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Generals-backed party poised for overwhelming victory in ‘fraudulent’ Myanmar election

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Polls in Myanmar have closed after a third and final stage of voting in what are widely viewed as sham elections.

Many popular parties are banned from standing and voting has not been possible in large areas of the country because of a five-year-long civil war.

The dominant party backed by the ruling military junta is expected to win a landslide victory.

The current regime has rejected international criticism of the election, maintaining that it is free and fair.

Around one-fifth of the country’s 330 townships, including the cities of Yangon and Mandalay, voted in the last stage.

Six parties, including the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), fielded candidates nationwide, while another 51 parties and independent candidates decided to contest state and regional levels.

Two previous rounds were held on 28 December and 11 January – giving overwhelming victories to the USDP.

The party won only 6% of parliamentary seats in the last free election in 2020.

As in previous rounds of this strange, month-long election, voting was orderly and peaceful at the polling station in Nyaungshwe, Shan State, which a BBC team observed.

Set in a large school, shaded by huge rain trees, there were ample volunteers an officials to guide voters where to go, and how to make their choice using the new, locally-made electronic voting machines.

You could be forgiven for believing this was a normal democratic exercise, not the sham its critics say it is.

However polling day was preceded by a campaigning period marked by fear, intimidation and a pervasive sense that little will change after the inevitable victory by the USDP.

Everywhere the BBC team travelled in southern Shan State, we were followed and closely monitored by dozens of police and military officials, always polite but very persistent.

It proved nearly impossible to get people to say anything about the vote, so nervous were they of possible repercussions.

The next steps after final results are announced are laid down in the military-drafted constitution.

Parliament will meet within the next two months to choose a new president, and everyone expects that to be the coup leader Gen Min Aung Hlaing.

It will be the same regime with civilian clothes.

But he will then have to relinquish his command of the armed forces.

His replacement is certain to be a loyalist, but his hold over the ranks of the military will inevitably be less secure, and it is no secret that many other senior officers do not believe he has made a good job of leading the country.

With many more voices in politics, there is the possibility of wider debate inside government over which direction Myanmar should now take, and the possibility – distant for now – of the first steps towards ending the civil war.

The military junta took control of Myanmar in a 2021 coup, ousting an elected civilian government led by Nobel Peace Prize Winner Aung San Suu Kyi.

She remains in detention and, like many other opposition groups, her National League for Democracy has been formally dissolved.

The military has been fighting against both armed resistance groups which oppose the coup and ethnic armies that have their own militias.

It lost control of large parts of the country in a series of major setbacks, but clawed back territory this year enabled by support from China and Russia.

The civil war has killed thousands of people, displaced millions more, destroyed the economy and left a humanitarian vacuum.

A devastating earthquake in March and international funding cuts have made the situation far worse.

Record-breaking 12.8 million users tune in to Roblox concert featuring Bruno Mars

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Bruno Mars has continued his record-breaking streak after drawing more than 12.8 million concurrent users to his virtual concert on Roblox.

The 16x Grammy winner set a new single artist record for most watched virtual concert with his performance on the platform’s Steal a Brainrot video game on Saturday (January 17).

The feat came on the heels of Mars selling 2.1 million tickets in a single day for his upcoming stadium tour, breaking records and logging the highest single-day sales in Live Nation history across North America, Europe and the UK.

The on-sale also set a new Ticketmaster record for the most tickets sold in a single day.

Mars became the first ever artist to ‘pop up’ in the viral Steal a Brainrot experience, which sees players raid each other’s bases to capture in-game characters known as ‘Brainrots’.

Fans were given the chance to collect Bruno-themed traits and a limited edition “Brunito Marsito” Brainrot.

The concert peaked with 12,862,161 concurrent users, according to the platform, attaining 53 million-plus views from social video content originating from more than 38 countries and in 20 languages.

Over 10 million viewers watched livestreams from 14 countries in nine languages.

Mars was previously named as the “icon” for Epic Games‘ Fortnite Festival Season 9 last year, capping off the Season 8 Festival with Sabrina Carpenter.

Other major artists to have been featured as “icons” on Fortnite include The Weeknd, Lady Gaga, Billie Eilish, Metallica, Karol G, Snoop Dogg, and Hatsune Miku.

DJ star Marshmello famously played the first ever live virtual concert inside of Fortnite back in 2019, attracting over 10 million concurrent users.

