BBC 2024-07-17 12:07:19


Trump’s defeated Republican rivals show united front at convention

By Kayla Epstein and Mike WendlingBBC News, at the Republican convention in Milwaukee
‘He will unite us’ – Trump’s ex-rivals praise him

One by one, Donald Trump’s defeated rivals for the 2024 Republican nomination took the stage to sing his praises at the party’s convention on Tuesday night.

From his box just above the convention floor, Trump smiled at times as he watched his former opponents Nikki Haley, Ron DeSantis, and Vivek Ramaswamy voice their full support for his candidacy.

If there were any doubts that this was Trump’s party, Tuesday’s programming put them to rest.

“I’ll start by making one thing perfectly clear: Donald Trump has my strong endorsement, period,” said Ms Haley, the former UN Ambassador who posed the strongest challenge to Trump earlier this year.

She said Trump had asked her to speak at the event in Milwaukee in the name of “unity”.

“For the sake of our nation we have to go with Donald Trump,” she told the crowd.

Ms Haley said in May that she would vote for the former president, but her headline speech on Tuesday was her most direct endorsement of the Republican nominee yet.

And when she declared her endorsement, Trump stood and clapped.

Ms Haley’s arrival, however, was not universally welcomed in the arena. There was a noticeable bating of breath as she acknowledged that she and Trump had their differences.

Some Republicans have struggled to forgive her for launching an aggressive campaign against their favoured candidate. Late in the race, she questioned whether Trump had the mental stamina to serve as president.

A smattering of boos greeted her as she took the podium, though they were soon drowned out by cheers and chants.

“She deserves it,” said Gregory Switzer, a conservative activist from Texas.

“She stayed in that race a lot longer than she needed to and dragged out the inevitable, said Matt Bumela, a delegate from Washington state who had predicted the booing. “And said things about Trump that were negative all the way up to the end.”

Ms Haley notably broke from Trump when she called for the US to continue to support Ukraine in its war with Russia.

When she later said she would vote for him in November, she said the former president would be “smart to reach out to the millions of people who voted for me”.

On Tuesday night, she told supporters of hers who might be on the fence: “You don’t have to agree with Trump 100% of the time to vote for him – take it from me.”

“Tonight is our unity night,” said New Hampshire state Senator William Gannon, who had served as a delegate for Ms Haley. He believed Trump made the right choice to invite her to speak.

“I wanna win the national election,” he said. “It was a wise move to bring her in.”

The third-place finisher in the primary, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, received a far more enthusiastic welcome from the crowd.

He touched on several conservative social issues, including diversity initiatives, which he said were “indoctrination”.

He urged the crowd to rally behind Trump – though they were already solidly behind their current nominee. “We cannot let him down, and we cannot let America down,” Mr DeSantis said.

He also took a swipe at Mr Biden’s age, an issue that is currently roiling the Democratic Party. “We need a commander-in-chief who can lead 24 hours a day and seven days a week,” he said.

Daniel Willis, the 25-year-old chair of the Delaware Young Republicans, said Mr DeSantis and Ms Haley did more than enough “to bridge the gap” with Trump supporters.

The rest of the night was devoted to the more common Republican campaign points, such as migrant crossings at the border, crime and an overarching commitment to defeating Mr Biden.

Ted Cruz, the US senator from Texas, said there was a “literal invasion” of the United States. Dr Ben Carson, who served in Trump’s cabinet, accused Democrats of “shredding the Constitution”.

Trump himself led a huge standing ovation for Madeline Brame, a woman whose son was killed in New York in 2018 and has since called for tough-on-crime policies.

Down on the floor, delegates said they were ready to move beyond the intra-party divisions of the primary and instead focus the party’s energy on President Biden.

“At the end of the day,” said Georgia delegate Pam Lightsey, “We’re all Republicans.”

Watch: A bandaged Trump enters first day of Republican convention

Trump security boosted weeks ago over Iran plot to kill him

By Max MatzaBBC News

Protection for Donald Trump was boosted several weeks ago after US authorities learned of an Iranian plot to kill him, according to national security officials.

Officials say there is no known connection between the alleged Iranian plot and the assassination attempt on the former president on Saturday in Pennsylvania.

However, the disclosure that security had been tightened raises further questions over how Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, was able to climb a building and get close enough to fire at Trump.

The US Secret Service and the Trump campaign were notified of the Iranian threat, and security was increased as a result, according to a US national security official.

Intelligence sources told CBS, the BBC’s US news partner, that the Secret Service bolstered security in June in response to the Iranian threat. This included extra counter-assault and counter-sniper agents, drones and robotic dogs.

CBS reported that the details of a potential Iranian operation were obtained through “human source intelligence”, and came amid a notable increase in Iranian chatter regarding attacks against Trump.

Trump and officials including his former secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, have faced threats from Tehran since ordering the drone strike assassination of Qassim Soleimani, the commander of Iran’s Quds force, in Iraq in 2020.

The Iranian mission at the United Nations called the report “unsubstantiated and malicious”, adding that Trump was “a criminal who must be prosecuted and punished in a court of law”.

Anthony Guglielmi, a spokesman for the US Secret Service, said it and other agencies were “constantly receiving new potential threat information and taking action to adjust resources, as needed”.

“We cannot comment on any specific threat stream, other than to say that the Secret Service takes threats seriously and responds accordingly.”

The Trump campaign said it did not comment on security matters and referred BBC questions to the Secret Service.

Adrienne Watson, a spokeswoman for the White House National Security Council, said that US security officials had been “tracking Iranian threats against former Trump administration officials for years”.

“These threats arise from Iran’s desire to seek revenge for the killing of Soleimani,” she said. “We consider this a national and homeland security matter of the highest priority.”

She however reiterated that the investigation “has not identified ties” between Crooks and “any accomplice or co-conspirator, foreign or domestic.”

In 2022, the Department of Justice announced criminal charges against a member of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, alleging that he was orchestrating a plot to kill Mr Bolton.

Prosecutors said the plot was “likely in retaliation” for the killing of Soleimani.

Questions have swirled about how police officers and agents responsible for the rally at Butler County fairgrounds, Pennsylvania, allowed Crooks to get so close.

The director of the Secret Service admitted that local police were inside the building while Crooks was on its roof aiming at Trump 130m (430ft) away.

CBS News, the BBC’s US partner, reported three local police snipers were inside the building and had seen Crooks getting on the roof.

The local sheriff’s department referred BBC questions to the state police, which said it was not responsible for the area containing the building.

A state police spokesman told the BBC that it provided “all resources” requested by the Secret Service, including between 30 to 40 troopers inside the perimeter.

President Joe Biden has ordered an independent review of how the gunman could have come so close to killing Trump, and the Secret Service also faces probes from Congress.

Toronto reels from floods and power cuts after severe storms

By Nadine YousifBBC News, Toronto
Watch: Floods take over Toronto’s roads and buildings

Record rainfall from three huge storms has flooded parts of Toronto, cut power and left drivers stranded on the major motorway through the city.

Environment Canada reported that almost 100mm (4in) of rain fell on Toronto on Tuesday, surpassing the city’s daily record set in 1941.

Images and videos showed severe flooding across the city, cars nearly submerged, and water cascading down the staircases at Union Station.

The pop star Drake posted a video on Instagram which appears to show part of his Toronto home, “The Embassy”, submerged. “Better be espresso martini,” he wrote as the video showed sludgy brown water fill a room.

The storm left more than 167,000 customers without power, according to Toronto Hydro.

Several flights were also delayed or cancelled out of Billy Bishop Airport, on the Toronto Islands in Lake Ontario.

The Don Valley Parkway, a major motorway that runs adjacent to the Don river, was blocked in both directions by flooding. Ontario Highway 410 was also closed, with police anticipating that it will not open up for another day as crews clean up.

Authorities said they have rescued at least 14 people, including one person who had to be plucked from their car’s roof.

Toronto’s fire service received numerous calls from people trapped in lifts, after large areas of city centre lost power during working hours.

Drake’s Toronto home ‘The Embassy’ hit by floods

Meteorologists said that Tuesday’s record rainfall was due to three consecutive storms that fell on the city.

“We had 25 per cent more rain in three hours than we’d have normally in the whole month of July with all the thunderstorms and systems that moved through,” meteorologist Dave Phillips told local news station CP24.

The Toronto and Region Conservation Authority warned that areas near shorelines, rivers and streams in the city are especially prone to flooding. There are more than a dozen rivers and streams in Toronto, making it vulnerable to rising water levels.

Toronto’s mayor Olivia Chow said she did not know why the Don Valley Parkway, which is prone to flooding, was not closed earlier in the day.

She added the city was “massively investing” in clean-up efforts to ensure similar flooding does not occur in the future.

Toronto suffered from an intense and costly July storm in 2013 that left at least 300,000 people without power and more than 1,000 passengers needing rescue from a flooded train.

Deadly unrest over job quotas grips Bangladesh

By Akbar Hossain and Anbarasan EthirajanBBC News in Dhaka & London
Watch: Bricks thrown as Bangladeshi students clash over job quotas

Schools and universities across Bangladesh have been shut until further notice after six people were killed in protests over quotas in government jobs.

University students have been holding rallies for several days against the system of providing reservations in public sector jobs for the children of war heroes, who fought for the country’s independence from Pakistan in 1971.

Some jobs are also reserved for women, ethnic minorities and the disabled.

A third of posts are kept for the children of those categorised as war heroes. The students argue that the system is discriminatory, and they want recruitment based on merit.

Several cities, including the capital Dhaka, this week witnessed clashes between supporters of the anti-quota movement and those who are against it, particularly the student wing of the governing Awami League known as the Bangladesh Chhatra League (BCL).

Student groups attacked each other with bricks and sticks. Police fired tear gas and used rubber bullets to disperse the clashing groups. Student activists said hundreds of people had been injured in the attacks.

“We blame the BCL members for the violence. They killed the protesters. Police didn’t intervene to save the ordinary students,” Abdullah Salehin Ayoun, one of the co-ordinators of the anti-quota movement, told the BBC.

Government jobs are highly coveted in Bangladesh because they pay well. In total, more than half of the positions – amounting to hundreds of thousands – are reserved for certain groups.

Critics say the system unfairly benefits the children of pro-government groups that support Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who won her fourth straight election in January.

Ms Hasina’s government abolished the reservation in 2018, following protests.

But a court ordered the authorities to reinstate the quotas in early June, triggering the latest round of protests.

Officials say three people were killed in the southern port city of Chittagong and two in Dhaka, while one student was killed in the northern city of Rangpur by a stray bullet.

Media reports say at least three of those killed were students, though there is no official confirmation yet.

The government blames opposition groups for the violence.

“The student fronts of the opposition Jamaat-e-Islami and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party [BNP] have infiltrated this anti-quota movement. They are the ones who initiated the violence,” Law Minister Anisul Huq told the BBC.

Bangladesh’s top court suspended the current system last week, but protests are expected to continue until it is permanently removed.

“The case has been listed for hearing on 7 August. Students have been given an opportunity to present their argument in the court,” Mr Huq said.

In a late-night operation on Tuesday, police raided the headquarters of the BNP, the main opposition party, in Dhaka, following the violent clashes.

Senior BNP leader Ruhul Kabir Rizvi said the raid was nothing but a drama and it was a message for the students to return home.

The protests have been going on for days with the students blocking roads and highways in Dhaka and other major cities, bringing traffic to a halt.

Student leaders said they were angered by recent comments of Ms Hasina who, they say, described those opposed to the job quotas as – a term used for those who allegedly collaborated with the Pakistani army during the 1971 war.

Several student leaders said Ms Hasina had insulted them by comparing them to . The comparison, they said, also encouraged BCL members to attack them.

“They want to suppress our voices through creating a reign of terror in the country. If I don’t protest today, they will beat me another day. That’s why I am on the streets to protest,” Rupaiya Sherstha, a female student at Dhaka University, told the BBC.

But government ministers say Ms Hasina’s comments were misinterpreted, and she did not call the students .

Mohammad Ali Arafat, state minister for information and broadcasting, denied allegations that the student wing of the Awami League triggered the violence.

He said the trouble began after anti-quota students intimidated residents of a hall in Dhaka.

“If there’s chaos on the university campuses, there’s no benefit for the government. We want peace to be maintained,” Mr Arafat told the BBC.

UN Secretary General António Guterres called on the government to “protect the demonstrators against any form of threat or violence”, according to his spokesman Stephane Dujarric.

The students have vowed to continue their protests until their demands are met.

The government has strengthened security by deploying the paramilitary, Border Guards Bangladesh, in five main cities, including Dhaka and Chittagong.

Mystery surrounds deaths at Grand Hyatt hotel in Bangkok

By Jamie Whitehead and Thanyarat DoksoneBBC News, in London & Bangkok

Six people have been found dead in a luxury hotel suite in Thailand’s capital, Bangkok.

Confusion and mystery has surrounded the grim discovery, with local media initially suggesting there had been a shooting at the five-star Grand Hyatt Erawan Bangkok, but police later dismissed these reports and said there was no evidence of gunfire.

Instead, authorities are investigating whether the victims died of poisoning.

The deceased – three men and three women – were all Vietnamese nationals, and some had dual American citizenship, Thailand’s prime minister said.

Srettha Thavisin, who visited the scene, added that investigators suspect the victims had been dead for 24 hours by the time they were found and that post mortem examinations would be carried out.

He added that police “needed to find out the motives”, and that the deaths were the result of a “killing”, not a suicide.

Seven people were booked to stay at the hotel, but only five checked in and one person is currently unaccounted for, Metropolitan police chief Lt Gen Thiti Saengswang said.

One of the victims found in the room did not match the hotel’s records.

He added that suspicious substances and the DNA of the victims were detected in drinks ordered to the suite just before 14:00 local time on Monday.

The food the victims ordered was not touched.

The guests had been scheduled to check out on Monday.

They went from the hotel’s seventh floor to the fifth, where their bodies were found by housekeepers in the suite’s living room and bedroom.

Investigators say there is no evidence of a fight or a robbery, and the only wound found on one of the bodies was likely caused by a collapse.

In the bathroom, tea, energy drinks and honey were found, all in open containers, the police chief said.

It also appears that two of the victims tried to get to the hotel suite’s door, which was locked from the inside, but did not manage to reach it in time.

The victims’ luggage will now be searched as part of the investigation.

A spokesperson for the US State Department said they were “closely monitoring the situation”, and expressed their condolences to the families of the victims.

Matthew Miller added that Washington was “ready to provide assistance” to them.

The Grand Hyatt Erawan Bangkok is in a popular tourist spot. Some of the victims were visiting Thailand for the first time, while others had been before, a police officer who wished to remain anonymous said.

The prime minister said that he did not want this incident to affect Thailand’s image or have an impact on tourism – which is a key pillar of the Thai economy, but which has not fully recovered from the coronavirus pandemic.

The country has just expanded its visa-free entry scheme to 93 countries and territories in an effort to entice tourists back.

China tycoon Guo convicted in US over $1bn scam

By João da SilvaBusiness reporter

Self-exiled Chinese businessman Guo Wengui has been convicted by a US court of defrauding his online followers in a billion-dollar scam.

He was found guilty on nine of the 12 criminal counts he faced, including racketeering, fraud and money laundering.

Guo’s sentencing has been scheduled for 19 November, when he could face decades behind bars. He has been in prison since his arrest in March 2023.

He is a critic of the Chinese Communist party and was an associate of Stephen Bannon, an ex-White House chief strategist under former president Donald Trump.

Guo goes by several aliases, including Miles Guo, Miles Kwok and “Brother Seven”. He was named as Ho Wan Kwok when he was indicted in 2023.

Prosecutors said Guo raised more than $1bn (£770bn) from online followers, who joined him in investment and cryptocurrency schemes between 2018 and 2023.

The money he raised was used to fund Guo’s lavish lifestyle which included a 50,000 square foot mansion, a $1m Lamborghini and a $37m yacht, they said.

“Thousands of Guo’s online followers were victimised so that Guo could live a life of excess,” the US Attorney in Manhattan, Damian Williams, said after the verdict.

Guo’s political activism and his links to high-profile, right-wing US politicians and activists earned him hundreds of thousands of online followers, most of them Chinese people living in Western countries.

Guo’s lawyers tried unsuccessfully to sway the jury by saying their client was not driven by money.

Instead, they portrayed him as a fervent opponent of China’s political system and his ostentatious lifestyle was a critique of the Chinese Communist Party.

After his arrival in the US in 2017, Guo’s outspoken opposition to China’s rulers inspired several ventures with Bannon.

They appeared frequently together in online videos, and in 2020 they launched a campaign called the New Federal State of China, with the goal of overthrowing the Chinese Communist Party.

Later that year, Bannon was arrested over an unrelated fraud case while on Guo’s yacht in Connecticut. He was later pardoned by then-president Donald Trump.

Bannon is currently serving a four-month sentence for contempt of Congress.

‘World’s rarest whale’ washes up on NZ beach

By Robert GreenallBBC News

A whale that was found dead on a beach in New Zealand earlier this month has been identified by scientists as a spade-toothed whale – a species so rare it has never been seen alive.

The five-metre long, beaked creature’s identity was determined from its colour patterns and the shape of its skull, beak and teeth.

Its remains have been placed in cold storage whilst DNA testing takes place, with experts saying it may take several weeks before a final identification is confirmed.

Because so few specimens have been found and there have been no live sightings, very little is known about the spade-toothed whale.

Researchers say the carcass discovery could help them acquire crucial new information about the species.

Local officials were notified that the whale had been washed ashore on 4 July at the mouth of the Taiari river, in Otago province on New Zealand’s South Island.

Department of Conservation (DOC) official Gabe Davies said in a statement that spade-toothed whales were one of the least known large mammalian species, with only six samples ever documented worldwide.

“From a scientific and conservation point of view, this is huge,” he added.

The department said that because the specimen had only recently died it could become the first whale of the species to be dissected.

New Zealand’s Māori people regard whales as a sacred treasure, and DOC said local Maori communities would take part in deciding the whale’s fate.

The species was first described in 1874 after a lower jaw and two teeth were collected from New Zealand’s Chatham Islands. Skeletal remains of two other specimens found off islands in New Zealand and Chile enabled scientists to confirm a new species.

Two more recent findings of stranded whales off New Zealand’s North Island in 2010 and 2017 added to the small collection.

