The sound of gunfire and blasts can be heard overnight and into the morning in Kyiv
A third of residents in Ukraine’s capital Kyiv are without power after a “massive bombing” of residential areas and critical infrastructure by Russia overnight, Ukraine’s foreign minister has said.
Andrii Sybiha said residents had been left without heating in freezing winter temperatures.
At least one person was killed and 30 others were injured in the strikes, Kyiv Mayor Vitaliy Klitschko said.
The attacks happened hours before Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky departed for Florida, where he will meet Donald Trump on Sunday for peace talks.
Russia’s ministry of defence said it had launched a “massive retaliatory strike” on Ukrainian energy infrastructure facilities.
It said it used long-range, land-, air-, and sea-based precision weapons to target the facilities, which it claimed were being used “in the interests of the Ukrainian Armed Forces and enterprises of the Ukrainian military-industrial complex”.
Following the strikes, Zelensky repeated his claim that Russia does “not want to end the war and is trying to use every opportunity to inflict more pain on Ukraine”.
Writing on Telegram, Zelensky said Russia directed almost 500 drones and 40 missiles towards Kyiv, targeting energy and civilian infrastructure.
Pictures show apartment buildings with gaping holes and homes on fire following the strikes.
The apartment block of BBC journalist Anastasiya Gribanova was struck, leaving some homes on the higher levels of the high-rise building in flames. Gribanova, who was in the building’s elevator at the time, was unharmed.
Reuters
A house in Kyiv was also hit, Ukraine’s emergency services said
Ukraine’s State Emergency Service said that 68 people were evacuated from a retirement home in the eastern Darnytskyi district.
“Russian representatives are having long conversations, but in reality the Daggers [missiles] and Shaheds [drones] are speaking for them,” Zelensky wrote on Telegram, saying that Vladimir Putin does not want to end the war.
“This sick activity can only be responded to with really strong steps. America has this opportunity, Europe has this opportunity, many of our partners have this opportunity,” he wrote, urging allies to show strength against Russian aggression.
The strikes saw Poland, which shares a 530km-long (320-miles) border with western Ukraine, ready its fighter jets, ground-based air defence systems and radar reconnaissance.
The move was “aimed at securing and protecting the airspace, especially in areas adjacent to the threatened regions,” Poland’s Armed Forces said.
Later on Saturday morning, it concluded that there had been no violation of the country’s airspace.
Meanwhile, Russia’s defence ministry said its air defences destroyed seven Ukrainian drones overnight.
Reuters
The aftermath of the damage in Kyiv
On Saturday, Zelensky, EU leaders and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen are expected to hold a phone call to discuss the road to peace.
Zelensky’s new 20-point draft is a revised version of an earlier 28-point plan which was drafted by US special envoy Steve Witkoff, but widely seen as being too favourable to Russia.
The Ukrainian president has voiced optimism around the new draft, describing it as “a foundational document on ending the war”, but Trump warned that Zelensky “doesn’t have anything until I approve it” in an interview with Politico.
The draft reportedly includes security guarantees from the US, Nato and European allies for a co-ordinated military response if Russia were to invade Ukraine again.
Control of Ukraine’s eastern Donbas has been a sticking point in talks so far, but now Zelensky has said a “free economic zone” could be an option.
Trump told Politico that he was expecting to see the new draft on Sunday.
“I think it’s going to go good with him. I think it’s going to go good with [Vladimir] Putin,” Trump said in the interview, adding that he expects to speak with Russia’s president “soon”.
Australia’s former Olympic Swimming Physiotherapist Peter John Wells has been accused of child sexual assault after repeated sexual contact with five girls and indecent assault of two others.
Wells is accused of having relationships with five girls in Brisbane between 2003 and 2009. At the Olympics in 2008 and 2016, he was the head physiotherapist for the Australian swim team. He was also the lead physiotherapist in 2016 for the entire Australian Olympic Team at their headquarters clinic.
When he was not at major events, he owned his own practice in Kelvin Grove and he worked at a sports complex in Chandler. Both are in Queensland and this is where the abuse allegedly occurred.
A committal hearing is designed to determine whether the evidence is substantial enough to charge the defendant with a crime. The hearing was scheduled to last at least a week with more than 26 witnesses, but after a few days, it was postponed and will resume on January 20th. Wells has not entered a plea to any charges yet.
Olympic gold medalist Bronte Barratt was called as a witness during the first part of the hearing, not a complainant. Barratt, who won a gold medal in the 800 freestyle relay in Beijing, was called to the stand due to the fact that she had extensive communication with another elite swimmer who wanted to make a report against Wells.
