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Lifestyle May 10, 2026

RHS Chelsea Garden Celebrates England's Edgelands

The RHS Chelsea garden, designed by Sarah Eberle, highlights the importance of England's edgelands …
The Concept of the Garden Stinging nettles, buttercups, broken crockery, fly-tipped flowers and a discarded gnome are not the usual hallmarks of an RHS Chelsea flower show garden. But this year’s On the Edge garden by Sarah Eberle – the most decorated designer at Chelsea – is designed not to look like a garden at all, rather to transport its visitors to the liminal spaces on the outskirts of towns where the countryside begins and nature is in critical need of protection. The Garden's Design and Features The garden is about the fringe lands of towns and cities – and how vulnerable they are to development. There is very much a feel of the countryside to it, but with a town edge coming in, in its plant material. Right at the front is its centrepiece: a fallen mature tree sculpted into a reclining female figure by the chainsaw carver Chris Wood, “a mixture of stone and timber carved from a sequoia that’s fallen on this piece of edgelands”. The Symbolism of the Sculpture The sculpture, which represents Mother Nature or Gaia, the Greek goddess of the Earth, is intended to evoke the peacefulness and vulnerability of green belts and other countryside that surround urban centres. Its arm touches rainwater collected in a gravel pool and its willow hair flows into a dry stone wall that winds through a landscape dotted with native trees such as hornbeam, field maple and hawthorn. The Planting Scheme The planting scheme includes lots of wildlife-friendly native plants that are typically viewed as weeds, such as buttercup, wild strawberry, purple foxglove, cow parsley and stinging nettles. “There is beauty in our ordinary, native landscapes and the plants you find there – and a weed is only a plant in the wrong place,” said Eberle. The Impact of the Garden Eberle hopes the garden will help to convey how fragile, scrappy patches of countryside on the edges of towns and cities can serve as important sanctuaries for wildlife and urban communities. “If we look after these spaces, they can be good for nature and good for people,” she said.
#RHS Chelsea #Sarah Eberle #Campaign to Protect Rural England
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World Wide May 10, 2026

Senior Sri Lankan Monk Arrested for Alleged Child Sex Crimes

A senior Sri Lankan monk, Pallegama Hemarathana, has been arrested for alleged child sex crimes. He…
Arrest of a Senior Monk A senior Sri Lankan monk has been arrested on allegations of child sex crimes, highlighting the serious nature of sexual abuse cases involving religious figures. Correcting Misinformation Correction 9 May 2026 A previous version of this story said Pallegama Hemarathana is the chief prelate of Colombo. That was incorrect. He was arrested in Colombo but is the chief priest of Anuradhapura. Details of the Arrest The monk in question is Pallegama Hemarathana. He holds the position of chief priest in Anuradhapura. The arrest took place in Colombo. The allegations against him are related to child sex crimes. The Impact on the Community The arrest has significant implications for both the religious community and society at large in Sri Lanka. Cases involving religious figures often draw considerable attention due to the respect and trust these individuals are accorded. Future Developments As the case progresses, it is likely to spark further discussions on the protection of children and the accountability of religious leaders. The legal proceedings and any subsequent findings will be crucial in determining the truth of the allegations and the appropriate actions to be taken.
#Sri Lanka #Child Sex Crimes #Monk Arrested
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Economy May 10, 2026