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Senator Bob Menendez found guilty in bribery scheme

By Bernd Debusmann Jr & Nadine YousifBBC News
Key moments in Senator Robert Menendez’s corruption saga

New Jersey Senator Bob Menendez has been found guilty on 16 counts tied to a scheme where he accepted bribes, including gold bars and a Mercedes-Benz, in exchange for helping foreign governments.

A jury convicted Menendez of all charges after more than 12 hours of deliberation over three days. The trial lasted nine weeks.

Menendez – formerly the head of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee – now faces the prospect of decades in prison.

Democratic lawmakers have called on him to step down from Congress in light of his conviction.

“Senator Menendez must now do what is right for his constituents, the Senate, and our country, and resign,” said Democratic Senate Majority leader Chuck Schumer in a statement.

Speaking to reporters after his conviction, Menendez maintained that he is innocent.

“I never violated my public oath,” he said outside the New York City courthouse on Tuesday. “I have never been but a patriot of my country and for my country.”

His lawyer, Adam Fee, said that he was “surprised and disappointed” with the jury’s guilty verdict and has vowed to appeal “aggressively.”

Prosecutors said the case represented “shocking levels of corruption.”

“This wasn’t politics as usual, this was politics for profit,” said Damian Williams, an attorney for the Southern District of New York.

“Now that the jury has convicted Bob Menendez, his years of selling his office to the highest bidder have finally come to an end,” Mr Williams said.

Menendez pleaded not guilty in the trial. His lawyers argued that the gifts he accepted did not qualify as bribes, because prosecutors had failed to prove that he took any specific action as a result of receiving them.

His wife, Nadine Arslanian Menendez, also faces charges in the bribery case, but her trial was delayed so she could undergo breast cancer treatment. She has pleaded not guilty.

His lawyers had attempted to shift blame to Mrs Menendez, portraying her as a financially troubled individual who hoped to “get cash and assets any way she could”.

Meanwhile, prosecutors relied on expert testimony, emails and Menendez’s text messages to show that the senator accepted lavish rewards from foreign governments.

They said the gifts included gold bars worth over $100,000 (£79,000). Some of the bars were handed to jurors as evidence in the trial.

Jurors also heard that FBI agents had found more than $480,000 (£370,452) in cash inside of Menendez’s home, some of which was stuffed in envelopes and coats.

Two businessmen, Wael Hana and Fred Daibes, are also being tried on accusations that they sought out the senator to illegally aid the Egyptian government and secure millions of dollars from a Qatari investment fund.

A third businessman, Jose Uribe, pleaded guilty and testified against Mr Menendez in the trial.

In exchange the bribes, prosecutors said Menendez helped secure millions of dollars in US aid for Egypt, where Hana had ties to government officials.

He was also accused of trying to influence criminal probes involving Daibes and Uribe. Both businessmen were co-defendants in Menendez’s case and were also convicted on the counts they faced.

Menendez is currently running as an independent as he campaigns to keep his seat in November’s election. Most Democrats in the state walked away from him last year after the release of the indictment showing gold bars stashed in his home.

Andy Kim, a Democratic congressman from New Jersey, said the verdict marked “a sad and sombre day” for his state.

“I called on Senator Menendez to step down when these charges were first made public, and now that he has been found guilty, I believe the only course of action for him is to resign his seat immediately,” Mr Kim said in a statement.

“The people of New Jersey deserve better,” he said.

The senator has faced federal corruption charges before. He was tried in 2017, with the justice department alleging he did political favours for a wealthy Florida eye doctor in exchange for luxury holidays and other lavish gifts.

But that case ended in a mistrial after he was acquitted on some charges and jurors were unable to reach a unanimous verdict.

Biden admits Trump ‘bullseye’ comments a mistake

By Christal HayesBBC News
Watch: Trump “in the prayers of Jill and me”, says Biden

US President Joe Biden has said it was a mistake for him to say “time to put Trump in a bullseye”, days before Saturday’s assassination attempt on his election rival.

Mr Biden’s remarks came in his first interview since the incident, in which he defended his rhetoric against Donald Trump and cited why it was important.

The president told NBC’s Lester Holt his campaign had a duty to clearly communicate the threat of a second Trump term, adding that his words were not the ones that needed to be tempered.

After a brief pause following Saturday’s attack, presidential campaign events now appear to be back under way.

Mr Biden is set to speak at the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) convention in Las Vegas on Tuesday.

Trump made his first appearance at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee on Monday, to a rapturous welcome.

  • Trump to speak Thursday – what to expect at Republican convention
  • A shocking act that will reshape the presidential race

During his NBC interview, Mr Biden described a phone call with Trump following the attempted assassination as “very cordial”.

“I told him he was literally in the prayers of Jill and me, and his whole family was weathering this,” he said.

When pressed on his “bullseye” comments, Mr Biden said: “It was a mistake to use the word. I didn’t say crosshairs. I meant bullseye, I meant focus on him. Focus on what he’s doing.”

He said he meant Democrats needed to look at Trump, his policies and the false statements he made during the presidential debate late last month.

According to Politico, Mr Biden had said on a private donor call: “I have one job, and that’s to beat Donald Trump. I’m absolutely certain I’m the best person to be able to do that. So, we’re done talking about the debate. It’s time to put Trump in a bullseye.”

Throughout the interview, Mr Biden made it clear he would not be stepping aside in the presidential race – despite calls from members of his own party after his poor debate performance.

“I’m old,” he lamented, while also noting he’s only three years older than Trump. He said his mental acuity was fine and listed his accomplishments as president – but acknowledged he was working to reaffirm to Americans that he was up to the job.

“I understand why people say, ‘God, he’s 81 years old. Whoa. What’s he going to be when he’s 83 years old, 84 years?’ It’s a legitimate question to ask,” he said.

He said he put his faith in the voters who overwhelmingly backed him in the Democratic primary. “I listen to them.”

The president has repeatedly called for Americans to “lower the temperature” since the shooting on Saturday, where Trump’s ear was grazed by a bullet.

One crowd member was killed and two others were critically injured in the attack.

About a dozen Republicans have blamed Mr Biden and other Democrats for inciting the attempt on Trump’s life. Many have specifically cited the “bullseye” comment.

JD Vance, who was announced as Trump’s presidential running mate on Monday, said in the wake of the shooting that Democratic rhetoric about the Republican candidate “led directly to President Trump’s attempted assassination”.

President Biden, in an Oval Office address on Sunday, denounced the attack and called for Americans to “take a step back”, warning that “political rhetoric in this country has gotten very heated”.

When asked in the NBC interview if he had also taken a step back to examine his past remarks for anything “that could incite people who are not balanced”, Mr Biden said the inflammatory rhetoric had not come from him.

“I’ve not engaged in that rhetoric,” Mr Biden said. “Now, my opponent is engaged in that rhetoric.

“How do you talk about the threat to democracy, which is real, when a president says things like he says? Do you just not say anything, because it may incite somebody?

“I am not the guy that said I want to be a dictator on day one, I am not the guy that refused to accept the outcome of the election.”

The FBI has identified the gunman who targeted Trump as Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, a kitchen worker from Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, who is a registered Republican.

A Secret Service sniper shot Crooks dead after he fired at the former president.

North America correspondent Anthony Zurcher makes sense of the race for the White House in his weekly US Election Unspun newsletter. Readers in the UK can sign up here. Those outside the UK can sign up here.

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Jack Black axes tour over bandmate’s Trump comment

By Bonnie McLarenCulture reporter

Jack Black has said he’s cancelled the rest of the Tenacious D world tour after his bandmate Kyle Gass sparked an outcry with a comment about the assassination attempt on Donald Trump.

The comedy rock group were on stage in Sydney, Australia, on Sunday when Gass was asked to make a wish after being presented with a cake for his 64th birthday.

He appeared to reply: “Don’t miss Trump next time.”

In a statement on Instagram, Black said he was “blindsided” by the comment.

“I would never condone hate speech or encourage political violence in any form,” the comedian and actor wrote.

He said he didn’t feel it was “appropriate to continue the Tenacious D tour”, and that the rest of the group’s “creative plans are on hold”.

Black added that he is “grateful to the fans for their support and understanding”.

The controversy had already led to Tuesday’s gig in Newcastle, New South Wales, being postponed.

Gass apologised for the comment on Instagram, saying it was a “severe lack of judgement”.

He wrote: “The line I improvised onstage Sunday night in Sydney was highly inappropriate, dangerous and a terrible mistake.

“I don’t condone violence of any kind, in any form, against anyone. What happened was a tragedy, and I’m incredibly sorry for my severe lack of judgement. I profoundly apologise to those I’ve let down and truly regret any pain I’ve caused.”

Gass also split with his agent following the incident.

“Due to what occurred, we have parted ways,” Michael Greene of Greene Talent told BBC News.

While many in the Sydney crowd can be heard laughing in video from the concert, the comment launched an angry reaction on social media – with X owner Elon Musk calling it “evil”.

Senator Ralph Babet – the United Australia Party’s only parliamentarian – asked for the band to be deported.

In a statement, he said the duo should “be immediately removed from the country after wishing for the assassination of Donald Trump at their Sydney concert”.

Asked about the comments while attending the Republican National Convention, Australian Ambassador to the US Kevin Rudd said it made him “physically ill” that someone would joke about such violence.

“People might think that it is a bit of funny ha-ha at a concert to run off at the mouth about this stuff. It’s not. It’s about physical life,” the former prime minister of Australia said.

“These people just [need to] grow up and find a decent job.”

Trump was shot in the ear when a gunman opened fire at a Pennsylvania rally on Saturday.

The FBI has identified the gunman who targeted Trump as Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, a kitchen worker from Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, who is a registered Republican.

A Secret Service sniper shot Crooks dead after he fired at the former president. One spectator was killed and two others were seriously injured.

Islamic State group claims deadly attack in Oman

By David Gritten & Jaroslav LukivBBC News

Six people, including a policeman, have been killed and 28 others injured in a rare shooting attack near a Shia Muslim mosque in Oman’s capital, Muscat, police say.

The three attackers were also killed by security forces during the incident in the al-Wadi al-Kabir area on Monday night, according to a statement.

Police gave no details about the identities of the victims and gunmen, or the motive. But Pakistan said four Pakistanis were among those killed in a “terrorist attack” on the Imam Ali Mosque. India also said one of its citizens was killed.

The Sunni Muslim jihadist group Islamic State (IS) says three of its members were involved in the attack.

Supporters of the group celebrated the shooting on social media networks.

IS has repeatedly targeted Shia ceremonies, processions and worshippers in countries like Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. But it has never before claimed an attack in Oman, where the Shia are a minority.

Video showed a crowd running for cover inside the mosque’s courtyard as gunshots were heard. Worshippers had gathered there on the eve of the Shia holy day of Ashura.

The police statement expressed condolences to the victims’ families and said an investigation into the circumstances of the incident was under way.

It also emphasised “the necessity of obtaining information from official sources and disregarding unreliable information”.

Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said he was “deeply saddened” by the attack and that his heart went “out to the families of the victims”.

“I have instructed the Pakistan embassy in Muscat to extend all possible assistance to the injured and visit the hospitals personally,” he wrote on X.

“Pakistan stands in solidarity with the Sultanate of Oman and offers full assistance in the investigation.”

Pakistan’s embassy in Muscat named the four Pakistanis who were killed as Ghulam Abbas, Hasan Abbas, Sayyed Qaisar Abbas and Sulaiman Nawaz. It also said 30 Pakistanis were receiving hospital treatment.

On Tuesday morning, Pakistani ambassador Imran Ali said in a video that he had visited some of those injured at three local hospitals and described their conditions as “relatively safe”.

He also advised Pakistani residents of Oman to avoid al-Wadi al-Kabir and to co-operate with local authorities.

Mr Ali later told AFP news agency that the attackers had initially opened fire from a building next to the mosque, where hundreds of people had gathered for a prayer service.

The worshippers were held “hostage” by militants before “they were later freed by Omani forces”, he said.

India’s embassy said it had been informed by the Omani foreign ministry that one Indian national had been killed and another injured, without identifying them.

The shooting happened on the night of the ninth day of the Islamic month of Muharram, when Shia Muslims attend rituals on the eve of Ashura. Ashura is a major commemoration of the martyrdom of Imam Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, in a battle in the seventh century.

Some of the worshippers in the courtyard can be heard shouting “O God”, “O Hussein” and “I am here, O Hussein” in the video filmed inside the Imam Ali Mosque as the attack unfolded.

Oman that has long been seen as one of the most stable and secure countries in the Middle East. This has allowed it to play a leading role in mediation efforts to try to resolve conflicts and disputes in the region.

The Gulf sultanate has a population of about 4.6 million, of which more than 40% are foreign workers.

The government does not publish statistics about religious affiliation.

However, the US state department estimates that 95% of the population is Muslim, with 45% Sunni, 45% Ibadi and 5% Shia. Hindus, Buddhists and Christians make up the remaining 5%.

Biden considering major Supreme Court reform: report

By Christal Hayes and Anthony ZurcherBBC News

Joe Biden is considering backing a host of reforms to the US Supreme Court including ending lifetime appointments, according to US media.

Backing such changes would mark a major reversal for the Democratic president. It comes after the high court made a series of decisions including the removal of the federal right to abortion and a ruling that gave Donald Trump immunity from prosecution for “official acts” as president.

CBS News, the BBC’s partner in the US, reported that Mr Biden was examining establishing term limits for justices, which are currently lifetime appointments, and bolstering the court’s ethics code.

However, changes would be difficult to pass in a divided Congress.

On a weekend call, Mr Biden told Democrats in the Congressional Progressive Caucus that he was working with experts on and reforms would be announced soon, a source familiar with the call told CBS News.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre declined to elaborate when asked about the proposed changes, or when an announcement might be made.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump attacked what he called an “illegal and unConstitutional attack on our SACRED… Supreme Court”.

Mr Biden has long resisted calls from his party to reform the court. Some Democrats had argued change was needed after his predecessor Trump appointed three right-wing justices to shape a 6-3 conservative majority.

There have also been questions about ethics on the high court with Justice Clarence Thomas accepting luxury trips from a billionaire Republican donor, and questions about his wife’s support for overturning the 2020 presidential election when Trump lost.

Mr Biden created a commission to issue recommendations early in his presidency. The advice was never acted upon.

Democrats would face a huge challenge to get any reform through a divided Senate and a Republican-controlled House of Representatives.

The high court’s opinions this term displayed the sharp political shift, with the conservative majority issuing a series of high-profile rulings that affected abortion rights, gun laws, the environment and Trump’s criminal trials.

The high court also threw out Mr Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan – which would have wiped off billions in debt for Americans.

On its last day of opinions, the court ruled Trump and other presidents have a wide (but not absolute) immunity from criminal prosecution for their actions in office.

One of the four criminal cases against Trump has since been dismissed and sentencing has been delayed in another.

Along with the reforms, Mr Biden is also examining backing a constitutional amendment that would eliminate the broad immunity cited by the court.

Mr Biden’s reported plan, if announced, would at least give him a new campaign issue in the runup to November’s election.

The president repeatedly cites the Supreme Court and its rulings on the campaign trail. He made mention of the high court Tuesday during an interview with BET, bringing up the court’s ruling in 2022 that eliminated the right to an abortion by overturning Roe v Wade.

Mr Biden noted Trump could have the option of appointing another justice or two if he wins. “Just imagine if he has two more appointments,” Biden said.

Gaza man with Down’s syndrome attacked by IDF dog and left to die, mother tells BBC

By Fergal Keane in JerusalemBBC News

There was always his family. When he was bullied at school, and beaten, they were there to embrace him when he came home. And when the war started and he was terrorised by the sound of bombs falling, someone always said things were going to be ok.

Muhammed was heavy and found movement difficult. He spent his days sitting in an armchair. If he needed anything, there was a niece or nephew to help.

Muhammed Bhar was 24 and had Down’s syndrome and autism. His mother, Nabila Bhar, 70, told the BBC: “He didn’t know how to eat, drink, or change his clothes. I’m the one who changed his nappies. I’m the one who fed him. He didn’t know how to do anything by himself.”

On 27 June the war came back to the Bhar family’s neighbourhood and Muhammed’s small world shrank further. Along with other residents of Shejaiya, east of Gaza City centre, the Bhars were given orders to evacuate by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).

The IDF was advancing into Shejaiya in pursuit of Hamas fighters fighting from tunnels and houses. But the Bhars were tired of moving.

In a weary tone, Nabila, who is a widow, reeled off the names of relatives’ homes where they’d sought shelter.

“We evacuated around 15 times. We would go to Jibreel’s place, but then there would be bombing at Jibreel’s place. We would go to Haydar Square, but then there would be bombing at Haydar Square. We would go to Rimal, but then there would be bombing at Rimal. We would go to Shawa Square, but there would be bombing at Shawa Square.”

The fighting intensified in the streets around them. They would hide in different parts of the house, often in the bathroom when shooting became especially intense.

“We were under siege for seven days. The tanks and soldiers were all around the house… Muhammed was staying on his sofa…and he didn’t like sitting anywhere except for there,” says Nabila.

For Muhammed war meant loud, violent sounds, the air vibrating with the concussion from shells exploding nearby. None of this could be explained to him.

“He would panic and say, ‘I’m scared, scared’,” Nabila remembers.

“He would say, ‘Hey, hey’, thinking that someone wanted to hit him. He was always scared, fearful. We would come around him, comfort him. He didn’t understand much. His autism made it very difficult.”

On 3 July, according to the family, the IDF raided their home on Nazaz Street. Nabila says there were several dozen soldiers with a combat dog – animals used to find Hamas fighters, and check for booby traps and explosives.

At first she heard them “breaking in and smashing everything” before the soldiers and dog arrived in the room.

Referring to Muhammed, she says: “I told them, ‘He’s disabled, disabled. Have mercy on him, he’s disabled. Keep the dog away from him.’”

Nabila saw the animal attack Muhammed.

“The dog attacked him, biting his chest and then his hand. Muhammed didn’t speak, only muttering ‘No, no, no.’ The dog bit his arm and the blood was shed. I wanted to get to him but I couldn’t. No-one could get to him, and he was patting the dog’s head saying, ‘enough my dear enough.’ In the end, he relaxed his hand, and the dog started tearing at him while he was bleeding.”

