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Politics Apr 17, 2026

Israeli Attacks in Gaza Strip Kill Several Palestinians Despite Ceasefire

Several Palestinians have been killed in Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip over two days, despite a…
Despite a ceasefire that has been in place for seven months, Israeli attacks have killed several Palestinians in the Gaza Strip over the past two days. The violence has resulted in the deaths of at least six people, including brothers Abdelmalek and Abdel Sattar al-Attar, who were killed in an Israeli drone strike in Beit Lahiya.Nine-year-old Saleh Badawi was also shot dead by Israeli forces in the Zeitoun neighbourhood east of Gaza City. Additionally, Mohsen al-Dabbari, 38, was killed by Israeli fire south of Khan Younis.On Friday, three more Palestinians were killed, including brothers Mohammed and Eid Abu Warda, who were shot dead on Mansoura Street in the Shujayea neighbourhood east of Gaza City. An Israeli drone strike on a water desalination facility in the same neighbourhood killed one Palestinian and wounded several others.The Gaza Government Media Office has reported that Israel has committed 2,400 violations of the ceasefire, which began in October. These violations include killings, arrests, blockades, and starvation policies.The violence has also spread to the occupied West Bank, where Israeli forces and settlers have carried out raids and attacks. Israeli settlers set fire to two vehicles during an attack on Palestinian homes in the southern West Bank, while Israeli forces stormed ar-Ram town north of Jerusalem and arrested a number of Palestinians.The United Nations has expressed concern over the continued violence, with UN Women reporting that an average of at least 47 women and girls were killed each day during the war in Gaza.
#Israel #Hamas #Gaza Strip
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News Apr 17, 2026

Bulgaria’s Snap Election on April 19: Radev Leads Amid Calls for Stable Governance

Bulgaria will vote in a snap parliamentary election on April 19, the eighth in five years, as polit…
Bulgaria is set to hold a snap parliamentary election on Sunday, April 19, a vote that comes after a series of short‑lived coalitions and widespread anti‑corruption protests that have eroded public confidence in the democratic process. The poll marks the eighth national election in just five years for the 6.5 million‑strong Black Sea nation, following the resignation of Prime Minister Rosen Zhelyazkov’s cabinet in December amid street demonstrations against endemic corruption and a controversial 2026 budget. According to Alpha Research, more than 3.3 million Bulgarians – roughly 60 % of eligible voters – are expected at the polls, a sharp rise from the 2.57 million who turned out in the October 2024 election. Voter sentiment is shifting toward a desire for decisive governance: 49 % of respondents say a single party should hold a majority and assume full responsibility, while only 33 % still favor coalition oversight. Rumen Radev, the former president and a former fighter pilot with pro‑Russian leanings, is contesting the premiership under the Progressive Bulgaria banner. His main rival is former prime minister Boyko Borissov, leading the centre‑right GERB‑UDF alliance. Polls show Radev’s party currently ahead with 34.2 % support, followed by GERB‑UDF at 19.5 %. The pro‑Western bloc “We Continue the Change‑Democratic Bulgaria” is projected third with 12‑14 % and could become a coalition partner for Radev if he wins. Radev has ruled out any alliance with GERB or the Movement for Rights and Freedoms (MRF), whose leader Delyan Peevski is under UK and US sanctions for corruption. Analysts warn that while coalition‑building appears inevitable, the durability of any future government remains uncertain. Should Radev secure a mandate, his campaign promises to eradicate the “corrupt, oligarchic model” that he claims dominates Bulgarian politics. A Radev‑led administration could also recalibrate Bulgaria’s foreign policy, potentially challenging recent EU‑aligned moves such as joining the eurozone in January 2026 and signing a security pact with Ukraine – both of which Radev has publicly opposed. Despite denouncing Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, Radev has repeatedly advocated for renewed dialogue with Moscow, positioning Bulgaria as a unique Slavic and Eastern‑Orthodox bridge between the EU and Russia. Domestic priorities remain pressing: while life expectancy and employment indicators have improved since EU accession in 2007, the country still needs political stability to unlock EU funds for infrastructure, attract foreign investment, and dismantle systemic corruption. Rural communities, such as those in southern Bulgaria, voice a desperate need for change. Farmer Nikolay Vasiliev told Reuters he sees Radev as a potential saviour capable of delivering security and decisive reforms. Concerns about foreign interference have also surfaced. Bulgaria recently asked the EU diplomatic service to counter Russian disinformation campaigns, after a think‑tank warned of coordinated Russian influencer networks seeking to sow division. Radev counters these accusations, asserting that “no one from outside can tell us how to vote – that decision belongs to us, the Bulgarian people.” Experts, however, caution that even if Radev wins, his ties to Moscow may not translate into a dramatic shift toward Russia, given Bulgaria’s recent progress in EU integration and the broader strategic interests of its populace.
#bulgaria #radev #election
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Politics Apr 17, 2026

