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Council elections take place for some Palestinians – but continuing mass displacement makes Gaza poll farcical

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Council elections take place for some Palestinians – but continuing mass displacement makes Gaza poll farcical

There was an election, of sorts, in Gaza at the weekend. It was a very limited vote – only people registered to vote in the central Gaza city of Deir al-Balah were able to cast a ballot. This made up a total electorate of 70,000 people, and of them, only 23% actually voted.

Hamas did not field any candidates and the municipal election has been described as a largely symbolic exercise by the Palestinian Authority (PA). The PA, which is dominated by Fatah under Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, wants to link the West Bank and Gaza politically ahead of a possible presidential campaign at some stage in the future.

The low turnout in the Gaza poll was not unexpected given the continuing instability in the Strip. A joint report on Gaza published earlier this month by the UN, EU and World Bank, estimated that the Israeli military has displaced more than 1.9 million Palestinians in the last two-and-a-half years.

Less reported – but no less important – is the fact that this displacement continues, despite the ceasefire agreement announced in October 2025. The situation remains volatile, with the Israeli military having killed more than 738 Palestinians in Gaza since then.

All the signs are that this displacement will last. The Israeli army remains on the ground in more than half of the Gaza Strip, which is now divided by the so-called “yellow line” established shortly after the ceasefire. Although the line was originally announced as a temporary measure ahead of the military’s full withdrawal, there is every sign of it becoming a fixed border. Israel’s military chief of staff, Lieutenant-General Eyal Zamir appeared to confirm this when he visited Gaza in December 2025 and described the yellow line as “a new border line”.

Now virtually the entire Palestinian population of Gaza – the vast majority of whom have been forced to move at least once during the conflict, now widely recognised as a genocide – are confined to its eastern side. Any Palestinian who crosses the line risks being shot by the Israeli army.

More than 200 Palestinians have already lost their lives in this way. Most infamously, the Israeli army killed 11 members of the Abu Shaaban family, including seven children, as they were driving back to their home in the early weeks of the ceasefire.

By forcibly preventing Palestinians from returning to their homes, Israel is making the Palestinian people’s displacement permanent. And as the majority of Gaza’s Palestinians were already refugees before the Israeli assault began in October 2023, many see this policy as continuation of what they call the Nakba_ – or “catastrophe”. This began in 1948, when Zionist militias and the Israeli army displaced and expelled at least 750,000 Palestinians, leading more than 200,000 to seek refuge in Gaza.

Complicating matters further still, the Israeli military has repeatedly moved the yellow line further inward, seizing more territory in a de facto land grab. According to recent estimates, the side of the line occupied by the Israeli military now comprises more than 58% of the territory of the Gaza Strip.

This area appears to have been earmarked for US-Israeli investment, development and possible settlement, while remaining out of bounds to Palestinians.

Transfer out of Gaza

At the same time as this ongoing internal displacement, controversial schemes to transfer Palestinians out of Gaza altogether are continuing. Since 2023, both the Israeli government and the White House have discussed numerous proposals for the Palestinians’ mass relocation from Gaza. Indonesia, Libya, Sudan, Congo and Somalia have all been touted as possible destinations. The Trump administration also proposed offering Palestinians US$5,000 (£3,680) to leave Gaza “voluntarily”.

A funeral for victims of an Israeli airstrike in Gaza, April 2026.

Despite the ceasefire agreed in October 2025, funerals continue in Gaza, with more than 738 Palestinians killed by the Israeli military since October’s ceasefire. EPA/Haitham Imad

Palestinians have overwhelmingly rejected these plans. Yet despite the 20-point ceasefire agreement stating that “no one will be forced to leave Gaza” and promising that “we will encourage people to stay”, various transfer schemes have continued covertly. Over the past year, hundreds of Palestinians have been spirited out of Gaza on flights organised by a settler organisation linked to the Israeli military.

This operation came to light when 153 Palestinians were forced to spend 12 hours on an airport runway in South Africa after landing there without the required travel documents. Media investigations subsequently found that their journey had been facilitated by an organisation called Al Majd Europe, which calls itself a humanitarian agency working to evacuate Muslims from conflict zones. Palestinians pay US$2,000 upfront to Al Majd Europe which then arranges for their departure from Gaza.

As it turns out, Al Majd Europe is led by Israeli-Estonian national Tomer Jamar Lind. A report published by Israeli daily newspaper, Haaretz, has found that Al-Majd coordinates with the Israeli army’s Voluntary Emigration Bureau, which is run by Israel’s far-right finance minister, Belazel Smotrich.

Behind the scenes, the evacuation scheme is orchestrated by the organisation Ad Kan, whose leader Gilad Ach openly backed Trump’s plans for mass transfer from Gaza.

After bussing the Palestinians from Gaza to southern Israel, the organisations arrange for them to fly from Ramon airport to a range of destinations, including Indonesia, Malaysia and South Africa.

Some of the Palestinians who have been relocated in this way report not knowing where they are going. There are striking parallels with the 1970s, when the Israeli authorities tried to illicitly deport thousands of Palestinians from Gaza to Paraguay.

In effect, then, Israel is pushing Gaza’s 2 million Palestinians into a confined part of the Strip while simultaneously working to relocate them out of Palestine altogether. And with international attention largely now turned away from Gaza, there is alarmingly little to stop these plans getting considerably further – before it is too late.

Singapore’s AI neutrality is cracking under US-China pressure

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Singapore’s AI neutrality is cracking under US-China pressure

A rear view of the large Merlion statue at Merlion Park, Singapore. Photo: Wikimedia Commons, Timelezz, cc-by-2.0

Singapore built its edge on something rare: neutrality that actually worked. Capital moved in, companies set up and deals got done without politics getting in the way.

From where I sit, that predictability has always been “The Product.” Yet, it seems that pressure on that model is now out in the open as it grapples with striking a balance between the US and China.