Around this point, says Nabila, the soldiers took the young man into another room, and away from the dog. They tried to treat his wounds.

A terrified Muhammed, who had always depended on his family for help, was now in the care of combat soldiers, who had come from streets where they’d been fighting close quarter battles with Hamas.

“They took him away, put him in a separate room, and locked the door. We wanted to see what happened to him. We wanted to see Muhammed, to see what had become of him,” says Nabila.

“They told us to be quiet and aimed their guns at us. They put us in a room by ourselves, and Muhammed was alone in another room. They said, ‘We will bring a military doctor to treat him.’” At one point, according to Nabila, a military doctor arrived and went into the room where Muhammed was lying.

Muhammed’s niece, Janna Bhar, 11, described how the family pleaded with soldiers to help him. “We told them Muhammed was not well, but they kept saying he was fine.”

After several hours, it is not clear how many, the family was ordered at gunpoint to leave, leaving Muhammed behind with the soldiers. There were pleas and cries. Two of his brothers were arrested by the army. They have still not been released. The rest of the family found shelter in a bombed out building.

They returned a week later to a sight that haunts Muhammed’s brother Jibreel. He produces his mobile phone and shows our cameraman a video of the scene.

Muhammed’s body is lying on the floor. There is blood around him, and a tourniquet on his arm. This was most probably used to stop heavy bleeding from his upper arm. Jibreel points to gauze used to bandage a wound, and remarks on the blood that clotted after the tourniquet was applied.

“They were trying to stop the bleeding. Then they left him without stitches or care. Just these basic first aid measures. Of course, as you can see, Muhammed was dead for a period of time already because he was abandoned. We thought he wasn’t at home. But it turned out he had been bleeding and left alone at home all this time. Of course, the army left him.”

It is not clear what exact injury caused Muhammed’s death. Nor what happened to him in the time his family last saw him, and when his brother returned and filmed the dead young man on the floor. He was buried shortly after the family found him, in an alley between houses because it was too dangerous to take the corpse to the mortuary, or a graveyard. There was no post-mortem and no certificate of death.

The family is demanding an investigation but with fighting still going on, and so many dead, it is hard to be hopeful that will happen any time soon. In response to queries from the BBC the IDF said they were checking on the report.

Nabila is left with an image of her dead child that refuses to go away. “This scene I will never forget… I constantly see the dog tearing at him and his hand, and the blood pouring from his hand… It is always in front of my eyes, never leaving me for a moment. We couldn’t save him, neither from them nor from the dog.”

New tech aims to keep polar bears and people apart

By Victoria Gill@vic_gillScience correspondent, BBC News

At the end of the Canadian Arctic summer, polar bears head inland to wait for the ice to form.

And while thousands of tourists flock to catch a glimpse of these magnificent predators, researchers are developing novel ways to keep people and bears safely separated.

New tracking devices that stick in polar bears’ fur could be the key to protecting both people and bears – by closely monitoring the animals’ locations.

Polar bears now spend more of the year on land, as Arctic sea ice melts, so conservationists are increasingly concerned about bears and people coming into contact.

The tracking tags, which have been tested on bears in Canadian Arctic, could help prevent those encounters, by “keeping a remote eye” on the bears.

Lead researcher Tyler Ross, a PhD candidate from York University in Toronto, said the fur tags were “particularly promising” for the prevention of these “human-bear interactions”.

In communities in the southern Canadian Arctic, where the scientists tested these tags, polar bears that wander too close to a community are sometimes caught, transported and released in carefully selected sites away from towns and villages.

“These tags could be fitted to those bears to monitor where they are after they’ve been released,” explained Mr Ross.

“If they’re coming back towards the community, conservation staff would have a sense of where they are, and they could head them off. I think that’s where they offer considerable promise.”

The researcher, who studies polar bear ecology, also says the tags could fill important gaps in knowledge about the bears. And as the Arctic climate warms up rapidly, the need to monitor bears becomes increasingly urgent.

“There’s a dearth of information about male polar bear movements, because they can’t be equipped with conventional tracking collars,” said Mr Ross.

The sea ice [that the polar bears use as a platform from which to hunt] is disappearing faster than it has in the past,” explained Mr Ross. “So the winter hunting season is getting shorter. We want to know where they’re moving in response.”

Polar bears are difficult to tag. Male bears’ heads are smaller than their necks, so tracking collars can just slip off.

Another option is ear tags – attached by piercing the bear’s ear. They require an animal to be recaptured in order to remove the tag and, in rare cases, can injure the ear.

The three new tags the researchers tested were designed by the company 3M in collaboration with the charity Polar Bears International. They all attach to the bears’ coarse fur.

To fit the tags, scientists had to locate and sedate bears. They then assessed the quality of the data they received from each device and noted when the tags fell off.

The best performing device was called a SeaTrkr tag, which is “crimped” into the bears’ fur. It stayed attached for an average of 58 days and – with an in-built GPS system – allowed the scientists to pinpoint the bears’ location to within just a few metres.

“It’s ideal to have something that falls off naturally – that’s not permanently attached to the bear,” explained Mr Ross. “But anything that lasts in the order of a few months would be great [for our research], because then you’re getting these important seasons that the bears are going through throughout the year.”

Climate change is bringing bears and humans into closer proximity, making places where polar bears and people coexist, riskier for both.

One US Geological Survey study in 2022 that that used data from satellite tracking collars on more than 400 polar bears in Alaska, shows the time they spend onshore has grown significantly in recent decades.

“Getting a better sense of polar bears’ movements is really crucial,” Mr Ross commented. “Particularly given the state of their environment at this point.”

This study of the bear tags is published in the journal Animal Biotelemetry.

Vance’s ‘Hillbilly Elegy’ becomes political lightning rod

By Ana FaguyBBC News, Washington

As American voters start to familiarise themselves with Donald Trump’s newly announced vice-presidential candidate Ohio Senator JD Vance it is nearly impossible to avoid his infamous memoir.

Written in 2016, Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis, tells the story of Mr Vance’s upbringing in the Appalachians, which includes his home state of Ohio, and offers a glimpse at what he says life is like for the rural poor.

The book has become a new political lightning rod in the 2024 presidential race. Critics say it shows a lack of understanding. Others say it captures the life perfectly.

Fans are also captivated by the book and buying it in large numbers, watching its movie adaptation and claiming it shows Mr Vance is an “everyday” man.

The memoir and film adaptation directed by Ron Howard and starring Glenn Close and Amy Adams – which received several Academy Award nominations – may offer voters a glimpse of who Mr Vance is and how he views his upbringing.

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The book has become such a popular talking point online that books site Goodreads blocked new reviews after Trump made Mr Vance his running mate.

“Rating this book is temporarily unavailable,” the site says. “This book has temporary limitations on submitting ratings and reviews. This may be because we’ve detected unusual behaviour that doesn’t follow our review guidelines.”

This is likely to stop users from “bombing” the page and negatively or positively reviewing the book on criteria other than its quality.

Goodreads declined to comment when asked by the BBC why ratings had been closed.

Review bombing is a growing phenomenon online. “Eat Pray Love” writer Elizabeth Gilbert last year was a target for a book some readers said was “glorifying” Russians. Gilbert paused publication.

The film adaptation of Mr Vance’s book has been targeted in a similar manner.

Letterboxd, a Goodreads equivalent for film, registered an increase in reviews.

But it is not all hate.

The book, in paperback and hardcover, currently ranks No. 1 and No. 2 on Amazon’s bestseller lists.

The film, which was released in 2020, reached No. 6 on Netflix’s top 10 films the day after Mr Vance’s selection was announced.

What we know about the Trump attacker

By Bernd Debusmann, Tom Bateman and Tom McArthurBBC News in Pennsylvania and London

The small Pittsburgh suburb of Bethel Park in Pennsylvania is reeling after the FBI named a young local man, Thomas Matthew Crooks, as the person who shot at Donald Trump during a campaign rally and shocked the nation.

Investigators believe that Crooks, armed with a semi-automatic AR-15 rifle, opened fire at the former president while he was addressing a crowd in Butler, Pennsylvania, leaving one audience member dead and two others wounded.

The 20-year-old kitchen worker was shot dead at the scene by a Secret Service sniper, officials said.

In his well-to-do hometown, however, neighbours are in shock, seemingly unable to grasp how a quiet young man is now accused in the shooting.

The FBI, for its part, has said only that Crooks was the “subject involved in the assassination attempt on the former president and that an active investigation was under way.”

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  • VICTIMS: Who was shot at the Trump rally?

Who was Thomas Matthew Crooks?

Thomas Crooks had not been carrying ID, so investigators used DNA and facial recognition technology to identify him, the FBI said.

He was from Bethel Park in Pennsylvania, about 70km (43 miles) from the site of the attempted assassination, and graduated in 2022 from Bethel Park High School with a $500 (£385) prize for maths and science, according to a local newspaper.

Crooks worked in a local nursing home kitchen just a short drive away from his home, where staff members have said that he passed a background check and raised no concerns.

The Community College of Allegheny, or CCAC, has confirmed that Crooks attended the school between September 2021 and May 2024. He graduated with an associate degree in engineering science.

In a statement sent to the BBC, the college noted that he graduated “with high honours” and that a review of his records turned up no disciplinary, student conduct or security-related incidents.

The University of Pittsburgh also told the BBC that in February he was accepted as a transfer student there for the fall 2024 semester. The following month, he elected not to attend.

State voter records show that he was a registered Republican, according to US media.

He also donated $15 to liberal campaign group ActBlue in 2021, according to an election donation filing and news reports.

He had a membership at a local shooting club, the Clairton Sportsmen’s Club, for at least a year, the club confirmed to the BBC.

The vast club is based south of Pittsburgh and is “one of the premier shooting facilities in the tri-state area” of Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia. It has more than 2,000 members.

It has multiple gun ranges, including a high-power rifle facility with targets up to 171 metres away.

The club’s owner, Bill Sellitto, told the BBC that the shooting was a “terrible, terrible thing”. Access to the club is tightly controlled, with only members allowed inside the sprawling facility.

“Obviously, the club fully admonishes the senseless act of violence,” attorney Robert S Bootay III, who represents the organisation, told the BBC.

Law enforcement officials believe the weapon used to shoot at Donald Trump, an AR-style rifle, was purchased by Crooks’ father, according to investigators.

It is unclear how the weapon came into his son’s hands, although there is no suggestion the father had any inkling of what was to take place.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, two officers told AP that Crooks’ father bought the weapon at least six months ago.

Authorities say that Crooks purchased a box of ammunition containing 50 rounds on the day of the rally, reports CBS, the BBC’s US news partner.

Police sources have also told CBS that he purchased a ladder at Home Depot before the shooting, although it is unclear if he brought it with him.

According to US media reports, Crooks was wearing a T-shirt from Demolition Ranch, a YouTube channel known for its guns and demolition content. The channel has millions of subscribers featuring videos on different guns and explosive devices.

The day after the shooting, law enforcement sources also told CBS that suspicious devices were found in Crooks’ vehicle.

According to CBS, the suspect had a piece of commercially available equipment that appeared capable of initiating the devices.

Bomb technicians were called to the scene to secure and investigate the devices.

What was his motivation?

Having established Crooks’ identity, police and agencies are investigating his motive.

So far, they have been unable to identify one.

On 15 July, the FBI said its forensic experts have successfully accessed Crooks’ phone, and they are examining it and other digital evidence for clues.

The inquiry into what took place could last for months and investigators would work “tirelessly” to identify what Crooks’ motive was, Kevin Rojek, the FBI Pittsburgh special agent in charge, said on the day of the shooting.

Speaking to CNN, Crooks’ father, Matthew Crooks, said he was trying to figure out “what the hell is going on” but would “wait until I talk to law enforcement” before speaking about his son.

Crooks’ family is cooperating with investigators, according to the FBI.

Citing three law enforcement sources, CBS has reported that his father called police after the shooting, although the nature of that call is still unclear.

In total, more than 100 interviews have so far been conducted.

Watch: Trump attacker ‘passionate’ about history says schoolmate

Police sealed off the road to the house where Crooks lived with his parents. The search of the residence was completed on 15 July.

A neighbour told CBS that officers evacuated her in the middle of the night with no warning.

Bethel Park Police said there was a bomb investigation surrounding Crooks’ home.

Access to the area remains controlled, with a police vehicle blocking entry to the street in front of the house.

On Tuesday afternoon, yellow police tape could be seen strung up in front of the residence. The BBC had a clear view of the back of the residence, but could not see any movement inside.

Only residents have been allowed in or out of the street.

Law enforcement sources told CBS that they believe there was some degree of planning ahead of the shooting.

How much time was spent in that planning, however, remains the subject of an ongoing investigation.

Police believe Crooks acted alone, but are continuing to investigate whether he was accompanied to the rally.

What kind of person was he?

So far, a confusing – and at times conflicting – picture has emerged of who Crooks was as a person.

Speaking to local news outlet KDKA, some young locals who went to school with him described him as a loner, who was frequently bullied and sometimes wore “hunting outfits to school”.

Another former classmate of his, Summer Barkley, cast him differently, telling the BBC that he was “always getting good grades on tests” and was “very passionate about history”.

“Anything on government and history he seemed to know about,” she said. “But it was nothing out of the ordinary… he was always nice.”

She described him as well-liked by his teachers.

Others simply remembered him as quiet.

“He was there but I can’t think of anyone who knew him well,” one former classmate, who asked to remain nameless, told the BBC. “He’s just not a guy I really think about. But he seemed fine.”

Another classmate, who similarly did not want to be identified, described him as “intelligent but a little weird.”

Staff at Angelo’s Pizza, a restaurant in Bethel Park, told the BBC they were familiar with Crooks.

The restaurant’s owner, Sara Petko, said that staff members – some of whom were his classmates – thought he was a “loner” but that they were having trouble understanding how an otherwise quiet man turned to violence.

“It’s just crazy, and too close for comfort,” she said. “To think that someone at basically the start of his life could do this.”

Jameson Myers, a former member of the Bethel Park High School varsity rifle team who graduated alongside Crooks in 2022, told CBS that Crooks did not make the team.

“He did not even make the junior varsity team after trying out,” Mr Myers added. “He never returned to try-outs for the remainder of high school.”

Another former classmate told ABC News he “shot terrible” and “wasn’t really fit for the rifle team”. The school district said there was no record of Crooks trying out for the team and he “never appeared on a roster”.

Mr Myers remembers Crooks as seemingly a “normal boy” who was “not particularly popular but never got picked on or anything”.

“He was a nice kid who never talked poorly of anyone and I never have thought him capable of anything I’ve seen him do in the last few days.”

Max Smith, who took an American history course with Crooks, told the Philadelphia Inquirer that his former classmate “definitely was conservative”.

Mr Smith recalled a mock debate in which they both took part, saying: “The majority of the class were on the liberal side, but Tom, no matter what, always stood his ground on the conservative side.”

“It makes me wonder why he would carry out an assassination attempt on the conservative candidate,” he said.

Other community members said simply that they were shocked that the alleged perpetrator of the shooting could have come from the quiet, tree-lined streets of Bethel Park.

Among them was Jason Mackey, a 27-year-old local man who lives near the Crooks residence and worked at his school while he was a student.

While Mr Mackey said that he did not know Crooks personally, he is still reeling from a sense of disbelief.

“It’s just shocking. You wouldn’t think an event of this magnitude would come right out of your backyard,” he said. “It’s just a crazy situation.”

Who were the victims in the shooting?

One person was killed and two others were injured in the shooting.

All three victims are adult men and were audience members, CBS News reports.

At a news conference on Sunday, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro identified the deceased victim as Corey Comperatore, a 50-year-old volunteer fire chief who was killed when he “dived on his family” to protect them.

He said that Comperatore “died a hero”.

The two people injured in the attack have been identified as 57-year-old David Dutch and 74-year-old James Copenhaver.

Both men are Pennsylvania residents and are in stable condition.

A GoFundMe page, organised by the Trump campaign’s national finance director Meredith O’Rourke, was set up in the hours after the attack with donations going to the families of the injured.

It has so far raised more than $340,000 (£267,000).

In a post to his Truth Social platform, Trump said he was “shot with a bullet that pierced the upper part of my right ear” and said he felt the bullet “ripping through the skin”.

Blood was visible on Trump’s ear and face as protection officers rushed him away.

Trump is “doing well” and is grateful to law enforcement officers, according to a statement published on the Republican National Committee (RNC) website.

He travelled to Milwaukee, Wisconsin on Sunday, a day after the shooting, to attend the Republican National Convention.

How far was he from Donald Trump?

One witness told the BBC that he had seen a man – believed to be Crooks – with a rifle on the roof of a building before Trump was shot.

“There are police running around. We’re telling them there’s a guy on the roof with a rifle,” Greg Smith told the BBC. “Secret Service is looking at us through binoculars, and I’m pointing right at the roof.”

Multiple videos appear to confirm that chain, with some showing rallygoer shouting at police.

Video footage obtained by TMZ shows the moment the shooting began.

The assailant opened fire with “an AR-style rifle”, officials have said. His shooting position was approximately 443ft (135m) from Trump.

Law enforcement sources also told CBS that he was reported by a bystander and identified as a suspicious person by police, but that officers lost track of him before the shooting began.

A Secret Service sniper returned fire and killed the gunman, officials said.

Footage later shows armed officers approaching a body on the roof of the building.

Watch now on iPlayer

Baby ‘saved from traffickers’ was borrowed by charity for photos

By Hayley MortimerBBC File on 4

An ex-police officer who claims to save children from human traffickers has faked stories to raise money for his charity, the BBC has discovered.

Adam Whittington, founder of Project Rescue Children (PRC) says he has helped more than 700 children in countries including Uganda, Kenya and The Gambia.

But BBC File on 4 has found that some of these children have never been trafficked, and that funds raised – sometimes with the help of celebrity supporters – have not always reached children in need.

PRC has described our allegations that it does not support children as being “completely without merit, misleading and defamatory”.

Our investigation shows Mr Whittington, a British-Australian citizen, has misled donors in a variety of ways – including by raising funds for a baby supposedly rescued from people traffickers, who has actually been with her mother all along. The mother, who lives in poverty, says she and her daughter have never received any money from PRC.

Mr Whittington started working in child rescue two decades ago, after leaving the Metropolitan Police.

He set up a company retrieving children taken abroad by a parent following custody disputes, but later switched his attention to trafficked or abused children.

