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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.”

Video captures the moments leading up to fatal shooting in Minneapolis

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Bystander footage has captured the moments before the killing of 37-year-old Minneapolis man Alex Pretti by federal immigration officers.

Federal and state officials have conflicting accounts of the events which lead to Pretti’s death.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem says agents fired “defensive shots” after Pretti “reacted violently”, while Minnesota Governor Tim Walz says the account of events from federal authorities is “nonsense” and “lies”.

The killing comes less than three weeks after American citizen Renee Good was shot dead by an immigration agent in the city

Follow live coverage.

Dre Harris Inks Global Publishing Agreement with Warner Chappell Music

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Warner Chappell Music, the music publishing arm of Warner Music Group, has signed a worldwide publishing deal with three-time Grammy-nominated R&B songwriter and producer, Andre “Dre” Harris.

Harris, whose career spans more than three decades, is best known for writing and producing for artists including Chris Brown, Alicia Keys, Usher, Justin Bieber, Kanye West, and Robin Thicke, contributing to more than 200 million records sold worldwide.

His catalog features Billboard Hot 100 hits such as Caught Up (Usher), Yo (Excuse Me Miss) (Chris Brown) and Oh (Ciara).

The deal follows a commercially strong period for Harris, who is currently credited on Kehlani’s Folded. The track has reached No.1 on Mediabase’s Urban Radio chart and Billboard’s Mainstream R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart, and has spent seven non-consecutive weeks inside the Billboard Hot 100 top 10 since its release in October.

Folded is nominated for Best R&B Song at the upcoming GRAMMY Awards.

“I’m very excited to sign with Warner Chappell!! It feels good to have a team that sees my vision, and understands me as a creative. I’m looking forward to building something new with my Philly family – Ryan Press and X (Champagne).”

Andre ‘Dre’ Harris

Ryan Press, President, North America at Warner Chappell Music, commented on the deal: “For over two decades, Dre has continued to prove how master creators stand the test of time, most recently by helping craft one of last year’s most impactful global songs. Having known him for years, I’ve seen him cement his legacy as a true visionary – shaping the sound of a generation hit after hit.”

He added: “Driven by relentless innovation and a talent for creating timeless, boundary-pushing records, he’s inspired countless artists, from Chris Brown to Usher and Alicia Keys. Rooted in Philly but leaving a lasting mark worldwide, Dre’s impact continues to grow, and we’re proud to support his bold, creative vision.”

Dre Harris shared: “I’m very excited to sign with Warner Chappell!! It feels good to have a team that sees my vision, and understands me as a creative. I’m looking forward to building something new with my Philly family – Ryan Press and X (Champagne).”

Xavier Champagne, Senior Director of Urban A&R at Warner Chappell Music, described Harris as a long-standing contributor to the evolution of R&B. He said: “It’s hard to overstate Dre’s impact on R&B music. For the past 30 years, he’s been one of the pillars who’s shaped and pushed the genre forward, and I’m incredibly honored that we get to partner and carry that legacy further together.”

Harris began his career in the early 1990s within Philadelphia’s neo-soul scene alongside producer DJ Jazzy Jeff. During this time, he contributed to projects for artists including Michael Jackson, Will Smith, Jill Scott, Musiq Soulchild, and Floetry.

“For the past 30 years, he’s been one of the pillars who’s shaped and pushed the genre forward, and I’m incredibly honored that we get to partner and carry that legacy further together.”

Xavier Champagne, Senior Director of Urban A&R at Warner Chappell Music

In 2000, he formed the songwriting and production duo Dre & Vidal with producer Vidal Davis. The partnership contributed to projects including Usher’s Confessions and Alicia Keys’ The Diary of Alicia Keys, both of which received GRAMMY Album of the Year nominations in 2005.

Both projects secured category wins: Usher’s Confessions for Best Contemporary R&B Album and Keys’ album for Best R&B Album

Dre & Vidal also worked on Mary J. Blige’s Growing Pains, which won Best Contemporary R&B Album at the GRAMMY Awards in 2009. In addition to their award-winning records and Hot 100 hits, the duo produced tracks for artists including Mariah Carey, Destiny’s Child, and Musiq Soulchild.

