BBC 2024-08-04 00:07:05


Iran says Hamas leader killed from close range

Matt Murphy and Jenny Hill

BBC News
Reporting fromLondon and Tel Aviv

Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh was killed with a “short-range projectile” fired from outside his guesthouse in Tehran, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) says.

The paramilitary organisation said the projectile weighed about 7kg (16lbs) and caused a “strong blast”, killing Haniyeh and his bodyguard last Wednesday. The Hamas leader had been visiting the Iranian capital for the inauguration of President Massoud Pezeshkian.

The IRGC accused Israel of designing and implementing the operation – supported by the US. Israel has not commented on Haniyeh’s death.

The IRGC account is at odds with reports in Western media, which have suggested that explosives were planted in the guesthouse by Israeli operatives.

The failures surrounding Haniyeh’s death, especially on a day marked by intense security, have caused embarrassment for Iran and the IRGC.

Dozens of IRGC officers have been arrested or dismissed in the days since Haniyeh’s death, the New York Times reported on Saturday.

The paper said the organisation’s intelligence agency had taken over the investigation. Staff members at Haniyeh’s guesthouse have been interrogated and their phones and other electronics have been seized, it added.

Meanwhile, the security details of Iranian politicians have been overhauled. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei led prayers for Haniyeh on Thursday, but was whisked away soon after the ceremony by his security detail.

The IRGC’s statement on Saturday came after Britain’s Daily Telegraph said Haniyeh was killed by bombs planted in his room by agents of Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency

Citing Iranian officials, the paper said two Mossad agents had entered the guesthouse and planted explosives in three rooms. The Iranians, who had viewed CCTV footage of the operatives, said the two subsequently left the country before detonating the bombs from outside Iran.

The New York Times also reported that Haniyeh was killed by explosives detonated in his room, saying they could have been planted up to two months earlier. The BBC has not been able to verify these claims.

But Hamas officials told the BBC earlier this week that Haniyeh had stayed at the same guesthouse before. He had made up to 15 visits to Iran since becoming the head of the political bureau in 2017.

The papers’ reports – if true – would represent an even bigger failure for the IRGC, who have long controlled internal security in the country. Experts also said it would highlight the degree to which Mossad can operate with impunity in Iran.

Regardless of the manner of Haniyeh’s death, both Iran and Hamas have vowed to retaliate.

The IRGC said on Saturday that Israel would receive “a severe punishment at the appropriate time, place and manner”.

Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed militia and political group in Lebanon, has also vowed reprisals. One of their top commanders, Fuad Shukr, was killed in an Israeli strike last Tuesday.

After an Israeli operation killed IRGC Brig Gen Mohammad Reza Zahedi in Damascus earlier this year, Iran fired 170 drones, 30 cruise missiles and at least 110 ballistic missiles towards Israel.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned Israelis that “challenging days lie ahead… We have heard threats from all sides. We are prepared for any scenario”.

His ministers were sent home this weekend with satellite phones in case of an attack on the country’s communication infrastructure.

Despite the government’s warnings, the mood appeared relaxed on Tel Aviv’s seafront, with bronzed bodies lazing under beach umbrellas.

But few are in any doubt that the Middle East stands perilously close to full-scale war.

Israel is on high alert and several international airlines have suspended flights to the country.

The US has also deployed additional warships and fighter jets to the Middle East to help defend Israel from possible attacks by Iran and its proxies, the Pentagon said.

UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy has warned that the risk that “the situation on the ground could deteriorate rapidly is rising”.

Meanwhile, at least 10 people have been killed in an Israeli airstrike on a school sheltering displaced people in Gaza’s Sheikh Radwan neighbourhood, the Hamas-run government media office has said.

It comes as Israel said an airstrike it conducted in the occupied West Bank killed a Hamas commander and four senior Palestinian Islamic Jihad fighters on Saturday.

The Israeli military said the air strike hit a vehicle as the men were on the way to carry out an attack.