Somali Pirates Abandon Hijacked UAE Dhow Amid Supply Shortages

Somali pirates left the hijacked Emirati dhow Fahad‑4 in the Arabian Sea after supplies ran low and…
Abandoned Hijack: Pirates Leave UAE Dhow in Arabian SeaSecurity officials in Somalia’s Puntland region reported that the Fahad‑4, an Emirati dhow seized in late April, was abandoned on May 4 after the pirate crew ran out of provisions and could not mount further attacks.Hijacking Timeline and Operational FailuresLate April: An 11‑member pirate group captured the dhow about 10 nautical miles (19 km) off Dhinowda, northeastern Somalia.Following the seizure, the vessel was used as a “mothership” to patrol Somali waters and seek additional targets.May 4: Pirates abandoned the boat, citing dwindling supplies and intensified vigilance by commercial ships.There is no confirmed information on the fate of the crew or the vessel’s current condition.Economic Stakes: Piracy’s $18 bn Global Cost and Rising Vessel ValueThe World Bank estimates piracy off Somalia once cost the global economy up to $18 billion annually.Recent attacks have focused on fuel‑rich tankers such as the Honour 25 and the Eureka, whose cargoes are more valuable amid soaring petrol prices linked to the US‑Israel‑Iran conflict.The Joint Maritime Information Centre (JMIC) has upgraded the threat level to “severe,” reflecting heightened risk for commercial shipping routes.Security Gaps: How Patrol Shifts Revived Somali PiracyAnalysts point to two key factors:Naval assets previously dedicated to anti‑piracy missions were redeployed in 2023 to counter Houthi attacks in the Red Sea, leaving a vacuum in the Gulf of Aden.Current distractions—such as naval focus on the Strait of Hormuz amid Iran‑U.S. tensions—further reduce patrol coverage, emboldening pirate groups.Outlook: Anticipated Naval Responses and Market ImplicationsExperts expect a multi‑pronged response:Re‑allocation of international warships to the Indian Ocean corridor to restore a “deterrence‑by‑presence” posture.Increased insurance premiums for vessels transiting the Gulf of Aden, potentially raising freight costs.Continued monitoring by JMIC and regional authorities, with a focus on disrupting pirate “mothership” operations.Should patrols intensify, the resurgence of piracy could be curtailed, stabilizing shipping rates and protecting the $18 bn economic impact at stake.
#Somali piracy #UAE dhow #Puntland security
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Politics May 10, 2026

The Strategic Aftermath of the India-Pakistan Standoff: Lessons in Vulnerability and Deterrence

As both nations mark the one-year anniversary of their brief but intense conflict, the narrative of…
The One-Year Retrospective: A Tale of Two NarrativesOne year after the four-day aerial war between India and Pakistan, the South Asian rivals are locked in a cycle of mutual celebration and strategic recalibration. While both governments present the conflict as a decisive victory for their respective militaries, the anniversary reveals a more complex reality. The war, triggered by the Pahalgam attack in April 2025 and codenamed Operation Sindoor by India and Operation Bunyan al-Marsoos by Pakistan, has fundamentally altered the security calculus in the region.Decoding the Military Balance: Claims vs. CapabilitiesThe official narratives on both sides emphasize specific tactical successes, yet open-source analysis suggests a more nuanced picture. India claims to have destroyed 13 Pakistani aircraft and 11 airfields, utilizing a mix of BrahMos supersonic cruise missiles and Israeli-made drones that penetrated deep into Pakistani territory, striking targets as far south as Karachi. Conversely, Pakistan asserts it downed five Indian jets, including Rafales, during the opening phase of the conflict.A critical turning point was the combat debut of the BrahMos missile. Pakistan's Chinese-supplied HQ-9B air defense system failed to intercept these hypersonic projectiles, exposing a significant technological gap. In response, Pakistan has accelerated its acquisition of the longer-range HQ-19 ballistic missile defense system, with induction anticipated by 2026.The Economic Reality of the Arms RaceBeyond the battlefield hardware, the conflict has accelerated a dangerous economic disparity that fuels the arms race. India’s defense budget for 2025-26 stands at approximately $78.7 billion, nearly nine times the official allocation of $9 billion in Pakistan’s 2025 budget. Despite Pakistan raising its military expenditure by 20 percent to secure equipment and physical assets, the fiscal strain is evident. Islamabad simultaneously cut overall federal expenditure by 7 percent to comply with International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan conditions, highlighting the unsustainable nature of its defense spending.The Erosion of Strategic DepthPerhaps the most profound lesson for Pakistan is the diminishing value of geographic strategic depth. In the past, distance from the Indian border provided a buffer against deep strikes. However, the conflict demonstrated that long-range precision weapons, drones, and cyber capabilities have rendered this buffer obsolete. Strikes reached military installations as far south as Sukkur, proving that geography alone can no longer protect the Pakistani heartland.This has forced a doctrinal shift. Pakistan has formally operationalized its Army Rocket Force Command (ARFC) to streamline conventional missile decision-making and maintain a clear separation from its nuclear deterrent. However, analysts warn that without hardened shelters, dispersal tactics, and urgent runway repair capacities, Pakistan remains vulnerable to being incapacitated in a future exchange.The Future of South Asian StabilityLooking ahead, the region faces a 'Red Queen's race,' where both nations must race to stay in the same relative position. The introduction of the J-35A fifth-generation fighter jets from China and the proposed $686 million F-16 upgrade from the United States indicate that the military competition will intensify. The BrahMos missile’s combat debut has fundamentally altered the strategic calculations for both sides, making it increasingly difficult to manage escalation without triggering a wider conflict.
#India-Pakistan Conflict #South Asia #Military Strategy
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World Wide May 10, 2026