Both his and PRC’s social media pages have accumulated 1.5 million followers and attracted celebrity support, thanks to their shocking and sometimes disturbing content.

Sam Faiers from ITV’s The Only Way is Essex became a PRC ambassador, and last September was taken to Uganda to meet orphaned and destitute children.

While there, she appealed to her millions of fans to donate and ended up raising £137,000 ($175,000) to build a rescue centre and cover its initial running costs.

It was this fundraising drive that gave me the first real sense that something was amiss.

In the weeks after Sam Faiers’ total was announced, allegations against PRC began popping up on social media, with former ambassadors and directors alleging financial mismanagement and suggesting stories about children were being fabricated.

Less than half of the money – £58,000 ($74,000) – that donors believed would fund the construction and running costs of the proposed rescue centre, was sent to PRC’s Ugandan partner organisation, Make a Child Smile.

Its founder, Alexander Ssembatya, who has apologised to donors, told the BBC he believed the rest of the money had been “eaten by Adam Whittington and PRC”. Construction work was on hold because of a lack of funds, he added.

Sam Faiers told the BBC she was “deeply appalled” and “heartbroken” to learn that not all the funds raised had reached the children and urged Mr Whittington to “do the right thing and release the remainder of the funds immediately to where they are so desperately needed”.

PRC said the money provided was sufficient to complete construction of the rescue centre, and told the BBC it had now withdrawn from the project, accusing Mr Ssembatya of refusing to sign a contract and mismanaging funds.

It said the remaining money had been spent on other children in Uganda and the Philippines.

File on 4: The Child Rescue Con

Charity claims to save children from trafficking and abuse but File on 4 has found that unsuspecting children are being used as props and the rescue centres have no children.

Listen on BBC Sounds now, or on Radio 4 (Tuesday 16 July at 20:00 and Wednesday 17 July at 11:00)

Watch the story on BBC iPlayer, or on the BBC News channel (Saturday 20 July at 13:30)

Although efforts to establish a rescue centre in Uganda fell flat, PRC already claimed to have operations up and running in other African countries, including Kenya.

Since 2020, Mr Whittington has told detailed and distressing stories about the children he has allegedly supported at PRC’s Kenya rescue centre – including siblings who had watched their parents being butchered by traffickers.

Within weeks of launching a sponsorship programme, PRC announced that all 26 Kenyan children pictured on its website had been sponsored.

The rescue centre is in a remote location on the outskirts of the city of Kisumu, which made verifying its existence difficult.

So in April 2024, I travelled with a BBC team, escorted by a police officer, and found the property – supposedly run by a woman known as Mama Jane.

I discovered Mama Jane was an elderly lady called Jane Gori, who lived in the house with her husband. We didn’t find any children, rescued or otherwise.

But I did find out that her son, Kupa Gori, was PRC’s director in Kenya and he had brought Mr Whittington to visit her home.

Mr Whittington uses pictures of improvement work PRC has funded at Mrs Gori’s house to convince donors he is running a rescue centre. Mrs Gori said she had no idea that her name, her house and her photograph were being used by PRC.

Nearby, I met a farmer called Joseph, whose two sons and a granddaughter have featured on the PRC website, described as orphaned, homeless, or victims of trafficking or exploitation. But none of this is true.

Not long after the photographs were taken in 2020, Joseph’s son Eugene died. But his picture remained online until at least February this year. According to PRC’s website, people continued to sponsor him.

Joseph says he has never received any money from PRC, adding: “It pains my heart that someone is using the photos of my child for money we did not get personally.”

When we put our findings to PRC, it told us that it stands by its claim that Jane Gori’s home is a PRC rescue centre that cares for children. It said that all funds for work carried out there were submitted to the Australian Charity Commission – where it was registered.

It did not respond to our question about the misuse of photographs of Joseph’s family.

The next case of deception I uncovered started in 2022, when Mr Whittington claimed to have carried out a dramatic rescue mission – saving a newborn baby from the clutches of traffickers in a busy marketplace in The Gambia.

On the morning of 17 December, his team chased two men who dropped a basket as they ran, he said. Inside was a newborn baby, whom he named Mireya. Mr Whittington posted a picture of her wrapped in a gold-coloured blanket.

To give the story further credibility he told his followers he had adopted the baby and said she was being looked after at PRC’s rescue centre in The Gambia.

He told his UK director Alex Betts the same story and asked her to adopt the child with him.

Ms Betts, an online influencer, hoped to bring the baby back to the UK. An online fundraising campaign was launched, along with a sponsorship programme.

In March 2023, Ms Betts visited the girl she thought was Mireya and took photos and videos of herself playing with a beautiful baby girl. The footage went viral – seen by more than 40 million people.

After Ms Betts arrived back in the UK, Mr Whittington asked her to sign a non-disclosure agreement that would have prevented her saying anything publicly about PRC. She did not understand why and raised concerns.

Then PRC terminated her contract on the grounds, it said, that she was “exploiting children for social media gain”. Ms Betts stopped receiving photo and video updates about Mireya and Mr Whittington attacked her online, falsely branding her a drug addict and alleging, again falsely, that a warrant had been issued for her arrest in The Gambia.

Ms Betts says she was recruited to PRC to “bring social media attention to the organisation”. She rejects the claims against her and says she has always acted “with honest and pure intentions”.

When Ms Betts decided to google “Gambia newborn baby” she discovered the photograph of the baby in a gold blanket was of another child. It had been posted on a maternity unit’s social media page two years before Mireya’s “rescue”.

PRC told us a member of staff had misguidedly used this image because they didn’t want to reveal Mireya’s identity, and that the PRC board had subsequently apologised publicly for any confusion.

The BBC has found no evidence that the marketplace rescue ever happened. But Ms Betts had met a baby – so who was the child?

In May 2024, a year after Ms Betts had posted her viral video, we travelled to The Gambia. Our first stop was the location of PRC’s supposed rescue centre.

But, just as we had found in Kenya, it was not a rescue centre and no rescued children had ever lived there. The man who owned the property told us it was just a family home.

His name was David Bass, the father of Ebou Bass, who had been recruited as PRC’s director in The Gambia. He told us that PRC fixed his roof and installed a fresh water supply. Again, Mr Whittington posted images of this construction work on social media and the PRC website to support his claim to be running a rescue centre.

Mr Bass senior told us he did not know the work on his home had been funded with money raised for the renovation of a rescue centre.

We were told the baby known as Mireya lived in a nearby village. Our search took us to a small compound, where we saw a toddler we recognised immediately from Ms Betts’ videos.

The child’s arms were covered in sores caused by a bacterial skin infection, as her mother couldn’t afford the medication she needed.

She told us her baby had been born and raised in the village and that she had been approached by Ebou Bass when her daughter was three months old. He had told her there were people who wanted to sponsor her baby, she said, so she had allowed him to take the child to meet Ms Betts.

She was amazed to hear the stories being told about her daughter online. She said she had never received any money but had been given some groceries on a few occasions.

Ebou Bass, who is no longer PRC’s director in The Gambia, acknowledged that Mireya’s story was false and that the rescue centre was his family’s home. When challenged, he said it was Mr Whittington’s idea to say they had rescued a baby from traffickers but that he had gone along with it because the child they had used as a prop was very poor and he had hoped she would receive financial help.

Lamin Fatty, from a Gambian organisation called the Child Protection Alliance, is now working with the country’s authorities to investigate Mr Whittington and PRC. He says multiple laws may have been broken in this incident.

PRC insists Mireya’s story is true and told us she was rescued by PRC in collaboration with the Gambian authorities. It has invited the BBC to carry out a DNA test on the child we found. It maintains the Bass home is a PRC rescue centre and that Mireya wasn’t at the property because she was overseas visiting relatives.

Adam Whittington served in the Australian Army before joining the Metropolitan Police in 2001, where he worked for at least five years.

We have not been able to find out what has happened to all the money raised for PRC or where it is being spent – Mr Whittington has set up companies and charities in multiple countries, many of which have never filed any detailed accounts.

But we do know some donations haven’t reached their intended targets.

The BBC has found that, in 2022, the UK’s Charity Commission rejected an application to register PRC as it had not demonstrated it was exclusively charitable and had failed to respond to what the commission described as “significant issues” with its application.

Mr Whittington also has other charitable organisations registered in The Gambia, Kenya, Ukraine and the Philippines.

PRC was a registered charity in Australia until we told the Australian Charity Commission about our investigation. Its charitable status has now been revoked.

Adam Whittington is currently living in Russia. He didn’t respond to our request for an interview.

Since we started our investigation, some content has been removed from PRC’s website and Mr Whittington has been banned from Instagram. He instructed solicitors in Kenya to block our investigation from being broadcast, though they have not succeeded. He has launched an online campaign against the BBC, calling me a “rogue journalist”.

On his remaining social media I can see he is currently travelling back and forth to the Philippines – raising money for a rescue centre and claiming to rescue children. And he says he will soon be expanding PRC into South Africa.

It was an instinctive sporting gesture that has gone down in Olympic folklore, but, for German long-jump champion Luz Long, it would have dark consequences.

As Jesse Owens soared over the eight-metre mark to secure Berlin 1936 gold, Long – his biggest rival – leapt into the sandpit in Berlin to hug and congratulate him.

Later, in a striking contradiction to Nazi Germany’s twisted notion of Aryan supremacy and decades before the civil rights movement would spark radical change in the United States, the pair shared a lap of honour together, black and white athlete jogging arm in arm.

Not everyone was applauding. High in the stands, German leader Adolf Hitler watched on disapprovingly.

As they stood on the podium – Long giving the required Nazi salute and Owens saluting the Stars and Stripes flag of a nation not yet ready to accept him wholly as one of their own – both athletes were unaware of what lay in store.

Owens and Long, both born in 1913, were at the peak of their athletic powers when they locked horns in Berlin.

But that is where the similarities ended; their beginnings and journeys to the Games were polar opposites.

A 20th-century icon, Owens’ story has been widely told. He was the grandson of former slaves and the youngest of 10 children in a family of Alabama tenant farmers.

As a child, he picked cotton with the rest of his siblings, but his athletic ability became clear after the family moved to Cleveland and he was enrolled in school, aged nine.

He had gone by the nickname JC, short for James Cleveland, but after his teacher misheard him he was registered as Jesse and the name stuck.

Owens earned an athletic scholarship to attend Ohio State University where, under the tutelage of coach Larry Schnyder, he became one of the greatest sprinters the world has ever known.

At a track and field meeting at the University of Michigan in 1935, Owens broke three world records and equalled another, all in the space of an hour, setting a new mark of 8.13m for the long jump that would stand for 25 years.

Unlike his rival, Long enjoyed a privileged upbringing, born into a middle-class family in Leipzig. His father, Karl, owned a pharmacy in the centre of the city, while his mother, Johanna, was a qualified English teacher. She came from a respected academic family, which included scientist Justus von Liebig, known as the founder of organic chemistry.

Carl Ludwig Hermann Long, who became known as Luz for short, grew up with his four siblings in the countryside outside the city. They would have family athletics championships in their sizeable back garden.

Long joined Leipzig Sport Club in 1928, where he came under the guidance of coach Georg Richter, who helped him develop a technique of sailing through the air using his strength as a high-jumper, unlike Owens, who harnessed his pace as a sprinter.

The partnership with Richter proved fruitful, as Long broke the German long jump record in 1933 to become national champion, aged just 20. Just a couple of months before the Berlin Olympics, Long set a new European long jump record of 7.82m en route to his third national title.

While both Owens and Long were building momentum on the track, they were also contending with the political landscape off it.

In the United States, there was growing pressure to boycott the Berlin Games in light of stories about the treatment of Jewish people in Germany under the new Nazi regime.

Owens initially supported calls for a boycott of the Games, reportedly telling the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People “if there are any minorities in Germany who are being discriminated against, the United States should withdraw”.

But he eventually agreed to attend following pleas from his coach and assurances from the United States Olympic Committee, who had sent a delegation to Germany to assess conditions and discuss the hosts’ policy on the participation of Jewish athletes.

Back in Germany, the political pressure placed on athletes by the state was increasing.

“Athletes were representatives of the German Reich – both on and off the ash track – not private individuals,” says Julia Kellner-Long, Luz’s only grandchild.

Long’s rise to the national team came in 1933 – the same year Hitler was appointed chancellor of Germany.

In the unlikelihood that he was unaware what was expected of him, a banner posted at the training ground made it clear: “Track and field athletes think of the 1936 Olympics. We must not disappoint our leader Adolf Hitler.”

Hitler was present at Berlin’s Olympic Stadium as Owens and Long contested one of the Games’ greatest long jump finals.

After a see-sawing battle, Long matched Owens’ leading distance of 7.87m with his penultimate attempt, to the delight of the home fans.

But Owens dug out his best when he needed it most, responding with 7.94m, to move clear of Long once again.

Long produced a foul on his final attempt, but his performance was good enough for silver and a first Olympic long jump medal for Germany.

Owens, with his title already assured, created further history with a final leap of 8.06m – setting an Olympic record that would stand for 24 years.

Long, putting aside his own disappointment, instinctively leapt into the sandpit to congratulate him.

Locked in that moment, alone in their embrace as an appreciative capacity crowd of more than 100,000 people watched on, Owens confided to his rival: “You forced me to give my best.”

Between them, Owens and Long had surpassed the previous Olympic record five times.

“It’s almost like a fairytale – to jump so long in this weather,” said Long in an interview with his hometown newspaper, Neue Leipziger Zeitung.

“I can’t help it. I run to him. I’m the first to congratulate him, to hug him.”

Long’s impulsive reaction caught the attention of the German authorities.

Soon after the Olympic Games, his mother, Johanna, made a note in her diary about a warning from Rudolf Hess, then deputy Fuhrer of the Nazi Party.

Long, she wrote, had “received an order from the highest authority” that he should never again embrace a black person.

He had been noted as “not racially conscious” by the Nazi regime.

The embrace clearly angered the Nazis, who often used powerful imagery to further its own ideology and feared how Owens and Long’s friendship might undermine its propaganda.

In that respect, they were right.

Almost 90 years later, Owens and Long’s friendship is one of the most enduring Olympic stories.

“The gesture of kindness and fairness touched the hearts of many people,” says Kellner-Long.

“Together, Luz and Jesse enjoyed a special friendship that day, demonstrating to the world that in sports and in life, friendship and respect are the most important things, regardless of background or skin colour.”

Stuart Rankin, Owens’ only grandson, is equally struck by its significance.

“I often say that of all my grandfather’s accomplishments at the 1936 Olympics, the unlikely friendship that he struck with Luz Long is the thing of which I am most proud and most impressed by,” he says.

“For them to have forged that friendship, under those conditions, in those circumstances, in that stadium, in the face of Hitler, was just phenomenal.”

It would be the only time Owens and Long would compete against each other.

Owens went on to add the 200m and 4x100m titles to his wins in the 100m and long jump and would take home four gold medals from the German capital.

But he angered authorities by refusing to compete in a meeting in Sweden immediately after the Games, instead returning home to take advantage of his new-found fame and a clutch of commercial opportunities.

The decision would result in Owens being banned from competing by the American Athletic Union – effectively ending his sporting career.

Owens was still given a hero’s welcome in a special homecoming ceremony in New York, but an incident at a party thrown in his honour at the Waldorf Astoria proved that despite his Olympic glory, nothing had changed.

On arriving at the hotel, Owens was directed away from the lobby by a doorman to a side entrance he was told was for tradesmen and black people.

It was a stark reminder of the deep-rooted division and racial prejudice at the heart of American society.

Long left Berlin as Olympic silver-medallist, national champion and European long-jump record holder.

He would go on to extend that mark to 7.90m the following year – a record that stood until 1956.

But he could not escape scrutiny or suspicion.

“Luz’s embrace in the sandpit had consequences,” says Kellner-Long.

“He was placed under closer monitoring by the authorities, compelling him to tread more carefully and maintain a lower profile.”

Long did not compete again after the outbreak of World War Two, instead focusing on his career as a lawyer.

Heinrich, his youngest brother, was killed in action. Devastated by the loss, Long attempted to plot a course through the war for his own family.

He married Gisela in 1941, and they had a son – Julia’s father – in November of that year, naming him Kai Heinrich, after his lost brother.

By then, Long had been drafted into the military, initially carrying out duties away from the frontline.

However, in 1943 Long was shipped out to Sicily with the 10th Battery Parachute Anti-Aircraft Regiment. A month later, he would send his final letter home to Gisela, who, by this time, was heavily pregnant with their second son, Wolfgang Matthias.

“In the letter, Luz described camping in tents on a beautiful flower meadow surrounded by mountains, a peaceful setting – that was his final communication with his family,” says Kellner-Long. “The next day, 30 May 1943, Wolfgang was born. Unfortunately, Luz never got to meet him.”

Allied forces landed in Sicily on 10 July 1943, as part of an operation to liberate Italy. Four days later, Long was hit in his leg by shrapnel, as German forces retreated, and bled to death.

Gisela received notification on 30 July that her husband was missing in action, presumed dead. It was only after another seven years that the details were confirmed and his grave, in the German section of honour at the American military cemetery in Gela, was found.

Owens chose not to enlist for military service during the war, and neither was he drafted.

But, banned from official athletic competition and with commercial offers quickly drying up, he had to find unorthodox ways of supporting his family.

He would take on local sprinters, giving them a 10 or 20-yard head start, before reeling them in with ease to claim a cash prize.

Or, when his human rivals weren’t forthcoming, Owens would race motorbikes, cars, and horses.

“People say it was degrading for an Olympic champion to run against a horse,” Owens said, “but what was I supposed to do? I had four gold medals, but you can’t eat four gold medals.”

After flitting between menial jobs, things started to improve for Owens in the 1950s when he found employment as a motivational speaker. He started his own public relations business and became a sought-after figure, travelling around the globe as a sporting ambassador.

During a trip to Germany in 1951, with the Harlem Globetrotters basketball team, Owens reached out to Long’s family. He met Kai and took him to the Globetrotters game in Hamburg as his guest of honour.

In 1964, Kai took part in a documentary, Jesse Owens Returns To Berlin, during which the two recreated a picture of Owens and Long reclining trackside at Berlin’s Olympic Stadium.

“Kai admired Jesse so much – his charisma, his modesty, and his natural gift and success as an athlete,” says Kellner-Long.