As announced this week, China is forcing Meta to unwind its US$2 billion acquisition of Singapore-based AI startup Manus, a company with Chinese roots in what amounts to much more than a blocked deal.

It seems to show that location no longer protects you. Origin and control now matter more than where a company is registered. I don’t see this as an isolated move. I see a system tightening.

AI has, over the last couple of years, moved into the category of strategic infrastructure. And governments are treating it accordingly.

Washington has already restricted outbound investment into Chinese advanced tech. Beijing is now tightening control over outbound ownership and talent. Both sides are drawing lines, and those lines are starting to overlap. Singapore sits directly in that overlapping region.

The scale matters here. More than $140 billion in foreign direct investment flowed into Singapore in 2024, one of the highest levels globally relative to its size.

Over 80 of the world’s top 100 tech firms run regional operations from there. Southeast Asia’s AI funding, roughly $6 billion in 2025, is largely structured through Singapore before being deployed.

Capital still wants to be in Singapore, that hasn’t changed, but it looks like freedom around that capital has.

For years, Singapore has acted as a bridge. Founders could relocate, restructure and access global capital without being forced into one geopolitical system. Investors could back companies with cross-border exposure and still expect a clean exit.

Chinese regulators are now looking past incorporation and focusing on origin, meaning where the technology was built, who built it and where it ends up. A Singapore address might no longer neutralize those questions.

From an investor’s perspective, this could mean behavior shifts quickly. Founders could choose sides earlier. Hybrid models of Chinese roots, Singapore structure and Western exit are likely to become harder to execute. Building for both systems at once introduces too much risk.

Valuations will start to reflect that new reality. Companies sitting between systems will carry a discount because of execution uncertainty. Clean alignment, fully inside one system, will command a premium because the path to exit is clearer.

Against this backdrop, cross-border M&A in AI can be expected to slow. Not because deals aren’t attractive, but because too many may be blocked. Boards and investors will avoid transactions where approval risk is obvious and fewer deals attempted means less liquidity across the middle.

Singapore could, I suspect, feel that directly. The city-state’s fundamentals remain strong, of course. There’s legal clarity, infrastructure and connectivity that still attract capital and talent.

This isn’t disappearing, but what’s changing is the ceiling on how globally those companies can operate. A Singapore-based company with Chinese founders and US buyers is no longer viewed as neutral.

This, therefore, is going to change how regulators respond and how investors assess risk. From where I sit, this leads to a more fragmented system.

Global tech is not unwinding completely, but it appears that it could be splitting into overlapping blocs. AI sits at the center of that split because it touches productivity, defense, finance and information all at once.

If this plays out, investors need to adjust fast. Understanding where a company sits politically is becoming as important as understanding what it does commercially. Of course, growth still matters, margins still matter, but now alignment does too.  

Nigel Green is CEO and founder of the deVere Group

How the UN maintains Gaza as an exception to the detriment of the Palestinian people

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How the UN maintains Gaza as an exception to the detriment of the Palestinian people

Palestinians living in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood struggle to maintain daily life under difficult conditions as the ongoing Israeli policy and attacks cause widespread destruction, while cold weather and heavy rainfall flood and damage tents, forcing residents to seek alternative shelter solutions despite limited resources, in Gaza City, Palestine, on March 29, 2026. [Saeed M. M. T. Jaras - Anadolu Agency]

Palestinians living in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood struggle to maintain daily life under difficult conditions as the ongoing Israeli policy and attacks cause widespread destruction, while cold weather and heavy rainfall flood and damage tents, forcing residents to seek alternative shelter solutions despite limited resources, in Gaza City, Palestine, on March 29, 2026. [Saeed M. M. T. Jaras – Anadolu Agency]

“Lebanon cannot be another Gaza,” the UN Secretary General’s Spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said last week in response to a question during a press briefing regarding Israel’s war in Lebanon. Earlier this month, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich openly spoke about Israel’s plans to extend its non-declared borders into Syria and Lebanon, besides the encroachment already in place and extending in Gaza. Israeli ministers also spoke of applying the same tactics used in Gaza to South Lebanon. 

Dujarric’s statement carries as much weight as contradiction in UN rhetoric. Lebanon cannot be another Gaza, and yet, the UN is doing nothing to stop Israel from expanding its borders and increasing its kill toll. On that level, Lebanon is on a par with Gaza – the UN’s silent complicity makes them comparable. 

However, not once since October 2023 have we heard any UN official sound a warning about Gaza in terms of comparison. What would UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, or Dujarric, have said? Gaza cannot become another Gaza? There is no comparison to what Gaza has suffered in increasing increments.

Israel then decided genocide would not only be possible but also acceptable, because the UN constitutes the legacy of former colonial powers masquerading as alleged guardians of human rights.

For Dujarric to be able to make such a statement, the UN must assume accountability. Had the international community truly worked to stop Israel’s genocide in Gaza, Dujarric would not be able to elicit a comparison. The UN would not be able to turn Gaza into a mere reference for other realities, while completely ignoring the realities created there for Palestinians by Israel’s colonial violence and genocide. 

READ: Israel detains 1,800 Palestinian children since Gaza war began

At any given moment, and with the UN’s tacit blessings, Gaza can become another destroyed Gaza. From Operation Protective Edge in 2014 to the genocide that started in October 2023, Israel went from partial to the near absolute destruction of Gaza. Dujarric’s rhetorical concern for Lebanon and its comparison to Gaza normalises the genocide in Gaza even further. It is not a question of taking an absolute stance against genocide, but ensuring the genocidal tactics are not replicated in Lebanon, which makes Gaza a contemporary reference point. The difference is that while Lebanon cannot be another Gaza, Gaza was forced into becoming the reference for a genocide that carries not only impunity but complete normalisation. And the normalisation of genocide is specific to Gaza. 

In UN rhetoric, Gaza maintains relevance but not importance.

Lebanon should not suffer what Palestinians have suffered. However, the international duty to protect Palestinians in Gaza from genocide should have eclipsed any need for future references in similar Israeli colonial aggressions.