Barratt responded, “Such a toughie. Only do it if you feel comfortable, and it’s your life, so don’t be pressured or anything … Have you spoken to anyone else from our era? Literally every Queensland girl on the swim team would have been treated by Peter Wells at some point.”
She reportedly withheld some of the communication from the former swimmer, which is why she was questioned at the hearing.
At least one of the alleged victims got the opportunity to address the judge on the first day with the court being closed to the public to allow anonymity.
The land around Hassayampa Ranch, 50 miles west of Phoenix, is dotted with saguaro cacti and home to coyotes, jackrabbits, and rattlesnakes. Its few hundred human residents were largely drawn by the tranquility and clear skies for stargazing.
But several of the biggest names in Silicon Valley are suddenly very interested in what happens on this serene stretch of desert. The region once dominated by ranches and farmland is becoming a new kind of tech hub—one that’s largely unpeopled, made up of row upon row of humming, energy-hungry GPU racks in gigantic AI data centers.
At a weekday morning hearing earlier this month, nearly an hour and a half away in downtown Phoenix, the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors approved an amendment that would allow for the industrial rezoning of a 2,000-acre property at Hassayampa Ranch. The developer, Anita Verma-Lallian, bought this vast tract of desert in May 2025 in a $51 million deal backed by heavyweight tech investors including the billionaire venture capitalist, podcast cohost, and Trump mega-donor Chamath Palihapitiya. The plan? A massive AI data center project that will likely draw a major cloud provider or Big Tech “hyperscaler” such as Meta, Google, or OpenAI.
“We have probably six to eight large hyperscalers that are interested in looking at it,” Verma-Lallian told Fortune. In a crisp gray jacket and narrow black slacks, with a chartreuse clutch in hand, Verma-Lallian emerged victorious from the supervisors’ auditorium into the midmorning desert light. She and her team—including her lawyer, real estate agent, PR rep, personal assistant, and sister—grinned in a group photo to mark the moment.
For this 43-year-old daughter of Indian immigrants raised in Scottsdale, the vote represented yet another milestone in her family’s American success story. Her father, Kuldip Verma, founded Vermaland—now one of Arizona’s major land and real estate companies—back in the mid-1990s, and Verma-Lallian has built a profile in her own right as a land developer with decades in the business. The Hassayampa Ranch deal, along with another 2,069-acre land parcel in nearby Buckeye that she sold in August for $136 million, has positioned her as a rising force in Arizona’s AI infrastructure race.
The crucial and unanimous Dec. 10 decision on Hassayampa Ranch means that Verma-Lallian can now submit a detailed zoning application and site plans. The giant data center will feature outsize buildings filled with aisles of GPU server racks, round-the-clock cooling systems, and 1.5 gigawatts of power—equivalent to the power needs of over a million homes. It will cost as much as $25 billion to build, Verma-Lallian and Palihapitiya have said.
District 4 Supervisor Debbie Lesko, whose district includes Tonopah, voted to approve an amendment that would allow for the industrial rezoning of the 2,000-acre property at Hassayampa Ranch.
Sharon Goldman
It’s a familiar story across the country: These mega-scale data center projects, providing the computing power underpinning the AI boom and the U.S. race against China to dominate the sector, are changing landscapes, straining energy grids and water tables, and reshaping the economy.
And those hyperscalers—including Alphabet, Amazon, and Meta, as well as fast-growing AI companies such as OpenAI and Anthropic—are spending hundreds of billions a year to build out the physical footprint of their AI businesses. Data center equipment and infrastructure spending is on track to rise to a trillion dollars a year by 2030.
Data center projects are touching off tense fights among developers, environmentalists, and rural residents—many of which end up in places like the Maricopa County supervisors’ auditorium, where locals take turns at the microphone with Silicon Valley–backed developers, and local officials accustomed to approving local ordinances and budgeting for municipal departments debate the merits of multibillion-dollar projects.
A nationwide AI data center boom
For much of the past two decades, data centers were among the least visible pieces of the tech economy—plain, boxy buildings that quietly powered websites, email, and cloud computing, drawing little public notice. The rise of generative AI has changed that. Its enormous appetite for computing power has transformed once-modest server farms into sprawling mega-complexes spanning millions of square feet and consuming electricity on the scale of a midsize city, along with vast quantities of water.
The Trump administration has made winning the AI race with China a central priority, pushing an AI Action Plan designed to accelerate data center approvals and expand the nation’s power grid—even as it has stalled renewable energy development.
