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EL PAIS English: The Scottish singer and founder of Orange Juice suffers from aphasia and partial paralysis, and is bidding farewell to the stage with a long tour of Spain. Quote: “Before my stroke, I was a clever show-off. I used fancy words,” says the former Orange Juice frontman. Maxwell picks up the thread: “On the long journey to regaining language and communicating effectively, as Edwyn definitely does, you learn a lot about the nature of communication and that it can be more than fancy words, more than fluency, and can boil down to some strong, simple things that connect.” Comment: Aphasia due to TBI communication requires others to put in words you just can’t remember. Sentences are clipped … often starting with “they” and a completely different topic to that being discussed at the time

Music

How Edwyn Collins survived two strokes, returned to music and is now retiring with honors

The Scottish singer and founder of Orange Juice suffers from aphasia and partial paralysis, and is bidding farewell to the stage with a long tour of Spain

Scottish musician Edwyn Collins in a recent promotional image.Fenella Lorimar
Jaime Lorite Chinchón

Jaime Lorite Chinchón

Madrid – MAY 02, 2026 – 06:00 CEST

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Edwyn Collins’ retirement from the stage at age 66 has come two decades later than anyone could have imagined. In 2005, the Scottish musician survived two cerebral haemorrhages. He was left with aphasia, a disorder that affected his communication abilities, both in expressing himself and understanding information. He also suffered paralysis on the right side of his body, which disabled one arm, although he was able to walk again with the aid of a cane. According to doctors, the prospects for improvement were slim. Founder of Orange Juice, an emblematic post-punk band that was more influential than popular (their career, which began in the late 1970s, barely spanned five years), Collins later had a respectable solo career that peaked in 1994 with the success of his song “A Girl Like You.”

Returning to music wasn’t even among the most optimistic goals of his recovery plan, but this week the artist kicked off a 10-date tour of Spain called The Testimonial Tour. A Last Lap Around Spain, after completing his farewell shows in the UK this fall. “Music is my life. Both after the stroke and before, it’s critical to me,” Collins explains via video call. Grace Maxwell, his wife and manager for over 40 years, who accompanies him in interviews to help him formulate his answers, agrees: “I don’t think Edwyn could have returned to life as he has without this wonderful gift.”

Just two years after his strokes, Collins was performing again. He can’t play the guitar, but he retains his baritone voice and sings effortlessly, aided by a music stand with the lyrics, which he rehearses and recites incessantly. His retirement isn’t due to a decline in his health. “She’s the boss, and she said it was time to retire,” Collins says, pointing at his wife. Maxwell, taken aback by the remark, clarifies that it was a mutual decision. “If we continued, we’d both be over 70 by the next tour. Edwyn is brilliant and strong and copes with it all, but it’s pretty tiring.”

Edwyn Collins has survived two cerebral haemorrhages.Fenella Lorimar

Collins and Maxwell are one of those couples so in sync that they seem like a comedy duo. Although he can’t deliver a sophisticated speech, he makes a virtue of necessity with a succinct brand of humor that often surprises his wife. “Recently, I was complaining about something and he blurted out, ‘Oh, shut up, woman! You have a great life!’ It made me laugh; it’s one of those things that brings you back to reality.” This obligation to communicate in a simple and direct way, as he himself describes it, has led to an interesting process of stylistic refinement. Last year, Collins released his 10th solo album, Nation Shall Speak Unto Nation, his fourth since his illness. Everything, even the title, based on an old BBC slogan, relates to what has been the theme of his life since 2005: communication.

“Before my stroke, I was a clever show-off. I used fancy words,” says the former Orange Juice frontman. Maxwell picks up the thread: “On the long journey to regaining language and communicating effectively, as Edwyn definitely does, you learn a lot about the nature of communication and that it can be more than fancy words, more than fluency, and can boil down to some strong, simple things that connect. Perhaps we need more of that in this world right now.” Does a change in communication change a person? The musician doesn’t feel he’s a different person, but rather that his process has changed his perspective. “I think I was a bit clever and a show-off. Fuck that! I’m happy with my life,” exclaims Collins, who on his comeback album, Losing Sleep (2010), dedicated a song to his learning process: Humble.