Elsewhere, Israeli officials – including the directors of Mossad and the internal security agency Shin Bet – have arrived in Cairo for fresh ceasefire talks.

They will meet Egyptian intelligence chief, Abbas Kamel, and other senior military officials in a bid to rescue a potential truce. But US President Joe Biden admitted on Friday that Haniyeh’s death had damaged the talks.

Haniyeh was heavily involved in negotiations and Mr Biden said his death “doesn’t help” efforts to end the ten-month old conflict.

The war began in October when Hamas carried out an unprecedented attack on Israel, killing about 1,200 people and taking 251 others back to Gaza as hostages.

The attack triggered a massive Israeli military response, which has killed at least 39,550 Palestinians in Gaza, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.

Video shows Haniyeh in Iran hours before his death

Dozens of children killed in Bangladesh protests – Unicef

Flora Drury and Ethirajan Anbarasan

BBC News

At least 32 children have died during student protests that engulfed Bangladesh last month, the UN’s children’s agency has said.

The youngest child killed had yet to turn five years old, a Unicef spokesperson said, adding that most of those who died were bystanders.

They were among more than 200 people who were killed during demonstrations against job quotas in the civil service, according to figures verified by BBC Bangla.

The quota system has now been scaled back by the government following a Supreme Court ruling, but students have continued protesting – now demanding justice for those who died or have been injured or detained.

While the protests are now smaller in scale, the government is struggling to control the rising tide of anger over how it initially responded to the demonstrations.

“Why are our brothers in graves and the killers outside?” asked a crowd which had gathered outside the largest mosque in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, following Friday prayers, according to the AFP news agency.

Security forces responded to the thousands who filled the streets with tear gas and rubber bullets, according to Reuters news agency. It reported that at least 20 people were injured.

Sanjay Wijesekera, Unicef’s regional director for south Asia, said he had been made aware of reports of children being detained during a visit to Bangladesh this week.

He added that the 32 deaths the organisation had confirmed were “a terrible loss”.

A spokesperson for the UN agency said most of those killed were aged 13 or older, with one under five and one child aged between six and 12.

“Children must be protected at all times,” Mr Wijesekera said. “That is everyone’s responsibility.”

Bangladeshi junior Information Minister Mohammad Ali Arafat responded that the government had no information regarding Unicef’s death toll.

“We don’t know where they [Unicef] got the numbers from,” he told the BBC, adding: “Our position is clear: Whoever has been killed, we are going to investigate and bring the perpetrators to book.”

Security forces have been accused of using excessive force to quell the initial protests, with many of the dead and injured suffering gunshot wounds, according to doctors who spoke to the BBC.

But the government – which has said a number of police officers were also killed – has blamed political opponents for the unrest.

On Thursday, it banned the country’s main Islamist party – Jamaat-e-Islami and its student wing, Islami Chhatra Shibir – which it claimed was behind some of the violence.

“We have evidence that they have participated in the killings and in the destruction of government and private properties,” Anisul Huq, Bagladesh’s law minister, told the BBC.

The opposition party’s leader described the move as “illegal, extrajudicial and unconstitutional”.

Leaders of the student protest were also detained for a week – something done for their own protection, officials claimed. However, their release on Thursday has done little to dampen the outrage.

In a joint statement released on Friday, the students questioned the grounds on which they were held.

The group alleged “harassment, torture and drama” towards them and their families during their seven days of detention.

“No one is safe in the custody of those who kill unarmed students and citizens,” the statement said, as it urged people to continue taking to the streets.

Nearly 10,000 people have reportedly been detained since the authorities began their crackdown on the protests.

But Mr Arafat rebuffed the statement by the student leaders.

He said the authorities had to take the student leaders into custody because the government was aware of a potential threat to their lives.

“Their protection became our top priority,” he added.

In one US state, women politicians dominate. What pointers can it offer Kamala Harris?

