Sunday, February 15, 2026

SOMEBODY INFORM THE SAUDI PRINCE THAT IT'S TURKEY, NOT ISRAEL

Saudi prince: Israel seeking control from the Nile to the Euphrates

Prince Turki al-Faisal accused Israel of harboring expansionist ambitions similar to Iran's, and said Israel continues to violate the ceasefire in Gaza: "They blame Hamas who come out and shoots at them, but that is no excuse. Hamas has almost been destroyed."

 

by Shachar Kleiman  

 

Israel Hayom

Feb 15, 2026

 

 

Prince Turki Al Faisal 

Prince Turki Al Faisal, the former director of Saudi intelligence

 

Prince Turki al-Faisal said over the weekend in an interview with the Emirati news site The National that Riyadh is seeking to promote "a regime of stability and development instead of the upheavals and negative developments that occurred in the past." Al-Faisal is regarded as one of the senior figures in the Saudi royal family and previously served as Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the US and as head of Saudi intelligence.

Al-Faisal said there were "players with differing perspectives" in the region and that Saudi Arabia was witnessing competing ambitions. "We see Israel, for example, publicly declaring that it wants to develop what they call 'Greater Israel' from river to river, from the Nile to the Euphrates," he said. "Iran, of course, has its own ambitions. There are also outside powers, the US, China, Russia, Europe and others. Our region has always been seen as a prize for those who aspire to control it."

On the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, al-Faisal also questioned Washington's ability to act in Gaza without institutional backing from the United Nations. "Establishing a council requires institutional support and the only alternative is the UN," he said. "NATO will not do it, nor will the Arab League. America alone will not be able to do so."

He further complained that "Israel continues to violate the ceasefire and every day Palestinians are being killed." According to al-Faisal, "They blame what they call extremists, Hamas fighters who come out and shoot at them. But that is no excuse. Hamas has been almost destroyed." Hamas is a Gaza-based terrorist organization that has ruled the coastal enclave since 2007.

Amid heightened tensions with Iran and the possibility of a US strike, the Saudi prince stressed that his country supports diplomacy. At the same time, he assessed that the leadership of the regime in Tehran was under heavy pressure following its brutal crackdown on protests.

"Iran has suffered strong and devastating blows over the past two years," he said. "We saw the uprising. By their own admission, it claimed many lives. So there is a sense of uncertainty facing the leadership in Iran, which perhaps it has not dealt with before." However, al-Faisal added that he did not know whether the recent events would ultimately lead to regime change.

ORGANIZED CRIME IN ISRAEL

Organized crime poses strategic threat to Israel

The ratio of Arab-to-Jewish homicides expanded from 4:1 in 2015 to 14:1 by late 2025.

 

By Shimon Sherman 

 

Israel Today

Feb 15, 2026

 

 

A car that collided with a bus near Sde Warburg after the occupants were shot amid a feud between warring crime families, February 3, 2026.
 

On Sunday, synchronized protest convoys involving hundreds of vehicles departed from the Galilee, the Triangle and the Negev, converging on the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem.

The demonstration was triggered by a surge in violence during the first week of February that resulted in several fatalities in broad-daylight shootings across several Arab municipalities. The protesters’ central demand was the reclassification of the crime wave as a “National Emergency” to address a homicide rate that, in early 2026, had reached a frequency of nearly one victim per day.

The Sunday demonstrations were followed by sporadic protests and acts of civil disobedience across Israel, including blocking highways, in an attempt to pressure the Cabinet into authorizing broader resources to combat organized crime syndicates in Arab communities. In response to the growing protests, President Isaac Herzog recognized the surge of violence as a “national burden” and said that “turning a blind eye” is no longer an option for the state, in a recent statement.

The crime wave

The recent protest movement is fueled by an unprecedented escalation in violence that has claimed 45 lives since the start of the year. This trajectory follows a record-breaking 2025, which concluded with 252 recorded homicides in the Arab sector, the highest annual figure on record and a nearly 250% increase from the 71 homicides recorded in 2018.

While Israel’s overall murder rate is around 1.6 per 100,000 inhabitants annually, among Arabs the rate is around 12 per 100,000, higher than El Salvador’s and on par with Venezuela’s. While the homicide rate for Jewish Israelis has remained relatively flat, the ratio of Arab-to-Jewish homicides has expanded from 4:1 in 2015 to 14:1 by late 2025.

A recent report for the Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security (JISS) emphasized that at this scale, crime in the Arab community has transitioned from a local issue to a national threat. “Serious crime, and especially organized crime within the Arab sector, has become a strategic threat to the rule of law, national security, and the country’s social fabric,” the report noted.

This crime wave is increasingly characterized by organized syndicate activity. In 2025, the Israel Police seized more than5,600 illegal firearms across the country, with approximately 88% of all homicides in the Arab sector involving firearms. There are an estimated 400,000 illegal firearms in circulation in Israel. Furthermore, the violence has begun to claim a higher percentage of “innocent bystanders,” estimated at 10-12% of victims in 2025, and a record 23 female victims.

The crisis is primarily centered in the north, which accounted for 57% (141 victims) of the previous year’s total, followed by the Triangle and central regions at 28%. The demographic impact is concentrated among the “youth bulge,” with victims aged 18 to 30 accounting for approximately 50% of all fatalities.

Despite the scale of the violence, the clearance rate for murders in the Arab sector remains historically low, hovering between 10% and 15%, compared to over 70% in the Jewish sector.

The ongoing protest movement highlights a significant divergence between the public demand for law enforcement and the internal societal barriers to its implementation. According to a recent JISS report, approximately 70% of witnesses in criminal cases within the Arab sector refuse to cooperate with police investigations. This “wall of silence” is compounded by a deep-seated crisis of confidence; the 2025 Israel Democracy Institute report on public security found that trust in the police among Arab citizens has collapsed to just 19%, with 40% of the population expressing “no trust at all” in the institution.

This refusal to engage with authorities is often driven by a fear of immediate retaliation, as criminal syndicates frequently target those who provide testimony. Within many communities, this has fostered a culture of silence where cooperation with the state is viewed as a significant personal risk, thereby significantly reducing law enforcement’s capacity to bring successful indictments to court. This dynamic creates a situation in which massive street protests demand police intervention while, on the ground, residents often reject the infrastructure or the cooperation necessary for enforcement.