Rapper Travis Scott went on to break that record the following year, pulling in 12.3 million concurrent players for his Astronomical virtual performance.

That bar stood until Fortnite set a new milestone in November 2024, drawing 14.3 million concurrent players for its Remix: The Finale virtual concert, which featured performances by Snoop Dogg, Ice Spice, Eminem, and a posthumous tribute to Juice WRLD.


Roblox finished Q3 2025 (to end of September) with a significant spike in Daily Active Users (DAUs).

At the close of that quarter – the latest on public record – the firm counted 151.5 million DAUS globally.

That was up 70% YoY vs. the equivalent period of the prior year (see below).

Over 90 million of those DAUs in Q3 2025 were located outside of the US, Canada, and Europe.



Music Business Worldwide

Many arrested in solidarity with Palestine hunger strikers outside London prison | Latest on Israel-Palestine conflict

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Eighty-six people have been arrested in the United Kingdom after gathering at a London prison in support of a Palestine Action-linked activist on hunger strike and in a perilous condition who is being held there, police say.

London’s Metropolitan Police wrote on X late on Saturday that officers were dispatched to Prison Wormwood Scrubs, where protesters “refused to leave the grounds when ordered to do so”.

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Inside Wormwood Scrubs is Umer Khalid, a 22-year-old pro-Palestine activist who stopped eating 16 days ago. He had been on hunger strike since November, briefly pausing in December due to severe ill health.

The group “allegedly blocked prison staff from entering and leaving, threatened police officers and a number managed to get inside a staff entrance area of a prison building”, the police said.

Videos of the incident verified by Al Jazeera show police officers shoving protesters to the ground and handcuffing them as shouts ring out in the background. Two groups of police also appeared to kettle protesters – a police tactic that involves officers surrounding and closing in on a group of demonstrators in an effort to contain them.

“Why are you assaulting me?” a woman can be heard asking at one point.

Those arrested were detained under suspicion of aggravated trespass, the police said.

Khalid told Al Jazeera last week that he planned to escalate his hunger strike to exclude all fluids starting on Saturday, the day of the protest.

After speaking with him on Monday by phone, Khalid’s mother, Shabana Khalid, told Al Jazeera that a prison guard remains outside his cell in case he needs urgent medical attention. She added that he is also being monitored closely with hourly medical observations.

“I’m reassured in one sense,” she said, “but the fact he’s on [hunger strike] still is quite scary. He’s starting to get tired. You can hear in his voice.”

Umer Khalid is among a group of five activists accused of breaking into the United Kingdom’s largest airbase, Brize Norton, in Oxfordshire in June and spray-painting two Voyager refuelling and transport planes. The group has pleaded not guilty.

At the time, the pro-Palestine protest group Palestine Action said two of its members were involved and red paint “symbolising Palestinian bloodshed was also sprayed across the runway and a Palestine flag was left on the scene”.

Within days, the UK government moved to ban the group under “antiterrorism” laws and made it illegal to support or promote the group.

The decision – which has been challenged in court and heavily criticised as “unjustified” by the United Nations – has led to multiple protests with hundreds of arrests in the months since.

Ongoing hunger strikes

Aside from Umer Khalid, seven other protesters have been involved in rolling hunger strikes since November.

Khalid became the only one still refusing food after three members of the group ended their protests this month. They said one of their demands had been met after a UK-based subsidiary of the Israeli weapons company Elbit Systems was denied a UK government contract.

“Our prisoners’ hunger strike will be remembered as a landmark moment of pure defiance; an embarrassment for the British state,” the Prisoners for Palestine Group said.

Two of the prisoners who concluded their hunger strikes, Heba Muraisi and Kamran Ahmed, were on the brink of death after more than two months without food. Still, Muraisi told Al Jazeera in the days before the announcement that she felt “it’s important to fight for justice and for freedom”.

The group’s list of demands includes bail, the right to a fair trial and the de-proscription of Palestine Action as well as for Elbit sites to be closed in the UK. They’re also seeking an end to what they call censorship in prison, accusing authorities of withholding mail, calls, books and visitation rights.

Before starting to refuse liquids on Saturday, Umer Khalid told Al Jazeera: “The only thing that seems to have any impact, whether that is positive or negative, is drastic action.”

“The strike reflects the severity of this imprisonment,” he added. “Being in this prison is not living life. Our lives have been paused. The world spins, and we sit in a concrete room. This strike reflects the severity of my demands.”