In an era when AI infrastructure investment accounts for a growing share of U.S. economic growth, both Republicans and Democrats are vying to prove they can get projects built quickly—a priority that aligns with those of deep-pocketed tech and infrastructure investors who have built and consolidated their political influence as demand for computing power has surged. For example, Palihapitiya’s All-In podcast cohost, venture capitalist David Sacks, is now Trump’s “AI and crypto czar,” helping steer federal strategy on AI competitiveness and infrastructure.
In 2025, AI data centers emerged as a political flash point, fueling heated debates and grassroots campaigns over power, water, land, and jobs. Critics, many from the left but also including populist Republicans such as Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, warn they are driving up electricity costs and straining scarce water supplies. Meanwhile supporters (again, from both sides of the aisle) argue they can deliver economic growth and long-sought tax revenue to struggling communities.
Graphic by Nicolas Rapp
There is Meta’s $10 billion, 2,250-acre Hyperion facility underway in northeast Louisiana, where residents have complained about increased traffic and safety risks near schools and homes. There is Dunn County, Wisconsin, where a planned data center near the small city of Menomonie has drawn statewide pushback from those opposed to building on prime farmland and concerned about a lack of transparency. And there is Coweta County, a fast-developing exurb southwest of Atlanta where residents are fighting back against planned data center proposals that could cause utility strain, noise, and light pollution.
Verma-Lallian’s plan is no exception: Her project has already stirred alarm among community members adjacent to the land who fear the impact on the wells that offer their only access to water, as well as how their rural desert lifestyle and property values will be affected by noise, construction, and rising energy costs. It is a microcosm of the quiet but explosive conflict unfolding at the edges of America’s AI build-out.
Water, electricity, noise, and disruption
As Verma-Lallian celebrated with her team outside the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors’ auditorium, Kathy and Ron Fletcher, ages 76 and 78 respectively, stood to the side, alone. The retirees and grandparents, clad in jeans, moved from California to Arizona in 2020 to live on a one-acre residential plot next to the Hassayampa Ranch site, drawn by the beautiful desert views and sunsets.
They were not surprised by the ruling, but they were frustrated. In their unincorporated rural community of Tonopah, Kathy Fletcher said, residents have little money, time, or political leverage to mount an effective opposition. (District 3 Supervisor Debbie Lesko, a former member of Congress whose district includes Tonopah, declined Fortune’s requests for comment.)
“All we can do is plead with the people here,” said Kathy Fletcher, noting that she and Ron were the only residents to drive more than an hour to the Maricopa County meeting on a weekday morning. “We’re kind of treated like the redheaded stepchild, and they just think they can throw anything they want out here,” she said. “We’re having a difficult time fighting the battle to tell people, ‘You can make a difference.’”
Kathy and Ron Fletcher were drawn to their home in Tonopah by the beautiful desert views and sunsets.
Sharon Goldman
The Fletchers’ next-door neighbor, Cherisse Campbell, who owns a hatchery for heritage turkeys, gathered nearly 200 signatures on a Change.org petition that focused on the environmental impact of potential light and noise pollution; traffic and infrastructure strain; and the negative impact on property values.
Campbell, 38, was born and raised in Maricopa County, spending most of her childhood in Surprise, a northwest Phoenix suburb “back when there were only orange groves and desert and a big ostrich farm.” She spoke virtually at the meeting, where she said her free-range birds, which “exercise natural mating, nesting and young-rearing behaviors,” would face hazards with the arrival of big industry. “We don’t need or want paved roads or structures surrounded by concrete that will exacerbate the heat island effect of the summer,” she said. “Connecting a main road designed for high-volume traffic from the I-10 to this site will present a destructive nightmare for these rural residents (and my birds).”
And Tonya Pearsall, a 51-year-old mother of five who has lived in Tonopah since 1999 and runs a small dog-breeding business, Little Loves Maltipoos, said she had spent several weekends going door-to-door to get 100 residents to sign another petition against Verma-Lallian’s project. “My main concern is water; we are all on wells out here,” she said.
Michele Van Quathem, Verma-Lallian’s water attorney, said that once the zoning process for the data center is completed, the project would likely partner with Global Water Resources, the public service water provider for the area, or the tenant could supply its own water—which could include digging its own groundwater wells or building on-site water storage or recycling systems. Estimated water usage will be known with more certainty, she said, as site planning and user discussions progress, but she emphasized, “Water sources will need to comply with Arizona’s water laws, including strict groundwater management laws for the Phoenix Active Management Area where the project is located.”