Organized crime in the Arab sector

The violence within Israel’s Arab society is the byproduct of a sophisticated organizational hierarchy dominated by the “Big Five,” a group of major crime families—the Hariri, Abu Latif, Jarushi, Bakri and Qarajah clans. Between them, they control vast swaths of the illegal market in the north and the Triangle regions.

These organizations have transitioned from disparate street gangs into structured organizational hierarchies that provide a parallel “justice system.” This system resolves internal conflicts and land disputes through tribal arbitration, establishing the syndicates as de facto sovereigns that bypass the Israeli judiciary. This institutional power was notably demonstrated during the 2024 municipal elections, when dozens of candidates and officials were targeted by violence or threats, and in several towns, candidates were forced to withdraw or required 24/7 security.

The operational reach of these families is supported by their transition into the legitimate economy through front companies in sectors such as transportation, scaffolding and private security.

In February 2025, the Israel Police conducted a massive raid on the Abu Latif organization, resulting in 36 arrests for the systematic use of violence to dominate state-issued tenders worth hundreds of millions of shekels.

This infiltration is bolstered by a predatory shadow banking system where interest rates can reach 10%-15% per month, leading to a “debt-slavery” loop. To sustain this growth, the syndicates employ a highly effective recruitment strategy, offering young at-risk men starting salaries that consistently out-pay other employment opportunities in the communities.

A major influx of military-grade weapons further props up the criminal system. Criminal organizations have moved beyond small arms to using grenade launchers, weaponized drones and standard-issue IDF explosives stolen from military bases, smuggled from Egypt or Jordan, or purchased from underground factories in Judea and Samaria. Throughout 2025 and into early 2026, these groups have deployed IEDs (improvised explosive devices) for daylight car bombings in dense urban centers.

Deputy Commissioner Maoz Ben-Shabo, the Israel Police’s project coordinator for the Arab sector, highlighted this shift in his testimony to the Knesset National Security Committee on Jan. 29. “The issue of weapons is at the core of criminal organizations. … Today, every organization has several weapons suppliers who provide them with everything—missiles, grenades, rifles or explosive devices,” Ben-Shabo noted.

The criminal black market

The financial foundation of organized crime in the Arab sector is built upon a vast “non-observed economy” that the Ministry of Finance estimates is worth tens of billions of shekels annually.

A primary driver of this shadow economy is the systematic extraction of khawa, or protection money, which the Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security estimates nets criminal organizations approximately 2 billion shekels ($650 million) each year. This unofficial tax has become so entrenched that in regions such as the Galilee, it is frequently treated as a fixed overhead cost for construction and commercial development.

The prevalence of this black market is reflected in local financial behavior. According to the Bank of Israel, more than 50% of transactions in Arab localities are conducted in cash, compared to roughly 12% in Jewish urban centers, facilitating a cash-only ecosystem that shields syndicate revenue from state oversight.

This economic structure creates a significant tax-revenue gap that directly hampers municipal development. In several Arab municipalities, property tax collection rates remain below 30%, leaving local councils without the necessary funds for infrastructure or municipal policing. This shortfall is compounded by the widespread use of currency exchange shops, or “change” spots, which the Israel Tax Authority identifies as primary pipelines for laundering illicit funds into clean assets.

Furthermore, the presence of these syndicates distorts the local real estate market. Crime families frequently purchase land and property in cash to launder profits, driving up prices and making legitimate home ownership inaccessible.

The infiltration of the legitimate economy by laundering networks has led to a “resource paradox” where the community pays significantly more in criminal extortion than it does in the taxes required to fund public services. This dynamic reached an initial peak in August 2023, when the Finance Ministry froze 200 million shekels (about $65 million) in municipal balancing grants. Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich justified the freeze by stating, “Organized crime relies on money, and most of this money, which is the State of Israel’s, instead of serving Arab Israeli citizens, reaches the same protection collectors.”

By early 2026, the implementation of broader development funds under Government Resolution 550, the 30 billion shekel ($9.7 billion), five-year plan for the Arab sector, remains a point of intense budgetary friction. The state’s difficulty in injecting resources without inadvertently strengthening crime syndicates was underscored by a December 2025 Cabinet decision to divert 220 million shekels (around $71 million) from Resolution 550’s socioeconomic programs directly to the Israel Police and Shin Bet. Social Equality Minister May Golan defended this divestment, saying the funds would “establish a ‘groundbreaking’ program to address ‘the root of the problem,’ which will both supplement and strengthen the existing program to combat crime in the Arab community.”

The causes of the violence

Brig. Gen. (res.) Erez Winner, a research fellow at the Israel Center for Grand Strategy, attributed the crisis to deep-seated sociological drivers that exist independently of state policy. “It has to be understood that there is a deep underlying cultural reason which is causing a lot of the violence,” he told JNS. “Blood guilt and family feuds are an institution that is hundreds of years old in Arab society,” he added.

Winner further explained that “murder for your family’s honor is considered an important responsibility,” meaning that individual disputes frequently spiral into generational cycles of retribution. Winner highlighted the scale of this issue, noting that a recent case where more than 20 murders were attributed to one clan conflict.

Winner also pointed to a recent void in the criminal landscape as a significant driver of the current wave. “Several years ago, the police made a serious effort to break up Jewish organized crime in Israel,” which inadvertently “created a vacuum that Arab crime families have slowly filled,” he explained.

These organizations have since “grown in power and strength,” transitioning from local gangs into the dominant syndicates currently active. According to Winner, this unchecked expansion is now reaching a breaking point, “resulting in violence spilling out onto the street.”

The current security climate has further strained the state’s capacity to intervene. Winner noted that “over the past two years, Israel has been dealing with serious threats in Gaza, in the north and in Judea and Samaria,” a shift that “has also taken resources away from the fight against the crime families.”

Consequently, the domestic crisis was “ignored because of more serious threats,” creating a permissive environment for syndicates to expand. This lack of oversight “allowed the crime families to grow without serious pressure,” leaving the police in a reactive posture.