Madeline Halpert

North America reporter@m_halpert
Reporting fromGrand Rapids, Michigan

In a country where women still find it challenging to reach high office, the swing state of Michigan is an outlier.

Its three most senior elected officials are all women – nationally women fill only around a quarter of senior political roles.

With no woman having ever served as president, the state run by women could offer pointers for a route to the White House for Democrat Kamala Harris.

Opinion polling does not offer a clear answer on whether people are less willing to vote for a woman, but they certainly end up electing fewer overall.

And you don’t have to look far to find the perception that women still have to fight harder to get elected.

Robyn Kepplinger may be one of the few in her pro-gun, anti-abortion rural western Michigan town who is thrilled at the chance to vote for a Democratic woman for president.

The 33-year-old says she could not imagine a better candidate to lead the country “in the direction that we need to go”.

Listen to Madeline read this article

Ms Kepplinger, a resident of Jenison, has thrown her support behind Vice-President Harris. On Friday, the 59-year-old secured enough delegate votes to become Democratic nominee following President Joe Biden’s decision to drop out of the race on 21 July.

But even some Harris fans worry that being a woman could be a significant obstacle between her and the presidency. “For anyone to be doing something that has not been done before, it’s difficult,” Ms Kepplinger said. “I don’t think that most people are behind a change as drastic as a female leader.”

Such a change, however, has proven possible in the key battleground state of Michigan, where three female Democrats now hold the top positions: Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer, and Attorney General Dana Nessel. In fact, Michigan has had two female Democratic governors in the past 20 years, Jennifer Granholm and Ms Whitmer.

Only around a quarter of senators and state governors in the US are women. The figure for representatives is slightly higher at 29%.

“Women are still underestimated,” said Marcie Paul, the chair of Fems for Dems, an advocacy group for liberal women in Michigan. “It’s going to be no different for her [Ms Harris], I believe, than it was when they said three women on the top of the ticket cannot possibly win in Michigan.”

Ms Harris, however, shares some of the traits that made women in Michigan successful candidates, according to Kim Gates, Democratic chair of Kent County, Michigan.

Ms Harris, Ms Whitmer and Ms Granholm managed to strike a balance between compassion and strength as “straight-talking, strong women”, Ms Gates said.

“They have great speaking skills. They’re able to sound like they’re talking to the average person,” she said. “They’re compassionate.”

Combining straight-talking, strength and compassion is easier said than done, but if Ms Harris can, it may bode well for her.

Female candidates may also prove more adept than men at galvanising voters around the issue of reproductive rights after the fall of Roe v Wade.

Voters nationwide cite abortion rights among the most important election issues, with one recent poll from KFF finding 1 in 8 voters saw it as a top priority for November. The issue has been relevant at the polls, with anti-abortion advocates losing a series of contests in Republican states since the federal right to abortion was overturned in 2022. In the past two years, a handful of states have passed ballot measures protecting the right to abortion, including in the Republican strongholds of Kansas, Kentucky and Ohio.

The cause helped propel Ms Whitmer to victory in her race for re-election in Michigan in 2022, the same year Michigan residents voted to enshrine abortion rights in the state’s constitution. During Ms Harris’ tenure, she has shown a strong focus on reproductive rights, recently visiting a clinic that provides abortions.

It’s an area where her gender could prove an advantage, said Adrian Hemond, a political strategist in Michigan.

“Vice-President Harris is a much better messenger on that issue than Joe Biden,” he said.

‘Excitement in the air’

As concerns grew around 81-year-old Mr Biden’s ability to beat Trump in November, some major donors paused funds when the president’s poll numbers were falling in swing states, including Michigan.

Meanwhile, Trump, 78, also saw a boost in personal ratings after a gunman attempted to assassinate him at a rally in Pennsylvania last month.

But after Mr Biden stepped down, Ms Harris received a record level of donations – $81m (£63m) within 24 hours. Since then, a Morning Consult poll released on Tuesday showed Harris’s approval rating at 50%, up from 43% a week previously, and a separate poll from Reuters/Ipsos found Ms Harris was supported by 43% of registered voters, and Trump supported by 42%.