Owens died of lung cancer in 1980 and was posthumously awarded the Congressional Medal of Honour by then-president George Bush Sr in 1990.

His wife, Ruth, has continued his legacy, running the Jesse Owens Foundation before passing on the baton to their daughters – Gloria, Marlene and Beverly – and more recently their five grandchildren.

Over the years, the Long and Owens families have stayed in touch.

Julia Kellner-Long, along with Owens’ granddaughter Gina, lit the Olympic flame in a special ceremony at the Berlin Stadium in 2004. With Marlene, she then presented the long jump medals when the World Athletics Championships were held in Berlin in 2009.

Kellner-Long and Rankin would become close friends after a chance meeting in Munich in 2012, and have recently worked together on a documentary about their grandparents.

“The relationship between the families means a lot to me, and I am proud of our connection,” says Kellner-Long.

“Julia and I joke around often and think of both of our grandfathers looking down and smiling and being quite happy that the families are still connected despite the years,” adds Rankin.

While the reality of the friendship between Owens and Long is held dear by both families, their special bond has taken on a life of its own online.

One widely repeated myth involves a vivid letter supposedly written by Long to Owens from the “dry sand and wet blood” of north Africa. It calls on Owens to return to Germany to find his son if Long fails to make it home.

One of the lines reads: “Tell him, Jesse, what times were like when we not separated by war, tell him how things can be between men on this earth.”

Unbearably poignant, but almost certainly untrue.

Long never served in north Africa. Neither family have seen such a letter and both question the likelihood and logistics of it being written and delivered.

Kellner-Long understands the powerful message people continue to take from their story, however.

“It offers hope and inspiration to people worldwide,” she says. “In times when racism and exclusion are sadly still prevalent, this story is more relevant than ever.”

“I think that Luz’s example of sportsmanship is one that should be preserved and held high for all time,” says Rankin.

“My grandfather’s relationship with Luz is certainly one he never would have predicted but, because it happened, it provided a hopeful perspective in my grandfather, and certainly in me, that, despite the tide of an entire nation, it doesn’t mean every member of that nation is the same.

“Luz’s strength and character, it’s almost indescribable, but it demonstrates how in the most unlikeliest of places you can still find good.”

Related Topics

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Inside the beauty pageant in one of the world’s worst places to be a woman

By Kiin Hassan Fakat & Mary HarperMogadishu

While many people in Somalia squeezed into cafes and homes on Sunday night to watch the Euro football final, hundreds of Mogadishu’s most stylish residents gathered in the beachside Elite Hotel for another competition: Miss Somalia.

The fact that about a kilometre away a car bomb exploded outside the Top Coffee restaurant which was packed with football fans highlights the dramatic contrasts of life in Somalia.

While the beauty show contestants were parading in the hotel, at least five people were killed and about 20 injured in the nearby blast.

The militant Islamist group al-Shabab, which has controlled much of Somalia for more than 15 years, said it carried out the attack.

Hani Abdi Gas founded the Miss Somalia competition in 2021, a brave thing to do in a culturally conservative country with problems with Islamist militants. Somalia has regularly topped the list of the world’s worst places to be a woman.

Ms Gas grew up in Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya, along with hundreds of thousands of other Somalis who fled war and drought. She returned to her homeland in 2020.

Although the pageant is about beauty, Ms Gas said the inspiration behind the competition was to lift up women’s voices and take them out of isolation.

“It fosters unity and empowerment,” she said.

Ms Gas believes it is time for Somalia to join the rest of the world when it comes to beauty contests. “I want to celebrate the aspirations of women from diverse backgrounds, build their confidence and give them a chance to showcase Somali culture worldwide.”

This year’s competition certainly represented women from different walks of life. One of the contestants was a policewoman.

Many in Somalia find the idea of beauty pageants appalling.

Some see them as an affront to Islam and to Somali culture. Others say they are another form of gender abuse, reducing women to objects.

“I am disgusted with the idea of our young women competing in this dreadful contest,” said clan leader Ahmed Abdi Halane.

“Such things are against our culture and our religion. If a girl wears tight clothes and appears on stage, it will bring shame upon her family and her clan. Women are supposed to stay at home and wear modest clothes.”

Some women are also opposed to beauty contests.

“It is good to support the Somali youth but not in ways that conflict with our religion,” said student Sabrina, who did not want to reveal her surname.

“It is not appropriate for a woman to appear in public without covering her neck and that is what the Miss Somalia contestants did.”

Unlike the sombre-coloured robes and veils worn by many Somali women, the Miss Somalia contestants wore flamboyant, figure-hugging gowns.

Dressed in a long golden dress with sleeves flowing down to the floor, 24-year-old Aisha Ikow was crowned Miss Somalia and took home a $1,000 (£770) cash prize.

She is a university student and make-up artist, and represented South-West state. The other finalists were the regional beauty queens from Jubaland in the south and Galmudug in central Somalia.

“I will use this as an opportunity to fight against early marriage and to promote girls’ education,” said Ms Ikow.

“The competition celebrates Somali culture and beauty while shaping a brighter future for women.”

The six judges, five women and one man, found it hard to choose the winner.

The panel included the founder Ms Gas, a representative from the ministry of youth and Miss Somalia 2022. They judged the contestants according to their physical beauty, the way they walked the catwalk, the way they dressed and the way they spoke in public.

There was also an online vote open to the public.

It cost $1 to vote, with the money raised used to fund the event in Mogadishu and overseas trips to compete in the Miss Africa, Miss World and Miss Universe competitions.

The night-time pageant in a luxury seafront hotel was a far cry from the lives of most people in Somalia, especially women.

Four million Somalis, about a quarter of the population, are living elsewhere in the country after being forced from their homes.

The UN estimates between 70% and 80% of them are women.

In 2024, enough data was collected for Somalia to be included in the United Nations Human Development Index for the first time in three decades. It came last.

Somalia is fourth from bottom on the UN’s Gender Inequality Index. Aid groups say 52% of women in the country have experienced gender-based violence. About 98% undergo female genital mutilation.

Traditionally, when a man raped a woman, his “punishment” was that he had to marry the woman who he had sexually assaulted. Attitudes towards rape and other forms of abuse against women have not changed much over the years.

In 2013, a woman in Mogadishu was sentenced to jail for one year after reporting that she had been raped by members of the security forces.

In the self-declared republic of Somaliland, religious leaders quashed a 2018 sexual offences law almost as soon as it was signed. The revised version does not protect women from child marriage, forced marriage, rape or other forms of sexual abuse.

But the fact that a Miss Somalia competition can be held in Mogadishu, even a kilometre away from a suicide bombing, shows that the country is changing both in terms of attitudes and in terms of security.

A beauty pageant would have been unthinkable a few years ago, especially when al-Shabab controlled the capital.

The crowd at Elite Hotel did not leave until the early hours of the morning. They did not hear the sound of the nearby attack as it was drowned out by the noise of the Indian Ocean waves breaking on the beach.

More BBC stories on Somalia:

  • Inside Somalia’s hidden world of sex work
  • The bid to heal the Horn of Africa port controversy
  • Somalia’s football pitch that doubles as an execution ground
  • Somalia’s men in sarongs taking on al-Shabab militants

BBC Africa podcasts

Jay Slater’s mum says ‘our hearts are broken’ after son’s body found

By Guy Hedgecoe & Jonny HumphriesLynette HorsburghBBC News

The mother of British teenager Jay Slater says the family’s “hearts are broken” after a body found in Tenerife was confirmed as her son.

Debbie Duncan said in statement that her son’s death was the “worst news”, adding: “I just can’t believe this could happen to my beautiful boy.”

Officials say the 19-year-old’s death is a result of “trauma consistent with a fall in a rocky area”, adding that fingerprint tests showed the body found in Masca on Monday was Mr Slater.

Earlier, charity LBT Global had confirmed that Mr Slater’s possessions were also discovered near his last known location.

The teenager, from Oswaldtwistle, Lancashire, was last seen on 17 June, after visiting an Airbnb rented by two people he had been with at the NRG music festival on the island.

  • ‘Vile’ Jay Slater trolling ‘devastating’ for family

‘Fall from considerable height’

Earlier, the High Court of Justice of the Canary Islands said: “We have a positive identification and more data: fingerprint tests show that the body is [that] of Jay Slater and that the death was caused by trauma consistent with a fall in a rocky area.”

LBT Global’s Matthew Searle was with Mr Slater’s mother when they heard the news that the body had been identified as her son and said the family were devastated.

He said: “The announcement does seem to confirm that Jay died of injuries consistent with an accidental fall from a considerable height.”

Mr Searle said the charity, which helps families in missing persons cases overseas, would be supporting the family “to make this horrific time as easy as possible”.

He added: “We are working with the family now to sort out the next steps of taking Jay home, recovery of his belongings and laying him to rest.”

The BBC visits the mountain area where Jay Slater search ended

An earlier court statement today said that documentation found with the body belonged to the apprentice bricklayer.

“It is confirmed that the documentation that was on the body found yesterday in the mountains of Masca belongs to Jay Slater,” it said.

It went on to add that “everything suggests that it was an accidental fall” but the results of the official investigation into the death would take more time.

Mr Slater’s body was discovered by members of a mountain rescue team from the Spanish Civil Guard, near the village of Masca, on Monday.

Why did Spanish police say the search was called off?

Just two weeks ago, the civil guard on the island said the search had been called off, though the investigation remained open.

It is now clear that, in fact, the force was continuing with searches during this time.

Hinting at a possible reason, police said they made efforts to “preserve the natural space to ensure it did not fill up with curious onlookers”.

That appeared to be a reference to the huge interest the case generated in the UK, particularly on social media, where bizarre conspiracy theories were circulating and which even led to some online sleuths travelling to Tenerife to join in the search.

In contrast to the UK, where officers will often give briefings during investigations, the Spanish police give very little information to the media while cases like this are open. They did, however, say that nothing had been ruled out.

It is possible that this approach allowed the information vacuum to be filled by “curious onlookers”. Announcing the halting of the search yet continuing it in a low-key, virtually secret, way allowed the online noise – and media attention – to subside.

Nonetheless, the police do appear keen to demonstrate how demanding the search has been and why it has taken so long.

Video released by the civil guard showed just how difficult it was to access the steep rocky area where the body was discovered.

Earlier, a friend of Jay Slater paid tribute to “the happiest and most smiley person in the room”.

Lucy Law, who was the last known person to speak to Mr Slater during a phone call on 17 June, paid tribute to him on her Instagram page.

She said: “Honestly lost for words. Always the happiest and most smiley person in the room, you was (sic) one of a kind Jay and you’ll be missed more than you know.”

Ms Law’s tribute continued: “I’m sure you’ll ‘have your dancing shoes polished and ready’ waiting for us all.

“We all love you buddy. Fly high.”

Accrington and Rossendale College, where Mr Slater was studying as an apprentice bricklayer, said it was “deeply saddened” to hear the news of his death.

It added, Mr Slater was a “hard-working apprentice” at the college “with a very bright future ahead of him”.

“Our thoughts and condolences go out to his family, friends, and all who knew and loved him.”

The head teachers of the primary and high school Mr Slater attended in Oswaldtwistle have issued a joint tribute to him.

Andrew Williams, head teacher of Rhyddings High School, and James McBride, head teacher of West End Primary School, said: “All members of our school communities, both past and present, share in our condolences and deepest sympathies for those who knew Jay.

“As a devoted mother, we know Debbie would have never given up looking for Jay, and she and the family are firmly in our thoughts and prayers at this difficult time.”

About 100 people attended a vigil in memory of Mr Slater at West End Methodist Church in Oswaldtwistle earlier, where they released balloons.

Friend Holly Kidd said she “always hoped he would be alright”.

“I used to go out with him round town. He was such a lovely lad, it’s really upsetting. Just a really good friend. I just want him to know that we all miss him and we always will,” she said.

Carly Armstrong, whose son was friends with the teenager, said: “It’s been heartbreaking. They grew up together.

“If I could have gone over and searched the mountains myself I would have. It could have been any of them really, it’s just devastating.

“I want to show Jay’s mum that we all love her, are thinking of her and are all here.”

Pam Kerann who coached Mr Slater at football when he was younger, said: “It’s nice for the community to come together and remember Jay.

“Everyone’s got their own memories of him. He’s a mop-haired little footballer to me.”

Thailand expands visa-free entry to 93 countries

By Kelly Ng & Thanyarat Doksonein Singapore and Bangkok

Thailand has expanded its visa-free entry scheme to 93 countries and territories as it seeks to revitalize its tourism industry.

Visitors can stay in the South-East Asian nation for up to 60 days under the new scheme that took effect on Monday,

Previously, passport holders from 57 countries were allowed to enter without a visa.

Tourism is a key pillar of the Thai economy, but it has not fully recovered from the pandemic.

Thailand recorded 17.5 million foreign tourists arrivals in the first six months of 2024, up 35% from the same period last year, according to official data. However, the numbers pale in comparison to pre-pandemic levels.

Most of the visitors were from China, Malaysia and India.

Tourism revenue during the same period came in at 858 billion baht ($23.6bn; £18.3bn), less than a quarter of the government’s target.

Millions of tourists flock to Thailand every year for its golden temples, white sand beaches, picturesque mountains and vibrant night life.

The revised visa-free rules are part of a broader plan to boost tourism.

Also on Monday, Thailand introduced a new five-year visa for remote workers, that allows holders to stay for up to 180 days each year.

The country will also allow visiting students, who earn a bachelor’s degree or higher in Thailand, to stay for one year after graduation to find a job or travel.

In June, authorities announced an extension of a waiver on hoteliers’ operating fees for two more years. They also scrapped a proposed tourism fee for visitors flying into the country.

However some stakeholders are concerned that the country’s infrastructure may not be able to keep up with travellers’ demands.

“If more people are coming, it means the country as a whole… has to prepare our resources to welcome them,” said Kantapong Thananuangroj, president of the Thai Tourism Promotion Association.

“If not, [the tourists] may not be impressed with the experience they have in Thailand and we may not get a second chance,” he said.

Chamnan Srisawat, president of the Tourism Council of Thailand, said he foresees a “bottleneck in air traffic as the incoming flights may not increase in time to catch up with the demands of the travellers”.

Some people have also raised safety concerns after rumours that tourists have been kidnapped and sent across the border to work in scam centres in Myanmar or Cambodia.

A fatal shooting in Bangkok’s most famous shopping mall last year has also caused concern among visitors.

Further delays to Young Thug trial after judge removed

By Bonnie McLarenCulture reporter

The judge who has been overseeing the long-running racketeering trial against Young Thug has been removed.

The Atlanta rapper’s charges were put on hold earlier this month after lawyers for him and co-defendant Deamonte Kendrick asked for the judge to be recused over misconduct allegations.

Their lawyers accused Fulton County Superior Court Judge Ural Glanville of holding an “improper” meeting on 10 June when he met privately with prosecutors and a key witness.

Glanville maintained that the meeting was proper and argued that no one gained a tactical advantage as a result but while Judge Rachel Krause did not fault him for holding the meeting, she ordered the clerk of court to assign the case to a different judge.

It will now be overseen by Judge Shukura Ingram, according to Rolling Stone.

Krause said she had “no doubt that Judge Glanville can and would continue presiding fairly over this matter”.

But the motion was granted out of the “necessity of preserving the public’s confidence in the judicial system”, AP reported.

Krause acknowledged that the meeting “could have – and perhaps should have – taken place in open court”.

Brian Steel, a lawyer for Young Thug, said in an emailed statement to AP that his client is innocent and sought to clear his name through a fair trial.

2022 arrest

The news has caused more delays in the trial for the rapper, whose real name is Jeffery Lamar Williams.

His case has only inched forward since his arrest in May 2022. Jury selection for the trial – which has included testimony from dozens of witnesses – took nearly 10 months.

Prosecutors have accused the Atlanta rapper of co-founding a violent street gang in his hometown, hitting him with racketeering charges.

Georgia prosecutors used the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (Rico) Act – famously used in mafia prosecutions – to charge the rapper and 27 associates who were allegedly involved in the criminal enterprise.

Mr Williams, 32, is also charged with gang, drug and gun crimes and is standing trial with five of the others indicted with him.

Mr Kendrick’s lawyer told Rolling Stone that they are considering requesting a mistrial following the recusal.

‘Struggling’ Drag Race star takes a step back

By Riyah CollinsBBC Newsbeat

Drag queen Trixie Mattel will be taking a break from work after “struggling” for more than a year.

Trixie became a world renowned star after first appearing on Ru Paul’s Drag Race in 2015.

Since then, the queen returned for the All Stars version and as host of the spin-off show The Pit Stop, as well as running a YouTube channel and make-up business.

Trixie told fans in a video that all the work was “not sustainable” and there would be “a hiatus” for at least three months.

“I need a complete reboot,” says Trixie, who uses she/her pronouns in drag and he/him when not performing.

It was a rare video where Trixie, real name Brian Firkus, was out of drag.

“I feel uncomfortable about telling so much of myself,” Brian says, before opening up about a tough year.

“Things happened this year that I’m not ready to talk about, it just really beat it out of me and taught me new lows of the human experience.

“When you feel like you cannot stop crying and you’re so upset and then you have to put on a wig and make people laugh – it is chilling.”

Brian says he’d been working himself to “death” as Trixie and had become ill from stress.

It got to a point where he “struggled to enjoy” drag, which “I feel weird complaining about because all my wildest dreams came true”.

Brian grew up in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and has previously shared his experience of growing up in poverty.

“Growing up poor is traumatising,” he says in the latest video, saying it’s affected his work ethic.

“You can’t take a day off because there’s a pay cheque waiting.

“All I was doing was this. It was all work and money making and then my social life, my family life, my personal life… twigs. Frail twigs.”

As well as Drag Race, Trixie is well known for working with drag queen Katya Zamolodchikova – the pair often perform together and also have a Netflix series and online show UNHhhh.

Since 2022 Trixie’s also had her own show on Discovery+, Trixie Motel, which follows the drag queen as she renovates a motel in California.

Brian told fans: “I love doing all my little jobs” as Trixie but has realised “it’s a good thing to have boundaries”.

“Being a hard worker is fierce, being a hard worker at the expense of your real life and health is not,” he says.

“When you have the fortune that I’ve had, you shouldn’t be stupid and abuse it like I have.”