The syndicates have achieved a level of technical sophistication that often exceeds that of the state. Winner observed that “the crime families have adapted themselves very successfully to new technologies,” using “drones or signal interference devices or faster cars” to carry out operations.

This “tech-gap” has altered the lethality of the organizations, as “the crime organizations are surpassing the police in their technological resources.” This strategic edge “makes them a lot more efficient and a lot more dangerous,” allowing them to evade traditional surveillance and outpace law enforcement’s response capabilities.

Winner added that the technological gap is being exacerbated by restrictions placed on police, preventing them from using certain surveillance methods to curb crime.

Police Commissioner Daniel Levi underlined the importance of the technological gap in worsening the crime problem during a situational assessment on Thursday. Law enforcement cannot do its job when “our hands are tied, our ears are muffled, and our eyes are blindfolded,” Levi said.

Winner added, “One of the most important factors is that [the judicial system] does not allow the police to use advanced investigative tools, such as spyware, and they oppose the integration of the Shin Bet into the fight against the phenomenon.”

 Finally, Winner concluded that a major source of the issue lay with the state prosecution. Winner characterized the Israeli legal apparatus as “a completely sick justice system that was failing to keep criminals off the street even once they were caught.”

He argued that the judiciary had become paralyzed by “political questions like judicial reform and conflicts with the government,” which caused the “basic work of prosecuting criminals and making sure that police arrests actually lead to jail time” to languish. This lack of deterrence created a revolving door for violent offenders.

FOR EUROPE ANTI-AMERICANISM HAS ONCE AGAIN BECOME FASHIONABLE

Europe’s self-defeating anti-American reflex in confronting Iran

As the world’s largest aircraft carrier sails to the Middle East, the European Union drifts toward division instead of Western unity. 

 

By Fiamma Nirenstein
 
JNS
Feb 14, 2026
 
 

uss gerald r. ford cvn-78 aircraft carrier cvw-8 2026 166 

The USS Gerald R. Ford in the Caribbean Sea on January 19, 2026

 

“Challenge.” “Fracture.” Those were the headline words across much of Europe following the Munich Security Conference. Commentators spoke with a certain self-satisfaction about a virtuous “Europe of Peace,” in contrast to the supposedly bellicose posture of U.S. President Donald Trump.

From the Financial Times to Spanish and French dailies, an old reflex resurfaced: Europe’s revival, we are told, will be built on distancing itself from Washington. Anti-Americanism, that familiar comfort, has once again become fashionable.

Yes, one may recall U.S. Vice President JD Vance’s sharp criticism a year ago, when he accused Europe of complacency and inertia. But it is intellectually dishonest to ignore that Secretary of State Marco Rubio subsequently softened the tone and reaffirmed the value of transatlantic cooperation. What matters now is not past rhetoric but present reality.

And reality is sailing toward the Arabian Sea.

After the USS Abraham Lincoln and the USS George H.W. Bush, a third American aircraft carrier—the USS Gerald R. Ford, the largest and most powerful warship ever built—is now en route from the Caribbean to the Middle East. This is not theater; it is strategy.

Over the weekend, Trump publicly given Iran’s ayatollahs 30 days to accept or reject an American proposal. Negotiations are set to resume, with American negotiators Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner heading to Geneva. The president has made clear that if no agreement is reached, the consequences will be “traumatic.”

Washington’s demands are sweeping: an end to Iran’s nuclear ambitions, the dismantling of its ballistic-missile program, and the cessation of its support for terrorist proxies. Trump has also reiterated that it would be better for the murderous regime in Tehran—responsible for countless deaths at home and abroad—to disappear altogether.

These are near-impossible objectives. And Trump knows it.

The ayatollahs and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps do not view their mission in transactional terms. They believe they are fulfilling a sacred destiny: the advancement of Shi’ite Islam toward the apocalyptic return of the Mahdi. Nuclear weapons, missiles, regional proxies and the promise to destroy Israel are not bargaining chips—they are pillars of ideology.

This is not rhetoric. Tehran has repeatedly demonstrated that it will risk a catastrophic confrontation to pursue its aims. Europe knows that in such a scenario, its own capitals—well within range of Iran’s expanding missile arsenal—would not be spared. The Vatican, too, lies within reach.

Iran has never pursued diplomacy as an end in itself. It has used it as a tactic—what Islamic jurisprudence calls taqiyya, sanctioned deception when necessary to defeat the enemy. Europe knows this. It knows Iran’s regime is morally abhorrent, that it has pursued nuclear capabilities in defiance of international commitments, that snapback sanctions were triggered for cause, and that Tehran stands aligned with Russia in its war against Ukraine.

When the European Union designated the Revolutionary Guards a terrorist entity, Tehran responded by calling it a “strategic mistake.” That was not the language of partnership.

Europe, Israel and the United States face a common strategic reality. Iran does not distinguish between Tel Aviv, Brussels or Rome in its long-term worldview. Yet as the Gerald R. Ford steams closer to the region, Europe congratulates itself for rhetorical distance from Washington.

Is this wisdom? Or illusion?

At a moment of profound geopolitical danger—when Iran and Russia increasingly coordinate their ambitions—the Western alliance cannot afford symbolic fractures. Europe is struggling with internal political and economic crises. An anti-American banner will not restore its strength.

Europe’s honor and security were rebuilt after World War II with American partnership. The so-called “vacation from history” was not a moral lapse but a hard-earned period of reconstruction made possible by transatlantic unity.

The telescope is available. The Gerald R. Ford is visible on the horizon. The question is whether Europe chooses clarity—or comfort.

THE WAR ON DRUGS BY THE US COAST GUARD

Coast Guard offloads over $133.5 million in illicit drugs interdicted in Eastern Pacific Ocean

 

United States Coast Guard News
Feb 13, 2026 
 

Two suspected drug smuggling vessels burn following an interdiction by Coast Guard Cutter Seneca’s crew and their embarked helicopter air crew in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, Jan. 31, 2026. Following the patrol, Seneca’s crew offloaded approximately 17, 750 pounds of cocaine at Port Everglades, Florida. 