Israeli Strikes Cripple Southern Lebanon's Last Hospital

Southern Lebanon's only functioning hospital has been damaged by Israeli strikes, exacerbating the …
Israeli strikes have damaged the only functioning hospital in southern Lebanon, severely impacting the region's healthcare capabilities. The hospital, which was providing critical medical services to the local population, suffered significant damage in the attack.The incident has raised concerns about the humanitarian situation in Lebanon, where access to healthcare is already a pressing issue. The hospital's damage is likely to exacerbate the crisis, leaving thousands without access to essential medical care.The Israeli strikes on Lebanon have intensified tensions in the region, with many fearing the escalation of the conflict. The international community has called for restraint and a return to diplomatic efforts to resolve the situation.
#Israel #Lebanon #Hezbollah
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Politics Apr 17, 2026

Lebanese Banking Magnate Antoun Sehnaoui Sparks Outrage After US Envoy Praises Pro‑Israel Stance Amid Ongoing Conflict

Banker Antoun Sehnaoui, chair of Societe Generale de Banque au Liban, was lauded by US Middle East …
Amid a wave of Israeli air strikes that have killed hundreds and displaced roughly 20 % of Lebanon’s population from the south, Lebanese banker Antoun Sehnaoui attracted fierce criticism after being publicly praised for his pro‑Israel activities. Sehnaoui, who chairs Societe Generale de Banque au Liban (SGBL), attended an event at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum – a venue he has financially supported. The commendation came from Morgan Ortagus, the U.S. Middle‑East envoy who, according to reports, is also Sehnaoui’s romantic partner. Ortagus framed support for Israel as a matter of "moral clarity", even when it entails personal risk. She highlighted Sehnaoui’s funding of a U.S.–Israeli opera project, noting that such transactions are technically illegal in Lebanon under the country’s ban on dealings with Israeli entities. Describing the banker’s lineage, Ortagus said he hails from generations of "committed Lebanese Christian Zionists" and that his family has been "trained to support the State of Israel and the Jewish people." She also referenced his father, Nabil Sehnaoui, a principal backer of the Lebanese Forces militia, which allied with Israel during the 1982 invasion and was implicated in the Sabra‑Shatila massacres. The timing of the endorsement proved especially contentious. Since mid‑March, Israel has been accused of employing a “quadruple‑tap” bombing technique designed to maximise civilian casualties, and more than a million southerners have fled their homes, deepening sectarian tensions. Lebanese social‑media users reacted with outrage, calling for Sehnaoui’s imprisonment, accusing him of betraying his nation, and even alleging he had converted to Judaism. One commentator, academic Makram Rabah, argued that while a museum visit should not be controversial, the overt support for Israel amid a fragile ceasefire is. Ortagus’s own record – marked by staunch opposition to Hezbollah and open advocacy for Israel since her appointment in April 2025 – has already drawn scrutiny over her suitability as a neutral broker in the region. Beyond the political backlash, Sehnaoui faces serious legal challenges. Lebanese prosecutors have filed money‑laundering charges against him and SGBL, alleging illicit currency‑trading activities that exacerbated the country’s financial crisis that began in 2019. The bank denies any wrongdoing. In the United States, a 2020 civil lawsuit filed by families of Hezbollah‑linked attack victims accuses SGBL of providing material support to the militant group – a claim the bank also rejects. Lebanese MP Paula Yacoubian warned that Sehnaoui’s recent maneuvers appear designed to secure personal immunity in exchange for facilitating Israel‑Lebanon normalisation, rather than delivering tangible benefits such as the safe return of displaced residents. While the controversy rages, a tenuous ceasefire has allowed tens of thousands of residents to return to the devastated south, many seeking the remains of loved ones or assessing the damage to their homes.
#Antoun Sehnaoui #Morgan Ortagus #Societe Generale de Banque au Liban
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Politics Apr 17, 2026