Challenging the Client

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Client Challenge



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All-Region Teams for the West and Mid-West in 2025

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2025 ALL-WEST/MID-WEST REGION FIRST TEAM


 

SARAH ANETSBERGER
Glenbrook North High School (IL)
Junior – Forward

First Team All-State
NFHCA Midwest Region First Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

VALENTINA BAIZAN
St. John’s School (TX)
Junior – Forward/Midfield

12 goals, 9 assists
All-SPC
NFHCA All-West First Team

ELLA BEACH
Glenbrook North High School (IL)
Senior – Midfield

31 goals, 13 assists
First Team All-State
NFHCA First Team National All-American
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region First Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

SOPHIA BORGHESE
Thomas Worthington High School (OH)
Senior – Forward

46 goals, 15 assists, 10 game-winning goals
All-Ohio First Team
First Team All-League
Columbus Dispatch Player of the Year
NFHCA Second Team National All-American
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region First Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

KATY CHAPMAN
John Burroughs School (MO)
Senior – Midfield

11 goals, 21 assists
Metro League Player of the Year & First Team
All-Metro Player of the Year & First Team
NFHCA Second Team National All-American
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region First Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

LILLY CIMAROLI
New Trier High School (IL)
Senior – Midfield
28 goals, 15 assists, 10 game-winning goals
State Offensive Player of the Year
First Team All-State
HFSFHA All-Conference
HSNI All-Tournament First Team
NFHCA First Team National All-American
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region First Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

ELLA CLAYTON
Sacred Heart Academy (KY)
Senior – Midfield/Forward

22 goals, 11 assists
First Team All-State
HSNI Additional Top Performer
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region First Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

LOLA CONWAY
The Bishop’s School (CA)
Sophomore – Midfield

54 goals, 25 assists
Western League Player of the Year & First Team
All-CIF San Diego Section Player of the Year & First Team
WCC Player of the Tournament
San Diego Sports Association Star of the Month
NFHCA October Player of the Month
NFHCA All-West Region
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

GRACEY CRAWFORD
St. John’s School (TX)
Senior – Midfield

14 goals, 8 assists
All-SPC
HSNI All-Tournament First Team
NFHCA First Team National All-American
NFHCA All-West Region
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

FINLEY DESLOGE
John Burroughs School (MO)
Junior – Midfield/Defense

12 goals, 16 assists
Led defense that allowed 9 goals in 25 games
Metro League First Team
All-Metro Second Team

GRACE ESSALIH
The Kinkaid School (TX)
Senior – Midfield

33 goals, 18 assists
All-SPC
NFHCA First Team National All-American
NFHCA All-West Region
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

MONTGOMERY FERGUSON
St. John’s School (TX)
Senior – Midfield

11 goals, 3 assists
All-SPC
HSNI All-Tournament Second Team
NFHCA Third Team National All-American
NFHCA All-West Region
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

KINGSLEY GOLDMAN
St. Ignatius College Prep (IL)
Senior – Defense/Midfield

2 goals, 4 assists
State Defensive Player of the Year
First Team All-State
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region First Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

ANNA CLAIRE KOSEK
Sacred Heart Academy (KY)
Senior – Midfield/Forward

36 goals, 18 assists (led state in goals & points)
Miss Kentucky Field Hockey
State Tournament MVP & All-Tournament Team
First Team All-State
Apple Tournament MVP
HSNI All-Tournament First Team
NFHCA Second Team National All-American
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region First Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

MORGAN LALA
Christian Academy of Louisville (KY)
Senior – Goalkeeper

226 saves, 39 goals allowed
All-State Tournament Team
First Team All-State
Senior All-Star Game
Apple All-Tournament Team
NFHCA First Team National All-American
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region First Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

LIBBY MCCALLA
New Trier High School (IL)
Junior – Defense

6 defensive saves, led defense that allowed .98 goals/game
First Team All-State
IHSFHA All-Conference
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region Second Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

LILLIAN MITCHELL
Dexter High School (MI)
Senior – Midfield

7 goals, 5 assists
First Team SEC
First Team All-State
MFHCA Player of the Year
NFHCA Third Team National All-American
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region First Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

JACKIE O’DONNELL
The Kinkaid School (TX)
Senior – Midfield/Defense

7 goals, 17 assists
All-SPC
HSNI All-Tournament Second Team
NFHCA Second Team National All-American
NFHCA All-West Region
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