Some Democratic campaigners in Michigan say that her background as a black woman has helped Ms Harris reach some voters. Her Indian heritage – and the fact she is significantly younger than both Mr Biden and Trump – are also said to boost her appeal to some of the electorate.

Greg Bowens, a member of the executive board of the NAACP in Grosse Pointe, said there is “excitement in the air” in Detroit. He added this hasn’t been seen in Detroit – Michigan’s largest majority African-American city – since Barack Obama, the first black president.

“She has electrified black and brown folks,” he said.

While an apparent wave of enthusiasm grows among some Democratic voters, Ms Harris has been subjected to attacks based on her gender and background.

A 2021 video of Trump’s running mate JD Vance resurfaced has resurfaced, with the Republican criticising the political left – including Ms Harris – for being full of “childless cat ladies with miserable lives”. The remark was criticised widely, including by actor Jennifer Aniston, but they were seized on by some conservative figures on social media, who argued that Ms Harris is less suitable to be president because she lacks a stake in the future. Ms Harris is step-mother to her husband’s two children.

More generally, female candidates face more superficial criticisms than male politicians about how they look, how they carry themselves and how they speak, said Ms Paul, the Fems for Dems leader who helps encourage women to vote and run for office.

It’s a point seemingly not lost on many voters – a Pew Research Center poll from September 2023 said 62% of Americans believed there was too much of a focus on female candidates’ appearances, versus 35% for male candidates.

Female politicians of colour are targeted more than their white male counterparts, said Nazita Lajevardi, a Michigan State University political science professor. “Women of colour politicians face attacks that are gendered and raced at the same time,” she said. “They report experiencing more verbal attacks, more online abuse.”

Female, black public figures can be subjected to scrutiny of their past sexual history, said Jamil Scott, an assistant professor of government at Georgetown University. Images have circulated on social media with criticisms of Ms Harris’ past romantic partners. Whatever the motivation for circulating these images, Ms Harris has been married to Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff for 10 years.

Ms Scott said that as a female politician, Ms Harris will also likely be forced to walk a tightrope where she is perceived as strong in attacking her Republican rival, but doesn’t risk being seen as angry.

“We want women to be tough as candidates, but then we don’t want them to be too tough,” she said.

Ms Scott pointed to Hillary Clinton – the first US major party female presidential candidate – who was perceived by some to be unlikeable and too aggressive in her attacks against Trump in 2016.

Trump attempted to exploit this sense, famously calling Ms Clinton a “nasty woman”.

While Ms Harris’s background and stance on abortion may appeal to some, they do not guarantee support among left-leaning voters.

Tressa Johnson, a 31-year-old liberal voter from Grand Rapids, believes Ms Harris’s policy stances are what make her undesirable – not her ethnicity or gender. She says the vice-president’s past as a tough-on-crime prosecutor and the Biden administration’s limited criticism of Israel’s actions in Gaza make her a poor candidate.

“People just want to go, ‘Look, she’s a woman of colour,’” said Ms Johnson, who plans to vote for Green Party candidate Jill Stein. “I just want a competent person that cares about the working class people in this country.”

A ‘potent’ rival in Trump

What Ms Whitmer’s Michigan victory can’t help the Harris campaign with is how to beat a candidate as high profile as Trump. Mr Hemond, the political strategist, said that while Ms Whitmer defeated two “ill-equipped” Republican opponents, Ms Harris is up against a tougher candidate.

“It is very fair to say that Donald Trump is a much more potent electoral force,” he said.

The former president and his supporters have already started to attack Ms Harris based on her gender and ethnicity.

Echoing comments from Trump’s 2016 race, in which the former president accused Ms Clinton of playing the “woman card” to attract voters, Trump’s allies have claimed Ms Harris was picked solely for the purpose of “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion” (DEI).