Israel and Lebanon Agree to 10-Day Ceasefire Brokered by US

US President Donald Trump announces a 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, effective at 5pm…
US President Donald Trump has announced that Israel and Lebanon have agreed to a 10-day ceasefire, which will take effect at 5pm US East Coast time (21:00 GMT) on Thursday. The truce was brokered after Trump spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun.The ceasefire is seen as a significant development in the conflict between Israel and Lebanon, which was drawn into the US-Israeli war on Iran on March 2 when Hezbollah, the Iran-aligned Lebanese armed group, fired rockets at Israel. The conflict has resulted in over 2,196 deaths in Lebanon and thousands more wounded.Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam welcomed the announcement, describing the ceasefire as "a central Lebanese demand we have pursued since the first day of the war". Netanyahu confirmed he had agreed to the truce, which he said presented his country with an opportunity for a "historic deal" with Beirut.The US State Department said that Israel would retain the right under the agreement to carry out strikes in Lebanon in self-defence "at any time". The ceasefire could be extended by mutual consent. Trump later said the Lebanese government would begin working with Hezbollah to achieve the goal of dismantling the group.The ceasefire follows an intense week of diplomacy, including direct talks between Lebanese and Israeli envoys in Washington, DC, hosted by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Trump said he would invite Netanyahu and Aoun to direct talks, believing "that will happen quickly".
#Israel #Lebanon #Donald Trump
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Politics Apr 17, 2026

Tehran residents return to ruined city amid fears truce will not hold

Tehran residents return to city amid fears truce will not hold after US-Israeli strikes
Thousands of Iranians who had fled Tehran during the recent war have begun returning to their homes or workplaces, despite the fragile truce and looming anxiety over the approaching ceasefire deadline.Mehdi, a 36-year-old IT professional, is one of them. He had fled to the north with relatives in the early days of the war, but has now returned to find his home damaged by blasts, with shattered glass and blown-out bedroom window frames.The city is riddled with ruined buildings, destroyed infrastructure, and an economy in turmoil. Mehdi describes the experience of hearing missiles hit nearby: 'There's a whistling sound I hope you never hear … a missile so close that you don't know if it's going to hit your house or your neighbour's.'Many residents, especially those reliant on the internet, have lost their livelihoods due to the 45-day internet blackout imposed by Iranian authorities. This has left most of Iran's population cut off from the world, with some paying large sums to access the internet through Starlink and VPNs.Noor, an activist based in Tehran, says 10 million Iranians depend on internet access to run small businesses or make an income. The economic pressure has become unbearable, with food items and medications for patients with serious or chronic illnesses becoming difficult to find or afford.The economic crisis has worsened, with factories struggling to operate due to a lack of raw materials, construction workers losing jobs, and workplaces laying off staff or reducing their workforce.
#Tehran #Iran #United States
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Politics Apr 17, 2026

