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Somalia’s Decision to Cut Ties with the UAE: A Matter of Contention | Opinions

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The decision to annul UAE agreements was not abrupt or reckless, but a necessary assertion of sovereignty, constitutional order and national unity.

By any objective measure, the decision taken by Somalia’s Cabinet on January 12 to annul all agreements with the United Arab Emirates was neither abrupt nor reckless. It came after prolonged restraint, repeated diplomatic engagement, and a sober assessment of what any responsible government is ultimately obliged to defend: its sovereignty, constitutional order, and national unity.

For years, Somalia pursued cooperation with external partners in good faith, guided by the expectation that engagement would be based on mutual respect, positive collaboration and the pursuit of a win-win prosperous future. The Somali government’s patience was not infinite nor unconditional. When international cooperation begins to bypass constitutional institutions, fragment national authority, and distort internal political balances, it ceases to be partnership and becomes illegal interference.

At its core, sovereignty is not an empty slogan; it is a system. It means that political, security, and economic relations with foreign states must flow through a country’s recognised national institutions. When parallel arrangements emerge, direct dealings with sub-national entities, security cooperation outside federal oversight, or agreements concluded without national consent, the integrity of the state is gradually eroded. Somalia experienced precisely this pattern over an extended period with the UAE engagement in the country. Therefore, our national decision on the UAE agreements was not a rejection of positive bilateral engagement, nor an abandonment of diplomacy: It was an affirmation of boundaries in line with international law.

Some critics of the Somali government’s decision to annul all UAE agreements have framed the decision as “drastic,” arguing that Somalia should have absorbed these practices for the sake of short-term stability or economic convenience. That argument misunderstands both Somalia’s recent history and the foundations of durable statehood. Fragile states do not become stable by tolerating fragmented authority driven by external interests. They become stable by consolidating institutions, clarifying chains of command, and ensuring that foreign engagement strengthens rather than substitutes the state. The nullification of UAE agreements concluded with sub-national administrations, and the suspension of bilateral security arrangements, must be understood in this context.

Under international law, and through all established diplomatic rules, sovereign nations must engage through their relevant national institutions. National institutions are solely responsible for the engagement with sub-national level institutions and actors. Accordingly, absolutely no independent country can accept security structures that operate outside its constitutional framework or port arrangements that dilute national control over strategic assets and undermine intergovernmental fiscal federalism.

What Somalia has done is draw a clear, lawful line. It has said that engagement is welcome but only on transparent, state-to-state terms, consistent with constitutional authority and international law. It has affirmed that dialogue remains possible but that principles are not negotiable.

Given Somalia’s strategic location, concerns about economic disruption resulting from the annulment of the UAE agreements are understandable. However, our government has put in place mechanisms to ensure continuity in port operations and security responsibilities, including the use of neutral international operators to continue facilitating global trade where necessary. Fundamentally, Somalia recognises that sustainable economic development and growth depend on the right enabling environment, political coherence and legal clarity, which investors are seeking across the world. Only a strong and unified state can provide this, not a fragmented one, divided within by destructive external interests.

Somalia’s decision to annul the UAE agreements reflects a broader regional reality. Somalia sits at a strategic crossroads linking the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden, and the wider Horn of Africa. Any use of Somali territory, ports, or political space to advance external conflicts or agendas carries risks not only for Somalia, but for regional trade and stability as a whole. Therefore, a strong and united Somalia, reinforcing its national sovereignty, is a regional and global asset.

For too long, Somalia has been spoken about as an object of regional politics rather than as a subject of international law. The Cabinet’s decision on the UAE agreements signals a shift away from that narrative. It asserts that Somalia will engage the world as a sovereign equal, not as a fragmented space open to parallel influence and abuse.

History is often unkind to states that delay difficult decisions in the name of convenience. Somalia chose clarity instead. That choice deserves to be understood not as confrontation, but as an overdue act of constitutional self-respect.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.

FlyExclusive expands fleet with two new Challenger 350 aircraft

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flyExclusive adds two Challenger 350 aircraft to fleet

West Chester Welcomes Distance Swimmer Amelia Wygant to Their Team for the 2026 Season

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Fitter and Faster Swim Camps is the proud sponsor of SwimSwam’s College Recruiting Channel and all commitment news. For many, swimming in college is a lifelong dream that is pursued with dedication and determination. Fitter and Faster is proud to honor these athletes and those who supported them on their journey.