Rebel Fighters Kill at Least 69 in Northeastern DRC

Armed rebels from the CODECO militia killed at least 69 people in Ituri province on April 28, 2026,…
Armed rebels from the CODECO militia killed at least 69 people in a series of attacks on villages in Ituri province, northeastern DRC, on April 28, 2026, reigniting long‑standing ethnic violence between the Lendu and Hema communities.Deadly CODECO Assault Leaves 69 Dead in IturiThe coordinated raids targeted several villages, including Bassa, after an earlier assault by the CRP (Convention for the Popular Revolution) on FARDC positions near Pimbo. CODECO fighters, claiming to protect the Lendu, launched retaliatory attacks that left civilian casualties and delayed body recovery for days.Attack date: April 28, 2026Location: villages in Ituri province, near the Uganda and South Sudan bordersPerpetrators: CODECO militia (Lendu‑aligned) and earlier CRP assault (Hema‑aligned)Casualty Figures and Militant InvolvementSecurity sources confirmed a death toll of at least 69, including 19 militia members and soldiers. Civil society leader Dieudonne Losa reported that only 25 bodies have been buried, with many remains still unrecovered.Total deaths: 69Militia/soldier deaths: 19Unburied bodies: > 40Escalating Ethnic Tensions and Regional InstabilityThe violence reflects the deep‑rooted rivalry between the Hema and Lendu ethnic groups, a conflict that has persisted for decades over control of Ituri’s gold and other mineral resources. The presence of multiple armed actors—CODECO, CRP, the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), and the M23 rebellion—stretches the Congolese army (FARDC) and the UN peacekeeping mission (MONUSCO) thinly across the region.Humanitarian agencies warn that the massacre could trigger cycles of retaliation, further displacing civilians and hampering aid delivery.Outlook: Risks of Wider Violence and Humanitarian CrisisExperts, including Amnesty International’s Rawya Rageh, argue that without a decisive security response, eastern DRC will see “more attacks” as armed groups exploit security gaps. The UN has condemned the killings and pledged to protect civilians, but limited troop numbers raise doubts about effective enforcement.Potential developments include:Retaliatory attacks by Hema‑aligned groups against Lendu communitiesIncreased recruitment of child soldiers by groups such as ADF and CODECOEscalated international pressure for a coordinated regional security frameworkContinued instability threatens the extraction of critical minerals—cobalt, copper, uranium—that feed global supply chains, making the conflict a matter of both regional security and worldwide economic interest.
#CODECO #CRP #Ituri
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Business May 09, 2026