MIAMI – U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Seneca’s crew offloaded approximately 17,750 pounds of cocaine worth more than $133.5 million in Port Everglades, Friday.  

The seized contraband was the result of four interdictions in international waters of the Eastern Pacific Ocean. 

On Jan. 25, Seneca's crew detected a go-fast vessel, and the embarked Helicopter Interdiction Tactical Squadron air crew employed airborne use of force tactics. Seneca's boarding team interdicted and boarded the vessel, seizing 4,410 pounds of cocaine.  

On Jan. 31, Seneca's crew detected three go-fast vessels, and the embarked HITRON air crew employed airborne use of force tactics. Senaca's boarding team interdicted and boarded all three vessels, seizing 13,340 pounds of cocaine. 

 

Ship

USCG Cutter Seneca

  

“I am extremely proud of the crew’s incredible performance and adaptability during this deployment,” said Capt. Lee Jones, commanding officer, Coast Guard Cutter Seneca. “This deployment demonstrates our enhanced posture and continued success in the fight against narco-terrorism and transnational criminal organizations. The Coast Guard, in conjunction with our inter-agency and international partners, continues to patrol areas commonly associated with drug trafficking in the Eastern Pacific, denying smugglers access to maritime routes by which they move illicit drugs to our U.S. land and sea borders.” 

THE DEMOCRATS WOULD PROBABLY LIKE TO KICK JOHN FETTERMAN OUT OF THE PARTY

I GUESS I DON'T HANG OUT ENOUGH WITH RACIST ELECTRICIANS

By Bob Walsh

 

HGTV fired Nicole Curtis after she used the n-word in an uncovered video.@detroitdesign/instagram
HGTV fired Nicole Curtis after she used the n-word in an uncovered video.
 

Nicole Curtis used to have a very popular show called REHAB ADDICT on the HGTV network.  She did home rehabilitations.  As of a few days ago she is now radioactive and her gig was cancelled and her show was pulled from the network.  

She had torn into the overhead of a house and found a real mess of wiring.  She described it as being "nigger-rigged."  I had never heard the expression before.  She immediately realized what she had said and directed the camera man to delete it.  It didn't get deleted and in fact surfaced recently.  She is now unemployed and cancelled.  

I saw the clip just yesterday on a national show.  My own opinion, for what that might be worth to you, is that she is not any more racist than any other White lady of her age group and she was making what she thought was a comment about the bozo who did the work rather than Black folks in general.  It doesn't matter.  Some errors at not recoverable.  

You have to be careful what you say and maybe get a camera man who will scrub a tape when you tell him to.  

She seems to have been very apologetic.  She may be able to rehab herself down the line.  I hope so.  I am unsure you should lose a gig you really like and seem to be good at over one brain fart, even if it does have a rather unpleasant undertone.  

Saturday, February 14, 2026

BEATS THE MARDI GRAS FESTIVALS OF NEW ORLEANS AND GALVESTON BY A COUNTRY MILE

Rio revelry begins! Scantily-clad glitter-covered partygoers parade through streets of Brazilian cities for annual festival

 

By Sophie Carlin 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 14, 2026

 

 

Locals and foreigners alike will flood to Rio's famed Sambodrome, among other venues across the country, to catch the dance parades. Pictured: A samba school parade in Sao Paulo

Locals and foreigners alike will flood to Rio's famed Sambodrome, among other venues across the country, to catch the dance parades. Pictured: A samba school parade in Sao Paulo

 

Rio Carnival has begun in earnest, with scantily-clad glitter-covered partygoers taking to the streets to parade through cities across Brazil

The annual five-day festival, which began on Friday and will last until Tuesday, marks a last gasp of excess for the Catholic country before Lent starts on Ash Wednesday. 

It is world famous for its raucous street parties and colourful displays, with musicians, percussionists and stilt artists drawing thousands out into the south American sun. 

The celebrations in the city of Rio de Janeiro, which some six million are expected to attend this year, are the most well known. 

But the festivity is a nationwide phenomenon, with merrymakers also turning out in full force in towns and cities across the country. 

The highlight of the event for many is the huge organised dance parades, which see samba schools dance the night away on enormous floats and in elaborate costumes. 

Hosted in Rio, Sao Paulo, Vitoria and Olinda, the acts, which performers prepare for months, are judged by a panel, who will eventually crown a winner. 

Locals and foreigners alike will flood to Rio's famed Sambodrome, among other venues across the country, to catch the dance parades.

 

The annual five-day festival, which began on Friday and will last until Tuesday, marks a last gasp of excess for the Catholic country before Lent starts on Ash Wednesday. Pictured: A samba school parade in Sao Paulo this week

The annual five-day festival, which began on Friday and will last until Tuesday, marks a last gasp of excess for the Catholic country before Lent starts on Ash Wednesday. Pictured: A samba school parade in Sao Paulo this week 

It is world famous for its raucous street parties and colourful displays, with musicians, percussionists and stilt artists drawing thousands out into the south American sun. Pictured: A samba school parade in Sao Paulo this week

It is world famous for its raucous street parties and colourful displays, with musicians, percussionists and stilt artists drawing thousands out into the south American sun. Pictured: A samba school parade in Sao Paulo this week 

The celebrations in the city of Rio de Janeiro, which some six million are expected to attend this year, are the most well known - but the festivity is a nationwide phenomenon. Pictured: A samba school parade in Sao Paulo

The celebrations in the city of Rio de Janeiro, which some six million are expected to attend this year, are the most well known - but the festivity is a nationwide phenomenon. Pictured: A samba school parade in Sao Paulo

 

The facility, which seats some 80,000 spectators, will form the centrepiece of the city's festivities, with drums, cymbals and trumpets taking over the Rio soundscape. 

This year's parades celebrate a range of themes, including sex workers, the late Brazilian singer-songwriter Rita Lee and Black communities in the Amazon. 

But beyond the staged performances, thousands of partygoers, many scantily clad and covered in glitter, are also making their own fun out on the streets. 

Crowds have gathered all over the country to soak up the sun and music before the sacrifices of Lent begin. 