The possibilities are endless

One of the phrases Edwyn Collins repeated endlessly in the hospital, as a result of his aphasia, was “the possibilities are endless.” He doesn’t know what he meant by it, but his wife admits that the mantra lost its power to evoke memories after hearing it “about 100,000 times.” The phrase gave its title to the documentary about his life, The Possibilities Are Endless (2014), which Collins, a lover of all things analog, appreciates was filmed on 35mm. “Not digital!” he exclaims. “Another thing he tried was to pin his thoughts down on band names and members. For example, The Who. He would start: ‘Pete Townshend, Roger Daltrey…’ It was his brain trying to find to fix itself,” says Grace Maxwell. Once again, music found its way in.

The couple had spent their entire lives navigating limitations. In the Orange Juice era, Collins traveled by car with Alan Horne, co-founder of Postcard Records, to manually distribute his records and clumsily pursue figures like John Peel, the most famous DJ of the time. Maxwell, in the poignant book Falling and Laughing: The Restoration of Edwyn Collins (2009), confessed that the phenomenal success of A Girl Like You was their financial security. Now, unable to play, the musician uses a cassette recorder—“No digital!” he adds again—to create songs by making the sound of the saxophone with his mouth. Then, an engineer in his studio translates it into musical notation.

“The other day I saw a guy from an AI company saying that people find it really difficult to make music. But real musicians enjoy it. Edwyn finds it very easy to compose, even though the lyrics are a challenge,” his wife asserts. They have a son, William, 35, who helps run the family business. Regarding the son’s musical tastes, Collins speaks with amusement of the “glam days” the young man experienced before coming of age: “He liked Marc Bolan and, get this, Gary Glitter.” “Don’t tell people that!” Maxwell scolds him, to which he responds by mockingly singing “I Love You Love Me Love,” one of the compositions by the disgraced singer and convicted sex offender.

Grace Maxwell, wife and manager of Edwyn Collins, alongside the musician in an image provided by the promoter of the concerts in Spain.

Among Orange Juice’s supporters is the UK Prime Minister, Keir Starmer. Collins was invited to meet him at 10 Downing Street. “He’s a good man and has a good heart. He’s in a difficult position right now, but there are far worse leaders on the planet,” his wife concludes. “Starmer thinks Orange Juice and Edwyn Collins are brilliant. That gives you a pretty good idea of ​​his character.”

Regarding his retirement plans, the musician hopes to record more albums after leaving the stage. Settled in Helmsdale, a coastal town in the Scottish Highlands where they also have their studio, the couple enjoys fresh air and a pleasant environment for daily walks. “He’ll be pottering there with our son, our friends, and other people, really focusing on quality of life at this stage in the game,” explains Grace. The concept confuses Edwyn: “Quality of life? What is that?”

– “Well, just enjoying ourselves,” Maxwell replies.

– “OK, I see.”

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ALJAZEERA: In Yemen, Starlink internet brings opportunities – for some

In Yemen, Starlink internet brings opportunities – for some

Despite Houthi resistance and affordability challenges, Starlink fuels growth in Yemen’s digital workforce.Listen (8 mins)

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Man sits at desk with computer at cafe
Omer Banabelah, a mobile app developer from Mukalla, says Starlink has allowed him to stay in touch with clients even when visiting his home village, where poor connectivity once cost him work [Saeed Al-Batati/Al Jazeera]

By Saeed Al Batati

Published On 3 May 20263 May 2026

Mukalla, Yemen – At the Mukalla Creative Hub, a man in a black T-shirt leans over a desk to help a colleague with his project, while other men remain fixed on their laptop screens. Nearby women sit in ergonomic office chairs, writing or scrolling on their phones. On the other side of the space in Yemen’s coastal city of Mukalla, a sleek cafe-style counter stands at the entrance, while colourful armchairs are neatly arranged and occupied by a few people working among rows of computers.

  • What draws entrepreneurs, remote freelancers, and students here is not just the stylish setting or uninterrupted electricity, but something far more essential: fast, reliable Starlink satellite internet.

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“Four Starlink devices power the space, delivering speeds of 100 to 150 Mbps and allowing users to stay constantly connected,” Hamzah Bakhdar, a digital freelancer who also works at the hub, told Al Jazeera.

In a country where war has devastated telecommunications, eroded salaries and cut off remote areas, Starlink is helping create a small but growing digital workforce of designers, developers, teachers, and freelancers who can now work for clients abroad and earn far more than Yemen’s crumbling local economy would otherwise allow.

Internet access in Yemen has also been weaponised, with buried land cables sometimes cut, leaving parts of the country abruptly disconnected. The Houthi rebels, who are based in the Yemeni capital Sanaa and have fought the internationally recognised government since 2014, control the country’s major internet providers. That allows them to block websites they view as linked to their opponents inside and outside the country, including key platforms used by tech developers and remote workers.