MONICA PICCIOLI
Assumption High School (KY)
Senior – Defense/Midfield

13 goals, 18 assists
First Team All-State
All-State Tournament Team
HSNI All-Tournament Second Team
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region First Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

HANNAH PONCIROLI
Villa Duchesne (MO)
Sophomore – Midfield

32 goals, 17 assists
All-Metro First Team
GISL Co-Player of the Year & First Team
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region First Team

OLIVIA ROLLINS
Pioneer High School (MI)
Junior – Defense

4 goals, 2 assists
Led defense that allowed to 2 goals to MI opponents
First Team All-State
First Team SEC
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region First Team

CATHERINE ROSSER
The Kinkaid School (TX)
Senior – Goalkeeper

91% save percentage, 120 saves, 12 goals allowed
All-SPC
NFHCA Second Team National All-American
NFHCA All-West Region

BLAIR STRACHAN
The Kinkaid School (TX)
Junior – Defense

20 goals, 29 assists
NFHCA Third Team National All-American
NFHCA All-West Region

OLIVIA VAN DE BRAAK
St. Ignatius College Prep (CA)
Sophomore – Midfield

17 goals, 9 assists
SCVAL De Anza Division Offensive Player of the Year
SCVAL De Anza Division First Team
NFHCA All-West Region
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

NINA YACOVONE
Shaker Heights High School (OH)
Junior – Midfield

22 goals, 28 assists
All-Ohio First Team
NOFHL Player of the Year & First Team
NFHCA All-Mid-West Region First Team
MAXFH Preseason Player to Watch

The post 2025 West/Mid-West All-Region Teams appeared first on MAX Field Hockey.

Alex Honnold successfully free solos Taipei 101 on live Netflix broadcast without safety equipment

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Watch: Climber Alex Honnold scales 101-floor skyscraper without safety gear

American climber Alex Honnold has successfully scaled a Taiwan skyscraper without a rope, harness or safety equipment.

The building, named Taipei 101 for the number of its floors, stands at 508m (1,667ft) of steel, glass and concrete and is designed to resemble a stick of bamboo.

Honnold is renowned for being the first person to climb El Capitan, the vertical granite cliff in California’s Yosemite national park – also without ropes or safety gear.

The climb was originally set to take place on Saturday but was delayed by wet weather.

His ascent in Taiwan’s capital was streamed live on Netflix, which said there would be a delay on the live feed should the worst happen.

Honnold completed the climb in one hour and 31 minutes and celebrated the achievement with one word: “Sick.”

His time more than halves the record of the only other person to scale the tower.

Alain Robert, a Frenchman who called himself “Spiderman”, made it to the top of Taipei 101 – at the time the world’s tallest building – in four hours. He did so with ropes and a harness.

RITCHIE B TONGO/EPA/Shutterstock Alex Honnold stands on top of the Taipei 101 skyscraper building in a red t-shirt and dark trousers. There is only blue sky behind him. RITCHIE B TONGO/EPA/Shutterstock
Getty Images A building occupant uses his phone to record US rock climber Alex Honnold climbing the Taipei 101 building. Honnold is wearing a red t-shirt and black trousers with yellow shoes. Getty Images

Taiwan’s Vice President Hsiao Bi-khim congratulated Honnold on the ascent, writing on X: “I admit I would probably feel sick, too, barely able to watch.”

Honnold was greeted at the top of the building by his wife, who expressed concern for the wind and heat as he climbed.

But there was another distraction during his ascent.

As Honnold reached the 89th floor, fans cheered and waved, face to face but for the window with the man clinging to the building.

Video of the moment was shared by Honnold and Netflix on Instagram, showing the climber continuing undeterred.

Honnold has made many extreme climbs during his career. A documentary about his ascent of the 3,000 foot (915m) El Capitan, titled Free Solo, won an Academy Award.

Getty Images US rock climber Alex Honnold scales the Taipei 101 building without ropes or safety gear. He is wearing black trousers and a red t-shirt. Getty Images
Getty Images Onlookers take pictures and record footage of US rock climber Alex Honnold climbing the Taipei 101 building. People are holding a variety of devices, including mobile phones and cameras. Getty Images

People is Taipei watched Honnold climb the building

Getty Images US rock climber Alex Honnold raises his arms from the top of the Taipei 101 building.Getty Images
Reuters People look at the building while sitting on a patch of grass from a distance Reuters

The building, named Taipei 101 for the number of its floors, stands at 508m (1,667ft)

Secrets of Beluga Whale Mating Reveal Nature’s Strategy

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For the first time, we know more than we ever expected to know about the sex lives of the majestic beluga whale. It’s complicated, to say the least, but it also shows just how strategic nature is at keeping an isolated group of animals alive.