Distance swimmer Amelia Wygant has committed to continue her athletic career at West Chester University, a Division II school in Pennsylvania, beginning in the fall of 2026. Wygant lives in Frisco, Texas, where she attends Frisco High School and competes for Life Time Dallas.

Wygant also serves as the At-Large Representative for the North Texas Swimming Committee. In this role, she attends monthly meetings and assists with social media management. Swimming runs in her family. Wygant’s mother and two aunts were collegiate swimmers as well.

“I am thrilled to announce my verbal commitment to continue my academic and athletic career at West Chester University!! I want to thank my parents, coaches, and teammates who have helped me throughout this journey. I also want to say a huge thank you to Coach Steve and Victor for this amazing opportunity. GO RAMS!!🐏💜💛”

Wygant earned all of her distance lifetime bests in December 2023 at the at the KMSC King Marlin Pro-Am Classic (SCY). She placed 22nd in the 500 free (5:14.33) and finished 6th in both the 1000 free (10:31.44) and the 1650 free (17:32.44). She competed in the 200 free (1:59.93), the 100 back (1:03.19), and the 200 back (2:14.00) as well. Her 200 free time remains a personal best.

Wygant also shows strength in backstroke. She recorded her fastest 200 back time of 2:12.78 in early December 2023 at the GU MAC Winter Invitational (SCY) during prelims. She later finished 16th in finals (2:13.93).

The previous year, at the 2022 NT MAC North Texas Senior Meet (SCY) in December, Wygant posted her lifetime best in the 100 back with a time of 1:02.97.

More recently, Wygant set personal bests this past July at the 2025 MT NTRO TYR American Long Course meet, including the 50 back (35.21), 50 fly (32.61), 100 fly (1:12.64), and 200 IM (2:38.85).

Top Yard Times 

  • 500 Free – 5:14.33
  • 1000 Free – 10:31.44
  • 1650 Free – 17:32.44
  • 100 Back – 1:02.97
  • 200 Back – 2:12.78

The West Chester women’s team captured the team title at the 2025 Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference Championships. Wygant’s fastest time in the 1650 free would have placed 5th at the meet. Last season, the top mile times for the Golden Rams were posted by senior Danielle Stewart (17:24.82) and freshman Ditta Kowalik (17:27.05).

Wygant will arrive on campus alongside Kara Walters, Allison Schiavo, Julie Chong, and Addyson Despeaux. Walters will be a strong training partner for Wygant with her 5:07.44 time in the 500 free, along with Schiavo (5:08.35) and Chong (5:08.87).

Wygant plans to major in Exercise Science and intends to use the degree to continue her education toward becoming a cardiac sonographer. She is an AP Scholar and a member of the National Honor Society.

If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to [email protected].

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28 ft Tiny House “Flexible Tink” Accommodates Guests, Storage and a Home Office

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Typically, a jack of all trades is… well, you know, but the Tink is adept at performing multiple roles. The compact tiny house is very flexible and packs in lots of clever storage, room for guests, and even space to work from home.

Designed by Modern Tiny Living, the Tink is based on a triple-axle trailer and has a length of just 28 ft (8.5 m). This puts it on the smaller side for a North American tiny house and could make it a good fit for those planning to relocate their home regularly. The exterior is finished in engineered wood and topped by a steel roof.

The tiny house has two entrances, with the main one opening next to the living room. Like Modern Tiny Living’s Cerceaux, this space is raised and has lots of storage, including under the floor, in the steps leading up to it, and in the U-shaped seating area itself. The sofa accommodates an impressive six people at once and can also be converted into a double bed.

The Tink’s living room has lots of built-in storage, including under the floor and within the sofa

Modern Tiny Living

Next to the living room is the kitchen. This includes a farmhouse-style sink, a propane-powered oven and cooktop, a microwave, a large quad-door fridge/freezer, and a washer/dryer. It also has custom cabinetry, with brown maple countertops, and a countertop extension and breakfast bar-style seating for up to two people. Close to the kitchen is the bathroom, which looks pretty snug and contains a shower, a sink, and a flushing toilet.