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The arrival of Starlink satellite internet has provided an alternative, allowing people to bypass the Houthis’ tight grip on telecommunications and stay online even in remote areas.

Mohammed Helmi, a video editor and motion graphics designer, was juggling projects for three clients in Yemen, Saudi Arabia and the United States. Thanks to the fast internet at the cafe, he no longer worries about losing connection or missing deadlines, problems he said repeatedly disrupted his work in the past.

“In the past, when I downloaded files to my laptop, it would stop as soon as my data ran out,” Helmi, a young man with a thin moustache, told Al Jazeera at the cafe. “I had to buy another gigabyte and start the download all over again. Because of this, I often had to turn down projects.”

Wide shot of the Mukalla Creative Hub showing people working at desks with computers
The Mukalla Creative Hub is a rare workspace for online freelancers, many of whom are drawn by its high-speed, uninterrupted internet powered by four Starlink kits. [Saeed Al-Batati/Al Jazeera]

Control over the internet

Starlink is operated by billionaire Elon Musk’s SpaceX company, and delivers internet by linking a ground dish to low-orbit satellites owned and operated by the company.

While other satellite internet companies exist, and others are quickly entering the space, Starlink is the only low-orbit satellite internet service legally available in Yemen after the internationally recognised government signed an agreement with the company in September 2024.

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But it’s not for everyone.

The kits cost about $500, a price that remains unaffordable for the vast majority of Yemenis, living in one of the poorest countries in the world, where more than 80 percent of people live below the poverty line.

Owning a dish is therefore still a distant dream for many Yemenis desperate to get online.

University students, like Mariam, a student at Hadramout University, says that even buying internet vouchers from local providers who resell Starlink access is beyond her reach – let alone purchasing a device herself.

“People are using vouchers because they cannot afford Starlink devices, whose prices are very high,” Mariam, who preferred to be identified only by her first name, told Al Jazeera.

The Houthis have also reacted aggressively to the arrival of Starlink, launching a campaign warning people against using the service and threatening legal action against anyone found in possession of the device.

They have accused the company of serving as a “US espionage agent” and said it posed “a major threat to national security”. Experts have worried that data gathered over Starlink’s internet service could be used for “intelligence gathering and economic exploitation“.

There are also concerns internationally over the concentration of satellite internet services and infrastructure in the hands of Starlink, particularly in light of Musk’s ownership, with the South African-born billionaire increasingly associating himself with far-right causes in the United States and Europe.

A starlink dish kept in place with bricks
A Starlink dish on a rooftop in Mukalla, where the service is legal. In Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen, the group has banned the device and threatened punishment for those using it [Saeed Al-Batati/Al Jazeera]

Connecting Yemen’s remote areas

But despite Houthi threats and the high cost of the devices by Yemeni standards, Starlink has spread across the country, reaching areas that had long been isolated.

Omer Banabelah, a mobile app developer, said that before Starlink arrived, a visit to his home village in Hadramout’s countryside meant disappearing from the digital world altogether. He could not make a phone call, let alone connect to the internet, leaving him anxious that clients would move on when their messages went unanswered. With Starlink now available in rural parts of the province, Banabelah said he no longer fears losing work every time he travels.

“I can reply to their messages anytime, from anywhere,” he told Al Jazeera. “Work that takes 10 minutes with Starlink could take an entire day without it.”

Similarly, Yemeni teachers, struggling with poor and delayed salaries that have stagnated for years, have also benefited from the spread of the internet service, which has allowed them to offer uninterrupted online classes and earn badly needed extra income.

Raja al-Dubae, a school director in Taiz, told Al Jazeera that her school began offering online classes based on the Yemeni curriculum to Yemeni students living abroad in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and China in 2023. It started with just 50 students, with teachers connecting through local networks.

But when internet traffic surged in the densely populated city each afternoon, the connections would collapse, forcing teachers to abandon classes mid-session.

“Teachers were often disconnected from their students, and by the time the internet stabilised, the next class had already begun, leaving them frustrated and unable to finish their lessons,” she said.

Al-Dubae said she initially rejected her nephew’s proposal to buy Starlink because of the high upfront cost, but now regrets the delay. Since installing the service, the number of students has climbed to more than 200, revenues have grown, and teachers have begun earning better additional pay.