Research led by the Florida Atlantic University’s (FAU) Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute have, for the first time, discovered how wild beluga whales mate – and it’s a picture of evolutionary survival.

Research Video of Alaska’s Beluga Whales

The beluga whale (Delphinapterus leucas) has been an infamously challenging species to study, even in terms of the normal difficulties in researching marine mammals. Over a massive 13 years, the scientists focused on a small whale population in Alaska’s Bristol Bay, connecting genetic information on 623 individuals as well as observing their social groups and ages. Overall, this population is made up of around 2,000 whales that are essentially isolated from any other belugas.

What they found was that their mating habits are impressively strategic. Each mature individual – male and female – will mate with multiple partners over several years, meaning they’re polygynandrous. The result is that many calves are half-siblings, ensuring genetic diversity – which is critically important in an isolated population.

“What makes this study so thrilling is that it upends our long-standing assumptions about this Arctic species,” said senior author Greg O’Corry-Crowe, a research professor at FAU. “Because males are much larger than females and appear to spend little time associating with mothers and calves, scientists believed belugas were likely to be highly polygynous, where males spend a lot of time competing for mates and only a few dominant males fathering most of the calves.

“Our findings tell a very different story. In the short term, males are only moderately polygynous. One explanation we think lies in their incredible longevity – belugas can live perhaps 100 years or more. Rather than competing intensely in a single season, males appear to play the long game, spreading their reproductive efforts over many years. It appears to be a ‘take your time, there’s plenty of fish in the sea’ strategy.”

While the boys play “the long game,” the females frequently swap mates from one breeding season to the next. The scientists believe this helps them avoid being stuck with “low quality males” and again protects genetic diversity.

“It’s a striking reminder that female choice can be just as influential in shaping reproductive success as the often-highlighted battles of male-male competition,” said O’Corry-Crowe. “Such strategies highlight the subtle, yet powerful ways in which females exert control over the next generation, shaping the evolutionary trajectory of the species.”

The researchers also found that while older females had more surviving calves than younger ones – possibly due to experience and mate choice – most adults had only a few offspring at a time. This appeared to be guided by the female’s slow reproduction.

If you’re wondering why scientists would devote more than a decade to watching whales get it on, understanding the reproductive strategies and success or failures of such an elusive, isolated group of animals is critical for protecting their numbers.

“Understanding these dynamics matters for conservation,” said O’Corry-Crowe. “If only a few males father most calves, the effective population size becomes much smaller than the number of whales actually present. This loss of genetic diversity increases the risk of inbreeding and reduces the population’s ability to adapt to environmental change. Frequent mate switching combined with low reproductive ‘skew’ and possibly the active avoidance of mating with close relatives, may be effective strategies to maintaining the genetic health of relatively small populations.”

The scientists also worked closely with the Bristol Bay indigenous communities in an effort to better protect the whales as they face a rapidly changing Arctic and sub-arctic environment.

“We cannot afford to be complacent,” said O’Corry-Crowe. “Small populations still face the dangers of genetic erosion. But we can be optimistic that beluga whale mating strategies provide evidence of nature’s resilience and offers hope for those working to save and recover small populations of any species.”

The study was published in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science.

Source: Florida Atlantic University

Can Physical AI Lead to a New Age for Industrial Robots?

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Could physical AI usher in a new era for industrial robots?

Gaza: Reality vs Fantasy in the Israel-Palestine Conflict

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By any measure, Gaza’s devastation demands urgent and serious reconstruction. Homes, hospitals, schools, farms, cultural heritage, and basic infrastructure lie in ruins. Entire neighbourhoods have been erased. The humanitarian need is undeniable. But urgency should never become an excuse for illusion, spectacle, or political shortcuts.

The contrast between rhetoric and reality could not be sharper. While United States President Donald Trump and a group of world leaders gathered in Davos, Switzerland, to sign the charter of the so-called Board of Peace and unveil glossy reconstruction plans, the killing in Gaza continued.