Verma-Lallian said the development will observe setbacks from residences and preserve washes—natural desert channels that are typically dry but carry heavy flows during monsoon rains. She understands that area residents “prefer to see homes or nothing at all, so they’re not thrilled with what we’re trying to do out there.” But, she said, “I think we’ll plan it in a very thoughtful way” with a design that’s “aesthetically appealing.”
Verma-Lallian’s land-use attorney, Wendy Riddell, acknowledged that residents often feel a sense of attachment to open land they’ve long used for hiking, horseback riding, or off-roading—even when that land is privately owned. And she pointed out that Tonopah residents will have the chance to weigh in later in the process, during site-plan review.
At that stage, she said, developers typically work with neighbors on issues such as building setbacks, view corridors, landscaping, and building height. “Those are very typical things we work through on a zoning application with concerned citizens,” Riddell said.
A bottleneck for AI growth—and an opportunity
Verma-Lallian, who lives in Paradise Valley, Ariz., with her husband, son, and daughter, may have Silicon Valley ties, but she also brings a Hollywood sheen that has jarred some in the rural community. She made headlines last year for buying the Pacific Palisades home where the Friends actor Matthew Perry drowned. In 2023 she founded a film production company, Camelback Productions. And she plans to build a movie studio on another Arizona property, not far from the data center site.
During a drive to Hassayampa Ranch, Verma-Lallian and Scott Truitt, a real estate agent who has worked with both her and her father for decades, passed parcel after parcel of land she owns. Truitt gestured toward sites on either side of the road, noting properties Verma-Lallian had bought and sold over the years that are now residential developments, warehouses, retail stores, and gas stations.
Graphic by Nicolas Rapp
After the previous owners of the Hassayampa Ranch property had gotten residential zoning for a master planned community of thousands of homes, the market crashed in 2008 and the project stalled. But even as the market recovered, the project faced a new obstacle: Around three years ago, Arizona water regulators stopped issuing new certificates of assured water supply, a prerequisite for large-scale residential construction—making the original housing plan far harder to revive.
That regulatory constraint did not apply to industrial uses like data centers, which are not required to obtain a certificate of assured water supply as part of the zoning process, even though their water needs can rival or exceed those of residential developments. The distinction helped open the door for Verma-Lallian to acquire the land for a different use—one that did not require proving a long-term water supply upfront.
The site checked several critical boxes: It sits near the nuclear Palo Verde Generating Station. It has a natural gas pipeline close enough that a future data center could be paired with new gas-fired plants to generate power. And—most importantly—it offers scale. At roughly 2,000 acres, the property is large enough to support a massive data center campus, something Verma-Lallian said is increasingly rare in the West Valley. “There just aren’t many privately owned sites left of this size,” she said, noting that only about 17% of land in Arizona is privately held, with the rest controlled by the state, the federal government, or Native American tribes.
The changes happening in Arizona’s West Valley seem almost inevitable as development pushes relentlessly west from Phoenix. Hassayampa Ranch is close to the 25,000-acre site that Bill Gates purchased in 2017 with plans to build Belmont, a $100 million smart city with tens of thousands of homes, self-driving cars, and high-speed digital infrastructure (though the land remains as yet undeveloped). Buckeye, the closest city to Tonopah and the Hassayampa Ranch site, has grown from a population of 91,000 residents five years ago to 130,000—gaining thousands during the pandemic. A Costco has moved in and a Target is coming soon.
While Verma-Lallian’s site has seen some community pushback, in general Arizona is pro-growth, Truitt said: “Everybody wants to do a data center here.” In the West Valley, much of the land changing hands once belonged to farmers, he added. Rising land prices and other pressures have made agriculture increasingly untenable, and many aging farm owners have no next generation willing to take over. “They’re just sitting on the land,” he said. He pointed out dairy farms, with cows visible from the road: “They’ll be pushed out eventually by development. They’ve sold a lot of their property.”
The AI data center boom has drawn tech investors who see land and power as the next bottlenecks in the AI economy—and therefore the next big opportunity. Chamath Palihapitiya, the billionaire investor who has bragged about his easy access to the White House, said his stake in Hassayampa Ranch with Verma-Lallian is his first data center investment. The business partners met through a mutual friend, the fintech founder Ethan Agarwal, who is running as a “fiercely pro-capitalism” Democrat for governor of California. Verma-Lallian declined to comment on her own politics, but in the past she has donated to Democrats including Hillary Clinton.
“Other than owning my home, I don’t own any real estate,” Palihapitiya said. “I didn’t consider it part of my investing circle of competence until realizing the energy-plus-data-center aspect.”