At the opposite end of the home from the living room is the home office area. As mentioned, it has its own separate entrance and it hosts a desk, seating, and some additional storage.

There’s just one dedicated bedroom in the Tink, accessed by a storage-integrated staircase. The bedroom itself is a typical loft-style setup, with a low ceiling, some shelving, and a double bed. A skylight helps maximize natural light.

The Tink's kitchen includes a farmhouse-style sink, a gas oven and cooktop, a washer/dryer, and a large quad-door fridge/freezer
The Tink’s kitchen includes a farmhouse-style sink, a gas oven and cooktop, a washer/dryer, and a large quad-door fridge/freezer

Modern Tiny Living

We’ve no word on the price of the Tink, though it’s a custom design for a client that’s based on Modern Tiny Living’s Kokosing model, which starts at US$109,000.

Source: Modern Tiny Living

Russian doctors detained after nine newborns die in maternity hospital

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Two senior doctors have been arrested in Russia following the deaths of nine babies in a maternity hospital in Siberia this month.

The newborns died during the long New Year holiday in Novokuznetsk, Russia’s main investigative authority said in a statement.

No reason for the babies’ deaths has been given.

The case has caused anger around Russia.

All the babies were born in the Novokuznetsk Maternity Hospital No.1 from 1-12 January, with the first death on 4 January, Russia’s Investigative Committee spokeswoman Svetlana Petrenko said.

Without giving details, the committee said the chief physician and the head of the intensive care unit had been detained for the “improper performance of their official and professional duties in organising and providing medical care”.

It said the suspects were co-operating with the investigation and authorities were deciding on charges as well as pre-trial detention.

The committee released a video showing one man being escorted away and a man signing some papers in the presence of a uniformed officer.

Victims and witnesses had been questioned and materials seized as work continued to gather more evidence, it added.

Nine post-mortem examinations were being carried out.

The Interfax news agency said the Kemerovo Region Ministry of Health which was also investigating said the infants had had a severe intra-uterine infection.

The hospital has announced that it is no longer accepting patients due to a higher-than-usual rate of respiratory infections.

Icon of a Downward Arrow Button

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The S&P 500 fell 0.19% yesterday but, interestingly, the “equal weight” S&P 500 (a notional index that values each stock equally) was marginally up. That’s because more investors are picking between winners and losers on the index—and many of the losers are the “Magnificent Seven” tech stocks.

The market as a whole is up 0.48% year-to-date. Given that the year is only a few days old, that pace promises healthy gains ahead.

But only two of the Mag 7 stocks are in positive territory so far, Alphabet and Amazon. All the others are down. Some of them are down bad. Tesla has lost 4.73% so far, Apple is down 4.83%.

The collapse of the Mag 7 is important because in the last few years the valuation of those stocks has grown so big that they now form more 30% of the value of the S&P as a whole. It created a situation where even if you bought an S&P 500 exchange-traded fund your results were mostly affected by the Mag 7.

To give you an idea of how worried analysts are about this concentration risk, Apollo Global Management chief economist Torsten Sløk recently published a note whose opening page looked like this:

But the dominance of the Mag 7 is likely to come to an end this year, many on Wall Street believe—if only because their valuations can’t exponentially go up forever. 

Morgan Stanley Wealth Management Chief Investment Officer Lisa Shalett believes the market is undergoing a healthy rotation away from tech stocks and back into the non-tech components of the S&P.

“We see several drivers of healthy deconcentration of the current ‘top 10’ components persisting,” she said in a recent note. “First is relative earnings acceleration. Growth rates are apt to continue to decline for the ‘Magnificent Seven’ while those of ‘the 493’ improve. Second, stock-buyback activity among the tech giants is falling as operating cash flow increasingly goes to [AI-related] capex.” 

The result is something that traders are pretty happy about because—as yesterday’s equal weight S&P performance shows—the other 493 stocks are still able to generate gains even if the Mag 7 are crumbling.