For UN officials to make such statements, it should be clarified that the UN allowed Israel’s genocide to happen in Gaza. This selectivity – in rhetoric not in practice – illustrates how the UN was fine with all the tactics Israel used to ethnically cleanse Gaza, to normalise genocide only in Gaza’s context. Israel couldn’t have asked for better rhetorical contradictions at an international level. The underlying UN message is that genocide is a war crime – anywhere except in Gaza. 

OPINION: Is the EU willing to deconstruct colonialism and its role in maintaining it?

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

Ukraine Summons Israeli Ambassador Over Alleged Stolen Grain; Israel Rejects Claims

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Ukraine Summons Israeli Ambassador Over Alleged Stolen Grain; Israel Rejects Claims


Ukraine’s foreign ministry said it had summoned Israeli Ambassador Michael Brodsky after allegations that grain shipped by Russia from occupied Ukrainian territory had been accepted at Israeli ports, according to Reuters.

The move follows similar earlier accusations that have strained ties between the two countries, including a dispute on social media Monday and a prior discussion between the countries’ foreign ministers on April 15. A Ukrainian diplomatic source said Israel had previously “brushed off” complaints regarding the issue.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha wrote on X that “Friendly Ukrainian-Israeli relations have the potential to benefit both countries, and Russia’s illegal trade with stolen Ukrainian grain should not undermine them.” He added, “Now that another such vessel has arrived in Haifa, we once again warn Israel against accepting the stolen grain and harming our relations.”

Sybiha said Ukraine had “already officially summoned the Israeli ambassador to [the Ukrainian foreign ministry] tomorrow morning to present our protest note and request appropriate action.”

Israel rejected the claims, with Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar responding on X, “Allegations are not evidence,” and adding, “Evidence substantiating the allegations have yet to be provided.” Sa’ar said the matter would be reviewed and that international law would be upheld.

Israel has said Ukrainian officials have not provided evidence to support the accusations.

Haaretz reported that a vessel, the Panormitis, believed to be carrying grain from occupied Ukrainian territory, was awaiting permission to dock in Haifa. The newspaper also said four shipments of grain from occupied Ukraine had already been unloaded in Israel this year.

Kyiv considers grain produced in the four regions Russia claimed as its own since its 2022 invasion, as well as in Crimea, annexed by Russia in 2014, to have been taken by Moscow.

Israel said it would investigate the matter and ensure that international law is being followed.

Lufthansa Unveils ‘Economy Basic’ With Europe’s Smallest Cabin Bag Allowance

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Lufthansa Unveils ‘Economy Basic’ With Europe’s Smallest Cabin Bag Allowance


fthansa is introducing a new “Economy Basic” fare that offers Europe’s smallest free cabin‑bag allowance as the airline seeks to compete more aggressively with low‑cost carriers. The fare, available on short‑ and medium‑haul routes from 19 May, is designed as an entry‑level option for price‑sensitive travelers.

The new allowance permits only a small personal item with a maximum volume of 18 liters, significantly below the free limits offered by Ryanair, Wizz Air and easyJet. Lufthansa says the dimensions comply with the minimum standard agreed between EU transport ministers and the Airlines for Europe trade group.

The fare is part of a broader restructuring that expands Lufthansa’s economy‑class options to five tiers, ranging from the bare‑bones Economy Basic to Economy Flex, which includes priority boarding and flexible rebooking. Passengers can pay to add carry‑on or checked baggage, while elite status holders — including HON Circle, Senator and Star Alliance Gold members — may bring an additional cabin bag even under the new restrictions.

The move comes as airlines continue negotiations with the European Commission over rules that could require carriers to allow a free roll‑aboard suitcase. Lufthansa argues that such a mandate would increase delays and raise fares.

The new fare will also apply across the Lufthansa Group, including Swiss, Austrian Airlines and Brussels Airlines.

Read more via Lufthansa Adopts Budget Airline Model With New Economy Basic Fare – Bloomberg

BBQ Ranch Chicken Casserole

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BBQ Ranch Chicken Casserole

You are here: Home / All RECIPES / BBQ Ranch Chicken Casserole

If you’re looking for a dinner that’s quick, comforting, and packed with flavor, this BBQ Ranch Chicken Casserole is exactly what you need. With tender shredded chicken, smoky BBQ sauce, and creamy ranch dressing

It’s one of those recipes that feels like a warm hug—simple to prepare, incredibly satisfying, and perfect for weeknight meals or casual gatherings.


💛 Why You’ll Love This Recipe

  • ⏱ Ready in about 30–35 minutes
  • 🧀 Loaded with melty, cheesy goodness
  • 🍗 Perfect for using leftover or rotisserie chicken
  • 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Kid-friendly and crowd-pleasing
  • 🥘 One dish = easy cleanup

🛒 Ingredients

  • 2 cups cooked chicken, shredded
  • 1 cup BBQ sauce
  • 1 cup ranch dressing
  • 1 cup shredded cheese (cheddar or your favorite)
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp onion powder
  • 1 cup cooked rice or pasta (optional)
  • Green onions, chopped (for garnish)

👩‍🍳 Instructions

1. Preheat the Oven

Set oven to 350°F (175°C) and grease a baking dish.


2. Mix the Filling

In a large bowl, combine:

  • Shredded chicken
  • BBQ sauce
  • Ranch dressing
  • Garlic powder
  • Onion powder
  • Rice or pasta (optional)

Mix until everything is well coated.


3. Assemble

Transfer the mixture to the baking dish and spread evenly.


4. Add Cheese

Sprinkle shredded cheese generously over the top.


5. Bake

Bake for 20–25 minutes until cheese is melted, bubbly, and slightly golden.


6. Serve

Let cool for a few minutes, then garnish with green onions and serve warm.