He sees the massive AI infrastructure build as similar to the development of the internet and mobile, he explained, though in those earlier investment eras, energy was not a critical determinant of success. “In the AI generation, it is a fulcrum asset,” he said. “And the most obvious wrapper of energy is the data center. Hence my interest.”
The “greater good”—but for whom?
While Verma-Lallian appreciates the landscape surrounding Hassayampa Ranch, (“It’s so peaceful and beautiful,” she said) she frames her development as a practical choice.
She cited her own experience living in a condo building in Old Town Scottsdale, where a proposed high-rise would block residents’ view of Camelback Mountain. “Everyone was really upset about it, but the development moved forward,” she said. “It was a hotel that was good for the community, bringing tourism revenue to the city.”
Of Hassayampa Ranch, she said, “You have to look at the greater good of what it does to those communities. Keeping zoning frozen in time can limit a community’s ability to adapt, grow responsibly, and plan for future demand.” Still, Verma-Lallian acknowledged that residents of Tonopah “probably see me as more of a developer, just trying to make money.”
Her ambitions extend beyond data centers. With many Hollywood productions leaving California, Verma-Lallian said she plans to develop another nearby site—located just off Interstate 10 and not far from Hassayampa Ranch—into a movie studio complex that would also include an indoor amusement park and a smaller data center.
“It’s only about four and a half hours from Burbank,” she said, adding that she now spends roughly a quarter of her time on film production. She was a producer on the 2024 film Doin’ It, which premiered at SXSW, as well as Patel, a Shakespeare reimagining that wrapped production this summer and stars Kal Penn. She also recently finished a project featuring Wicked star Cynthia Erivo in London and has two other films in the works.
AI development has moved at such breakneck speed that despite the billions pouring into new facilities, a central unknown remains: whether the sheer volume of compute now under construction will be needed on the timelines companies are betting on. If demand slows, shifts, or becomes more concentrated, the data center boom could turn into a bust. But after decades in real estate, Verma-Lallian said she is unfazed by the possibility of a data center downturn. If demand shifts, she said, the sites she has developed could be repurposed for manufacturing, distribution, or other industrial uses. “The trends do keep changing,” she said. “But the way you build these facilities is very similar.”
Still, Verma-Lallian breathed a sigh of relief after the vote. She was aware of the petitions and emails opposing her project, and while she was confident she’d prevail, it was by no means a foregone conclusion. Another AI data center project in Chandler, a bustling suburb southeast of Phoenix, was voted down by city officials this month after massive pushback from residents, even though it was backed by former Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema.
After her triumph at the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors hearing and a quick tour of Hassayampa Ranch, Verma-Lallian headed back to Los Angeles, where a meeting with Netflix and a call with an investor awaited.
Back in Tonopah, Kathy Fletcher said she bears Verma-Lallian no ill will—even as she continues to oppose the project. “I think she’s a very successful young lady,” Fletcher said. “I wish her a lot of success. I just don’t want a data center in my backyard.”
For others in the community, the sense of loss feels personal. “We used to be able to see the Milky Way—that’s why we moved out here,” said Tonya Pearsall. “I’m not anti-growth. I’m conservative. I get capitalism.”
But to allow industrial development on this otherworldly desert, with its vibrant ecosystem of washes and saguaro? “It’s painful,” she said. “I could break down and cry.”
Somalia has demanded Israel reverse its recognition of the breakaway region of Somaliland, condemning the move as an act of “aggression that will never be tolerated”.
Ali Omar, Somalia’s state minister for foreign affairs, told Al Jazeera in an interview on Saturday that the government would pursue all available diplomatic means to challenge what it described as an act of “state aggression” and Israeli interference in the country’s internal affairs.
Recommended Stories
list of 4 itemsend of list
The sharp rebuke came a day after Israel became the first nation in the world to formally recognise Somaliland, triggering swift condemnation across African and Arab nations, and raising concerns about whether the move was part of an alleged Israeli plan to forcibly displace Palestinians.
Somaliland broke away from Somalia in 1991 following a brutal civil war but has never secured recognition from any United Nations member state. The self-declared republic has established its own currency, flag and parliament, though its eastern territories remain disputed.
“This will never be acceptable or tolerable to our government and people who are united in defending our territorial integrity,” Omar said. “Our government strongly advises the State of Israel to rescind its divisive actions and abide by international law.”
Somaliland President Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi, known locally as Cirro, had been signalling for weeks that recognition by an unnamed state was imminent, though he didn’t clarify which country. Somaliland’s capital Hargeisa had been dotted with billboards in recent weeks, telling residents that recognition was coming.