Wrexham AFC's £3.8m Government Grant Sparks Lawfulness Concerns

Wrexham AFC, part-owned by Hollywood stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac, received a £3.8m government g…
Wrexham AFC, the football club co-owned by Hollywood stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac, has been awarded a £3.8m government grant without a contract or a completed state aid assessment in place. This has raised questions over whether the award was lawful.The club has received a total of £18m in taxpayer-funded grants to help redevelop its stadium, the Racecourse Ground. This is significantly more than any other club in the UK.Responses to freedom of information requests suggest that Wrexham county borough council awarded the money before completing the usual steps. Alexander Rose, a partner specialising in subsidy control at law firm Ward Hadaway, stated that the lack of a final state aid assessment at the time the grant was awarded would have left it vulnerable to legal challenge by a rival.However, there is little prospect of Wrexham AFC being forced to repay the cash, as the one-month window for challenges to be filed has since closed. The leader of Wrexham council, Mark Pritchard, said: “All due diligence and checks were in place ahead of the transfer of any funding and we refute any accusations to the contrary.”Reynolds and Mac took over the club in 2021, bringing with them a wave of sponsorship and global interest via their Disney TV series Welcome to Wrexham. The club has been able to far outspend their lower-league rivals, transforming the club’s fortunes.Wrexham, which was granted city status in 2022, awarded the £18m to the star-studded club as part of its “Wrexham Gateway” urban improvement scheme. Most of the money went towards developing the stadium, despite the club having deep-pocketed owners.The first £3.8m tranche of cash was awarded on 8 February 2022, less than a year after Reynolds and Mac’s takeover. Another £14m was awarded in September 2025.Public authorities that give out grants are required by law to judge if they comply with the principles of subsidy control, to ensure taxpayer money is not misspent. However, in response to a freedom of information request, Wrexham council said it only had “draft assessments” in place before the money was awarded.The council said the final assessment it provided was submitted nearly five months later, on 6 July 2022. In response to questions, the council shared a draft assessment it said dated from 7 September 2021.Rose said: “At the time the £3.8m grant was awarded there was a duty to carry out a principles assessment. Evidence that this assessment wasn’t finalised when the grant was given would certainly have helped a challenger, for example a rival football club.”“Subsidy control rules exist to ensure there’s a level playing field in which businesses can compete,” he added. “That includes in professional football. They’re also an important protection for the taxpayer, preventing wasteful and unnecessary subsidies from being awarded.”Recipients of large grants almost always sign contracts to ensure taxpayer money is spent as promised. Yet the council said the grant was authorised by its executive board and “provided in advance of the finalisation of the grant funding agreement”.The council said the grant funding agreement – apparently covering the whole £18m – was only created in July 2023.The contract was then completed on 17 September 2025, when the £14m tranche was awarded.The two-year delay between the creation of the contract and its signing also offered another potential benefit to Wrexham council: new subsidy control laws that came into force days earlier in August raised the threshold for mandatory scrutiny of the grant by the Competition and Markets Authority.Delaying the subsidy meant the award to Wrexham AFC was not subject to this scrutiny.While it was tapping taxpayer money, the club was also able to raise huge amounts from private backers. In the year to June 2025 it raised £36m through share issues. Three months after the second grant, Reynolds and Mac announced the sale of a stake in the club to Apollo, one of the world’s largest private equity firms.Bloomberg reported that Wrexham was valued as high as £350m. The club then raised another £47.8m in January, according to corporate filings.In the year before it received the £14m grant, Wrexham was able to repay loans worth £10.6m to Ryan Reynolds’s company, according to accounts published last month. It also lost £3.8m from the collapse of Argentex, a currency brokerage that entered special administration in July 2025 because of failed foreign exchange trades.Pritchard, the council leader, said: “The grant represents a small investment compared to what the club will be investing at the Racecourse … In fact, as the club has grown in both stature, ambition and from external investment, the percentage of public investment compared to that of the club has shrunk from roughly 68% of the project costs to around 25% currently.“This demonstrates further value for money in regard to the initial investment from the public purse.”Wrexham AFC said the club is itself making a “significant financial investment with the support of our ownership group and investors”. Accounts published last month show the club has signed a £69.2m contract to build a new stand.The spokesperson said the “funding ensures the facility can be brought up to the required standard to host international sporting events, including international football and rugby matches (as opposed to just meeting domestic football criteria)”
#Wrexham AFC #Ryan Reynolds #Rob McElhenney
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Politics Apr 17, 2026

Sectarian Opposition Halts Beirut Displacement Centre as Israel-Lebanon Conflict Deepens