🍽️ What to Serve With It

  • 🥗 Fresh green salad
  • 🥖 Garlic bread
  • 🥕 Roasted vegetables
  • 🥬 Coleslaw for a crunchy contrast
  • 🍹 Iced tea or lemonade

💡 Tips for Best Results

  • Use rotisserie chicken to save time
  • Don’t overbake—watch the cheese carefully
  • Add a little hot sauce for extra kick 🔥
  • Swap cheese types for different flavors (mozzarella, Monterey Jack)

🔄 Variations

  • 🦃 Replace chicken with turkey
  • 🌱 Use plant-based protein for a vegetarian version
  • 🌮 Add corn, beans, or jalapeños for a Tex-Mex twist

🧊 Storage & Reheating

  • Fridge: 3–4 days in airtight container
  • Freezer: up to 2 months
  • Reheat: oven at 350°F (175°C) until warm

✨ Final Thoughts

BBQ Ranch Chicken Casserole is the ultimate easy comfort food—creamy, cheesy, and bursting with bold flavors. Whether you’re cooking for your family or just want something satisfying without the effort, this recipe always delivers.

Start with the sensors, then design the rest: How Zoox built its robotaxi

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These days, the hype is all about AI and robots, but almost a decade ago, the tech du jour was self-driving. You couldn’t swing a lanyard at CES for the latter half of the last decade without hitting a robotaxi; post-COVID, the number of startups has shrunk, but the technology has definitely matured. Go to the right cities—San Francisco and Austin, Texas, spring to mind—and you might see dozens of sensor-festooned vehicles among the downtown traffic.

The pod-like robotaxis belonging to Zoox stand out. Other robotaxi developers are retrofitting existing vehicles like Hyundai Ioniq 5s with sensors and the computing power necessary for self-driving. Zoox, which was bought by Amazon in 2020, did that with its test fleet, but as it starts to offer ride-hailing services—currently in Las Vegas and San Francisco—it’s doing so with a purpose-built design that looks like it just drove off the set of a big-budget sci-fi production.

“A robotaxi is not a car; it’s not a human-driven vehicle, and the requirements are wildly different, although it has to live in that world,” explained Chris Stoffel, director of robot industrial design and studio engineering at Zoox.

It all starts with the sensors, each perched on a little ledge projecting from the top four corners of the robotaxi’s body. From up there, each has an unobstructed, high-level view, giving the Zoox robotaxi good situational awareness, particularly straight ahead. “Because we don’t have a traditional hood, we’ve optimized our frontal coverage in a way that would be nearly impossible on a retrofitted vehicle,” said Zoox director of sensor engineering Ryan McMichaels.

A Zoox robotaxi picks up riders

Zoox’s robotaxi has a friendly, welcoming design.

Zoox’s robotaxi has a friendly, welcoming design. Credit: Zoox

Then there’s the fact that the robotaxi doesn’t care whether it’s coming or going, thanks to its symmetrical, bidirectional design. The advantages are tantalizing, particularly for a vehicle that’s going to be summoned on demand. There’s no more need for a three-point turn, and with its symmetrical steering axles, it should have unparalleled agility. For example, since both axles have the same degrees of steering, the Zoox robotaxi can crab walk far more effectively than the GM Hummer EV performing its party trick.

“Not only do we do that for the maneuverability, but also the redundancy of the vehicle,” said Stoffel. “The hardware inside of the vehicle, it’s the same rack, it’s the same EDU on both ends, same battery pack—kind of split in both ends—two HVAC units. There’s a lot of redundancy built in there. It kind of got the kitchen sink of redundancy as we wanted to make sure this first product really could complete the mission,” Stoffel told me.

“We’re picking people up and we’re dropping them off. How do we do that better than anyone else? The idea to get into a spot that no one can or down a street or maneuverability that no one can, because we are really focused primarily on dense urban areas at the moment,” Stoffel said.

Zoox robotaxi interior.

The interior is designed to be calming.

Hard-wearing, but functional.

I haven’t had a chance to try out the rider experience yet, but I’m curious to see how it compares to the black cabs I grew up with in London. Those aren’t symmetrical, but they do have extremely tight turning radii, and an interior for riders that seats five with a pair of rear-facing jump seats—the best seat in the house for some.

Zoox’s interior is a little more stylish than the passenger compartment of a London taxi, though, with cup holders and wireless charging pads on both benches. “When you get into the vehicle… designing for calm is what we’ve wanted to go for. And the way we do that is nothing demands your attention. When you get into this thing, it’s very simple, it’s very clean, very continuous. Nothing is demanding your attention, allowing you to settle in. As simple as just doing your seatbelt and hitting go, you’re on your way,” Stoffel told me.

Zoox’s robotaxis are currently deployed in Las Vegas, San Francisco, and Austin, with Miami next in the works.

Elvis’ Biggest Tragedy: He Planned to Marry and Start Over Then Died Hours Later

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Elvis’ Biggest Tragedy: He Planned to Marry and Start Over Then Died Hours Later


In a heartbreaking twist that still haunts fans decades later, Elvis Presley was reportedly just hours away from a brand-new chapter in life before tragedy struck.

According to those closest to him, the King of Rock and Roll wasn’t spiraling without hope — he was planning a full comeback.

His then-girlfriend Ginger Alden revealed that the two had just set a wedding date the very night before his sudden death on August 16, 1977. The 42-year-old icon was also dreaming of a fresh start, including a new film project and even redecorating his famous Graceland mansion.

“He wanted to do a movie called Mission,” Alden recalled. “And just hours before… we had set a wedding date.”

But that future never came.

Alden would later discover Elvis unresponsive on the bathroom floor — a devastating moment that would mark the end of one of the most legendary lives in American music history.

Behind the fame, those closest to Elvis say there was a growing sense of urgency — and fear.

Women who loved him, including ex-wife Priscilla Presley and longtime girlfriend Linda Thompson, reportedly did everything they could to keep him alive.

Author Alanna Nash claimed Thompson would stay awake through the night just to make sure Elvis was still breathing.

But the superstar’s inner circle says he struggled to accept help — weighed down by addiction, pressure, and the expectations of being Elvis.