Since the ceasefire came into effect on October 10, no fewer than 480 Palestinians have been killed. Four of them were killed on the very day the charter was signed by 19 ministers and state representatives, many of whom were less interested in the issue of Gaza and much more in being seen alongside Trump.

Against that backdrop, the board’s carefully staged optimism feels like performance rather than transformation. It resembles a sandpit where those signing up get to build sandcastles with Trump that will wash away with the first real wave.

The proposals may look impressive and sound hopeful, but structurally, they are hollow. They sidestep the real drivers of the conflict, marginalise Palestinian agency, privilege Israeli military priorities over civilian recovery, and align uncomfortably with longstanding efforts to maintain the occupation, displace Palestinians, and deny the right of return for the population uprooted in 1948 and 1967.

Gaza is not a real estate prospectus

The glossy vision of presidential adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner treats Gaza not as a traumatised society emerging from catastrophic violence, but as a blank investment canvas for luxury housing, commercial zones, data hubs, beachfront promenades, and aspirational gross domestic product (GDP) targets.

It reads less like a recovery plan and more like a real-estate prospectus. Development language replaces political reality. Sleek presentations replace rights. Markets replace justice.

But Gaza is not a failed start-up looking for venture capital. It is home to more than two million Palestinians who have endured siege, displacement, repeated wars, and chronic insecurity for decades. Reconstruction cannot succeed if it is detached from their lived experiences or if it treats Gaza primarily as an economic asset open to speculative investment, including by extreme Zionists, rather than as a human community struggling to preserve its identity and social fabric.

For many families, even modest homes in Gaza’s formal refugee camps represented a fragile bridge worth holding on to as a step towards an eventual return to places from which they were forced to flee, in what is today known as Israel.

These homes were valued not for their comfort or market worth, but for the social networks they sustained and their symbolic links to continuity, memory, and political claims. Palestinians are therefore unlikely to be swayed by offers of glitzy towers, luxurious villas, or promises of a “market economy” under siege. Their experience over the past decades has taught them that no level of material improvement can substitute for deeper aspirations tied to dignity, rootedness, and the right of return.

A future designed without Palestinians

A glaring flaw of Trump’s plan is the systematic exclusion of Palestinians themselves from shaping the vision of their future. These plans are unveiled in elite conference halls, not debated with the people whose neighbourhoods have been flattened.

Without Palestinian ownership, legitimacy collapses. Experience from Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere has shown repeatedly that reconstruction imposed from the outside — however well branded — reproduces the very power imbalances that fuel instability in the first place.

Equally troubling is the plan’s deliberate avoidance of addressing the root causes of Gaza’s suffering: occupation, blockade, and military control. You cannot rebuild sustainably while continuing to preserve and fund the machinery that repeatedly destroys what is built.

No amount of concrete, branding, or foreign investment can substitute for political resolution. A territory that remains militarily besieged, economically sealed, and politically subjugated will never achieve durable recovery.

Prosperity cannot flourish inside a cage. The European Union learned this lesson the hard way through multiple reconstruction cycles it funded in Gaza, which may help explain why none of its members rushed to join the board, despite being able to afford the permanent membership fee and despite the political incentives of cultivating a more cordial relationship with Trump in light of the war in Ukraine and his threats on Greenland.

Aiding Israel’s military control through spatial redesign

There is also a serious risk that the proposed physical design of Gaza would entrench Israeli military strategy rather than restore Palestinian life. The plans envision buffer zones, segmented districts, and so-called “green spaces and corridors” that would break up the territory internally.

This kind of spatial engineering would facilitate surveillance, control, and rapid military access. Urban planning would become security architecture. Civilian geography would turn into militarised space. What is sold as modernisation would constitute a sophisticated system of containment, just like the illegal settlement networks and road systems in the occupied West Bank.

The emphasis on reclaiming land from the sea using rubble may repeat the problems of Beirut’s reconstruction after the civil war, where newly reclaimed areas attracted disproportionate investment because they were free of unresolved ownership claims, ultimately allowing elites to appropriate the city’s waterfront and pull it away from public use.

The demographic implications of the plan are equally profound. Shifting Gaza’s population centre southward — closer to Egypt and further from Israel’s settlements — would quietly alter the political and social centre of gravity of Palestinian life.