“Driven by relentless innovation and a talent for creating timeless, boundary-pushing records, he’s inspired countless artists, from Chris Brown to Usher and Alicia Keys. Rooted in Philly but leaving a lasting mark worldwide”

Ryan Press, President, North America at Warner Chappell MusiC

Since transitioning to solo production work in the 2010s, Harris has continued to collaborate with a broad range of artists across R&B, pop, and hip-hop, including Justin Bieber, Burna Boy, Kanye West, Melanie Fiona, Mali Music, and Pharrell signee Cris Cab. He also co-executive-produced Jill Scott’s Woman, which debuted at No.1 on the US albums chart.


In December 2025, Warner Chappell Music Nashville signed a global publishing agreement with singer-songwriter Margo Price.

That news followed the October signing of award-winning French composer Victor Le Masne, and the September acquisition of a long-term, worldwide publishing agreement with Eagles founding member Bernie Leadon.Music Business Worldwide

Final round of elections in Myanmar sees military-backed party poised for victory, according to ASEAN News

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Polls have opened in Myanmar for the third and final round of a controversial general election, with a military-backed party on course for a landslide win amid a raging civil war.

Voting began in 60 townships, including in the cities of Yangon and Mandalay, at 6am local time on Sunday (23:30 GMT, Saturday).

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Critics say the polls are neither free nor fair, and are designed to legitimise military rule in Myanmar, nearly five years after the country’s generals ousted the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi, leading to a civil war that has killed thousands and displaced more than 3.5 million people.

Aung San Suu Kyi remains in detention and, like several other opposition groups, her National League for Democracy (NLD) has been dissolved, tilting the political playing field in favour of the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), which is leading in the polls.

So far, the USDP has secured 193 out of 209 seats in the lower house, and 52 out of 78 seats in the upper house, according to the election commission.

That means that along with the military, which is allocated 166 seats, the two already hold just under 400 seats, comfortably surpassing the 294 needed to come to power.

Seventeen other parties have won a small number of seats in the legislature, ranging from one to 10, according to the election commission.

Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, who heads the current military government, is widely expected by both supporters and opponents to assume the presidency when the new parliament meets.

The military has announced that the parliament will be convened in March, and the new government will take up its duties in April.

While the military has pledged that the election will return power to the people, rights monitors said the run-up was beset with coercion and the crushing of dissent, warning that the vote will only tighten the military’s grip on power.

A new Election Protection Law imposed harsh penalties for most public criticism of the polls, with the authorities charging more than 400 people recently for activities such as leafleting or online activity.

Ahead of the third round of voting, Tom Andrews, the UN special rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar, also called for the rejection of its outcome, calling it “fraudulent”.

“Only an illegitimate government can emerge from an illegitimate election,” he wrote on X on Saturday.

“As Myanmar’s election ends, the world must reject it as fraudulent while rejecting what follows as simply military rule in civilian clothing.”

Malaysian Minister of Foreign Affairs Mohamad Hasan told Parliament on Tuesday that the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), of which Myanmar is a member, did not send observers and would not certify the election, citing concerns over the lack of inclusive and free participation.

His comments were the first clear statement that the 11-member regional bloc will not recognise the election results.

In Myanmar’s second city of Mandalay, Zaw Ko Ko Myint, a 53-year-old teacher, cast his vote at a high school around dawn.

“Although I do not expect much, we want to see a better country,” he told the AFP news agency. “I feel relieved after voting, as if I fulfilled my duty.”

The previous two phases of the election have been marked by low voter turnout of about 55 percent, well ⁠below the turnout of about 70 percent recorded in Myanmar’s 2020 and 2015 general elections.

Official results are expected late this week, but the USDP could claim victory as soon as Monday.

Aung San Suu Kyi’s NLD thrashed the USDP in the last elections in 2020, before the military seized power on February 1, 2021.