By the time of his death, insiders say he felt trapped — stuck between an exhausting tour schedule, financial stress, and declining health.

Those closest to Elvis insist he knew things had gone too far — and he wanted out.

His friend and spiritual advisor Larry Geller revealed the singer had made a dramatic decision: he was going to change everything.

“He said, ‘We’ll do it in September,’” Geller recalled.

But Elvis never made it to September.

According to Geller, the plan was bold — finish one last short tour, then walk away from the spotlight entirely. The idea was to take a full year off, focus on his health, and escape to Hawaii for a complete reset.

“He knew his life was on the line,” Geller said. “He wanted to get off the pills.”

Elvis’ life may have looked glamorous, but insiders say it had become a cage.

His longtime manager Colonel Tom Parker was accused of tightly controlling his career — even blocking the singer from touring Europe, something Elvis desperately wanted.

At the same time, his spending habits and generosity reportedly left him under financial pressure, forcing him to keep performing even when he was exhausted.

“He gave too much away,” Nash said. “And he kept working.”

Even those closest to Elvis saw the warning signs.

His daughter, Lisa Marie Presley, was just nine years old at the time — but she noticed her father was changing.

“He was not happy,” she once said, recalling his worsening temper and declining health.

Behind the scenes, nurses and loved ones tried everything — diets, exercise, detox attempts — but nothing stuck. Elvis reportedly relied heavily on prescription medications, convincing himself it wasn’t a problem because they were doctor-approved.

Meanwhile, friends say he had started searching for something deeper.

“He wanted to find God,” Geller’s daughter shared, adding that Elvis had dreams of becoming a gospel singer and reconnecting with his faith.

In one chilling admission before his death, Elvis reportedly confided in Geller:

“I know I have to make dramatic changes… I know my life is on the line.”

It was a moment of clarity — but tragically, it came too late.

Alden says their final exchange still echoes in her mind.

“He said, ‘I’m going to the bathroom to read,’” she recalled.

Hours later, she found him dead.

For those who loved him, the pain wasn’t just losing Elvis — it was knowing how close he was to turning everything around.

Nearly five decades later, the story of Elvis Presley’s final days remains one of the most haunting “what ifs” in pop culture.

He had plans. He had hope. He was ready to change.

But time ran out.

As Geller put it: “Don’t wait. It doesn’t matter who you are — when you know you need to change, you have to do it now.”

The Trump Administration Aims to Penalize Disabled Adults Who Live With Their Families

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The Trump Administration Aims to Penalize Disabled Adults Who Live With Their Families

Even a glance at Shy’tyra Burton’s life reveals her need for the sort of federal government assistance that helps disabled Americans stay in their homes. Born two months prematurely into a poor family in Philadelphia, unable to breathe or swallow without tubes and largely confined to medical facilities until age 4, Burton was diagnosed with a litany of developmental and intellectual disabilities that left her with an IQ below 70.

She persevered and graduated from a high school special education program, then attempted community college. But she struggled to grasp basic tasks and information. She couldn’t get hired, including at McDonald’s. After multiple medical and psychological evaluations and a hearing before a judge, the federal government approved her for the Supplemental Security Income program, which provides a basic income to those with severe disabilities and to indigent older people.

For Burton, now 22, the $994 monthly benefit is lifesaving but not enough to completely support herself on her own. So, like many SSI recipients, she has continued to live with her father, who makes around $2,000 a month as a Philadelphia sanitation worker.

Now, President Donald Trump’s administration is poised to penalize people like Burton simply for living in the same home as their families, according to four federal officials, internal emails and a federal regulatory listing. The administration is working on a rule change that would deduct the value of a disabled adult’s bedroom from their SSI allotment, even if the family members they live with are poor enough to qualify for food stamps. This would mean slashing the benefits of some of the most low-income SSI recipients by up to a third — about $330 a month in Burton’s case — or ending their support altogether.

The effort to cut SSI for families who also rely on food stamps, also known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, was initiated by top White House and Department of Government Efficiency officials last year, multiple Social Security officials said. It marks a second attempt by the Trump administration to quietly but dramatically downsize disability benefit programs overseen by the Social Security Administration, despite those programs’ strict eligibility standards and minimal instances of fraud. White House Budget Director Russell Vought and Social Security Commissioner Frank Bisignano abandoned a different proposed regulation involving disability payments last year after ProPublica and other news outlets reported on the harm that the plan would cause to hundreds of thousands of largely blue-collar workers in red states. (The disability programs are administered by the Social Security Administration but separate from the retirement program for which the agency is named. The Trump administration has promised not to cut Social Security retirement payments.)

The likely SSI cut will affect not just younger adults with disabilities such as Down syndrome and severe autism who are still living at home with their low-income parents, but also older people with health or financial problems who have had to move in with their adult children on tight budgets. All told, as many as 400,000 poor and disabled people and indigent older people across the United States could have their support cut or eliminated, according to a ProPublica analysis of actuarial figures from the Social Security Administration.

Protecting the SSI program from such a fate is “about how the faithful will be judged, and our care for the most vulnerable,” said Galen Carey, vice president of government relations for the National Association of Evangelicals and himself the father of a 35-year-old son with Down syndrome who lives at home and receives SSI. Carey said it’s wrong to reduce a disabled person’s SSI benefits for choosing or needing to live with loved ones. “Knowing that they are contributing and not a burden to the family can be a source of great pride,” he said. (Some 40 Down syndrome organizations recently sent a letter to Bisignano expressing their opposition to the planned change.)

The reason this will especially affect SNAP families is complicated. Essentially, under a long-standing federal policy that was updated during the Biden administration, if a household has already demonstrated its poverty via SNAP or other public assistance programs’ own extensive income-reporting requirements, then the family is officially deemed unable to financially support a disabled loved one living at home. (The typical SNAP household that is also supporting a person who receives SSI has an annual total income of just $17,000, according to the nonpartisan Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.)