“On a [year-to-date] basis, the bull market in the S&P 500 is broadening, as we expected it might this year. The S&P 400 and S&P 600 are outperforming the S&P 500,” Ed Yardeni of Yardeni Research told clients this morning:

The Mag 7 has been in decline for two and a half months. “The Impressive-493 has outperformed the Magnificent-7 since last November. We expect this will continue in 2026, as last year’s LargeCap laggards catch up,” Yardeni said.

Here’s a snapshot of the markets ahead of the opening bell in New York this morning:

  • S&P 500 futures were down 0.44% this morning. The last session closed down 0.19%.
  • STOXX Europe 600 was up 0.27% in early trading.
  • The U.K.’s FTSE 100 was up o.3% in early trading. 
  • Japan’s Nikkei 225 was up 1.48%.
  • China’s CSI 300 was down o.4%. 
  • The South Korea KOSPI was up 0.65%. 
  • India’s NIFTY 50 was down 0.26%. 
  • Bitcoin was at $95K.
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Japan and South Korea Strengthen Bonds Through a K-Pop Music Session

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new video loaded: Japan and South Korea Reinforce Ties With a K-Pop Jam Session

President Lee Jae Myung of South Korea and Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi of Japan jammed to K-pop during a summit to reaffirm their relationship amid growing political and economic uncertainty.

By Shawn Paik

January 14, 2026

Universal Music Group names Hannah Poferl as Chief Data Officer

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Universal Music Group has appointed New York Times veteran Hannah Poferl to the role of Chief Data Officer.

The appointment is effective immediately. Poferl will be based in Santa Monica and will report to Chief Operating Officer Boyd Muir, UMG said in a statement on Tuesday (January 13).

She will lead the company’s data and analytics strategy and functions globally, with responsibility for audience development and engagement, and will implement the use of data and AI to power UMG’s superfan strategy.

The aim is to better connect the company’s artists and labels with fans, empower talent discovery, and help unlock long-term value for UMG’s global catalog. A part of Poferl’s role will be to support operational performance at UMG’s companies worldwide, UMG said.

“Her exceptional reputation and track record of strategically utilizing data, analytics and AI technology to grow, connect and engage audiences with creativity and culture, mirrors our own vision for transforming the ways artists and labels can connect with fans.”

Boyd Muir, UMG

Muir said: “We are thrilled to welcome Hannah to the UMG team. Her exceptional reputation and track record of strategically utilizing data, analytics and AI technology to grow, connect and engage audiences with creativity and culture, mirrors our own vision for transforming the ways artists and labels can connect with fans.

“Her unique insight and deep understanding of both the creative and commercial aspects of the creative sector, dovetail perfectly with our own ambitions to accelerate the role data and technology play in our driving our superfan initiatives, direct to consumer platforms and UMG’s business globally.”

Poferl said: “I’m excited to join UMG because of its clear focus on using data and technology in service of artists and artistry at a time when data and technology are playing an increasingly important role.

“The organization’s ambitious and thoughtful approach to innovation, including AI, reflects a clarity of purpose and a respect for creativity that I value deeply. Storytelling has been central to my career, and music is one of the most powerful storytelling mediums that exists — making this an especially meaningful place to do this work.”

“[UMG’s] ambitious and thoughtful approach to innovation, including AI, reflects a clarity of purpose and a respect for creativity that I value deeply.”

Hannah Poferl

Poferl most recently served as Chief Data Officer at The Times, a role she held since 2021. Overseeing a team of some 200 people, Poferl “led data-driven acquisitions and editorial transformations that helped propel The Times to the top of its peer group – closing the gap with broadcast rivals and outpacing digital peers,” UMG said.

In the nearly 12 years she spent at the newspaper, Poferl held a number of other positions including Associate Managing Editor, Director of Newsroom Strategy, Deputy Editor and Senior Manager, Newsroom Analytics.

Her appointment comes just a week after it was confirmed that Warner Music Group veteran James Steven will be joining UMG as EVP & Chief Communications Officer.

Steven, who served as WMG’s Chief Communications Officer for 10 years, will take up his new role on January 26. He will be based in New York and will report to Chief Administrative Officer Will Tanous.