It may ease Israeli security anxieties, but it would do so at the expense of Palestinian continuity, identity, and territorial coherence. Population engineering under the banner of reconstruction raises serious ethical concerns and risks externalising Gaza’s long-term humanitarian burden onto neighbouring states. This may also help explain Egypt’s absence from the signing ceremony and its decision to limit participation to its intelligence leadership.

No amount of political theatre can replace freedom

The Board of Peace itself also deserves careful scrutiny. Its branding suggests neutrality and collective stewardship, yet its political framing remains highly personalised around Trump, with little clarity about how it is meant to operate in practice.

This is not the kind of multilateral peacebuilding mechanism envisaged by United Nations Security Council Resolution 2803 of November 2025; it is political theatre. Peace mechanisms anchored in personalities rather than institutions and international law rarely survive political change.

At the heart of all this lies a familiar but dangerous assumption: that economic growth can substitute for political rights. History teaches the opposite. People do not resist simply because they are poor; they resist because they lack dignity, security, freedom of expression, and self-determination. No master plan can bypass these realities. No skyline can compensate for political exclusion.

This does not mean Gaza must wait for the perfect peace before rebuilding. Recovery must proceed urgently. But rebuilding must empower Palestinians rather than redesign their constraints. It must dismantle systems of control, not embed them into concrete and zoning maps. It must confront the political roots of destruction rather than cosmetically repackage its aftermath.

Until those foundations exist, the Board of Peace and Kushner’s vision risk becoming exactly what they resemble — a form of sandcastle diplomacy: impressive to the global public, comforting to elites, and destined to wash away when the first serious wave of political reality arrives.

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

Icon of a Downward Pointing Arrow Button

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Another deadly shooting in Minnesota at the hands of federal agents carrying out President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown heaped pressure on Senate Democrats to shut down the federal government again.

Meanwhile, Trump appeared to inch closer to deploying active-duty troops to the state after accusing local officials of “inciting insurrection.”

A series of appropriations bills passed the House of Representatives earlier in the week, including one to fund the Department of Homeland Security, which includes agencies like Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Border Patrol.

The Senate must pass those bills in a so-called minibus or else the government will run out of funding on Friday. That’s after lawmakers agreed to end the previous shutdown in November with short-term funding.

The shooting death of Renee Good by an ICE agent in Minneapolis earlier this month had already prompted Democrats to seek reforms from DHS in exchange for votes on funding.

Another non-fatal shooting by immigration officers followed, but the latest death on Saturday stirred fresh demands from House Democrats that counterparts in the Senate must reject DHS funding.

Senate Dems should block ICE funding this week. Activate the National Guard. We can and must stop this,” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said on social media.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer late Saturday said he will vote against theDHS bill, adding that Democrats will provide votes on the minibus if DHS funding is included.

Lawmakers could pass appropriations for the other departments if Republicans agree to strip out DHS money.

Sen. Chris Murphy, the ranking Democrat on the subcommittee that oversees the DHS budget, reiterated his earlier push to linking reforms and funding.

“1. ICE must leave Minneapolis. 2. Congress should not fund this version of ICE – that is seeking confirmation, chaos and dystopia,” he posted.

Murphy added later: “The Senate should not vote to keep funding this rampage. We are not powerless. We do not need to accept this.”

Other Democrats, including senators Elizabeth Warren, Mark Warner, Brian Schatz, Mark Kelly, Catherine Cortez Masto, and Jacky Rosen have also signaled they will block DHS funding.

The shooting also followed days of reports about immigration officers in Minnesota detaining young children, arresting U.S. citizens, and forcibly entering homes without judicial warrants.

But on Saturday, Trump blamed Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey for demanding that immigration agents leave the city.

“The Mayor and the Governor are inciting Insurrection, with their pompous, dangerous, and arrogant rhetoric!” he wrote.

That suggests Trump may invoke the Insurrection Act to deploy the military to Minnesota. Last week, two infantry battalions of the Army’s 11th Airborne Division, which is based in Alaska and specializes in arctic operations, were given prepare-to-deploy orders.

If he does that, the political fight over his immigration policies would likely escalate from a budgetary standoff to a constitutional battle.

Earlier this month, Trump said he would invoke the 1807 law “if the corrupt politicians of Minnesota don’t obey the law and stop the professional agitators and insurrectionists from attacking the Patriots of I.C.E., who are only trying to do their job.”

A day later, he told reporters there wasn’t a reason to use it “right now,” but added “If I needed it, I’d use it.”