The Trump rule will undo this approach. It won’t matter if the SNAP program has already determined a family is poor enough to receive aid; anyone living at home beyond age 18 without paying full rent will be treated as if they have a benefactor. The value of their bedroom as well as any income and assets their family may have will be calculated and recalculated as often as every month and deducted from their SSI check.

The SSI rule change is being reviewed by the White House Office of Management and Budget, a process that involves editing the draft regulation and considering where it falls on the list of the president’s priorities. Once it’s returned to the Social Security Administration for initial publication, there will be an opportunity for public comment; it could take until next year to be finalized, depending on the amount of opposition it faces.

Presented with a detailed list of this article’s findings, Rachel Cauley, the OMB’s communications director, asserted that “this story is false because it speculates about policies that have not yet been decided.” Asked to specify what was false, Cauley did not identify anything, instead reiterating that the story is “trash.” A Social Security Administration spokesperson said “Commissioner Bisignano remains committed to protecting and strengthening Social Security and serving America’s most vulnerable populations.”

A mother, wearing glasses and a leopard-print shirt, and son, wearing a bright yellow shirt, smile and pose with their heads leaning together. The mother’s eyes are closed and the son is smiling.
Opal Foster’s son Jeremiah has Down syndrome and receives SSI. He turned 18 last year but is still living at home as he tries to start a career as a chef. Caroline Gutman for ProPublica

ProPublica interviewed families who rely on the SSI program in Philadelphia and across the country. We talked to a young couple struggling to support not just their kids but also a parent with Alzheimer’s. We heard from a mother, Opal Foster, whose 18-year-old son has Down syndrome and lives at home as he strives to become a chef. And we spoke with a middle-aged woman with schizophrenia and panic disorder who lives with her brother’s family because she can’t hold down a job and fears being left alone in a nursing home.

All of these people could have their SSI benefits cut because they live with family, even though disability advocates, evangelicals and budget experts agree that it’s more humane and less expensive for adults with disabilities to live at home rather than in institutional facilities. The potential cut to Burton’s SSI benefit, for example, would save taxpayers about $11 a day. But if her dad as a result of the reduced support can’t afford to provide for her anymore, then it could cost taxpayers many hundreds of dollars a day or more to house her at a residential facility, according to the state of Pennsylvania’s fee schedules.


Supplemental Security Income, which serves 7.5 million Americans who are unable to make a living because of severe disabilities or destitution in old age, has never been easy to qualify for. Fewer than a third of applicants are approved, and the process often takes years. Recipients of these benefits in turn regularly have their finances reevaluated, and are also intermittently examined by medical and vocational experts, to determine whether their payments will continue.

This paperwork-and-review-heavy process generates hefty overhead. The SSI program distributes just 5% of all Social Security Administration benefits yet accounts for nearly 35% of the agency’s administrative budget. Month after month, staffers have to pore over microscopic changes to SSI beneficiaries’ living arrangements and family members’ incomes and assets.

Current and former Social Security officials have told ProPublica over the past year that the SSI program’s complexities and absurdities remain perhaps the agency’s biggest bureaucratic headache. As ProPublica reported last summer, DOGE did nothing to address this, mostly ignoring SSI despite its obvious inefficiencies. In fact, DOGE and the White House pushed out roughly 7,000 Social Security employees, many of whom had been working on SSI reforms and backlogs.

The Biden administration had tried to do something about SSI’s excessive red tape. Under existing law, disabled people whose families have already established themselves to be poor by qualifying for certain other public assistance programs, such as veterans’ benefits or Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, don’t have to do all of the same check-ins, over and over again, to receive SSI. In 2024, Biden added SNAP — which is more widely used now than when these SSI rules were created — to the list of such programs.

This was ultimately an act of government efficiency, said Marianna LaCanfora, who was for years the deputy commissioner for retirement and disability policy at the Social Security Administration, including during Trump’s first term. Safety net programs like SSI don’t have to be so complicated and thus expensive, LaCanfora and others at the agency said. But they often are that way because of all the effort spent triple-checking that the poor are actually poor.

Nevertheless, conservative think tanks opposed the Biden SNAP policy, with some claiming that paying these low-income SSI beneficiaries less could save the federal government $20 billion over the next decade. And the White House included the rule change as one of its agenda items for the SSA heading into 2025. It was part of a broader push by the administration and DOGE to undo anything that the Biden administration had touched.

If enacted, the change will require intellectually disabled young people like Burton as well as very elderly people to file extensive monthly reports if they want to continue their benefits even at the reduced level. They’ll have to provide details about the property where they live: whether it’s leased or owned, as well as the names of anyone in the home, and whether any of these people has any new income or assets. They’ll also have to include documentation of all household bills and expenses, showing how much they do or don’t contribute personally, as well as financial documents such as bank statements and any pay stubs.

Burton will likely have to make an appointment and report in person at a Social Security field office any time her father’s hours or wages change even slightly; any time she and he switch up how they split utility bills; and any time an adult sibling spends even a few nights at the house and helps her with living expenses. If she doesn’t, she could later receive bills accusing her of having been overpaid by Social Security.

For his part, Bisignano, the Social Security commissioner, wants to be seen as a leader who’s making the agency more businesslike and efficient, according to interviews with agency staff and recordings of him speaking in private executive meetings. But the SSI rule change, by all accounts, will increase the administrative burden not just on families like Burton’s but also on the staff who’ll have to constantly assess the living arrangements and family incomes of her and millions of other people.

Given the tension between what the rule will do and the sense of efficiency that Bisignano says he wants to instill at Social Security, some agency insiders told ProPublica that he could still push the White House to drop the plan.


Shy’tyra Burton’s monthly SSI support check is what allows her to contribute to her household, by paying her own phone and internet bills and buying many of her own meals, according to her father, Rondell. “I’m still barely managing, though,” he said. He has largely been a single parent to Shy’tyra and her siblings, who need some support too, although they’re more self-sufficient. Groceries and gas have only gotten more expensive.