According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, which monitors human rights abuses in the country, at least 7,705 people have been killed since the outbreak of the civil war, while 22,745 remain detained.

But the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, a monitoring group that tallies media reports of violence, estimates more than 90,000 have been killed on all sides of the conflict.

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The Process of Selecting India’s Chief Guest for the 26 January Parade

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EPA/Shutterstock Indian paramilitary soldiers take part during Republic Day parade rehearsals in New Delhi, India, 21 January 2026. India will celebrate its 77th Republic Day on 26 January 2026.EPA/Shutterstock

The Republic Day parade is a display of India’s culture, achievements and military might

India will mark its 77th Republic Day on 26 January – the day when the country adopted its constitution and formally became a republic, breaking from its colonial past.

The annual grand parade will take place along Delhi’s iconic central boulevard, with military tanks rolling past and fighter jets roaring overhead as thousands watch.

The parade is a spectacle in itself, but attention is also focused on who is occupying the most prominent seats at the ceremony. This year, it will be European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President António Costa.

India has invited them as chief guests for the celebrations, placing the European Union at the centre of one of the country’s most prestigious state events.

On this day, India turns the heart of its capital into a stage. Thousands of troops march before cheering crowds, armoured vehicles move down the Kartavya Path (formerly Rajpath or King’s Avenue) and colourful tableaux or floats pass by spectators in Delhi, while millions more watch on their screens across the country.

The parade is presided over by the Indian president, with the chief guest seated alongside – closer to the presidential chair than even the senior-most government officials.

Who sits next to India’s president has long been read as more than a matter of protocol. Over the decades, the choice of chief guest has come to be closely watched as an indicator of India’s foreign policy priorities and the relationships Delhi wants to highlight at a particular moment, experts say.

The practice began in 1950 with the then Indonesian president, Sukarno, attending India’s first Republic Day parade. In its early years as a republic, India prioritised ties with other newly-independent countries – a focus reflected in its early choice of chief guests.

Getty Images Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh, accompanied by President Rajendra Prasad, leave the Rashtrapati Bhavan presidential palace in an open carriage to attend the Republic Day Parade, New Delhi, January 26th 1961. (Photo by Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)Getty Images

Queen Elizabeth II was the chief guest at India’s Republic Day parade in 1961

Since then, the parade has hosted leaders from across the world, reflecting shifts in India’s global relations and strategic priorities. The chief guests have been from leaders of neighbouring countries – such as Bhutan and Sri Lanka – to heads of state and government from major powers, including the US and the UK.

The UK has featured as the chief guest five times – including Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip – reflecting the long and complex history between the two countries. Leaders from France and Russia (formerly Soviet Union) have also been invited nearly five times since 1950, reflecting India’s long-standing strategic ties with the two countries.

With such a wide range of past guests, the question is how India decides who receives an invitation in a particular year.

The selection process is largely out of public view. Former diplomats and media reports say it typically begins within the foreign ministry, which prepares a shortlist of potential invitees. The final decision is taken by the prime minister’s office, followed by official communication with the select countries – a process that can take several months.

A former foreign ministry official speaking on condition of anonymity said: “Strategic objectives, regional balance and whether a country has been invited before are all taken into account.”

Former Indian ambassador to the US Navtej Sarna said a lot of thought goes into the decision making.

“It’s a balance between important partners, neighbours and major powers,” he said, adding that availability of the state leader during that time also plays a crucial role.

Hindustan Times via Getty Images Former president of United States of America (USA) Barack Obama along with his wife Michelle Obama, President of India Pranab Mukherjee and Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi during the ceremony of 66th Republic Day of India, at Rajpath, on January 26, 2015 in New Delhi, India. Hindustan Times via Getty Images

Barack Obama became the first American president to attend the parade in 2015

Foreign policy analyst Harsh V Pant said the evolving list of chief guests mirrors India’s changing engagement with the world. “If you think of the EU delegation this year, with its leadership coming, it’s very clear that we are doubling down on our engagement with the EU.”