One such reveller roaming the streets of the historic Santa Teresa neighborhood in Rio on Friday was Braulio Ferreira, a 48-year-old entrepreneur. 

He participated in the city's iconic Carmelitas street party dressed as Jason Voorhees, a character from the Friday the 13th horror movie franchise.

'It's very nice and satisfying to see so many people happy from abroad, enjoying carnival with full-on happiness,' Mr Ferreira said.

The carnival begins when the mayor of Rio de Janeiro, Eduardo Paes, selects a so-called King Momo, who will preside over the festivities. 

 

Merrymakers have also been turning out in full force in other towns and cities across the country. Pictured: A samba school parade in Sao Paulo

Merrymakers have also been turning out in full force in other towns and cities across the country. Pictured: A samba school parade in Sao Paulo

The highlight of the festival for many is the huge organised dance parades (pictured, one such event in Sao Paulo)

The highlight of the festival for many is the huge organised dance parades (pictured, one such event in Sao Paulo)

These performances (pictured, one such event in Sao Paulo) see samba schools dance the night away on enormous floats and in elaborate costumes

These performances (pictured, one such event in Sao Paulo) see samba schools dance the night away on enormous floats and in elaborate costumes

Hosted in Rio, Sao Paulo, Vitoria and Olinda, the acts (pictured, a performance in Sao Paulo), which dancers prepare for months, are judged by a panel, who will eventually crown a winner

Hosted in Rio, Sao Paulo, Vitoria and Olinda, the acts (pictured, a performance in Sao Paulo), which dancers prepare for months, are judged by a panel, who will eventually crown a winner

This year's parades (pictured, a performer in Sao Paulo) celebrate a range of themes, including sex workers, the late Brazilian singer-songwriter Rita Lee and Black communities in the Amazon

This year's parades (pictured, a performer in Sao Paulo) celebrate a range of themes, including sex workers, the late Brazilian singer-songwriter Rita Lee and Black communities in the Amazon

But beyond the staged performances, thousands of partygoers, many scantily clad and covered in glitter, are also making their own fun out on the streets. Pictured: The iconic Carmelitas street parade in Rio

But beyond the staged performances, thousands of partygoers, many scantily clad and covered in glitter, are also making their own fun out on the streets. Pictured: The iconic Carmelitas street parade in Rio 

Crowds have gathered all over the country to soak up the sun and music before the sacrifices of Lent begin. Pictured: The Carmelitas street parade in Rio

Crowds have gathered all over the country to soak up the sun and music before the sacrifices of Lent begin. Pictured: The Carmelitas street parade in Rio

The carnival begins when the mayor of Rio de Janeiro, Eduardo Paes, selects a so-called King Momo, who will preside over the festivities. Pictured: The Carmelitas street parade in Rio

The carnival begins when the mayor of Rio de Janeiro, Eduardo Paes, selects a so-called King Momo, who will preside over the festivities. Pictured: The Carmelitas street parade in Rio 

He gives the symbolic monarch the key to the city, which ushers in his five-day 'reign' over the celebrations. Pictured: The Loucura Suburbana street parade in Rio

He gives the symbolic monarch the key to the city, which ushers in his five-day 'reign' over the celebrations. Pictured: The Loucura Suburbana street parade in Rio 

In that time, Momo's role, which symbolises society being turned upside down during carnival, is simply to participate in the parades and promote the joy of partygoers. Pictured: The official Carnival opening ceremony in Rio

In that time, Momo's role, which symbolises society being turned upside down during carnival, is simply to participate in the parades and promote the joy of partygoers. Pictured: The official Carnival opening ceremony in Rio 

But not all is plain sailing, as in Rio, a recent wave of thefts by groups of young people acting at carnival events have raised serious concerns. Pictured: A samba parade in Sao Paulo

But not all is plain sailing, as in Rio, a recent wave of thefts by groups of young people acting at carnival events have raised serious concerns. Pictured: A samba parade in Sao Paulo

Many have called on both Mayor Paes and the city's governor, Claudio Castro, to do more to guarantee revellers' safety. Pictured: A samba parade in Sao Paulo

Many have called on both Mayor Paes and the city's governor, Claudio Castro, to do more to guarantee revellers' safety. Pictured: A samba parade in Sao Paulo

The public order department of Rio's City Hall, along with the municipal police, have said a special patrol operation has been set up to alleviate worries in the community. Pictured: A samba parade in Sao Paulo

The public order department of Rio's City Hall, along with the municipal police, have said a special patrol operation has been set up to alleviate worries in the community. Pictured: A samba parade in Sao Paulo

A reveller from the Academicos do Tatuape samba school performs during the carnival parade at the Anhembi Sambadrome in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on Saturday

A reveller from the Academicos do Tatuape samba school performs during the carnival parade at the Anhembi Sambadrome in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on Saturday 

Dancers from the Academicos do Tatuape samba school perform during the carnival parade at the Anhembi Sambadrome in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on Saturday

Dancers from the Academicos do Tatuape samba school perform during the carnival parade at the Anhembi Sambadrome in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on Saturday 

Performers from the Dragoes da Real samba school perform during the carnival parade at the Anhembi Sambadrome in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on Saturday

Performers from the Dragoes da Real samba school perform during the carnival parade at the Anhembi Sambadrome in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on Saturday 

A reveller from the Dragoes da Real samba school performs during the carnival parade at the Anhembi Sambadrome in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on Saturday

A reveller from the Dragoes da Real samba school performs during the carnival parade at the Anhembi Sambadrome in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on Saturday 

Dancers from the Colorado do Bras samba school perform during a carnival parade in Sao Paulo, on Saturday

Dancers from the Colorado do Bras samba school perform during a carnival parade in Sao Paulo, on Saturday 

 

He gives the symbolic monarch the key to the city, which ushers in his five-day 'reign' over the celebrations.

In that time, Momo's role, which symbolises society being turned upside down during carnival, is simply to participate in the parades and promote the joy of partygoers. 

This year's Momo is 30-year-old Danilo Vieira, a Rio native, who said before his symbolic coronation: 'The rules still apply, of course. 