Omar said the strategic importance of the Horn of Africa was driving foreign interference and interest. “The importance of this region isn’t new. It is still important for international trade today,” he said.
‘Displacement of Palestinians’
Omar accused Israel of pursuing Somaliland’s recognition in order to further displace Palestinians from Gaza. “One of the motivating factors is the displacement of Palestinians from Gaza,” he told Al Jazeera. “It has been widely known – Israel’s goal on that issue.”
On Saturday, Somaliland’s Cirro defended the move, insisting it was “not directed against any state, nor does it pose a threat to regional peace”.
Hours after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the recognition on Friday, Somalia’s prime minister’s office issued a statement describing Israel’s action as a deliberate attack on Somalia’s sovereignty and an unlawful step, and emphasising that Somaliland remains an integral and “inseparable” part of the Somali territory.
Netanyahu framed the diplomatic breakthrough with Somaliland as being in the spirit of the Abraham Accords and said he would champion Somaliland’s cause during his meeting with United States President Donald Trump on Monday. Netanyahu also invited Cirro to Israel, which the latter has accepted.
But Trump has distanced himself from close ally Netanyahu on the issue, telling The New York Post newspaper he would not follow Israel’s lead.
Somalia’s Public Works Minister Ayub Ismail Yusuf welcomed Trump’s stance, writing on social media: “Thank you for your support, Mr. President.”
Trump’s comments marked a shift from August, when he told a news conference his administration was working on the Somaliland issue. In recent weeks, the US president has frequently attacked the Somali community in the US and Somalia.
The US has also expressed frustration with Somalia, saying at a recent UN Security Council meeting that Somali authorities had failed in improving security in the country despite billions in aid, and signalling it will not continue to fund a costly peacekeeping mission.
Meanwhile, the African Union’s chairperson, Mahamoud Ali Youssouf, rejected any initiative aimed at recognising Somaliland as an independent nation, warning it would set a dangerous precedent with far-reaching implications. The continental bloc cited a 1964 decision on the intangibility of borders inherited at a country’s independence as a fundamental principle.
Arab League Secretary-General Ahmed Aboul Gheit also condemned what he described as a provocative Israeli assault on the sovereignty of an Arab and African state. He said the Israeli recognition was a clear violation of international law and a flagrant infringement of the principle of state sovereignty.
Despite the international reactions, thousands poured onto the streets of Hargeisa on Friday to celebrate what many saw as the end of 30 years of diplomatic isolation. The Israeli flag was emblazoned on the national museum as residents welcomed the breakthrough.
Somalia has historically had contentious relations with Israel, stemming from Israel’s historic ties with Somalia’s regional rival, Ethiopia.
During the Cold War, Israel provided Ethiopia with military training, intelligence and weapons, while Somalia, aligned with Arab states hostile to Israel, was defeated in the 1977 Ogaden War, a setback that helped fuel decades of civil unrest.
Somaliland declared independence from Somalia in 1991 following persecution under former leader Mohammed Siad Barre, but Somalia has never recognised the breakaway region.
Earlier this month, Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Sharren Haskel revealed there had been communication with Somalia’s government about shared concerns over Houthi influence in the region.
But Omar, the Somali state minister for foreign affairs, strongly denied any ties with Israel, stating that the country’s position on Israeli policies remained unchanged.
A required part of this site couldn’t load. This may be due to a browser
extension, network issues, or browser settings. Please check your
connection, disable any ad blockers, or try using a different browser.
Thailand and Cambodia have agreed to an immediate ceasefire, the defence ministers of both countries have said in a joint statement.
The two sides have agreed to freeze the front lines where they are now, and allow civilians living in border areas to return home, halting almost threeweeks of intense clashes in which hundreds of soldiers are believed to have died and nearly one million people displaced.
The ceasefire took effect at noon local time (05:00 GMT) on Saturday. Once it has been in place for 72 hours, 18 Cambodian soldiers held by Thailand since July will be released, the statement said.
The breakthrough came after days of talks between the two countries, with diplomatic encouragement from China and the US.
The agreement prioritises getting the displaced back to their homes, and also includes an agreement to remove landmines.
Thailand’s Defence Minister Natthaphon Narkphanit described the ceasefire as a test for the “other party’s sincerity”.
“Should the ceasefire fail to materialise or be violated, Thailand retains its legitimate right to self-defence under international law,” he told reporters.
Thailand had been reluctant to accept the ceasefire, saying the last one was not properly implemented. They also resented what they saw as Cambodia’s efforts to internationalise the conflict.
Unlike the last ceasefire in July, US President Donald Trump was conspicuously absent from this one, although the US State Department was involved.