Brian says he’ll be visiting friends and family and will also be taking a break from social media.

“This break is so overdue,” he says.

“I don’t know what I’m going to come back as, maybe not even as a drag queen, who knows?

“I’m very excited to feel really into drag again and really into performing.”

Listen to Newsbeat live at 12:45 and 17:45 weekdays – or listen back here.

Near misses and risk-taking filmed at crossings

By Marcus WhiteBBC News
A girl running in front of a train in Fishbourne was among recent incidents

Video of dangerous incidents at level crossings has been released as part of a summer safety campaign.

In June, a girl was filmed running across a crossing in Fishbourne, West Sussex, just a couples of metres in front of an advancing train.

Recent CCTV footage also showed people hanging from rising crossing barriers in Chertsey, Surrey; rushing cyclists colliding in Hounslow, London; and a car swerving to avoid closing barriers in Bramley, Hampshire.

Network Rail, which released the video, said July was a peak time for incidents.

Sam Pead, a regional level crossing manager, said: “It’s frustrating we continue to see people recklessly risking their lives when crossing the railway.

“Across the Southern region, trains can travel as fast as 140mph (225km/h) and are largely powered by the third rail which carries more than enough electricity to kill or seriously injure and is always on.”

Farnham in Surrey and Star Lane in Wokingham, Berkshire, were the most abused level crossings in the Wessex region last year, Network Rail said.

Addlestone and Ash in Surrey and Poole High Street in Dorset also recorded more than one incident per month.

In Chertsey, the CCTV film showed a truck tearing off a barrier in the driver’s effort to escape the tracks.

Incidents involving poorly trained or uncontrolled dogs were a post-Covid trend, Network Rail said.

Clappers Lane in Ferring, West Sussex, recorded near misses involving a dog walker and a cyclist.

Another dog walker ignored a stop sign at Ashtead Common, Surrey, and a dog was also filmed waiting alone on the track at the same location.

The firm reported 28 near misses in the Wessex region in the 2023-24 financial year, which was 13% fewer than the year before.

However, incidents of level crossing misuse in the region rose by 24% to 466.

See also

Related link

Kenya serial killer suspect tortured to confess – lawyer

By Ian WafulaBBC News, Nairobi

A man described as a “serial killer” by Kenya’s police was tortured into making a confession, his lawyer has told a court in capital, Nairobi.

Police said that Collins Jumaisi Khalusha, 33, confessed to having killed 42 women since 2022, including his own wife, after his arrest on Monday.

He was detained following the recent discovery of nine mutilated bodies at an abandoned quarry in Nairobi.

Prosecutors denied that he had been mistreated and the court said the suspect could be held for a month, pending further investigations.

John Maina Ndegwa, Mr Khalusha’s lawyer, said his client had been molested by officers and it was “laughable” to suggest that he had confessed.

After the hearing, at which Mr Khalusha appeared in handcuffs but did not speak, his lawyer said he hoped the confession would be expunged from the court records.

“He says he was strangled to confess. You could tell he was in distress, terrified and in anguish,” Mr Ndegwa told the BBC.

He added that he had asked that his client be taken to hospital for urgent treatment.

Mr Khalusha was arrested at a bar early on Monday morning as he was watching the Euro 2024 football final between Spain and England.

He then led officers to his house near the crime scene where 10 phones, a laptop, identity cards and personal female clothing were found, police said.

Since Friday, police have cordoned off the dumpsite, the Mukuru quarry, where the bodies were found in various stages of decomposition.

The victims were aged between 18 and 30 and were all killed in the same way, according to the police.

There has been shock and outrage in Kenya over the murders – and anger directed towards the police that such crimes could have gone unnoticed for so long.

Kenya’s police have been accused of widespread human rights abuses in the past – and the force is currently under investigation over deaths and abductions following recent anti-government protests.

You may also be interested in:

  • Kenya protesters traumatised by abductions – lawyer
  • Mystery and heartbreak of the bodies found in a Kenyan river
  • Kenya femicide: A woman’s murder exposes the country’s toxic online misogyny

BBC Africa podcasts

Jack Black axes tour over bandmate’s Trump comment

By Bonnie McLarenCulture reporter

Jack Black has said he’s cancelled the rest of the Tenacious D world tour after his bandmate Kyle Gass sparked an outcry with a comment about the assassination attempt on Donald Trump.

The comedy rock group were on stage in Sydney, Australia, on Sunday when Gass was asked to make a wish after being presented with a cake for his 64th birthday.

He appeared to reply: “Don’t miss Trump next time.”

In a statement on Instagram, Black said he was “blindsided” by the comment.

“I would never condone hate speech or encourage political violence in any form,” the comedian and actor wrote.

He said he didn’t feel it was “appropriate to continue the Tenacious D tour”, and that the rest of the group’s “creative plans are on hold”.

Black added that he is “grateful to the fans for their support and understanding”.

The controversy had already led to Tuesday’s gig in Newcastle, New South Wales, being postponed.

Gass apologised for the comment on Instagram, saying it was a “severe lack of judgement”.

He wrote: “The line I improvised onstage Sunday night in Sydney was highly inappropriate, dangerous and a terrible mistake.

“I don’t condone violence of any kind, in any form, against anyone. What happened was a tragedy, and I’m incredibly sorry for my severe lack of judgement. I profoundly apologise to those I’ve let down and truly regret any pain I’ve caused.”

Gass also split with his agent following the incident.

“Due to what occurred, we have parted ways,” Michael Greene of Greene Talent told BBC News.

While many in the Sydney crowd can be heard laughing in video from the concert, the comment launched an angry reaction on social media – with X owner Elon Musk calling it “evil”.

Senator Ralph Babet – the United Australia Party’s only parliamentarian – asked for the band to be deported.

In a statement, he said the duo should “be immediately removed from the country after wishing for the assassination of Donald Trump at their Sydney concert”.

Asked about the comments while attending the Republican National Convention, Australian Ambassador to the US Kevin Rudd said it made him “physically ill” that someone would joke about such violence.

“People might think that it is a bit of funny ha-ha at a concert to run off at the mouth about this stuff. It’s not. It’s about physical life,” the former prime minister of Australia said.

“These people just [need to] grow up and find a decent job.”

Trump was shot in the ear when a gunman opened fire at a Pennsylvania rally on Saturday.

The FBI has identified the gunman who targeted Trump as Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, a kitchen worker from Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, who is a registered Republican.

A Secret Service sniper shot Crooks dead after he fired at the former president. One spectator was killed and two others were seriously injured.

Mystery surrounds deaths at Grand Hyatt hotel in Bangkok

By Jamie Whitehead and Thanyarat DoksoneBBC News, in London & Bangkok

Six people have been found dead in a luxury hotel suite in Thailand’s capital, Bangkok.

Confusion and mystery has surrounded the grim discovery, with local media initially suggesting there had been a shooting at the five-star Grand Hyatt Erawan Bangkok, but police later dismissed these reports and said there was no evidence of gunfire.

Instead, authorities are investigating whether the victims died of poisoning.

The deceased – three men and three women – were all Vietnamese nationals, and some had dual American citizenship, Thailand’s prime minister said.

Srettha Thavisin, who visited the scene, added that investigators suspect the victims had been dead for 24 hours by the time they were found and that post mortem examinations would be carried out.

He added that police “needed to find out the motives”, and that the deaths were the result of a “killing”, not a suicide.

Seven people were booked to stay at the hotel, but only five checked in and one person is currently unaccounted for, Metropolitan police chief Lt Gen Thiti Saengswang said.

One of the victims found in the room did not match the hotel’s records.

He added that suspicious substances and the DNA of the victims were detected in drinks ordered to the suite just before 14:00 local time on Monday.

The food the victims ordered was not touched.

The guests had been scheduled to check out on Monday.

They went from the hotel’s seventh floor to the fifth, where their bodies were found by housekeepers in the suite’s living room and bedroom.

Investigators say there is no evidence of a fight or a robbery, and the only wound found on one of the bodies was likely caused by a collapse.

In the bathroom, tea, energy drinks and honey were found, all in open containers, the police chief said.

It also appears that two of the victims tried to get to the hotel suite’s door, which was locked from the inside, but did not manage to reach it in time.

The victims’ luggage will now be searched as part of the investigation.

A spokesperson for the US State Department said they were “closely monitoring the situation”, and expressed their condolences to the families of the victims.

Matthew Miller added that Washington was “ready to provide assistance” to them.

The Grand Hyatt Erawan Bangkok is in a popular tourist spot. Some of the victims were visiting Thailand for the first time, while others had been before, a police officer who wished to remain anonymous said.

The prime minister said that he did not want this incident to affect Thailand’s image or have an impact on tourism – which is a key pillar of the Thai economy, but which has not fully recovered from the coronavirus pandemic.

The country has just expanded its visa-free entry scheme to 93 countries and territories in an effort to entice tourists back.

Trump security boosted weeks ago over Iran plot to kill him

By Max MatzaBBC News

Protection for Donald Trump was boosted several weeks ago after US authorities learned of an Iranian plot to kill him, according to national security officials.

Officials say there is no known connection between the alleged Iranian plot and the assassination attempt on the former president on Saturday in Pennsylvania.

However, the disclosure that security had been tightened raises further questions over how Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, was able to climb a building and get close enough to fire at Trump.

The US Secret Service and the Trump campaign were notified of the Iranian threat, and security was increased as a result, according to a US national security official.

Intelligence sources told CBS, the BBC’s US news partner, that the Secret Service bolstered security in June in response to the Iranian threat. This included extra counter-assault and counter-sniper agents, drones and robotic dogs.

CBS reported that the details of a potential Iranian operation were obtained through “human source intelligence”, and came amid a notable increase in Iranian chatter regarding attacks against Trump.

Trump and officials including his former secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, have faced threats from Tehran since ordering the drone strike assassination of Qassim Soleimani, the commander of Iran’s Quds force, in Iraq in 2020.

The Iranian mission at the United Nations called the report “unsubstantiated and malicious”, adding that Trump was “a criminal who must be prosecuted and punished in a court of law”.

Anthony Guglielmi, a spokesman for the US Secret Service, said it and other agencies were “constantly receiving new potential threat information and taking action to adjust resources, as needed”.

“We cannot comment on any specific threat stream, other than to say that the Secret Service takes threats seriously and responds accordingly.”

The Trump campaign said it did not comment on security matters and referred BBC questions to the Secret Service.

Adrienne Watson, a spokeswoman for the White House National Security Council, said that US security officials had been “tracking Iranian threats against former Trump administration officials for years”.

“These threats arise from Iran’s desire to seek revenge for the killing of Soleimani,” she said. “We consider this a national and homeland security matter of the highest priority.”

She however reiterated that the investigation “has not identified ties” between Crooks and “any accomplice or co-conspirator, foreign or domestic.”

In 2022, the Department of Justice announced criminal charges against a member of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, alleging that he was orchestrating a plot to kill Mr Bolton.

Prosecutors said the plot was “likely in retaliation” for the killing of Soleimani.

Questions have swirled about how police officers and agents responsible for the rally at Butler County fairgrounds, Pennsylvania, allowed Crooks to get so close.

The director of the Secret Service admitted that local police were inside the building while Crooks was on its roof aiming at Trump 130m (430ft) away.

CBS News, the BBC’s US partner, reported three local police snipers were inside the building and had seen Crooks getting on the roof.

The local sheriff’s department referred BBC questions to the state police, which said it was not responsible for the area containing the building.

A state police spokesman told the BBC that it provided “all resources” requested by the Secret Service, including between 30 to 40 troopers inside the perimeter.

President Joe Biden has ordered an independent review of how the gunman could have come so close to killing Trump, and the Secret Service also faces probes from Congress.

Islamic State group claims deadly attack in Oman

By David Gritten & Jaroslav LukivBBC News

Six people, including a policeman, have been killed and 28 others injured in a rare shooting attack near a Shia Muslim mosque in Oman’s capital, Muscat, police say.

The three attackers were also killed by security forces during the incident in the al-Wadi al-Kabir area on Monday night, according to a statement.

Police gave no details about the identities of the victims and gunmen, or the motive. But Pakistan said four Pakistanis were among those killed in a “terrorist attack” on the Imam Ali Mosque. India also said one of its citizens was killed.

The Sunni Muslim jihadist group Islamic State (IS) says three of its members were involved in the attack.

Supporters of the group celebrated the shooting on social media networks.

IS has repeatedly targeted Shia ceremonies, processions and worshippers in countries like Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. But it has never before claimed an attack in Oman, where the Shia are a minority.

Video showed a crowd running for cover inside the mosque’s courtyard as gunshots were heard. Worshippers had gathered there on the eve of the Shia holy day of Ashura.

The police statement expressed condolences to the victims’ families and said an investigation into the circumstances of the incident was under way.

It also emphasised “the necessity of obtaining information from official sources and disregarding unreliable information”.

Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said he was “deeply saddened” by the attack and that his heart went “out to the families of the victims”.

“I have instructed the Pakistan embassy in Muscat to extend all possible assistance to the injured and visit the hospitals personally,” he wrote on X.

“Pakistan stands in solidarity with the Sultanate of Oman and offers full assistance in the investigation.”

Pakistan’s embassy in Muscat named the four Pakistanis who were killed as Ghulam Abbas, Hasan Abbas, Sayyed Qaisar Abbas and Sulaiman Nawaz. It also said 30 Pakistanis were receiving hospital treatment.

On Tuesday morning, Pakistani ambassador Imran Ali said in a video that he had visited some of those injured at three local hospitals and described their conditions as “relatively safe”.

He also advised Pakistani residents of Oman to avoid al-Wadi al-Kabir and to co-operate with local authorities.

Mr Ali later told AFP news agency that the attackers had initially opened fire from a building next to the mosque, where hundreds of people had gathered for a prayer service.

The worshippers were held “hostage” by militants before “they were later freed by Omani forces”, he said.

India’s embassy said it had been informed by the Omani foreign ministry that one Indian national had been killed and another injured, without identifying them.

The shooting happened on the night of the ninth day of the Islamic month of Muharram, when Shia Muslims attend rituals on the eve of Ashura. Ashura is a major commemoration of the martyrdom of Imam Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, in a battle in the seventh century.

Some of the worshippers in the courtyard can be heard shouting “O God”, “O Hussein” and “I am here, O Hussein” in the video filmed inside the Imam Ali Mosque as the attack unfolded.

Oman that has long been seen as one of the most stable and secure countries in the Middle East. This has allowed it to play a leading role in mediation efforts to try to resolve conflicts and disputes in the region.

The Gulf sultanate has a population of about 4.6 million, of which more than 40% are foreign workers.

The government does not publish statistics about religious affiliation.

However, the US state department estimates that 95% of the population is Muslim, with 45% Sunni, 45% Ibadi and 5% Shia. Hindus, Buddhists and Christians make up the remaining 5%.

Biden considering major Supreme Court reform: report

By Christal Hayes and Anthony ZurcherBBC News

Joe Biden is considering backing a host of reforms to the US Supreme Court including ending lifetime appointments, according to US media.

Backing such changes would mark a major reversal for the Democratic president. It comes after the high court made a series of decisions including the removal of the federal right to abortion and a ruling that gave Donald Trump immunity from prosecution for “official acts” as president.

CBS News, the BBC’s partner in the US, reported that Mr Biden was examining establishing term limits for justices, which are currently lifetime appointments, and bolstering the court’s ethics code.

However, changes would be difficult to pass in a divided Congress.

On a weekend call, Mr Biden told Democrats in the Congressional Progressive Caucus that he was working with experts on and reforms would be announced soon, a source familiar with the call told CBS News.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre declined to elaborate when asked about the proposed changes, or when an announcement might be made.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump attacked what he called an “illegal and unConstitutional attack on our SACRED… Supreme Court”.

Mr Biden has long resisted calls from his party to reform the court. Some Democrats had argued change was needed after his predecessor Trump appointed three right-wing justices to shape a 6-3 conservative majority.

There have also been questions about ethics on the high court with Justice Clarence Thomas accepting luxury trips from a billionaire Republican donor, and questions about his wife’s support for overturning the 2020 presidential election when Trump lost.

Mr Biden created a commission to issue recommendations early in his presidency. The advice was never acted upon.

Democrats would face a huge challenge to get any reform through a divided Senate and a Republican-controlled House of Representatives.

The high court’s opinions this term displayed the sharp political shift, with the conservative majority issuing a series of high-profile rulings that affected abortion rights, gun laws, the environment and Trump’s criminal trials.

The high court also threw out Mr Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan – which would have wiped off billions in debt for Americans.

On its last day of opinions, the court ruled Trump and other presidents have a wide (but not absolute) immunity from criminal prosecution for their actions in office.

One of the four criminal cases against Trump has since been dismissed and sentencing has been delayed in another.

Along with the reforms, Mr Biden is also examining backing a constitutional amendment that would eliminate the broad immunity cited by the court.

Mr Biden’s reported plan, if announced, would at least give him a new campaign issue in the runup to November’s election.

The president repeatedly cites the Supreme Court and its rulings on the campaign trail. He made mention of the high court Tuesday during an interview with BET, bringing up the court’s ruling in 2022 that eliminated the right to an abortion by overturning Roe v Wade.

Mr Biden noted Trump could have the option of appointing another justice or two if he wins. “Just imagine if he has two more appointments,” Biden said.

Deadly unrest over job quotas grips Bangladesh

By Akbar Hossain and Anbarasan EthirajanBBC News in Dhaka & London
Watch: Bricks thrown as Bangladeshi students clash over job quotas

Schools and universities across Bangladesh have been shut until further notice after six people were killed in protests over quotas in government jobs.

University students have been holding rallies for several days against the system of providing reservations in public sector jobs for the children of war heroes, who fought for the country’s independence from Pakistan in 1971.

Some jobs are also reserved for women, ethnic minorities and the disabled.

A third of posts are kept for the children of those categorised as war heroes. The students argue that the system is discriminatory, and they want recruitment based on merit.

Several cities, including the capital Dhaka, this week witnessed clashes between supporters of the anti-quota movement and those who are against it, particularly the student wing of the governing Awami League known as the Bangladesh Chhatra League (BCL).

Student groups attacked each other with bricks and sticks. Police fired tear gas and used rubber bullets to disperse the clashing groups. Student activists said hundreds of people had been injured in the attacks.