“With Starlink, the internet is very fast and reaches every corner of the school,” she said. “Teachers no longer disconnect from their students. I never imagined it would make such a difference. Videos load quickly, we no longer turn away new applicants, and our reputation for fast internet has spread.”

For Yemenis who have grown used to Starlink’s high-speed internet, and the better incomes and business opportunities it has helped create, the worst-case scenario is a return to the slow, unreliable service of local networks.

“Go back to the headache of local networks? Perish the thought. We hope the service will continue to improve,” al-Dubae said, scoffing at the idea of reverting to local internet providers.

Helmi reacted similarly. “If Starlink were cut off, I would be devastated and forced back into the local market, which cannot cover my expenses or living costs,” he said, shifting in his seat and smiling at the thought. “I would need to take on three or four jobs just to match what I earn from a single project from abroad.”


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Axios: The year that shook the Gulf

The year that shook the Gulf
 
Illustration of a map of the Gulf with abstract images of barbed wire, Saudi Riyals, UAE Dirhams, and a silhouette of two Arab businessmen talking.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios. Stock: Getty Images
 
The United Arab Emirates is leaving OPEC. Saudi Arabia is ending its splashiest foreign sports venture. The two U.S. allies are in the midst of a messy divorce, even as both face fire from Iran.

Why it matters: One year after President Trump’s grand tour of the Gulf, the region’s vision of a geopolitically stable post-oil future — powered by tourism, AI and American capital — has taken a major blow, Axios’ Dave Lawler, Barak Ravid and Zachary Basu write.

The trillions of dollars in investment pledges that Trump secured on his trip are in limbo.So is the American “golden age” he claimed would be bankrolled in part with Gulf money.

The big picture: Trump’s trip may prove the high-water mark for the idea that the future of AI, global investment and geopolitics would all flow through the Gulf.

The Saudi sovereign wealth fund’s exit from LIV Golf, after pouring more than $5 billion into the PGA competitor since 2022, is the first major casualty of the kingdom rationing cash as oil exports sink.

No one is rushing to build $20 billion data centers in Saudi Arabia or the UAE after Iran proved it can strike them with cheap drones, as Constellation CEO Joe Dominguez told Axios.

Gulf leaders have spent a generation perfecting the Dubai model — selling stability as a luxury good to foreign tourists, expats and investors. Iran’s attacks on luxury hotels and airports have undercut that premise.

Friction point: The UAE’s break from the Saudi-led oil cartel is the latest fracture in a regional rivalry driven by clashing alliances and views on Yemen, Sudan and Palestine, as well as personal animosity between the two leaders. The Iran war has only deepened the rift.

Behind the scenes: The Trump administration was slow to grasp how serious that rift between the UAE and Saudi Arabia had become — and chose not to get involved as it deepened, U.S. and regional sources told Axios.

Senior officials are deeply concerned that Washington’s two most important Arab allies will emerge from the war more adversarial than ever.

Reality check: The Gulf states still have deep reserves of energy and capital, plus a security relationship with Washington that the war has only strengthened.

Some analysts see the Iran crisis as a temporary shock for the Gulf economies, not an existential crisis.

The bottom line: A year after his Gulf tour, Trump’s promised investment bonanza has collided with the consequences of his Iran war. Fixing the damage may take longer than the time he has left in office.Share this story.
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Ian Bremmer The Iran War Has No Exit. It’s Over for Trump

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Demis Hassabis “Why not make an alternate AI that works in synchrony with humans instead of trying to replace human intelligence?”

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Big Think: 6 Archetypes of Childhood Trauma

The 6 archetypes of childhood trauma

Dr. Nicole LePera explains how to recognize when you’re reacting from childhood wounds.

Big Think

Apr 25, 2026

Dr. Nicole LePera explains why insight alone never produces lasting change and walks through the science of reparenting: The practice of stepping in as the adult presence you may never have had.

About the speaker: Dr. Nicole LePera is a holistic psychologist and NYT bestselling author behind Reparenting the Inner Child.


Timestamps

00:00:44 Chapter 1: The six archetypes of childhood trauma

00:03:02
 Personality vs. survival patterns

00:10:47
 The hidden trauma you didn’t know you had

00:17:31
 The 6 childhood trauma archetypes that still control you

00:23:45
 Chapter 2: The inner child

00:29:16
 What your inner child actually is (it’s not what you think)

00:36:58
 Chapter 3: Reparenting for lasting transformation

00:38:38 The benefit of daily conscious check-ins

00:45:55
 Reparenting: the skill that rewires your brain for good

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