He added that most likely a trade deal would be announced – signalling that India and the European bloc are on the same page when it comes to the current geopolitical situation.

This comes as India continues to engage with the US on a trade deal. The talks, which have been going on for almost a year, have strained their relationship since the US imposed 50% tariffs on Indian goods, the highest in Asia, including penalties linked to India’s purchase of Russian oil.

“It [the choice of the parade’s chief guest] gives you a sense of India’s priorities at that particular point – which geography it wants to focus on, or whether there is a milestone it wants to mark,” Pant said, pointing out that India continued to engage closely with the global south.

In 2018, for example, leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) were invited as chief guests. It was the first time a regional grouping was invited – marking 25 years of India’s engagement with the bloc, Pant added.

At the same time, some absences from the guest list have also reflected strained relationships.

Pakistani leaders attended twice as chief guests before the neighbours went to war in 1965. Islamabad has not been invited thereafter – a sign of continuing strain in ties. The only time China attended was when Marshal Ye Jianying came in 1958, four years before the two countries went to war over their disputed border.

But the significance of Republic Day extends beyond diplomacy and guest lists.

AFP via Getty Images Indian President Abdul Kalam (R), Russian President Vladimir Putin (2R) and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh (L) watch Indian army jets flying over India's 58th Republic Day parade from a bullet-proof box, in New Delhi, 26 January 2007. AFP via Getty Images

Russian President Vladimir Putin attended the Republic Day parade in 2007

Analysts says India’s parade stands apart from similar military displays elsewhere in the world for a number of reasons. The fact that India has a guest almost every year is one of them.

Also, for most countries, these parades commemorate military victories. Like Russia’s Victory Day marks the defeat of Germany in World War Two, France’s Bastille Day celebrates the start of the French Revolution and the eventual fall of the monarchy, and China’s military parade marks their victory over Japan in World War Two.

India’s celebration, by contrast, is centred on the constitution, says Pant.

“For many other countries, these celebrations are related to victories in war. We don’t celebrate that. We celebrate becoming a constitutional democracy – the coming into effect of the constitution.”

Unlike military parades in many Western capitals, India’s Republic Day also blends displays of its military capability with cultural performances and regional tableaux, projecting both power and diversity.

Beyond strategy and symbolism, the parade often leaves a more personal impression on visiting leaders.

The former official who spoke anonymously recalled how the Obamas were particularly struck by the camel-mounted contingents – a moment that stayed with them long after the formal ceremonies ended.

Follow BBC News India on Instagram, YouTube, X and Facebook.

William Alexander, Winter Juniors Qualifier, Commits Verbally to South Carolina for Fall 2026

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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.

Winter Juniors qualifier William Alexander has decided to stay in-state with his commitment to continue his academic and swimming career at the University of South Carolina. He publicized the news on Instagram, writing:

I am incredibly excited to announce my commitment to continue my academic and athletic career at The University of South Carolina! I want to thank all my coaches, teammates, family, and friends for their unwavering support. I also would like to thank Coach Nils and Coach Jason for this amazing opportunity. Most importantly, thank you to God for your many blessings! Go Cocks!!!!

A senior at Spring Valley High School in Columbia, Alexander has been a member of his school’s varsity swimming and diving team since his freshman year. He also swims year-round with Gamecock Aquatics at the Sol Blatt P.E. Center, the same pool where he’ll train throughout his collegiate career.

Alexander is a sprint freestyle specialist who has steadily improved throughout his high school career, but 2025 was the year that put him into the power-five recruiting conversation. He started the year with personal bests of 21.71, 46.82, and 1:43.89, but by year’s end had lowered those times to 20.89, 45.52, and 1:38.56. His best meet came at the Winter Junior Championships – East last month, his first time qualifying for the meet, where he placed 28th in the 200 free, 56th in the 100 free, and 80th in the 50 free, all in his current best times.