Burton is calmer and better at managing her disabilities when she can sense that her family’s economic circumstances are relatively stable, her father said. When he blew out his shoulder last year trying to hurl a heavy recycling bin onto a garbage truck, and had to have surgery and take time off work, the loss of income soon manifested in her behavior, he said. “It’s a trickle-down effect,” he explained. “My daughter absorbs money stress in her body.”

One recent 75-degree afternoon, sitting on the front stoop of the rowhouse where she lives with her dad, Burton was rubbing her hands together vigorously, as if it were cold out. When asked why, she claimed it reminded her of being a baby in the neonatal intensive care unit and touching her parents’ hands through the small opening in her incubator.

Burton still has some childlike ways. She grips her stuffed animals when she’s nervous, which is often. She talks to imaginary friends out loud, the same ones she talked to when she was a girl. What she likes about living at home is in part that she can be herself, and her family will still be there to care for her. She doesn’t like the lack of freedom and that she can’t truly be “out there” like her adult siblings.

Burton wanted to go into the child development field, to help kids growing up with disabilities like hers, but some of the concepts were a bit too difficult. Now, she’s excited by cosmetology and intends to support herself one day as a hair stylist. She spends much of her time practicing on mannequin heads in her childhood room.

Thailand’s forever war greets Anutin with a vengeance

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thailand’s-forever-war-greets-anutin-with-a-vengeance
Thailand’s forever war greets Anutin with a vengeance

BANGKOK – As the United States struggles to find an early exit from the prospect of yet another forever war in the Middle East, recent weeks have seen its treaty ally, Thailand, again wrestling with its own forever war, an apparently intractable conflict along its southern border with no end in sight.

For over 20 years, the slow-burn secessionist revolt in the majority Malay-Muslim provinces of Pattani, Yala, Narathiwat and parts of Songkhla has dragged on, out of sight and mostly out of mind, for national policymakers in Bangkok, 1,000 kilometers to the north.

But with a new government led by Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul in power since the beginning of April and the insurgents of the Barisan Revolusi Nasional Melayu Patani, better known simply as BRN, on an escalating rampage since the beginning of the year, Thailand’s southern forever war is back on the front burner.

Largely in disregard for an on-again/off-again peace process facilitated since 2013 by neighboring Malaysia, BRN’s military wing – an adaptive and resilient generational enterprise embedded in Muslim communities region-wide – has asserted itself alarmingly in recent weeks.

Actively supported by only a small minority of the Malay population but enjoying the sympathies of many, its staple tactics – bombings, drive-by shootings, targeted killings and arson sprees – have never escalated to a level that could wrest from Bangkok a region where the historical Muslim sultanate of Patani once ruled.

But since early 2026, BRN’s mostly part-time, village-based cells have displayed an evolving capacity not only for hard-hitting ambushes but, far more ominously, for region-wide coordinated operations that reflect the political appeal and organizational staying power of a cause that appears to have no difficulty attracting new recruits.

In the early hours of January 11, that coordination was demonstrated with unprecedented effect with a wave of attacks using large improvised explosive devices (IEDs) targeting petrol stations and adjacent 7-Eleven convenience stores across ten districts of all three primarily affected provinces.

In terms of scope and impact, the precisely coordinated blasts – carried out by attack teams of around 10 rebels between 00.50 and 01.30 – marked one of the most logistically and organizationally complex operations in the 22 years of an insurgency that is generally defined as having begun in January 2004.

Over its various stages – planning, reconnaissance and target selection, logistical preparation, attack and evasion – the attacks involved mobilizing several hundred operatives under tight security, with no more than a handful of senior commanders aware of the scope of the entire plan.

Nor were the targets chosen at random. In a made-for-TV blitz providing graphic footage of towering flames reaching into the night sky, the petrol stations were all owned by the giant, state-owned PTT corporation, a brand instantly recognizable nationwide.

In BRN’s ideological narrative of a region occupied by “Siamese” colonialism, both PTT and the 7-Eleven franchise owned by the huge Charoen Pokphand Group stand at the vanguard of predatory Sino-Thai capitalist penetration.

Not by chance, the entire coup de main was carefully executed to avoid civilian casualties: as they invaded the roadside facilities, BRN attack teams fired into the air and ordered staff and customers to evacuate the convenience stores before large IEDs brought in on motorcycles were detonated by digital timers and remote-control devices. Only five civilians and one policeman suffered minor injuries.

Even as BRN has been at pains to avoid civilian collateral damage, the 80,000 or more Thai security forces spread across the region have suffered a constant, but never critical, hemorrhaging of casualties.

 A string of recent attacks using the rebels’ hallmark IEDs packed into cooking gas tanks and buried under roads have struck police and army vehicles across the region.

On February 8, in Bannang Satar district of Yala, one massive blast flipped an eight-ton armored personnel carrier off the road, leaving seven soldiers inside bruised but alive.

In late March in Narathiwat’s Ra-ngae district, five police officers in an armored pickup truck were not so lucky. A similar device, typically weighing over 25 kilograms, struck the vehicle from the side, blowing it off the road and wounding all on board. Had the IED been buried and struck the truck’s underside, most, if not all, the officers would have died.

And in mid-April, BRN’s bombers in Bannang Satar were back with another attack on an army pickup with a buried device that detonated a second or two prematurely, wounding all seven soldiers on board but killing none.

In recent years, arson – a longstanding insurgent tactic – has typically targeted roadside CCTV cameras in overnight attack waves across one or two districts at a time.

But in recent months, the target set has widened with attack teams repeatedly torching heavy-duty wheeled vehicles at road construction projects, hitting contracting companies hard, and, by extension, the regional economy more generally.

Soft-power messaging

Compounding the rising mayhem wrought by IEDs, arson and targeted killings of off-duty security personnel, the first quarter of 2026 has also seen the insurgents’ most widespread propaganda campaigns to date –  operations that mobilize hundreds of BRN support elements in low-risk activity that carries pointed messages to a far wider audience.