Oracle's Hardline Stance on Severance: Why 20,000 Workers Are Pushing Back

Oracle laid off an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 employees in March 2026, offering standard severance …
The 'Take-It-or-Leave-It' Severance OfferOracle's mass layoffs on March 31, 2026, were delivered with a digital finality that left many employees stunned. One former employee described the surreal experience of attempting to log into their VPN only to find their account deactivated, followed by an immediate termination email. In response to these cuts, Oracle offered a standard corporate severance package: four weeks of pay for the first year of employment, plus one additional week for every year of service, capped at 26 weeks. The package also included one month of COBRA insurance coverage.VPN Deactivation: Employees were locked out of systems immediately upon termination.Standard Terms: 4 weeks + 1 week/year (max 26 weeks).Health Coverage: COBRA paid for one month.The High Cost of Forfeited StockWhile the cash severance was standard, the treatment of stock compensation became a major point of contention. Unlike peers who accelerated vesting, Oracle forfeited all unvested Restricted Stock Units (RSUs). This decision had a devastating financial impact on long-tenured staff. One employee lost approximately $1 million in stock that was just four months from vesting, as RSUs accounted for 70% of his total compensation.Bypassing WARN Act ProtectionsOracle navigated regulatory hurdles by classifying many employees as 'remote,' a designation that allowed the company to sidestep the WARN Act. This federal law requires companies to provide two months notice for mass layoffs affecting 50 or more people at a single location. By classifying workers as remote, Oracle avoided triggering these protections, leaving employees without the mandated notice period. Even when WARN Act protections technically applied, Oracle argued that the two-month notice pay was already factored into its existing severance calculation.The Failed Collective Bargaining AttemptIn a rare move, 90 employees signed a public petition urging Oracle to match the generous severance packages of competitors like Meta and Microsoft. Meta offered 16 weeks of base pay plus two weeks per year of service, while Cloudflare provided accelerated stock vesting and lump-sum severance through 2026. Despite this pressure, Oracle declined to negotiate, maintaining a rigid 'take-it-or-leave-it' stance.The Future of Tech Labor RelationsOracle's refusal to negotiate underscores a shifting dynamic in the tech industry. While the 'employee's market' once allowed workers to demand high salaries and perks, the current economic climate has empowered companies to enforce strict cost-cutting measures without compromise. This incident signals a potential new era where corporate leverage far outweighs employee protections.
#Oracle #Tech Layoffs #Severance Packages
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Environment May 02, 2026

US Vineyards Battle Spotted Lanternflies as Invasive Insects Spread

The spotted lanternfly, an invasive insect native to China, has spread to 19 US states, causing sig…
The Spread of Spotted Lanternflies Around grape harvest time about three years ago, an employee at Zephaniah Farm Vineyard in Leesburg, Virginia, noticed bugs, about 1in long with gray and black wings and a bright red underwing, atop some trees. They were spotted lanternflies, invasive insects that probably played a role in the fact that the vineyard produced about half as many grapes in 2025 as the previous year, according to Tremain Hatch, a co-owner and viticulturist. The Economic Impact on Vineyards Zephaniah Farm is not the only US business that has seen lanternflies suck away their revenue. Their US population has increased in recent years and affected the winemaking and forestry sectors. In New York, for example, researchers estimated that the bugs could cost wineries millions of dollars. The Data Analysis The spotted lanternflies are native to China and were first detected in the US in 2014 in Berks county, Pennsylvania. They have since spread to 19 states – with the largest infestations in the north-east – and Washington DC. The bugs suck the sap from a variety of plants, including grapevines, hops and fruit trees, and then secrete honeydew, a sugary liquid which can then facilitate the growth of sooty mould. The Impact Analysis Scientists are uncertain what the lanternfly population numbers could look like this summer and fall, but they expect them to continue to spread across the country. As such, researchers are looking for ways to protect vegetation – and the wine industry – from the bugs. “They don’t belong in our environment,” said Brian Walsh, a Penn State Extension horticulture educator who studies lanternflies. “And while you may not be having a huge impact overall on the population by killing individuals, each one that you see and encounter and kill, that is one less that you’re going to accidentally move to a new area.” The Prediction Despite the increasing US lanternfly population, Nathan Derstine, a visiting assistant professor of biology at the University of Richmond, does not expect the bugs to wreak as much havoc as, for example, the emerald ash borer, an invasive Asian beetle that has killed hundreds of millions of ash trees. “This is a recent invasion,” Derstine said. “It’s been about 12 years. That is not very long in the grand scheme of things, and so there has probably not been much adaptation or chance for any response by the natural enemies or parasitoids or things that are present here.”
#Spotted Lanternflies #Invasive Insects #US Vineyards
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Politics May 02, 2026