On the high school scene, Alexander won the 50 free state title and finished as the runner-up in the 200 free at his final state meet in October. He also helped the 200 free relay take third and the 400 free relay finish fifth with anchor legs of 20.91 and 45.63. It marked his first-ever state title after a pair of podium finishes as a junior, when he touched second in the 100 and third in the 200. Though he didn’t compete as a sophomore, he finished sixth in the 200 and eighth in the 500 as a freshman, meaning he’s never missed an ‘A’ final.

Top SCY Times:

  • 50 Freestyle: 20.89
  • 100 Freestyle: 45.52
  • 200 Freestyle: 1:38.56

South Carolina, guided by head coach Jeff Poppell, competes in the SEC with powerhouses like Texas, Tennessee, and Florida. At the 2025 SEC Championships last February, the Gamecocks took 11th before sending two athletes on to compete at the NCAA Championships, where they finished 39th.

To earn a second swim at last season’s conference meet, it took times of 19.53/42.75 in the 50/100 free and 1:34.99 in the 200 free, putting Alexander outside the cutoff in each of his top events. On the team itself, he would have ranked seventh in the 200 free, ninth in the 100 free, and 11th in the 50 free, adding some depth to the dual meet lineup. With continued development and roster turnover through graduation, he has the potential to become a conference scorer and contribute to the Gamecocks’ free relays.

Currently set to join Alexander in the Palmetto State this fall are fellow sprint freestylers Riley Richards (20.50/45.28), Noah Schotz (22.93/50.39 LCM), and breaststroker Owen Harmon, who should all make for strong training partners over their four years together.

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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Thousands of flights canceled and over 100,000 power outages caused by U.S. winter storm

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U.S. winter storm leads to more than 100,000 power outages, thousands of flight cancellations

Ford Freescape Modular Camper Van with Inflatable Pop-Up Roof

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One of the buzziest highlights of this year’s CMT camper and travel show, the new Freescape camper van combines a flexible floor plan like nothing we recall seeing before with a unique patented pop-up roof system we definitely haven’t seen before. The all-wheel-drive Ford Adventure camper van is as ready to live off-grid as it is to run errands on it.

One doesn’t need to wander deep into the halls of CMT 2026 to find some eye-opening innovations. The Freescape camper van is one of the most conspicuously fresh new designs of the show, and it’s right in the hallway, mere steps from the badge-scanning turnstiles of the main entry.

What’s captivating enough about Freescape’s van that show goer after show goer can’t help but to stop and stare, at least momentarily, is the unique pop-up roof system, a patented design that’s being called the first of its kind. It’s certainly the first we’ve seen on a production van and not a concept camper.

It looks like inflatable roofs are starting to become more of a thing – Freescape isn’t the only company at CMT showing one

CC Weiss/New Atlas

Freescape combines the idea of a side-expanding pop-up roof tent with an inflatable construction more commonly used in roof-mounted tents, not integrated pop-tops. The design sees the van roof tilt out of the way toward the driver’s side and the inner tent inflate at the push of a button. Inflation works via an air compressor stored away in the van cabin, and tent setup takes roughly seven minutes.

The tent breaks down and stows away even more quickly, as several its multiple valves allow for fast deflation while also helping to prevent total failure in the case of a leak in one of the air frame segments. Once the tent is deflated, the owner folds the floor back inside and closes the roof. An attachable fabric headliner keeps the tent out of sight inside the van.

The advantage of inflating a tent off the side of the vehicle in this way is multifold. To start, it creates a 79 x 55-in (200 x 140-cm) longitudinal double bed, comfortably wider than the 81 x 49-in (205 x 125-cm) bed Ford supplies in its own Nugget pop-top. A pair of support poles helps to stabilize the extended bed.

Freescape's floor plan sleeps four people
Freescape’s floor plan sleeps four people

Freescape

Width tends to be at a premium in camper beds, so that’s a plus on its own, but the bigger advantage of the side-extended design is the fact that the bed is located on the overhang, leaving the full amount of headroom open at all times inside the van itself, with no need to lift the bed out of the way. This makes it easier to access the bed and convenient for one person to take an upstairs while others remain in the cab without losing out on standing room.