 On the night of 5-6 February, in the run-up to Thailand’s national elections on February 8, insurgent messaging involved the hanging of cloth banners from roadside trees and power poles across all four provinces carrying messages in Thai, Malay and English: “ There can be no democracy under colonial occupation” and “National liberation is the precondition for peace.”

In March, the propaganda teams were back with a blunter message spray-painted in Thai script across roads in 18 of the 37 insurgency-impacted districts across the region: ‘Patani mai chai Siam’ – Patani is not Siam.

An apparently deteriorating situation has hardly been helped by some spectacular own goals at the seniormost level of the harassed and frustrated Thai security forces.

March 20 saw an attempted assassination of Kamolsak Leewamoh, a Muslim member of parliament and noted critic of the military’s alleged human rights abuses. A late evening attack using an M-16 assault rifle on the Narathiwat MP’s SUV as he returned home failed to harm him but seriously wounded his driver and police bodyguard.

Scandal erupted when ongoing police investigations established that all those implicated in the attacks – five of whom have now been arrested – were ex-military personnel, with the alleged shooter a former paramilitary Ranger.

No less damningly, the vehicle used by the attackers had been “on loan” from the motor-pool of the Forward Command of the Internal Security Operations Command (ISOC) – the point agency in the struggle to contain the rebellion headed by Lieutenant-General Norathip Phoey-nork, commander of the southern Fourth Army Region.

 There has been no suggestion that the bungled assassination bid by ex-military personnel was sanctioned from the top of ISOC’s southern command.

But Norathip successfully doused the fire of scandal with gasoline when, at an April 13 press conference to publicize arrests in the case, he was caught in an unguarded off-microphone comment noting that had he been behind the killing, the MP would not have survived.

Appointed to his current position from the Cambodian border last September and evidently unschooled in southern sensitivities, Norathip then blundered directly into the minefield of Islamic education in the region, with the incendiary assertion that Koranic seminaries and night schools, known as “ponoh” and “tadika”, which occupy pride of place in Patani Muslim communities, were involved in fanning the separatist revolt.

The resultant furor on, and well beyond, social media demanding his recall from the region required the intervention of a clearly alarmed Prime Minister Anutin, who, on April 17, publicly apologized for the commander’s gaffe as he left Bangkok on an emergencyvisit to the region.

Well before that, notably in the wake of the petrol station blitz, Anutin had been at pains to stress the need for better intelligence in a conflict in which, despite massive investments in local paid informants, BRN operations have invariably caught the security and intelligence services entirely off-guard.

Over 22 years of rebellion, a sprawling and hugely costly counter-insurgency campaign has rested on emergency legislation to make major advances in mapping the insurgency’s human terrain using DNA samples, ballistic forensics, CCTV footage, phone intercepts and thousands of arrests and interrogations.

But even as the revolt draws new recruits with no official records into its orbit, generating operational intelligence through human sources inside an intensely secretive and highly compartmentalized political and military organization has, for both operational and cultural reasons, proved essentially mission impossible.

Notwithstanding security force raids, arrests and occasional clashes that add new martyrs to the rebel cause, the battlefield initiative remains where it has always been – with the insurgents.

Strategic challenges

At the strategic level beyond the sputtering ground war, the Thai state faces two other daunting challenges. The first centers on an on-off peace process in danger of floundering for lack of momentum.  

On one hand, continuity and commitment around the process have been perennially bedeviled by national-level political disruptions in Bangkok. Last week, the Anutin government made yet another top-level change by appointing Thanat Suwannanon, director of the National Intelligence Agency, to head the southern negotiations team, replacing General (retired) Somsak Rungsita, a former National Security Council chief who had been in the job for only six months.

But at a deeper level, negotiations are overshadowed by profound skepticism in military and monarchist circles about the desirability of substantive administrative concessions in the border region that might undercut an essentially quixotic separatist cause yet threaten Thailand’s traditional standing as a unitary state.

 Within BRN, meanwhile, major questions persist over policy coherence among an opaque cabal of ‘Old Guard’ leaders, compounded by simmering tensions between the party’s negotiators and an increasingly assertive military wing, no less skeptical of political sellouts than its hardline Thai military counterparts.

Thailand’s second problem is Malaysia. Since 2013, the Malaysian government in Kuala Lumpur has served as a “facilitator” to the peace process.

That role is undertaken by an office headed by a retired senior official with a security and intelligence background – currently Mohamad Rabin Basir, a former director of Malaysia’s National Security Council – who interfaces with the two negotiating teams.

Malaysian Special Branch police, meanwhile, maintains close tabs on both senior BRN political leaders known to be based in the country and militant elements slipping back and forth across a notoriously porous border who are unlikely to be much inconvenienced by Thai plans to erect fencing along certain short stretches of a nearly 650-kilometer land frontier.

In this context, Malaysia is well placed to assert its own interests over a process aimed at resolving a conflict in which it is anything but an impartial observer.  Ironically, those largely ill-defined interests have fomented deep suspicions within both warring parties.

South of the border, BRN political leaders and their military operatives chafe under often hard-knuckle monitoring, manipulation and direction by Malaysian authorities while understanding all too well that they can never afford to alienate a government on which aging senior leaders depend for sanctuary and a quiet life.

Meanwhile, there are strong indications that Thai military intelligence officials have concluded that hard-hitting BRN operations in border districts, evidently planned and prepared south of the border, have benefited at very least from a nudge and wink from Malaysia’s Special Branch.

BRN’s evident use of Malaysian territory for training courses is a bone of contention that Asia Times understands has been pointedly raised with the Malaysians this year by the Thai military.

Indeed, from the very different perspectives of both belligerents north of the border, a common question may be taking shape: ultimately, is Malaysia interested in midwifing a sustainable settlement to a festering conflict at risk of escalation, or alternatively, in maintaining ongoing control over a powerful lever in the shape of BRN while watching Thailand twist in the wind of its seemingly intractable forever war?

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