A government‑planned displacement centre in Beirut’s Karantina district was scrapped after Christia…
Beirut, Lebanon – In late March, authorities abandoned a proposed shelter for war‑displaced residents in the Karantina neighbourhood after a wave of public protest.Opponents, including local politicians and community activists, cited practical concerns such as traffic congestion near the port and health risks. However, the core of the backlash was sectarian: many Christian residents invoked demographic fears, chanting slogans reminiscent of the 1975‑1990 Lebanese Civil War to block housing for the predominantly Shia‑Muslim displaced population.The controversy resurfaced painful memories of the 1976 Karantina massacre, when right‑wing Phalangist forces expelled and killed thousands of Muslims. Historian Diala Lteif, researching the district’s history, estimates the death toll at 1,000‑3,000. She warned that the current rhetoric mirrors the “foundational logic” of that tragedy – a drive to segregate neighbourhoods.Israel’s intensified campaign against Lebanon has already forced the displacement of approximately 1.2 million people. The war, reignited on March 2 after Hezbollah’s retaliatory rocket fire, has seen Israeli troops and air strikes devastate southern towns and parts of Beirut, heightening fears that hosting displaced families could draw further attacks.Amid these tensions, a 10‑day ceasefire is slated to begin, yet many Lebanese worry the violence could spiral into renewed communal conflict or even a civil war.Experts note that the association of displaced Shia communities with Hezbollah fuels anxiety. Lara Deeb, an anthropologist at Scripps College, explained that Lebanon’s sectarian political system blurs the line between a religious group and a political party, amplifying mistrust across the board.While the cancelled site remains unused, another displacement centre operated by the Lebanese charity Offre Joie continues to function in Karantina. It currently shelters about 1,000 displaced families from the south, the Bekaa Valley, and Beirut’s southern suburbs.Volunteer Marie Daou described the centre’s conditions as comparatively decent, with reliable hot water and regular meals. Security forces monitor the residents’ identities, and no occupants have left despite more than 40 days of conflict.One resident, 30‑year‑old Nadine, fled her home in Burj al‑Barajneh on March 2. She now lives with five siblings at the centre, saying, “For now, we’re staying here. You can’t go back because there is danger, but nowhere is safe. We will endure.”The episode highlights how historic sectarian wounds intersect with today’s geopolitical crisis, shaping public policy and community responses in a Lebanon already strained by war and displacement.
#Beirut #Karantina #Israel-Lebanon conflict
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Tech Apr 16, 2026

InsightFinder Raises $15M to Solve the Hidden Infrastructure Causes of AI Failure

InsightFinder has secured $15 million in Series B funding to advance its AI observability platform,…
The Evolution of Observability in the AI EraThe market for IT reliability tools has undergone a significant paradigm shift. The industry has moved past the era of simply tracking everything to a focus on controlling complexity and costs. However, the rapid adoption of AI agents within enterprises has introduced a new, critical category of workload that requires specialized monitoring. InsightFinder, a startup grounded in 15 years of academic research, is capitalizing on this shift by leveraging machine learning to proactively identify and fix issues in IT infrastructure.Diagnosing the 'Black Box' of AI FailuresInsightFinder has officially launched its new product, Autonomous Reliability Insights, designed to tackle the root causes of AI model errors. Unlike traditional tools that focus solely on the model itself, this solution integrates data, model, and infrastructure monitoring to provide a holistic view. The company’s CEO, Helen Gu, a computer science professor at North Carolina State University, explains that the biggest misconception is that AI observability is limited to LLM evaluation during development. In reality, a robust platform must support end-to-end feedback loops covering development, evaluation, and production.Real-World Application: InsightFinder recently helped a major U.S. credit card company resolve a fraud-detection model that was drifting. The issue wasn't the AI model itself, but outdated cache in server nodes.Technical Approach: The platform utilizes a combination of unsupervised machine learning, proprietary large and small language models, predictive AI, and causal inference to analyze data streams.Why InsightFinder's $15M Round Signals a Market ShiftThe $15 million Series B round, led by Yu Galaxy, comes at a time when the observability space is crowded with competitors like Datadog, Dynatrace, and Grafana Labs. However, InsightFinder's financial performance indicates a strong market demand for its specific approach. The company reports revenue growth of over threefold in the past year and secured a seven-figure deal with a Fortune 50 company within three months.Funding Allocation: The capital will be used to expand the team (currently under 30 people) and invest in sales and marketing to scale its go-to-market motion.Total Raised: InsightFinder has now raised a total of $35 million in funding.Bridging the Gap Between Data Science and SREThe core value proposition of InsightFinder lies in its ability to bridge the communication gap between data scientists and site reliability engineers (SREs). While data scientists understand the AI but not the system, and SREs understand the system but not the AI, InsightFinder provides the insights that connect these two worlds. Gu argues that this unique combination of expertise and customizability acts as a significant moat against larger competitors.The Future of Autonomous IT OperationsAs enterprises continue to integrate AI agents into their core workflows, the demand for observability tools that can handle the full stack will only increase. InsightFinder's trajectory suggests that the future of IT operations lies in autonomous remediation—systems that not only detect anomalies but also fix them without human intervention. The company's success with Fortune 50 clients indicates that deep, enterprise-grade integration is the key differentiator in this emerging market.
#InsightFinder #Helen Gu #AI Observability
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