'We have to follow the rules of our city, our country, but Carnival is run by me.'

He continued: 'Carnival is love, carnival heals. A kind of magic happens, bringing joy to every heart, to all races, to everyone.' 

In 2024, Mayor Paes issued a decree making the ceremony crowning Momo an annual official event, enshrining it as a regular day in the city's calendar.

But not all is plain sailing, as in Rio, a recent wave of thefts by groups of young people acting at carnival events have raised serious concerns.

Many have called on both Mayor Paes and the city's governor, Claudio Castro, to do more to guarantee revellers' safety.

Former local councillor Luciana Boiteux took to Instagram earlier this month to voice her fears - and demand better lighting and preventative community policing. 

'Carnival is meant to be a time of joy, but what we've been seeing at the street parties in Rio, beyond the fun, is fear,' she wrote. 

The public order department of Rio's City Hall, along with the municipal police, have said a special patrol operation has been set up to alleviate worries in the community. 

Around 1,100 agents have been assembled to monitor the street parties from start to finish for any potential trouble.  

And teams specialising in violence against women will also be present at key locations to offer support and guidance.

KIM JONG-UN IS GROOMING HIS TEENAGE DAUGHTER TO TAKE OVER WHEN HE DIES, BUT HIS SISTER MAY BE PLANNING TO TAKE OVER HERSELF

Heir to the throne: North Korea faces brutal succession battle between Kim Jong Un's daughter and sister, official warns

 

By Francine Wolfisz 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 14, 2026

 

 

Intelligence services say it looks increasingly likely Kim Jong Un intends to pass the baton of power to his daughter, Kim Ju-ae, believed to be 13

Intelligence services say it looks increasingly likely Kim Jong Un intends to pass the baton of power to his daughter, Kim Ju-ae, believed to be 13

 

North Korea could face a brutal power struggle in the event of Kim Jong-un's death involving his daughter and sister, a former intelligence official has warned.

The leader is the third generation, after his father and grandfather, to have ruled the communist state and it looks increasingly likely that he intends to pass the baton of power to his daughter, Kim Ju-ae, believed to be 13.

South Korea´s spy agency told the country's parliament on Thursday that it believes the teenager is close to being designated as the country´s future leader as he moves to extend the family dynasty to a fourth generation.

But those plans could be thwarted by his ambitious sister Kim Yo Jong, who is said to be planning to seize control for herself should the dictator die or become incapacitated. 

Yo Jong, 38, is well-respected within political and military ranks and is widely seen as the most powerful person in North Korea after Jong-un.  

Rah Jong-yil, the former South Korean ambassador to the UK and deputy director of Seoul's intelligence service, told The Telegraph he believes a struggle for power after Jong-Un dies 'is probable'. 

He said: 'It depends on the timing, but I believe if Kim Yo Jong believed that she had a chance of becoming the top leader then she would take it.

'For her, there are no reasons to refrain from putting into effect her own political project.'

 

Kim Jong Un's ambitious sister Kim Yo Jong is said to be planning to seize control for herself should the dictator die or become incapacitated

Kim Jong Un's ambitious sister Kim Yo Jong is said to be planning to seize control for herself should the dictator die or become incapacitated

Jong Un was just 26 when he was officially named heir during a 2010 party conference, two years after Kim Jong Il suffered a debilitating stroke

Jong Un was just 26 when he was officially named heir during a 2010 party conference, two years after Kim Jong Il suffered a debilitating stroke

 

Neither would there likely be much mercy shown in the event aunt and niece clash over who should rule the nation next, given previous events.

Just two years after Kim took power in 2011, he had his uncle and mentor, Jang Song-thaek, arrested over allegations of having committed 'anti-party, counter-revolutionary factional acts'.

The charges included illicit affairs with women, harboring 'politically-motivated ambition', weakening 'the party's guidance over judicial, prosecution and people's security bodies' and obstructing 'the nation's economic affairs'.

He was later executed by firing squad in 2013.

Meanwhile, Jong Un's older half-brother, Kim Jong-nam, fell out of favour with the dictator and was subsequently assassinated by having VX nerve agent smeared onto his face in Kuala Lumpur airport in 2017.

It is widely believed he died on the orders of the North Korean government.

Now the National Intelligence Service (NIS) in South Korea said during a closed-door briefing that they are closely monitoring whether Jong Un's daughter appears with him before thousands of delegates at the upcoming Workers´ Party Congress.

First appearing in public at a long-range missile test in November 2022, Ju Ae has since accompanied her father to an increasing number of events, including weapons tests, military parades and factory openings. 

 

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (centre L) and his daughter Ju Ae (centre R) inspecting a training of the Korean People's Army in 2024

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, accompanied by his daughter Kim Ju Ae, directs a test of a large-caliber multiple-rocket launch system, in an unknown location in January

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, accompanied by his daughter Kim Ju Ae, directs a test of a large-caliber multiple-rocket launch system, in an unknown location in January

Kim Jong Un (R) and his daughter Ju Ae (L) inspecting the newly completed multi-purpose commercial complex in Kangdong County

Kim Jong Un and his daughter Ju Ae inspecting a newly-completed food factory in Sinpo city

 

She travelled with him to Beijing last September for Jong Un's first summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in six years on the sidelines of a Second World War event.

Speculation about her political future intensified last month when she joined her parents on a New Year´s Day visit to Pyongyang´s Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, a sacred family mausoleum displaying the embalmed bodies of her late grandfather and great-grandfather, the country´s first- and second-generation leaders. 

Some experts saw the visit as the clearest sign yet that she´s positioned to be the heir to her 42-year-old father.

South Korean officials initially expressed doubt that she could be chosen as a North Korean leader, citing the country´s deeply conservative culture and tradition of male-dominated leadership. 

But her increasingly prominent appearances in state media have prompted a reassessment. 

In its previous assessment of Ju Ae´s status in September, the NIS told lawmakers that Jong Un´s decision to bring her along on his trip to China was likely part of an effort to build a 'narrative' to pave the way for her succession.

'In the past, (NIS) described Kim Ju Ae as being in the midst of `successor training.´ What was notable today is that they used the term `successor-designate stage,´ a shift that's quite significant,' said lawmaker Lee Seong Kweun, who attended the briefing.