By extending over the side of the van, the tent also works as its own awning, providing some shade and weather protection without the need for a separate awning.

The extended roof tent doubles as an awning for cooking and relaxing
The extended roof tent doubles as an awning for cooking and relaxing

Freescape

Freescape did not expend all its creativity designing the patented inflatable roof, saving plenty for the flexible lower floor plan. Like many other camper van builders, it starts with the common floor rails running lengthwise for mounting and removing the rear seats and other hardware. The two standard seats fold flat to create a lower double bed, this one well narrower at 79 x 39 in (200 x 100 cm).

Unlike other camper van builders, Freescape also adds a set of traverse tracks toward the front of the cabin. These serve to hold the kitchen block slides so that the sink, induction cooktop and drawer stack can glide clean across the floor, from a stowed position behind the driver’s seat and straight through the sliding door for outside cooking. Campers can then cook below the extended roof tent. The sliding unit also includes a worktop extension that can be secured at several heights at the end of the block.

The kitchen
The kitchen set up outside the van with worktop extension, induction cooktop and sink

CC Weiss/New Atlas

In addition to extreme left and right positions, the sliding kitchen is also designed to stop in the middle of the van, where its extended countertop can serve as a desk for use from the swivel passenger’s seat. Combined with the swiveling dining table, the setup allows several digital nomads to comfortably clack away on their keyboards at the same time – no banging elbows or rubbing knees.

The sliding kitchen can set up in the middle of the van to serve as a work station or table
The sliding kitchen can set up in the middle of the van to serve as a work station or table

Freescape

Moving back from that sliding flex block, the remainder of the kitchen area and sidewall console is simple and straightforward, incorporating a worktop/side shelf just inside the window and additional storage below.

As in many small camper vans, the side kitchen extends back into a full height cabinet at the rear of the van. Here, Freescape stores in a heavy-duty electrical system built for off-grid autonomy with a combination of 300-Ah lithium battery, 3,000-W inverter and 340 watts of solar panels.

Also included in the build is a 25-liter fresh water tank. An outdoor shower is integrated neatly into a cubby at the back of the wall console, making for easy showers and gear/dog cleanups.

Freescape's modular storage cubbies can combine to create a full tailgate organizers, rearrange or remove completely
Freescape’s modular storage cubbies can combine to create a full tailgate organizers, rearrange or remove completely

CC Weiss/New Atlas

As for the remainder of the tailgate area, Freescape further expands flexibility by offering shelf-like modules that buyers can stack into different arrangements or remove as needed. Its CMT exhibition van includes a stack of these shelves on one side and a top-loading Dometic fridge on the other.

For our money, we’d just as soon leave those boxes at the shop because we’d rather have more free space to store other camping and sports equipment. But others’ mileage will vary, and the modular storage system might prove an ideal means of organizing and accessing things for some campers and road lifers.

Beyond the removable rear storage modules and slide-around kitchen, the interior can be rearranged for different purposes using the floor rails. Van owners can add seats for more everyday passenger capability, rearrange them around different cargo and camping needs, or remove them completely for more cargo capacity. They can also use the rails to secure cargo, mount bikes and more.

Freescape has worked to massage its rooftop design into the overall profile of the Ford Tourneo Custom
Freescape has worked to massage its rooftop design into the overall profile of the Ford Tourneo Custom

Freescape

Freescape plans to build its camper on several different Ford Tourneo Custom trims. The four-sleeper debut model featured in all our photos is built atop a 199-in (505-cm) Ford Tourneo Custom with 168-hp diesel engine, eight-speed automatic transmission and all-wheel drive. It includes the full interior build-out, electrical system, inflatable pop-up roof and fresh water tank, along with a diesel camp heater and portable dry separating toilet. It prices in at 79,990, but note, the Dometic fridge is not listed on the pricing spec sheet.

Freescape also plans to build packages on the new Volkswagen Transporter/Caravelle, which shares a platform with the Ford Transit/Tourneo Custom.

Source: Freescape