That ceasefire agreement collapsed earlier this month, when fresh clashes erupted.
Both sides have blamed each other for the breakdown of the truce.
The Thai army said its troops had responded to Cambodian fire in Thailand’s Si Sa Ket province, in which two Thai soldiers were injured.
Cambodia’s defence ministry said it was Thai forces that had attacked first, in Preah Vihear province, and insisted that Cambodia did not retaliate.
The Thai Air Force said it had hit a Cambodian “fortified military position” after civilians had left the area. Cambodia’s defence ministry said the strikes were “indiscriminate attacks” against civilian houses.
How well the ceasefire holds this time depends to a large extent on political will. Nationalist sentiment has been inflamed in both countries.
Cambodia, in particular, has lost many soldiers and a lot of its military equipment. It has been driven back from positions it held on the border, and suffered extensive damage from the Thai air strikes, grievances which could make a lasting peace harder to achieve.
Disagreement over the border dates back more than a century, but tension increased early this year after a group of Cambodian women sang patriotic songs in a disputed temple.
A Cambodian soldier was killed in a clash in May, and two months later, in July, there were five days of intense fighting along the border, which left dozens of soldiers and civilians dead. Thousands more civilians were displaced.
Following intervention by Malaysia and President Trump, a fragile ceasefire was negotiated between the two countries, and signed in late October.
Trump dubbed the agreement the “Kuala Lumpur Peace Accords”. It mandated both sides to withdraw their heavy weapons from the disputed region, and to establish an interim observer team to monitor it.
However, the agreement was suspended by Thailand in November after Thai soldiers were injured by landmines, with Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul announcing that the security threat had “not actually decreased”.
UK plans to boost ranks of armed forces by offering young people paid military experience amid growing Russian threats.
Published On 27 Dec 202527 Dec 2025
Share
Teenagers in the United Kingdom will be offered paid “gap years” with the armed forces under a new “whole of society” approach to national defence that aims to increase recruitment among young people, according to reports.
The London-based i Paper reported on Friday that the UK’s Ministry of Defence hopes the scheme will broaden the appeal of military careers for British youth as tensions with Russia rise across Europe.
Recommended Stories
list of 4 itemsend of list
The scheme will initially be open to about 150 applicants aged 18 to 25 in early 2026, with ministers aiming to eventually expand the programme to more than 1,000 young people annually, depending on demand, according to British radio LBC.
With fears of threats from Russia growing amid Moscow’s war on Ukraine, European countries have looked to national service for young people as a means to boost their ranks, with France, Germany and Belgium announcing schemes this year.
Recruits to the UK scheme will not be deployed on active military operations and while pay has not been confirmed, the UK’s LBC news organisation reported that it is expected to match basic recruit salaries, typically about 26,000 pounds, or $35,000.
Under the programme, army recruits would complete 13 weeks of basic training as part of a two-year placement. The navy scheme would last one year while the Royal Air Force (RAF) is still considering options, according to reports.
UK Defence Secretary John Healey told the i Paper: “This is a new era for Defence, and that means opening up new opportunities for young people.”
News of the programme follows remarks earlier this month from the UK’s Chief of the Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Richard Knighton, who said Britain’s “sons and daughters” should be “ready to fight” and defend the country amid Russian aggression, the Press Association reports.
Knighton said that while a direct Russian attack on the UK is unlikely, hybrid threats are intensifying.
He referenced a recent incident involving a Russian spy ship suspected of mapping undersea cables near UK waters.
“Every day the UK is subject to an onslaught of cyber-attacks from Russia and we know that Russian agents are seeking to conduct sabotage and have killed on our shores”, Knighton said, warning that Russia’s military had become a “hard power [which] is growing quickly”.
The UK government announced earlier this year that defence and security spending will rise to 5 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) by 2035.
The sanctions entail freezing the companies’ assets in China and banning individuals and organizations from dealing with them, according to the Chinese foreign ministry.
The companies include Northrop Grumman Systems Corporation, L3Harris Maritime Services and Boeing in St. Louis, while defense firm Anduril Industries founder Palmer Luckey is one of the executives sanctioned, who can no longer do business in China and are barred from entering the country. Their assets in the East Asian country have also been frozen.
The announcement of the U.S. arms-sale package, valued at more than $10 billion, has drawn an angry response from China, which claims Taiwan as its own and says it must come under its control.
If approved by the American Congress, it would be the largest-ever U.S. weapons package to the self-ruled territory.