Other relatively recent high-level appointments at UMG include the appointment of prominent global finance exec Matt Ellis to Chief Financial Officer last May, and Muir’s own appointment to COO in October, 2024.Music Business Worldwide

Foreign intelligence blamed for protest movement in Iran | Latest on Protests

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Iranian authorities have been increasingly clear that they believe foreign countries are behind the unrest sweeping the country – and are involved in fomenting unrest on the ground.

On Monday, President Masoud Pezeshkian shifted focus away from Iran’s stuttering economy and suppression of dissent and towards his country’s longstanding geopolitical adversaries, Israel and the United States.

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Speaking on state broadcaster IRIB, Pezeshkian claimed that “the same people that struck this country” during Israel’s 12-day war last June were now “trying to escalate these unrests with regard to the economic discussion”.

“They have trained some people inside and outside the country; they have brought in some terrorists from outside,” he said, alleging that those responsible had attacked a bazaar in the northern city of Rasht and set “mosques on fire”.

The prospect of direct foreign intervention in support of Iran’s protesters appears to be growing daily, with US President Donald Trump repeatedly signalling a readiness to attack.

In Israel, far-right Heritage Minister Amichai Eliyahu told Army Radio last week, “When we attacked in Iran during ‘Rising Lion’ [Israel’s June attack on Iran], we were on its soil and knew how to lay the groundwork for a strike. I can assure you that we have some of our people operating there right now,” stopping short of claiming that Israeli agents were seeking regime change.

Writing on social media earlier this month, former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who is also a former director of the CIA, did acknowledge the presence of Israeli agents operating on the ground in Iran, wishing “Happy New Year to every Iranian in the streets. Also to every Mossad agent walking beside them.”

Israel’s enemy

Despite its wars with Syria, Yemen, Lebanon and the genocide it has unleashed on Gaza, it is Iran that looms largest in the minds of many Israelis as the most deadly of the many enemies they face.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly claimed that Tehran stands on the brink of developing nuclear weapons and is responsible for backing Israel’s opponents across the region.

“I don’t know if it’s Netanyahu pushing it or the whole of society,” Israeli political scientist Ori Goldberg said. “Israelis are desperate for any sign of a … masterplan in which they … will unite against any foe threatening their destruction.”

Israel has a history of covert operations in Iran.

Previous Israeli operations have targeted Iran’s nuclear and missile programmes and embedded agents and weapons systems inside Iranian territory.

Israeli intelligence has also exploited its presence within Iran to conduct a series of high-profile assassinations of nuclear scientists and politicians, including the Palestinian group Hamas’s political leader Ismail Haniyeh, who was killed while attending Pezeshkian’s inauguration ceremony in July 2024.

Members of the Iranian police attend a pro-government rally in Tehran, Iran [Stringer/WANA (West Asia News Agency)]

Israel is also widely acknowledged to have infiltrated deep into Iran and its security networks in the weeks before the June war. At that time, Israel was not only able to target scientists and officials involved in the country’s nuclear programme for assassination, but also to assemble and launch drones from within Iranian territory.

“My assumption is that the Mossad is active in Tehran behind the scenes,” said Ahron Bregman, who teaches at King’s College London and has written extensively on Israeli intelligence operations. “Israeli officials are unusually quiet. [There are] clear instructions not to talk [and] not to be seen to be involved in any way.”

“I assume there are Israeli agents on the ground, reporting back on the situation from the streets, particularly now that the internet in Iran is down,” he continued. “Operationally, it is easier to do things on the ground as it is so chaotic now.”

In the eyes of many analysts, Iran’s internal cohesion has been fundamentally undermined by the long-running series of protests and unrest, which has allowed for the infiltration of foreign security services.

Exacerbating those fissures has been the toxic mixture of crippling sanctions, corruption and the deaths of protesters.

“I’d be very surprised if Israeli agents were not active within Iran right now,” defence analyst Hamze Attar said. “They’re going to be doing everything they can to make sure these protests continue and escalate.”

“Principally, they’re going to try to provide the demonstrators with what they need most: exposure,” Attar continued. “People have come to expect violence from the Iranian regime. What [the protesters] need is to know it’s not for nothing. That’s what Israel and the US will be focusing on: providing the internet access that will allow people to share footage of what’s happening to them. The protesters will know where [what countries that support] is coming from, but right now – in the midst of the chaos – they’re very unlikely to care.”

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