It’s the kind of attack that Ms Harris would do best to ignore, as Ms Whitmer has done, said Mr Hemond.

During Ms Whitmer’s run for governor and time in office, she has been subjected to a host of sexist remarks, including from Michigan’s former Republican Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey, who once said he had “spanked” Ms Whitmer “hard” while working with her on the state’s budget.

“Gov. Whitmer largely let others litigate the sexist comments that were made about her, which was smart,” Mr Hemond said. “There does seem to be a perceptual danger for female candidates in engaging directly with these types of comments.”

Mr Hemond added that ignoring these types of comments often makes for an effective strategy because a majority of voters are women themselves, many of whom can relate to having to handle “sexist comments gracefully”.

Some liberal residents in Michigan hope voters will see beyond the DEI attacks against Ms Harris.

“She is intelligent, she has deep experience governing and making policy,” said Brandy, a voter in Southeast Michigan.

The Morning Consult poll also showed that Ms Harris’ ratings are a significant improvement on Mr Biden’s in swing states, and that she has gained 5 points in Michigan.

But Trump has strong support here too. A week after the shooting, he spoke to a crowd of 12,000 in Grand Rapids in his first public rally since the attack.

It’s a state Trump won by 11,000 votes in 2016 when he beat Hillary Clinton. Mr Biden won it back in 2020 by over 100,000 votes.

A changing climate

In some respects, the political backdrop has changed since 2016, Ms Scott said.

Voters were “not excited about Hillary Clinton”, she said. “They didn’t see the power in the moment of having a woman run for president.’’

But another wave of women may have been inspired by Ms Clinton’s defeat, and Trump’s victory, Ms Scott said. After millions of women participated in marches across the US to protest Trump’s inauguration, the country saw a record number of female candidates running for office in 2018.

Meanwhile, the percentage of Americans who believe men better suited to politics than women fell from 19% in 2014 to 14% in 2018, according to data from the University of Chicago’s National Opinion Research Center. In 1975, 47% of Americans believed men made better politicians than women.

Ms Harris has already seen an outpouring of support, in particular among black women and on social media, where memes of the vice-president are ubiquitous.

She is framing the race in November as a choice between “freedom” and “chaos” under Trump who she points out has been convicted of 34 felonies.

But ultimately, it may be her diverse background and experience that pulls more voters into the race, experts said.

“So many people see themselves in her, especially in a state like Michigan, where many people are of immigrant backgrounds or are black or South Asian,” said Ms Lajevardi, the Michigan State professor. “It matters when someone knows your community’s interests and seeks to represent them.”

Technically, Ms Harris became the first female president in 2021 – when she was handed presidential powers for 85 minutes while Mr Biden underwent a health check. Now the challenge for her campaign is to see whether she can extend that to four years.

Michigan offers pointers as to how women can take the top jobs, and stay in them.

Mystery surrounds US woman found starving and chained to tree in India

Geeta Pandey & Cherylann Mollan

BBC News
Mushtaq Khan

BBC Marathi

Mystery surrounds an American woman who was found chained to a tree “screaming” in a forest in the western Indian state of Maharashtra.

Lalita Kayi, 50, was discovered a week ago in the dense forests of Sindhudurg district after her cries for help were heard by shepherds. They alerted the police who sawed off the chain and rescued her.

Ms Kayi, who appeared completely emaciated, was taken to hospital. Her physical health has since improved and, on Friday, she was moved to a psychiatric facility for further treatment, doctors treating her told the BBC.

In a written statement to the police, she has alleged that her husband “chained her and left her in the forest to die without food or water”.

Police say they are looking for her husband in the southern state of Tamil Nadu on the basis of information she provided them.

But seven days after Ms Kayi was rescued, many questions remain unanswered.

Pandurang Gawkar, a cow herder who found her last Saturday, told BBC Marathi that he had taken his cattle to graze in the forest when he heard “a woman screaming loudly”.

