerging cooperation between the two groups surfaced in 2024, when the UN Panel of Experts on Yemen issued an official warning over growing arms trafficking across the shared waters between Somalia and Yemen—two nations that have been mired in continuous conflict since 1991 and 2014 respectively. The panel later expanded its warning to note deepening logistical and operational coordination between the militant organizations.

    Accounts suggest Houthi leaders have made direct trips to Somalia to establish working relationships with Al-Shabaab commanders, while cross-border criminal smuggling networks long active in the region have also acted as intermediaries to facilitate these connections. Illicit trafficking of weapons, goods and people has flourished along the ungoverned coasts of the Horn of Africa and Yemen for decades, providing a ready infrastructure for underground cooperation.

    For both groups, the partnership serves clear strategic goals. The Houthis aim to expand their regional influence and diversify their revenue streams, while Al-Shabaab seeks to bolster its outdated military arsenal with more advanced capabilities. Per UN documentation, Al-Shabaab militants have already received training in Houthi-controlled Yemeni territory on drone operation and the manufacturing of advanced improvised explosive devices. The Houthis have also reportedly supplied Al-Shabaab with armed drones—weapons the Houthis have used extensively to target commercial and military shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden between 2023 and 2025—and Al-Shabaab has additionally requested guided missiles from its Yemeni partners.

    Up to this point, Al-Shabaab has only used drones for surveillance and intelligence gathering. The acquisition of armed offensive drones would transform the group’s operational capacity, allowing it to carry out deadlier attacks against the already overstretched Somali national army and its international backers, both within Somalia and across regional borders. The United Nations has warned this expansion could allow Al-Shabaab to extend its reach far beyond Somali territory, further destabilizing the already fragile Horn of Africa region.

    Al-Shabaab’s growing power comes after nearly two decades of gradual expansion across Somalia. Emerging in the mid-2000s, the group has carved out control over large areas of central and southern Somalia, outlasting multiple international counterinsurgency campaigns. Its resilience is rooted in longstanding political, military and economic failures of the Western-backed Somali federal government, which has failed to unify fragmented regional forces and consolidate authority across the country. Al-Shabaab has successfully exploited violent rivalries between the federal army and regional militias seeking greater autonomy, expanding its influence as political divisions deepen in Mogadishu.

    International forces have also struggled to contain the group. African Union troops deployed to support the Somali government have faced persistent setbacks, and U.S. counterterrorism airstrikes—hit a record high in 2025—have done little to roll back Al-Shabaab’s territorial control, even as they weakened the smaller Islamic State affiliate in northern Somalia (which is also suspected of maintaining informal links to the Houthis).

    Currently, Somali security forces, backed by U.S. support, are preparing a new major offensive, codenamed Operation Onkod (Thunder), targeting Al-Shabaab in coastal areas west of the autonomous northern Puntland region, following a successful earlier campaign against the local Islamic State faction. Al-Shabaab has already begun reinforcing its positions in the area in anticipation of the assault.

    The growing cooperation between the Houthis and Al-Shabaab carries severe risks for global trade and regional security. While current cooperative activity remains limited, it could eventually push increased instability into the Gulf of Aden, already roiled by Houthi attacks on commercial shipping carried out in support of Palestinians since 2023. Those previous attacks already diverted international naval resources and contributed to a resurgence of pirate activity off the Somali coast, which has only partially abated. A stronger Al-Shabaab controlling northern Somali coastal territory, paired with ongoing Houthi aggression, could create a sustained arc of instability across the entire Red Sea corridor.

    Against the backdrop of open regional tensions between Iran, the United States and Israel that began in February 2024, the Houthis have already amplified destabilizing activity across the waterway. With the global economy already vulnerable to supply chain disruptions through strategic chokepoints like the nearby Strait of Hormuz, any further escalation in the Red Sea could have far-reaching economic consequences for markets worldwide.

    This analysis is based on research by Brendon Novel, a doctoral candidate in political science at the University of Montreal specializing in Horn of Africa and Red Sea security dynamics.

  • Trump names inexperienced ally as intelligence director

    Trump names inexperienced ally as intelligence director

    In a surprise and controversial Tuesday announcement, former and current US President Donald Trump has tapped one of his most aggressively loyal allies, 38-year-old Bill Pulte, to serve as acting director of national intelligence — a role Pulte will hold alongside his existing positions overseeing the nation’s federal housing finance system. Pulte, who currently leads the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) and regulates the government-sponsored mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, will step into the intelligence role to succeed Tulsi Gabbard, whose short tenure ended with her resignation in late May. Gabbard, herself a divisive pick for the intelligence post, departed after public reports of friction between her and Trump over his hardline policy against Iran.

    In an official post shared on his Truth Social platform Tuesday, Trump defended the unconventional appointment, highlighting Pulte’s track record overseeing US housing finance markets. “William has deep experience managing the most sensitive matters in America, the safety and soundness of the Markets,” Trump wrote, confirming that Pulte would not step away from his current housing and mortgage regulatory roles while leading the US intelligence community.

    Long recognized as one of Trump’s most vocal public defenders, Pulte has built a reputation as a blunt “attack dog” for the president, repeatedly targeting Trump’s political opponents across the Democratic Party with public accusations and investigations. He has openly claimed that Democratic Senator Adam Schiff and New York Attorney General Letitia James falsified information on their personal mortgage applications. According to reporting from The Wall Street Journal, an internal Fannie Mae complaint alleges Pulte improperly accessed the confidential mortgage records of James and other top Democratic officials, drawing criticism for misusing his regulatory power for political gain.

    The accusation against James led to a federal grand jury indictment in October last year, though a federal judge dismissed the case without prejudice a month later over unrelated procedural issues. Pulte has also brought forward mortgage fraud claims against Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, a move that prompted Trump to attempt to fire the sitting central bank official. That legal dispute remains pending before the US Supreme Court.

    Beyond his attacks on political opponents, Pulte has drawn controversy for his actions inside FHFA and Fannie Mae. He has fired internal ethics watchdogs who were investigating close allies of his, framing the dismissals as a deliberate effort to eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs within the agency. On housing policy, he has pushed a controversial proposal to introduce 50-year mortgages in the US, a plan that has sparked intense backlash even within Trump’s own pro-Trump MAGA movement.

    Pulte, the heir to the PulteGroup homebuilding fortune, left the company’s board of directors in 2020 after a public falling out with his family over the future of the business. His aggressive, public approach to political combat has also alienated many insiders, even within Trump’s own inner circle. Multiple US media outlets including The Wall Street Journal and Politico have reported that in 2025, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent threatened to physically assault Pulte during a private dinner at an exclusive club, highlighting the deep divisions within the Trump administration over Pulte’s actions. Critics have raised widespread alarm over the appointment, noting that Pulte has no prior experience in national security or intelligence work, marking a sharp break with standard practice for the top intelligence leadership role.