According to Lee, the agency cited her growing presence at high-profile military events, her inclusion in the family visit to Kumsusan, and signs that Jong Un was beginning to seek her input on certain policy matters.

 

Sibling rivalry: Yo Jong, 38, is well-respected within political and military ranks and is widely seen as the most powerful person in North Korea after Jong-un

Sibling rivalry: Yo Jong, 38, is well-respected within political and military ranks and is widely seen as the most powerful person in North Korea after Jong-un

 

In 2023, South Korea´s spy agency told lawmakers that Kim Jong Un and his wife also likely have an older son and a younger third child whose gender is unknown.

Since its foundation in 1948, North Korea has been ruled by male members of the Kim family, beginning with the country´s founder Kim Il Sung and followed by his son, Kim Jong Il.

Jong Un was just 26 when he was officially named heir during a 2010 party conference, two years after Kim Jong Il suffered a debilitating stroke. 

Following his father´s death in December 2011, he was abruptly thrust into the throne with relatively little preparation.

Some analysts suggest that Jong Un´s decision to debut his daughter early possibly reflects his own experience of being rushed into power.

Ju Ae´s first known visit to Kumsusan last month was also her father´s first visit to the site in three years. 

Given the palace´s status as a key symbol of the Kim family rule, the trip should be seen as a symbolic gesture by Kim Jong Un to present his daughter as his heir before his grandfather and father as he prepares for the major ruling party congress, said Cheong Seong-Chang, a senior analyst at South Korea´s Sejong Institute.

The Workers´ Party congress in late February, last held in 2016 and 2021, could provide a stage for Jong Un to formalize his succession plans, possibly by giving his daughter the party´s first secretary post, its number two job, although such a decision might not be immediately disclosed to the outside world, Cheong said.

Other analysts question whether she would receive such a high-profile post or any formal party role, given that party rules require members to be at least 18 - and argue that Yo Jongwould be more likely to succeed in the immediate term.

Ju-ae or her siblings 'are still too young and unestablished to realistically be considered for succession in the coming five to 15 years', a report from analysis publication 38 North explained.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Kim Ju-ae sure looks older than 13 to me.

I believe that Kim Jong-un's successor will be the one favored by the army generals. 

TAXPAYER FUNDED 'CASH WITH CARE' PROGRAM WAS ENACTED BY NEW YORK CITY COUNCIL AFTER MAMDANI WAS ELECTED MAYOR, BUT BEFORE HE TOOK OFFICE

Liberal city's wild experiment giving young homeless people at state-of-the-art shelter $15,800 in FREE cash from taxpayers

 

By Alexa Cimino 

 

Daily Mail

Feb 14, 2026

 

 

                  Covenant House ext 1

 

Giving homeless young adults up to $15,800 in no-strings-attached cash to spend however they choose may not sound like the most sensible use of taxpayers’ money.

But that is exactly what New York City has started doing under a controversial new experiment, dubbed Cash with Care, which aims to help move youth out of shelters for good.

The pilot program provides 60 homeless youths aged 18 to 24 with $1,200 a month for nine months, plus access to a one-time $5,000 lump sum - a total of up to $15,800 per person, no strings attached and with zero spending restrictions.

The $1.5 million program, approved by the City Council in December, immediately raised eyebrows, prompting skepticism not only from taxpayers and City Hall critics, but also from leaders at the facility where the recipients live.

Covenant House is the city’s largest provider of services for homeless youth, and its four-story, state-of-the-art building includes a high-end recording studio, an NBA-funded basketball court and a walk-in closet stocked with free clothes.

Many of the young people staying there have escaped dangerous home environments, family rejection and sex trafficking.

City council member Frank Morano told the Daily Mail that while youth homelessness was ‘a real and heartbreaking problem,’ he was skeptical of the handouts and questioned whether unrestricted cash was the answer.

‘New Yorkers deserve to know exactly what outcomes we are getting for that money,’ Morano said, pointing to housing stability, education, and long-term independence as ways to measure success. 

 

Young adults enrolled in a New York City pilot, which gives the homeless cash to help move them out of shelters, told the Daily Mail how the handouts have been changing their lives

Young adults enrolled in a New York City pilot, which gives the homeless cash to help move them out of shelters, told the Daily Mail how the handouts have been changing their lives

Recipients live in a facility called Covenant House, where Republic Records donated and installed a professional-grade music studio for youth pursuing creative paths

Recipients live in a facility called Covenant House, where Republic Records donated and installed a professional-grade music studio for youth pursuing creative paths

The site includes a huge closet provides free, professional and everyday clothing so young people can dress for work, school and daily life without added financial strain

The site includes a huge closet provides free, professional and everyday clothing so young people can dress for work, school and daily life without added financial strain

The closet is full of donated items so the youths can pick a new outfit for free

The closet is full of donated items so the youths can pick a new outfit for free

 

Taxpayers agreed, in a Reddit thread last month, they expressed their concerns with one writing: 'I’d like to keep my tax money on useful things instead, thanks!

'I would say taxes are for roads and public works and national defense. This is something you can privately opt into if you believe in [it] or opt out of if you don’t. You think it’s useful you should feel free to support it - I am skeptical of its utility so I prefer to stay out of it and direct my philanthropy elsewhere.'

Another added: 'Guaranteed Income Program is a social construct. It may or may not work.

'You can argue that having a guaranteed income will make people unmotivated to work and others who have to struggle, see their hard-earned money going to the lazy.' 

Speaking to the Daily Mail during an exclusive tour of the facility, the Covenant House New York CEO admitted she was not immediately convinced when the free cash was first floated but has since changed her mind.

'"You're going to give kids this influx of cash and not give them any kind of guidance?"' Shakeema North-Albert recalled thinking, as she worried about how young people with limited financial experience would manage the handouts.

She said similar programs in other parts of the country had raised concerns after some participants spent impulsively or diverted funds to family and friends before stabilizing their own housing.

But what ultimately shifted her view was that the initiative gives young people support alongside the cash, from financial coaching and education support to mental health services, in the hope it will help them secure more permanent housing sooner, build food security and clear debt.