“The sound was coming from the forest on the side of the mountain. When I went there, I saw that one of her legs was tied to a tree. She was screaming like an animal. I called other villagers and the local police.”

Police said that on her they found a copy of her passport, which stated that she was an American citizen, and her Aadhaar card – a unique ID for Indians – with her home address in Tamil Nadu.

They said she also had a mobile phone, a tablet and 31,000 rupees ($370; £290) in her possession – which allowed them to rule out theft as a motive.

Locals say that it was the woman’s good fortune that the shepherd picked a spot near her to graze his flock that day. The forest she was discovered in is vast and she otherwise could have gone for days without anyone hearing her cries for help.

Police initially took her to a local hospital before moving her to a hospital in the neighbouring state of Goa.

Dr Shivanand Bandekar, dean of Goa Medical College, told The Indian Express newspaper that she had some wounds on her leg and that she appeared to be suffering from a mental health condition.

“We do not know for how long she did not eat, but her vital signs are stable,” Dr Bandekar said.

On Friday, the woman’s physical health had improved enough to be moved to a psychiatric hospital in Ratnagiri district of Maharashtra state.

“Currently, her health is stable,” hospital superintendent Dr Sanghamitra Phule told BBC Marathi.

“She is taking medication, eating, and interacting with people. If she wants something, she can communicate it. She only knows English.”

According to the police, Ms Kayi was a ballet dancer and yoga practitioner in America – some reports say specifically Massachusetts – and moved to India about 10 years ago to study yoga and meditation in Tamil Nadu.

It was there that she met her husband – in some media reports, police have called him Satish. Police say they believe at some point she fell out with her husband.

Some reports say that she stayed in a hotel in Goa for two days and then travelled to Mumbai city, India’s financial capital.

But there is no clarity surrounding when or how she then ended up in the forest where she was discovered last week.

Ms Kayi, who was initially unable to speak, communicated with the police and doctors by scribbling notes on a pad. Through them she blamed her husband for tying her to the tree and claimed that she had gone without food and water for 40 days.

She also claimed that she had been given an “injection for extreme psychosis” which locked her jaw and prevented her from drinking water, and that she had to be provided nutrition intravenously.

“I am a victim and survived. But he ran away from here,” she alleged.

Police say they have been unable to verify these claims and believe it is unlikely that someone would survive without food or water for so long.

They have registered a case of attempted murder against her husband and have dispatched teams to Tamil Nadu, Goa and Maharashtra to investigate the matter further. Her husband is yet to be traced by the police and hasn’t made any statements to the media.

Police say they are also looking for clues in the mobile phone and the tablet they found on the woman.

The US embassy in Delhi – which media reports say has been “exerting pressure on the police to speed up the investigation” – has refused to comment on the case.

A spokesperson told the BBC that it could not respond to inquiries “due to the US Privacy Act”, which governs the dissemination of private information.

Plea deal with accused 9/11 plotters revoked

Max Matza

BBC News

US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin has revoked a pre-trial agreement reached with men accused of plotting the 11 September 2001 attacks.

In a memo on Friday, Mr Austin also said he was revoking the authority of the officer overseeing the military court who signed the agreement on Wednesday.

The original deal, which would reportedly have spared the alleged attackers the death penalty, was criticised by some families of victims.

The 9/11 attacks in New York, Virginia and Pennsylvania were the deadliest assault on US soil since the 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, where 2,400 people were killed. They sparked the “War on Terror” and the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq.

In his memo, Mr Austin named five defendants including the alleged ringleader of the plot, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, all of whom are held in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. The original deal named three men.

“I have determined that, in light of the significance of the decision to enter into pre-trial agreements with the accused… responsibility for such a decision should rest with me as the superior authority,” Mr Austin wrote to Brig Gen Susan Escallier.

“I hereby withdraw your authority. Effective immediately, in the exercise of my authority, I hereby withdraw from the three pre-trial agreements.”