“We blame the BCL members for the violence. They killed the protesters. Police didn’t intervene to save the ordinary students,” Abdullah Salehin Ayoun, one of the co-ordinators of the anti-quota movement, told the BBC.

Government jobs are highly coveted in Bangladesh because they pay well. In total, more than half of the positions – amounting to hundreds of thousands – are reserved for certain groups.

Critics say the system unfairly benefits the children of pro-government groups that support Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who won her fourth straight election in January.

Ms Hasina’s government abolished the reservation in 2018, following protests.

But a court ordered the authorities to reinstate the quotas in early June, triggering the latest round of protests.

Officials say three people were killed in the southern port city of Chittagong and two in Dhaka, while one student was killed in the northern city of Rangpur by a stray bullet.

Media reports say at least three of those killed were students, though there is no official confirmation yet.

The government blames opposition groups for the violence.

“The student fronts of the opposition Jamaat-e-Islami and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party [BNP] have infiltrated this anti-quota movement. They are the ones who initiated the violence,” Law Minister Anisul Huq told the BBC.

Bangladesh’s top court suspended the current system last week, but protests are expected to continue until it is permanently removed.

“The case has been listed for hearing on 7 August. Students have been given an opportunity to present their argument in the court,” Mr Huq said.

In a late-night operation on Tuesday, police raided the headquarters of the BNP, the main opposition party, in Dhaka, following the violent clashes.

Senior BNP leader Ruhul Kabir Rizvi said the raid was nothing but a drama and it was a message for the students to return home.

The protests have been going on for days with the students blocking roads and highways in Dhaka and other major cities, bringing traffic to a halt.

Student leaders said they were angered by recent comments of Ms Hasina who, they say, described those opposed to the job quotas as – a term used for those who allegedly collaborated with the Pakistani army during the 1971 war.

Several student leaders said Ms Hasina had insulted them by comparing them to . The comparison, they said, also encouraged BCL members to attack them.

“They want to suppress our voices through creating a reign of terror in the country. If I don’t protest today, they will beat me another day. That’s why I am on the streets to protest,” Rupaiya Sherstha, a female student at Dhaka University, told the BBC.

But government ministers say Ms Hasina’s comments were misinterpreted, and she did not call the students .

Mohammad Ali Arafat, state minister for information and broadcasting, denied allegations that the student wing of the Awami League triggered the violence.

He said the trouble began after anti-quota students intimidated residents of a hall in Dhaka.

“If there’s chaos on the university campuses, there’s no benefit for the government. We want peace to be maintained,” Mr Arafat told the BBC.

UN Secretary General António Guterres called on the government to “protect the demonstrators against any form of threat or violence”, according to his spokesman Stephane Dujarric.

The students have vowed to continue their protests until their demands are met.

The government has strengthened security by deploying the paramilitary, Border Guards Bangladesh, in five main cities, including Dhaka and Chittagong.

‘World’s rarest whale’ washes up on NZ beach

By Robert GreenallBBC News

A whale that was found dead on a beach in New Zealand earlier this month has been identified by scientists as a spade-toothed whale – a species so rare it has never been seen alive.

The five-metre long, beaked creature’s identity was determined from its colour patterns and the shape of its skull, beak and teeth.

Its remains have been placed in cold storage whilst DNA testing takes place, with experts saying it may take several weeks before a final identification is confirmed.

Because so few specimens have been found and there have been no live sightings, very little is known about the spade-toothed whale.

Researchers say the carcass discovery could help them acquire crucial new information about the species.

Local officials were notified that the whale had been washed ashore on 4 July at the mouth of the Taiari river, in Otago province on New Zealand’s South Island.

Department of Conservation (DOC) official Gabe Davies said in a statement that spade-toothed whales were one of the least known large mammalian species, with only six samples ever documented worldwide.

“From a scientific and conservation point of view, this is huge,” he added.

The department said that because the specimen had only recently died it could become the first whale of the species to be dissected.

New Zealand’s Māori people regard whales as a sacred treasure, and DOC said local Maori communities would take part in deciding the whale’s fate.

The species was first described in 1874 after a lower jaw and two teeth were collected from New Zealand’s Chatham Islands. Skeletal remains of two other specimens found off islands in New Zealand and Chile enabled scientists to confirm a new species.

Two more recent findings of stranded whales off New Zealand’s North Island in 2010 and 2017 added to the small collection.

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Thailand expands visa-free entry to 93 countries

By Kelly Ng & Thanyarat Doksonein Singapore and Bangkok

Thailand has expanded its visa-free entry scheme to 93 countries and territories as it seeks to revitalize its tourism industry.

Visitors can stay in the South-East Asian nation for up to 60 days under the new scheme that took effect on Monday,

Previously, passport holders from 57 countries were allowed to enter without a visa.

Tourism is a key pillar of the Thai economy, but it has not fully recovered from the pandemic.

Thailand recorded 17.5 million foreign tourists arrivals in the first six months of 2024, up 35% from the same period last year, according to official data. However, the numbers pale in comparison to pre-pandemic levels.

Most of the visitors were from China, Malaysia and India.

Tourism revenue during the same period came in at 858 billion baht ($23.6bn; £18.3bn), less than a quarter of the government’s target.

Millions of tourists flock to Thailand every year for its golden temples, white sand beaches, picturesque mountains and vibrant night life.

The revised visa-free rules are part of a broader plan to boost tourism.

Also on Monday, Thailand introduced a new five-year visa for remote workers, that allows holders to stay for up to 180 days each year.

The country will also allow visiting students, who earn a bachelor’s degree or higher in Thailand, to stay for one year after graduation to find a job or travel.

In June, authorities announced an extension of a waiver on hoteliers’ operating fees for two more years. They also scrapped a proposed tourism fee for visitors flying into the country.

However some stakeholders are concerned that the country’s infrastructure may not be able to keep up with travellers’ demands.

“If more people are coming, it means the country as a whole… has to prepare our resources to welcome them,” said Kantapong Thananuangroj, president of the Thai Tourism Promotion Association.

“If not, [the tourists] may not be impressed with the experience they have in Thailand and we may not get a second chance,” he said.

Chamnan Srisawat, president of the Tourism Council of Thailand, said he foresees a “bottleneck in air traffic as the incoming flights may not increase in time to catch up with the demands of the travellers”.

Some people have also raised safety concerns after rumours that tourists have been kidnapped and sent across the border to work in scam centres in Myanmar or Cambodia.

A fatal shooting in Bangkok’s most famous shopping mall last year has also caused concern among visitors.

China tycoon Guo convicted in US over $1bn scam

By João da SilvaBusiness reporter

Self-exiled Chinese businessman Guo Wengui has been convicted by a US court of defrauding his online followers in a billion-dollar scam.

He was found guilty on nine of the 12 criminal counts he faced, including racketeering, fraud and money laundering.

Guo’s sentencing has been scheduled for 19 November, when he could face decades behind bars. He has been in prison since his arrest in March 2023.

He is a critic of the Chinese Communist party and was an associate of Stephen Bannon, an ex-White House chief strategist under former president Donald Trump.

Guo goes by several aliases, including Miles Guo, Miles Kwok and “Brother Seven”. He was named as Ho Wan Kwok when he was indicted in 2023.

Prosecutors said Guo raised more than $1bn (£770bn) from online followers, who joined him in investment and cryptocurrency schemes between 2018 and 2023.

The money he raised was used to fund Guo’s lavish lifestyle which included a 50,000 square foot mansion, a $1m Lamborghini and a $37m yacht, they said.

“Thousands of Guo’s online followers were victimised so that Guo could live a life of excess,” the US Attorney in Manhattan, Damian Williams, said after the verdict.

Guo’s political activism and his links to high-profile, right-wing US politicians and activists earned him hundreds of thousands of online followers, most of them Chinese people living in Western countries.

Guo’s lawyers tried unsuccessfully to sway the jury by saying their client was not driven by money.

Instead, they portrayed him as a fervent opponent of China’s political system and his ostentatious lifestyle was a critique of the Chinese Communist Party.

After his arrival in the US in 2017, Guo’s outspoken opposition to China’s rulers inspired several ventures with Bannon.

They appeared frequently together in online videos, and in 2020 they launched a campaign called the New Federal State of China, with the goal of overthrowing the Chinese Communist Party.

Later that year, Bannon was arrested over an unrelated fraud case while on Guo’s yacht in Connecticut. He was later pardoned by then-president Donald Trump.

Bannon is currently serving a four-month sentence for contempt of Congress.

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England are on the hunt for a new manager.

After 102 matches at the helm, stretching eight years, Gareth Southgate has quit as Three Lions boss after defeat by Spain in Sunday’s Euro 2024 final.

He will be a tough act to follow as – on top of overseeing England’s run to the Euro 2024 final – Southgate has taken his country to the Euro 2020 final, a World Cup semi-final and a World Cup quarter-final.

So, who could follow him? BBC Sport takes a look at some of the contenders before asking you to choose who you would like in charge.

Lee Carsley

Perhaps a left field candidate but England Under-21 manager Lee Carsley is well thought of at the Football Association.

He has been with the FA a long time and won the European Under-21 Championship last summer. He could potentially buy the FA time as an interim manager until a big name was free next summer.

Southgate managed the under-21s between 2013 and 2016 before becoming the senior boss.

Carsley, 50, held talks about becoming Republic of Ireland manager last year but opted to stay with the under-21s for another cycle.

Pep Guardiola

The Manchester City boss has long been mooted as a future international manager and a role with England would certainly excite many Three Lions fans.

Having won everything there is to win at club level with Barcelona, Bayern Munich and Manchester City, a new challenge next summer could prove very attractive.

Guardiola is under contract at City until the summer of 2025, but after that? You couldn’t rule it out, although his wages could be another stumbling block.

Eddie Howe

Another English manager well fancied by the bookmakers.

The Newcastle boss has long been talked about as a potential England manager since impressing in charge of Bournemouth.

He has further enhanced his reputation at Newcastle – leading them in the Champions League in 2023-24, although they will not play in Europe next season.

The 46-year-old is tied to a long-term contract, understood to be until 2027, but it might be hard for Howe to turn down the opportunity if England came calling.

BBC Sport’s football news reporter Nizaar Kinsella says: “Those close to Howe believe he is on the FA’s shortlist, amid widespread reports of his candidacy.”

Speaking on Tuesday, Newcastle chief executive Darren Eales said the club would fight to keep their manager.

“We’re on an exciting journey and, as far as we’re concerned, Eddie is the man to lead us on that,” he said.

Jurgen Klopp

Another big-name manager out of work.

If the FA was minded to go down the route of attracting a name from abroad, Klopp would surely be on its list of contenders.

The former Liverpool manager is unlikely to be available right now, having stepped down at Anfield and wanting a break. But – should the FA be willing to wait – Klopp could come into the reckoning.

The 57-year-old is already being touted both for the vacant United States job and as a possible successor for Julian Nagelsmann, should he leave Germany.

Mauricio Pochettino

Another high-profile, popular, foreign manager out of work this summer.

The former Tottenham, PSG and Chelsea boss was heavily linked with Manchester United – before Erik ten Hag’s contract was extended – and would relish returning to work in England.

He is keen to become Southgate’s successor, lives in London, and his passion for football in this country makes him a serious contender.

Pochettino is also believed to not need any break from football after leaving Chelsea by mutual consent in May.

Graham Potter

The former Brighton boss is one of the favourites among the bookmakers after impressing in three years in charge at Brighton.

His reputation did suffer a bit of blow when he was sacked by Chelsea after less than seven months in charge in April 2023, but he remains one of English football’s most respected coaches.

There is a major question mark about whether he would want an international job over a club role though, and he rejected a chance to manage Sweden in the past before discussing moves to Ajax and Leicester.

The England job would surely be too big to turn down though and it is thought Potter turned down Leicester earlier this summer, with half on eye on a future England role.

Thomas Tuchel

Another highly rated manager who is looking for work this summer.

A legend at Chelsea for helping the club win the Champions League in 2021, he left his job at Bayern Munich at the end of last season, despite talks to persuade him to stay.

Tuchel, who has also managed at the likes of Paris St-Germain and Borussia Dortmund, would relish a return to English football and is believed to be open to talks with the FA about being Southgate’s successor.

He reportedly came close to replacing Erik ten Hag at Manchester United before they stuck with the Dutchman after his FA Cup win.

BBC Sport football news reporter Nizaar Kinsella says: “Sources close to Tuchel have told me that he remains interested in the role.

“However, he is not expecting to be contacted by the FA and is considered an outsider given the position of the other candidates”.

Who else could be considered?

Ipswich fans will not like reading this but their manager Kieran McKenna is fast growing a reputation as one the country’s best coaches. The England job could come too soon, but do not be surprised to see his name mentioned.

Former Chelsea manager Frank Lampard is another name being mentioned by some, along with Middlesbrough coach Michael Carrick, Celtic boss Brendan Rodgers and ex-Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho.

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England have recalled pace bowler Mark Wood to their XI for the second Test against West Indies at Trent Bridge, starting on Thursday.

Wood takes the place of the retired James Anderson, who ended his record-breaking career following the huge win in the first Test at Lord’s.

Wood missed the first Test after being part of the England squad for the T20 World Cup in June.

The 34-year-old has taken 108 wickets in 34 Tests and will form a pacey pairing alongside Gus Atkinson, with Chris Woakes the other specialist seamer.

England XI for second Test: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes (capt) Jamie Smith (wk), Chris Woakes, Gus Atkinson, Mark Wood, Shoaib Bashir.

Matthew Potts and the uncapped Dillon Pennington again sit out, having being part of the squad for the first Test at Lord’s. In Pennington’s case, the Nottinghamshire bowler misses the chance to make a Test debut on his home ground.

England, 1-0 up, can win the series at Trent Bridge and thus earn their first Test series win since the tour of Pakistan in 2022.

There are likely to be further changes to the pace-bowling attack for the third Test at Edgbaston next week, given the congested nature of the series.

Woakes, 35, wins his 50th cap and assumes the role of attack leader now Anderson has followed long-term new-ball partner Stuart Broad into retirement.

Indeed, this will be England’s first home Test without at least one of Anderson or Broad in their side since 2012.

Surrey’s Atkinson, 26, took match figures of 12-106 at Lord’s, the fourth-best by a bowler on Test debut in the history of the game.

West Indies are waiting on the fitness of pace bowler Shamar Joseph after he struggled with a left hamstring injury at Lord’s.

The 24-year-old bowled in the nets at Trent Bridge on Tuesday and is not thought to be a doubt at this stage.

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Chelsea are investigating a video posted on social media by midfielder Enzo Fernandez which the French Football Federation says includes an alleged “racist and discriminatory” chant.

On Tuesday the FFF said it would file a complaint to world governing body Fifa over the video featuring a song sung by some of the Argentina squad about France’s players.

Fernandez’s Chelsea team-mate Wesley Fofana, who has one cap for France, posted an image of the video on Instagram describing it as “uninhibited racism”.

BBC Sport understands Chelsea are investigating the incident and treating it seriously.

The FFF will also contact the Argentine Football Association (AFA) about live video posted on social media by Fernandez as Argentina celebrated winning the Copa America, after beating Colombia 1-0 in the final on Sunday.

A statement from the FFF, external said that president Philippe Diallo “condemns in the strongest terms the unacceptable and discriminatory remarks that were made against the players of the French team”.

It added: “Faced with the seriousness of these shocking remarks, contrary to the values of sport and human rights, the president of the FFF decided to directly appeal to his Argentine counterpart and Fifa and to file a legal complaint for racially offensive and discriminatory remarks.”

The Argentine FA has been approached for comment.

France beat Argentina in the last 16 of the 2018 World Cup, before Argentina beat them in the final of the 2022 World Cup.

It was an instinctive sporting gesture that has gone down in Olympic folklore, but, for German long-jump champion Luz Long, it would have dark consequences.

As Jesse Owens soared over the eight-metre mark to secure Berlin 1936 gold, Long – his biggest rival – leapt into the sandpit in Berlin to hug and congratulate him.

Later, in a striking contradiction to Nazi Germany’s twisted notion of Aryan supremacy and decades before the civil rights movement would spark radical change in the United States, the pair shared a lap of honour together, black and white athlete jogging arm in arm.

Not everyone was applauding. High in the stands, German leader Adolf Hitler watched on disapprovingly.

As they stood on the podium – Long giving the required Nazi salute and Owens saluting the Stars and Stripes flag of a nation not yet ready to accept him wholly as one of their own – both athletes were unaware of what lay in store.

Owens and Long, both born in 1913, were at the peak of their athletic powers when they locked horns in Berlin.

But that is where the similarities ended; their beginnings and journeys to the Games were polar opposites.

A 20th-century icon, Owens’ story has been widely told. He was the grandson of former slaves and the youngest of 10 children in a family of Alabama tenant farmers.

As a child, he picked cotton with the rest of his siblings, but his athletic ability became clear after the family moved to Cleveland and he was enrolled in school, aged nine.

He had gone by the nickname JC, short for James Cleveland, but after his teacher misheard him he was registered as Jesse and the name stuck.

Owens earned an athletic scholarship to attend Ohio State University where, under the tutelage of coach Larry Schnyder, he became one of the greatest sprinters the world has ever known.

At a track and field meeting at the University of Michigan in 1935, Owens broke three world records and equalled another, all in the space of an hour, setting a new mark of 8.13m for the long jump that would stand for 25 years.

Unlike his rival, Long enjoyed a privileged upbringing, born into a middle-class family in Leipzig. His father, Karl, owned a pharmacy in the centre of the city, while his mother, Johanna, was a qualified English teacher. She came from a respected academic family, which included scientist Justus von Liebig, known as the founder of organic chemistry.

Carl Ludwig Hermann Long, who became known as Luz for short, grew up with his four siblings in the countryside outside the city. They would have family athletics championships in their sizeable back garden.

Long joined Leipzig Sport Club in 1928, where he came under the guidance of coach Georg Richter, who helped him develop a technique of sailing through the air using his strength as a high-jumper, unlike Owens, who harnessed his pace as a sprinter.

The partnership with Richter proved fruitful, as Long broke the German long jump record in 1933 to become national champion, aged just 20. Just a couple of months before the Berlin Olympics, Long set a new European long jump record of 7.82m en route to his third national title.

While both Owens and Long were building momentum on the track, they were also contending with the political landscape off it.