“We stress once again that the Taiwan question is at the very core of China’s core interests and the first red line that must not be crossed in China-U.S. relations,” the Chinese foreign ministry said in a statement on Friday. “Any company or individual who engages in arms sales to Taiwan will pay the price for the wrongdoing.”
The ministry also urged the U.S. to stop what it called “the dangerous moves of arming Taiwan.”
Taiwan is a major flashpoint in U.S.-China relations that analysts worry could explode into military conflict between the two powers. China says that the U.S. arms sales to Taiwan would violate diplomatic agreements between China and the U.S.
China’s military has increased its presence in Taiwan’s skies and waters in the past few years, holding joint drills with its warships and fighter jets on a near-daily basis near the island.
Under the American federal law, the U.S. is obligated to assist Taiwan with its self-defense, a point that has become increasingly contentious with China. Beijing already has strained ties with Washington over trade, technology and other human rights issues.
One strike hit a field near a village in Sokoto state
The US has launched strikes against militants linked to the Islamic State group (IS) in north-western Nigeria, where militants have sought to establish a foothold.
Camps run by the group in Sokoto state were hit near the border with Niger, the US military said. Casualty numbers are unclear, but both US and Nigerian officials say militants were killed.
US President Donald Trump said theChristmas Day strikes had been “deadly” and labelled the group “terrorist scum”, saying they had been “targeting and viciously killing, primarily, innocent Christians”.
Nigerian Foreign Minister Yusuf Maitama Tuggar told the BBC it was a “joint operation” and had “nothing to do with a particular religion”.
Tuggar said the strikes had been planned “for quite some time” using intelligence provided by Nigeria. He also did not rule out further strikes.
Referencing the timing of strikes – which took place late on Thursday – he said they did not have “anything to do with Christmas”.
The US military said an “initial assessment” suggested “multiple” fatalities in Sokoto state.
A local official in the Tangaza area of Sokoto state, Isa Salihu Bashir, told the BBC the strikes had “hit some Lakurawa terrorist camps”. He said many fighters had been killed but the death toll was unclear.
The BBC has been unable to independently confirm casualty figures.
Bashir added that border patrols on the Niger side reported seeing Lakurawa fighters fleeing the targeted areas.
The Nigerian government has long been fighting an array of jihadist groups, including Boko Haram and IS-linked factions, but largely in the north-east. But in recent years a smaller group – known locally as Lakurawa – has sought to establish a base in north-western Sokoto state.
Nigerian authorities say the group has links to jihadist networks in Mali and Niger. They add that its members have settled in border communities, recruited young people, and imposed harsh controls.
Tangaza is made up of remote villages, whose residents are mostly moderate practising Muslims.
In a statement late on Friday, Nigeria’s information ministry said “precision strike operations” had been carried with the “explicit approval” of President Bola Tinubu and with “the full involvement of the armed forces of Nigeria”.
It also said that during the operation debris from munitions fell in two communities – the village of Jabo, also in Sokoto state, and Offa in Kwara state, about 600km (370 miles) to the south. No civilian casualties were reported in either location.
An eyewitness in Jabo, Umar Jabo told the BBC: “Something that looked like a plane flashed and crashed… in fields.”
He said there was no issue with IS in the area: “We live peacefully, and there is no conflict between us and Christians.”
The Trump administration has previously accused the Nigerian government of failing to protect Christians from jihadist attacks and has claimed a “genocide” is being perpetrated.
Trump has labelled Nigeria a “country of particular concern”, a designation used by the US state department that provides for sanctions against countries “engaged in severe violations of religious freedom”.
The US defence department posted a short video that appears to show a missile being launched from a military vessel
In a social media post late on Christmas Day confirming the strikes, Trump said that he would “not allow Radical Islamic Terrorism to prosper”.
US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said on Thursday that he was “grateful for Nigerian government support & cooperation”. The Pentagon later posted a short video that appeared to show a missile being launched from a ship.
Militants allied to IS have sought to establish a presence in two north-western states, while a separate IS-linked group has a stronghold in north-eastern Borno
Nigeria is Africa’s most populous country, with about 220 million people, divided roughly evenly between Christians and Muslims.
Jihadist groups such as Boko Haram and IS-linked offshoots have wrought havoc in north-eastern Nigeria for more than a decade, killing thousands of people.
Most victims have been Muslims, according to Acled, a group that analyses political violence around the world.
The strikes are the second major US intervention targeting IS in recent weeks.
US Central Command (Centcom) said fighter jets, attack helicopters and artillery had struck more than 70 targets. Aircraft from Jordan were also involved.
Those strikes were launched in retaliation for the killing of three Americans – two soldiers and a civilian interpreter – in an ambush.