Zambia Pulls Plug on RightsCon 2026, Citing ‘National Values’

Zambia’s government abruptly cancelled the RightsCon 2026 summit, the world’s largest gathering on …
Zambia announced on 5 May 2026 that the RightsCon summit, the world’s largest conference on human rights and technology, would be cancelled just days before its scheduled start, citing a need to align the event with “national values”.Government’s Last-Minute Cancellation of RightsCon 2026Permanent Secretary Thabo Kawana of the Ministry of Information & Media said the decision was taken to ensure the gathering “aligns with Zambia’s national values, policy priorities, and broader public interest considerations”. The summit was to run from 5‑8 May in Lusaka, attracting over 2,600 activists, technologists, academics and policymakers.Financial and Logistical Fallout for DelegatesMore than 2,600 participants had already booked travel and accommodation.Individual delegates, such as Karna Kone from Côte d’Ivoire, reported losses of several hundred dollars in airfare and visa fees.Organiser Access Now had invested months of liaison and incurred undisclosed costs.Implications for Zambia’s International Reputation and Civil Society SpaceHuman‑rights lawyers like Linda Kasonde argue the move signals a “slow degradation of rights” and damages Zambia’s image, especially as the country was set to host the first RightsCon in southern Africa. Reports suggest pressure from China—including the use of a venue donated by Beijing and concerns over Taiwanese delegates—may have influenced the decision.The cancellation arrives ahead of the August 2026 general election, raising fears that the government is tightening control over public discourse and limiting civil‑society convening.What This Means for Future Digital‑Rights Conferences in AfricaStakeholders warn that the incident could deter future international events, as sponsors and participants may view African venues as politically volatile. Advocacy groups are calling for stronger guarantees of independence for such summits, and for regional bodies to develop protocols that protect civil‑society gatherings from abrupt governmental interference.
#Zambia #RightsCon #Access Now
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Politics May 02, 2026

Cuba Calls Trump’s New Sanctions ‘Collective Punishment’

Cuba’s foreign minister denounced President Donald Trump’s latest executive order as “collective pu…
Cuba Labels Trump’s New Sanctions as Collective Punishment Cuba’s foreign minister Bruno Rodriguez called the latest U.S. measures “collective punishment” after President Donald Trump signed an executive order targeting multiple sectors of the Cuban economy. Executive Order Expands Sanctions Across Key Cuban Sectors Targets entities in energy, defence, metals & mining, financial services and security. Also sanctions officials accused of serious human‑rights abuses or corruption. Announced during the 1 May labour‑day procession outside the U.S. embassy in Havana. Economic Indicators Highlight Deepening Crisis Only one Russian oil tanker has reached Cuba since the January fuel blockade. Tourism, once the island’s most lucrative industry, has sharply declined (no exact figure provided). Power cuts and supply shortages have become routine. Political and Humanitarian Fallout for Cuba and U.S. Relations The sanctions arrive amid renewed diplomatic overtures, with senior U.S. officials visiting Cuba earlier in April. Cuba insists its socialist system is non‑negotiable, while Washington continues to demand economic liberalisation, reparations for ex‑propriated property and “free and fair” elections. What the Next Moves Might Mean for Havana and Washington Non‑American companies operating in the sanctioned sectors lose the protective shield previously afforded by the embargo. Potential escalation could further isolate Cuba, worsening the humanitarian situation. Conversely, increased pressure may force Cuba back to the negotiating table, though the risk of deeper confrontation remains.
#Cuba #Donald Trump #US sanctions
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