 

Covenant House New York chief executive Shakeema North-Albert said she was initially skeptical of giving young people unrestricted cash

Covenant House New York chief executive Shakeema North-Albert said she was initially skeptical of giving young people unrestricted cash

North-Albert speaking with Daily Mail reporter Alexa Cimino this week

North-Albert speaking with Daily Mail reporter Alexa Cimino this week 

 

Lyndell Pittman, Covenant House's senior vice president of support services, said his initial reaction to the proposal was even blunter.

'When we first got this, I was not a believer,' Pittman told the Daily Mail. 'I was like, "This doesn't make sense. We're just gonna give these kids this money, and how are we going to protect them from themselves?"'

Pittman was most concerned that the free funds did not 'cause any harm.' 

Both leaders said that as the program unfolded, their views shifted, with early indications that participants were spending cautiously and, in some cases, barely touching the money at all.

Although the payments have only been rolled out for the past two months, Pittman said roughly 40 percent of participants had 'barely spent any money since the start' - a detail that challenged assumptions that young people would quickly blow through the funds. He said the behavior could reflect either smart saving or fear.

'Because they’ve never had this type of money, there’s a fear in spending it,' he said, comparing it to the shock of being 'trusted' with a first credit card.

North-Albert believes that, in the long term, this will be a cost-saving measure. She noted that keeping a young person in shelter for a year can cost the city roughly $70,000, compared with $15,800 in direct cash support under Cash with Care, arguing that even modest reductions in shelter stays could significantly shift the financial equation.

The Daily Mail spoke to young people enrolled in the program, whose identities are kept anonymous, about how they were using the cash. 

 

Pam Sandonato, who works in communications at Covenant House, gave the Daily Mail a tour

Pam Sandonato, who works in communications at Covenant House, gave the Daily Mail a tour

Lyndell Pittman, Covenant House¿s senior vice-president of support services, admitted he was ¿not a believer¿ at first, raising concerns about what harm the free money could cause

Lyndell Pittman, Covenant House’s senior vice-president of support services, admitted he was ‘not a believer’ at first, raising concerns about what harm the free money could cause 

 

A 20-year-old musician said that before he received his first payment, he had no income, but now he was juggling jobs and working toward his GED. He talked about his future with striking certainty. 

'I'm planning on going to Juilliard soon,' he said - not if, but when.

The pianist, who also plays viola and clarinet, sings, raps, performs at events, and teaches lessons, said the monthly payments allowed him to invest directly in his craft, covering music supplies and one-on-one training. 

'I've saved most of it - a good 95 percent,' he said, explaining that he is setting the money aside for college and future expenses. 

Above all else, the cash has afforded him time to plan and get work rather than scrambling to survive. 

Another participant, 20, is learning what it means to manage money for the first time - and how to invest in himself. 

He has been using the payments to experiment with photography, shooting on his iPhone and teaching himself to edit using built-in apps. It is a starting point, but one that is already helping him build skills and confidence.

He described the income as both practical support and a lesson in responsibility.

 

A job board lists employment training opportunities for Covenant House youth

A job board lists employment training opportunities for Covenant House youth

Covenant House served 1,256 young people in 2025, offering them support to find their own housing and become financially independent

Covenant House served 1,256 young people in 2025, offering them support to find their own housing and become financially independent

 

'It feels good, but I know that it's supposed to teach me about financial responsibilities, on how to save money, how to budget with money,' he said. 'I know I can't be reckless and spend all of it.'

The money helps cover food outside the shelter, transportation, monthly bills, his phone plan, extra storage for his photos - and the occasional treat.

'It's good to treat yourself, but… don't overly spend,' he said. 'There has to be a limit.'

A 19-year-old man who had landed at Covenant House in June with no plan beyond finding somewhere safe to sleep had just moved into a Brooklyn apartment with another facility resident when he started getting the monthly payments.

The money is now helping pay for the basics, such as the $3 subway fare, which he no longer has to worry about affording. 

However, he did make one small spontaneous purchase as a treat - a pack of Pokemon cards, but he is hoping they are an investment and he may later trade them at a higher price.

Nearly 154,000 young people experienced homelessness in New York City between 2024 and last year, according to the Citizens' Committee for Children of New York.

North-Albert said organizers opted for a lottery to choose who would take part in the pilot, 'for the sake of fairness and equity,' noting that participants still had to meet eligibility requirements. 

 

One the first floor of the facility is a space dedicated to art and creative pursuits

One the first floor of the facility is a space dedicated to art and creative pursuits

A salaried worker serving food to the youth in the kitchen at the home

A salaried worker serving food to the youth in the kitchen at the home

The computer room at Covenant House ensures youths have access to workstations to be able to apply for jobs

The computer room at Covenant House ensures youths have access to workstations to be able to apply for jobs

The first floor houses the welcome center and a health and wellness center

The first floor houses the welcome center and a health and wellness center

Daily Mail Reporter Alexa Cimino received an exclusive tour of Covenant House

Daily Mail Reporter Alexa Cimino received an exclusive tour of Covenant House 

 

The random selection has also allowed Chapin Hall to create a control group of 60 Covenant House youth who qualified but were not chosen. 

Researchers will track housing stability, food security, debt, employment, and education, comparing outcomes between those who received payments and those who did not. 

Covenant House is a state‑of‑the‑art hub, with each floor dedicated to a different part of a young person’s journey to securing their own home.

Thanks to major corporate donors - including Cisco, Madison Square Garden’s Garden of Dreams Foundation, and Take‑Two Interactive CEO Strauss Zelnick - the new facility looks nothing like a traditional homeless shelter.

Over four floors, there is a health and wellness center, the CovCafe, a space for art and hands‑on creative work, a computer room, mental health services, and classrooms such as the Discovery Center to support career and educational development.

Below ground, the sub‑cellar features the CovDome gym, where the NBA and NBPA funded a full basketball court, along with Covenant's clothing room, which looks like a huge closet and gives out free clothes, and a professional‑grade music studio. 

Covenant House served 1,256 young people last year.