In the United States, there was growing pressure to boycott the Berlin Games in light of stories about the treatment of Jewish people in Germany under the new Nazi regime.

Owens initially supported calls for a boycott of the Games, reportedly telling the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People “if there are any minorities in Germany who are being discriminated against, the United States should withdraw”.

But he eventually agreed to attend following pleas from his coach and assurances from the United States Olympic Committee, who had sent a delegation to Germany to assess conditions and discuss the hosts’ policy on the participation of Jewish athletes.

Back in Germany, the political pressure placed on athletes by the state was increasing.

“Athletes were representatives of the German Reich – both on and off the ash track – not private individuals,” says Julia Kellner-Long, Luz’s only grandchild.

Long’s rise to the national team came in 1933 – the same year Hitler was appointed chancellor of Germany.

In the unlikelihood that he was unaware what was expected of him, a banner posted at the training ground made it clear: “Track and field athletes think of the 1936 Olympics. We must not disappoint our leader Adolf Hitler.”

Hitler was present at Berlin’s Olympic Stadium as Owens and Long contested one of the Games’ greatest long jump finals.

After a see-sawing battle, Long matched Owens’ leading distance of 7.87m with his penultimate attempt, to the delight of the home fans.

But Owens dug out his best when he needed it most, responding with 7.94m, to move clear of Long once again.

Long produced a foul on his final attempt, but his performance was good enough for silver and a first Olympic long jump medal for Germany.

Owens, with his title already assured, created further history with a final leap of 8.06m – setting an Olympic record that would stand for 24 years.

Long, putting aside his own disappointment, instinctively leapt into the sandpit to congratulate him.

Locked in that moment, alone in their embrace as an appreciative capacity crowd of more than 100,000 people watched on, Owens confided to his rival: “You forced me to give my best.”

Between them, Owens and Long had surpassed the previous Olympic record five times.

“It’s almost like a fairytale – to jump so long in this weather,” said Long in an interview with his hometown newspaper, Neue Leipziger Zeitung.

“I can’t help it. I run to him. I’m the first to congratulate him, to hug him.”

Long’s impulsive reaction caught the attention of the German authorities.

Soon after the Olympic Games, his mother, Johanna, made a note in her diary about a warning from Rudolf Hess, then deputy Fuhrer of the Nazi Party.

Long, she wrote, had “received an order from the highest authority” that he should never again embrace a black person.

He had been noted as “not racially conscious” by the Nazi regime.

The embrace clearly angered the Nazis, who often used powerful imagery to further its own ideology and feared how Owens and Long’s friendship might undermine its propaganda.

In that respect, they were right.

Almost 90 years later, Owens and Long’s friendship is one of the most enduring Olympic stories.

“The gesture of kindness and fairness touched the hearts of many people,” says Kellner-Long.

“Together, Luz and Jesse enjoyed a special friendship that day, demonstrating to the world that in sports and in life, friendship and respect are the most important things, regardless of background or skin colour.”

Stuart Rankin, Owens’ only grandson, is equally struck by its significance.

“I often say that of all my grandfather’s accomplishments at the 1936 Olympics, the unlikely friendship that he struck with Luz Long is the thing of which I am most proud and most impressed by,” he says.

“For them to have forged that friendship, under those conditions, in those circumstances, in that stadium, in the face of Hitler, was just phenomenal.”

It would be the only time Owens and Long would compete against each other.

Owens went on to add the 200m and 4x100m titles to his wins in the 100m and long jump and would take home four gold medals from the German capital.

But he angered authorities by refusing to compete in a meeting in Sweden immediately after the Games, instead returning home to take advantage of his new-found fame and a clutch of commercial opportunities.

The decision would result in Owens being banned from competing by the American Athletic Union – effectively ending his sporting career.

Owens was still given a hero’s welcome in a special homecoming ceremony in New York, but an incident at a party thrown in his honour at the Waldorf Astoria proved that despite his Olympic glory, nothing had changed.

On arriving at the hotel, Owens was directed away from the lobby by a doorman to a side entrance he was told was for tradesmen and black people.

It was a stark reminder of the deep-rooted division and racial prejudice at the heart of American society.

Long left Berlin as Olympic silver-medallist, national champion and European long-jump record holder.

He would go on to extend that mark to 7.90m the following year – a record that stood until 1956.

But he could not escape scrutiny or suspicion.

“Luz’s embrace in the sandpit had consequences,” says Kellner-Long.

“He was placed under closer monitoring by the authorities, compelling him to tread more carefully and maintain a lower profile.”

Long did not compete again after the outbreak of World War Two, instead focusing on his career as a lawyer.

Heinrich, his youngest brother, was killed in action. Devastated by the loss, Long attempted to plot a course through the war for his own family.

He married Gisela in 1941, and they had a son – Julia’s father – in November of that year, naming him Kai Heinrich, after his lost brother.

By then, Long had been drafted into the military, initially carrying out duties away from the frontline.

However, in 1943 Long was shipped out to Sicily with the 10th Battery Parachute Anti-Aircraft Regiment. A month later, he would send his final letter home to Gisela, who, by this time, was heavily pregnant with their second son, Wolfgang Matthias.

“In the letter, Luz described camping in tents on a beautiful flower meadow surrounded by mountains, a peaceful setting – that was his final communication with his family,” says Kellner-Long. “The next day, 30 May 1943, Wolfgang was born. Unfortunately, Luz never got to meet him.”

Allied forces landed in Sicily on 10 July 1943, as part of an operation to liberate Italy. Four days later, Long was hit in his leg by shrapnel, as German forces retreated, and bled to death.

Gisela received notification on 30 July that her husband was missing in action, presumed dead. It was only after another seven years that the details were confirmed and his grave, in the German section of honour at the American military cemetery in Gela, was found.

Owens chose not to enlist for military service during the war, and neither was he drafted.

But, banned from official athletic competition and with commercial offers quickly drying up, he had to find unorthodox ways of supporting his family.

He would take on local sprinters, giving them a 10 or 20-yard head start, before reeling them in with ease to claim a cash prize.

Or, when his human rivals weren’t forthcoming, Owens would race motorbikes, cars, and horses.

“People say it was degrading for an Olympic champion to run against a horse,” Owens said, “but what was I supposed to do? I had four gold medals, but you can’t eat four gold medals.”

After flitting between menial jobs, things started to improve for Owens in the 1950s when he found employment as a motivational speaker. He started his own public relations business and became a sought-after figure, travelling around the globe as a sporting ambassador.

During a trip to Germany in 1951, with the Harlem Globetrotters basketball team, Owens reached out to Long’s family. He met Kai and took him to the Globetrotters game in Hamburg as his guest of honour.

In 1964, Kai took part in a documentary, Jesse Owens Returns To Berlin, during which the two recreated a picture of Owens and Long reclining trackside at Berlin’s Olympic Stadium.

“Kai admired Jesse so much – his charisma, his modesty, and his natural gift and success as an athlete,” says Kellner-Long.

Owens died of lung cancer in 1980 and was posthumously awarded the Congressional Medal of Honour by then-president George Bush Sr in 1990.

His wife, Ruth, has continued his legacy, running the Jesse Owens Foundation before passing on the baton to their daughters – Gloria, Marlene and Beverly – and more recently their five grandchildren.

Over the years, the Long and Owens families have stayed in touch.

Julia Kellner-Long, along with Owens’ granddaughter Gina, lit the Olympic flame in a special ceremony at the Berlin Stadium in 2004. With Marlene, she then presented the long jump medals when the World Athletics Championships were held in Berlin in 2009.

Kellner-Long and Rankin would become close friends after a chance meeting in Munich in 2012, and have recently worked together on a documentary about their grandparents.

“The relationship between the families means a lot to me, and I am proud of our connection,” says Kellner-Long.

“Julia and I joke around often and think of both of our grandfathers looking down and smiling and being quite happy that the families are still connected despite the years,” adds Rankin.

While the reality of the friendship between Owens and Long is held dear by both families, their special bond has taken on a life of its own online.

One widely repeated myth involves a vivid letter supposedly written by Long to Owens from the “dry sand and wet blood” of north Africa. It calls on Owens to return to Germany to find his son if Long fails to make it home.

One of the lines reads: “Tell him, Jesse, what times were like when we not separated by war, tell him how things can be between men on this earth.”

Unbearably poignant, but almost certainly untrue.

Long never served in north Africa. Neither family have seen such a letter and both question the likelihood and logistics of it being written and delivered.

Kellner-Long understands the powerful message people continue to take from their story, however.

“It offers hope and inspiration to people worldwide,” she says. “In times when racism and exclusion are sadly still prevalent, this story is more relevant than ever.”

“I think that Luz’s example of sportsmanship is one that should be preserved and held high for all time,” says Rankin.

“My grandfather’s relationship with Luz is certainly one he never would have predicted but, because it happened, it provided a hopeful perspective in my grandfather, and certainly in me, that, despite the tide of an entire nation, it doesn’t mean every member of that nation is the same.

“Luz’s strength and character, it’s almost indescribable, but it demonstrates how in the most unlikeliest of places you can still find good.”

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Jude Bellingham praised Gareth Southgate as “easily one of the best coaches in the history of the national team” in a heartfelt tribute to the outgoing England manager.

Southgate resigned on Tuesday after nearly eight years in the role, with England’s 2-1 loss to Spain in Sunday’s Euro 2024 final his last match in charge.

In a post on Instagram, Real Madrid midfielder Bellingham described Southgate as “an unbelievable human being”.

“I’d like to thank Gareth and his staff for the great memories during his tenure,” Bellingham wrote.

“From the point of view of a fan who has become a member of the squad, it’s been a rollercoaster of amazing emotions that has instilled hope and joy back into our country.

“It was a privilege being lead by someone who is so dedicated and passionate, not only is Gareth easily one of the best coaches in the history of the national team but also an unbelievable human being.

“Thank you for everything and all the best in the next chapter, Gaffer.”

BBC Sport pundit and former England striker Alan Shearer was also among those to pay tribute to Southgate, who took charge of 102 games and led his country to back-to-back Euros finals.

“It was a huge job for him [Southgate] to take on,” Shearer told the BBC.

“He did that and turned everything around, we went from rock bottom to playing in semi-finals and finals. That is now the expectation with England and he played a huge part in that.”

He added that the 53-year-old will be remembered for “creating this incredible spirit and for players again wanting to represent their country”.

‘Very close to footballing immortality’

Gary Lineker expressed his thanks to Southgate on X.

The BBC presenter and ex-England striker wrote: “Wishing Gareth Southgate all the very best in the future. He brought pride, respect and a togetherness to England that we hadn’t seen for a long time.

“He was close, very close to footballing immortality and he always did the job with humility, decency and dignity. Thank you, Gareth.”

A number of current England stars also paid tribute to Southgate on social media.

Among them was captain Harry Kane, who was appointed as skipper by Southgate ahead of the 2018 World Cup.

“Boss. Thank you for everything you have done for me and our country!” the Bayern Munich striker wrote on X.

“You have been one of England’s greatest ever managers and it has been a pleasure to have served as your captain throughout.

“You helped our nation connect and believe in our team again. There have been so many highlights and we’ve made memories together that will last forever!”

Arsenal midfielder Declan Rice wrote on Instagram: “Thank you gaffer. It’s been a privilege to play for England under your guidance.

“Memories that will stay with me forever. All the best in your next adventure.”

Everton goalkeeper Jordan Pickford, also on Instagram, added: “I also want to say a special thank you to the boss for always believing in me during his time with us and I would like to wish him all the best in his next steps. Thank you Gareth.”

Harry Maguire missed out on selection for Euro 2024 because of a calf injury, but the centre-back played a key role in previous tournaments under Southgate.

“You made us all believe again – memories that will last forever. Thank you boss,” the Manchester United defender wrote on Instagram.

‘A great leader of people’

Sarina Wiegman, who has been Southgate’s counterpart with the England women’s team for the past three years, said she was sad to see him go.

“He is such a nice person and a great coach,” she told ITV. “We wouldn’t see each other all the time but when we would see each other it was very nice.

“What he has done for England football is really incredible. He can be very proud of himself. England is very proud of him and I’m Dutch, I am very proud of him too.”

Former England international Ashley Young won 39 caps for his country and was the first choice left-back for the Three Lions during their run to the semi-final of the 2018 World Cup.

Young told BBC Sport: “If you talk to many players who played in previous eras, what Gareth did and the way he brought the players and staff together, the players started to enjoy going away on national team duty.

“You only need to look at what he has done for the country. For me, he has done a great job for English football and disappointing to see he has resigned.

“Of course, he would have wanted to achieve and win something and the teams definitely deserved to do that. He can walk away with his held high, he brought the nation back together. Players and staff, the way he gelled everyone together was incredible.”

Speaking on BBC Radio 5 Live, former Club England managing director Adrian Bevington said: “This is a man who is a great leader of people, he’s an inspirational person.

“He’s is a very hard act to follow. It’s a very tough task for the Football Association. Finding the right replacement is the very hard part here, they’ve got to decide first of all on the profile of the individual coach they want.

“It’s really important this person can also handle off-field responsibilities, too.

“You are in effect adopting a stance of being like a prime ministerial type figure because of all the issues you have to contend with. The likes of which Gareth has done better than any other England manager who has gone before him.”

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When Bobby Locke coined his immortal phrase ‘drive for show, putt for dough’, it was just another flag the great South African planted in the story of golf.

For 20 years, Locke was never beaten over 72 holes in his native land. How good was he? When he went to the United States and competed against the Ben Hogans and the Sam Sneads he won six times in 1947 and another four times in 1948 and 1949.

He finished in the top four in 34 of 59 tournaments until a trumped-up charge was brought against him by the Tour and he was banned.

Claude Harmon, father of Tiger Woods’ former coach Butch and Masters champion in 1948, put it succinctly: “Locke was simply too good. They had to ban him.”

They reinstated him in 1951, but his unique look – baggy plus-fours, white silk shirts and a necktie – wasn’t seen so much in the US after that. There was really no need. He won in South Africa, England, Scotland, France, Mexico, Egypt. Germany, Switzerland and Australia. He wasn’t in thrall to the States. He was a world player.

When he came to his spiritual home of the British links, he won four Open Championships in nine years, the first at Sandwich – the name he later picked for the apartment complex he owned in Johannesburg – then at Troon in 1950 in what was then a record low score in the four-round format.

That same year, 1950, was when hapless Herman Tissies, the German amateur, got licked by the Postage Stamp, taking 15 shots to complete the devilish par-three.

‘He wore out his hats tipping them’

Locke was the first man to go back-to-back in The Open since Walter Hagen won his third and fourth titles in the late 1920s. Hogan was asked about Locke’s ability with the short stick. “Everyone examines greens, but only he knows what he’s looking for,” said the champion golfer of 1953.

“He was the greatest putter I have ever seen,” said seven-time major winner Snead. “He’d hit a 20-footer, and before the ball got halfway, he’d be tipping his hat to the crowd. He wore out his hats tipping them.”

“One six-foot putt for my life?” pondered fellow South African great Gary Player. “I’ll take Bobby Locke. I’ve seen them all and there has never been a putter like him.”

Old Mutton Face, they called him. Or Droopy Chops. Or Vinegar Puss. The monikers were a touch unkind. Locke had a lighter side, a smiling and charismatic presence when the stars were aligned, but there was a grumpy side, too. He didn’t like fans who took pictures of him and he knew his own worth. If a journalist wanted an interview that included any golf tips he’d charge $100. Pay up or shut up.

He was lethal but not exactly quick. He went at his own pace in tournaments and some of his peers didn’t like him for it and liked him less when he ambled away with the winners’ loot. He sparked resentment, mostly because of his excellence.

When writing about Bobby Locke, you soon figure out there were different versions of the same man. He was a fighter pilot in the South African Air Force during World War Two, apparently flying 100 combat missions in the Mediterranean and Western Desert.

Champion golfer, war hero and miracle man. In 1960, seven years after he won his third Claret Jug at Lytham and three years after he won his fourth at St Andrews, Locke’s wife, Mary, gave birth to a baby girl, Carolyn.

On his way to see the new arrival, the car Locke was travelling in stopped at a level crossing to let a train go by, then pulled out, not knowing that there was another coming in the opposite direction.

The vehicle flew 30 yards through the air and down a bank. Locke went through the back window. For two days he lay unconscious in the same hospital as his wife and daughter. It took a month before he could open his left eye. He had double vision, migraines, memory loss and severe pain in both legs.

Medication and mood swings became part of his daily existence. So did alcohol. He didn’t lose his life on that railway track, but Locke the golfer certainly died that day and an altogether different person replaced him. He was 43 years old.

‘He wasn’t rational any more’

Darkness enveloped him. In 1969 he was arrested for drink-driving. Then there was the incident with painter Big Boy Ndlovu, whose work on Locke’s apartment block was deemed below par. Big Boy asked for 220 rand for his services, but Locke refused to pay. Words were exchanged, Locke pulled a gun and shot Big Boy in the shoulder.

He was done for attempted murder, paid a fine of 120 rand and had his gun licence suspended for six months.

In a Sports Illustrated piece from 2001 a friend of the family spoke about Locke’s new-found casual cruelty towards his wife, Mary, and, worse again, the physical abuse he visited upon her. “He couldn’t think straight,” said the source. “He wasn’t rational any more.”

In early March 1987, Locke, 69, was admitted to a nursing home in Johannesburg. He was diagnosed with meningitis, fell into a coma and died the following day. The tributes were effusive. Most focused on the storied first half of his life rather than his tragic second act.

Mary and daughter, Carolyn, remained loving to the end, which came in 2000 in the home that was once Sandwich but which they’d renamed Bobby Locke Place.

In a final twist to a horrific story, Mary, 80, and Carolyn, 40, planned a grisly end – a suicide pact. Having grown fearful for their own safety in a once salubrious area that was now rife with crime, they became reclusive, amended their wills, arranged for their dog to be put down and for his ashes to spread on their grave.

They were discovered dead in bed, holding hands after drinking champagne to wash down tablets they’d been gathering for months. “I just want to be with Bobby again,” Mary had said to her neighbours for some time. None of them could have known that it would end this way.

Locke is remembered not for the husk of a man he became after his near fatal accident or for the horrible fate of his nearest and dearest, but for his greatness on the golf course. His victory in 1950 will get a mention or two this week. The other stuff? Not so much.