The White House said on Wednesday that it had played no role in the plea deal.

The five men named in the memo were: Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, often referred to as KSM, Walid Muhammad Salih Mubarak bin Attash, Mustafa Ahmed Adam al-Hawsawi; and two others not mentioned in the original plea: Ramzi bin al-Shibh and Ali Abdul Aziz Ali.

The men have been in custody for decades without trial. All have alleged they were tortured – KSM was subjected to simulated drowning, so-called “waterboarding”, 183 times before it was banned by the US government.

All have already faced more than a decade of pre-trial hearings, complicated by the allegations and evidence of torture against them.

Several family members of victims had criticised the terms of the deal struck on Wednesday as too lenient.

Brett Eagleson, the president of 9/11 Justice, which represents survivors and relatives of victims, had told the BBC earlier this week that the families were “deeply troubled by these plea deals”.

Speaking on Saturday, Terry Strada, who lost her husband Tom and chairs the 9/11 Families United group, told the BBC she was “very pleased” to see the Pentagon revoke the plea deal and put the death penalty back on the table.

If the men are found guilty after a trial, Mrs Strada said she would want to see the death penalty, “not because I am ghoulish or a horrible person, it’s because it fits the crime”.

“They’ve murdered nearly 3,000 Americans on American soil… lives were just permanently altered on that day,” she added.

A lawyer at Guantanamo representing Mohammed told The New York Times that he was shocked by the sudden u-turn.

“If the secretary of defence issued such an order, I am respectfully and profoundly disappointed that after all of these years the government still has not learned the lessons of this case,” said lawyer Gary Sowards.

“And the mischief that results from disregarding due process and fair play.”

The men have been accused of a litany of charges, including attacking civilians, murder in violation of the laws of war, hijacking and terrorism.

In September, the Biden administration reportedly rejected the terms of a plea deal with five men held at the US Navy base in Cuba, including Mohammed.

The men had reportedly sought a guarantee from the president that they would not be kept in solitary confinement and would have access to trauma treatment.

KSM is alleged to have brought the idea of hijacking and flying planes into buildings to al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. He was captured in Pakistan in 2003 along with Hawsawi, a Saudi who was an alleged fundraiser.

Ali, a computer scientist and nephew of KSM, is accused of providing technical support to the 9/11 operation.

Bin al-Shibh, a Yemeni, allegedly co-ordinated the attacks and had planned to be a hijacker but could not secure a US visa.

Bin Attash, also a Yemeni, is accused of bombing the USS Cole in Yemen in 2000, which killed 17 sailors, and involvement in the 11 September attacks.

Several Republicans applauded the defence secretary for revoking the deal.

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson said the “Biden-Harris Administration is correct to reverse course”, which he said followed Republicans “launching investigations into this terrible plea deal”.

“Now deliver long awaited justice for 9/11 families,” he said.

South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham said the decision “exercised good command judgement”.

“The previous plea deal would have sent absolutely the wrong signal to terrorists throughout the world,” he added.

Earlier on Friday, Republican Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee Mike Rogers demanded answers from Mr Austin on how the deal was struck.

“This deal signals willingness to negotiate with terrorists who deliberately harm Americans,” he wrote in a letter to the defence secretary.

Kim Jong Un wants Trump back, elite defector tells BBC

Jean Mackenzie

Seoul correspondent
‘Kim Jong Un will even kill all 25 million North Koreans to ensure his survival’

Donald Trump returning to the White House would be “a once-in-a-thousand-year opportunity” for North Korea, according to a man in a unique position to know.

Ri Il Kyu is the highest-ranking defector to escape North Korea since 2016 and has been face to face with Kim Jong Un on seven separate occasions.

The former diplomat, who was working in Cuba when he fled with his family to South Korea last November, admits to “shivering with nerves” the first time he met Kim Jong Un.

But during each meeting, he found the leader to be “smiling and in a good mood”.

“He praised people often and laughed. He seems like an ordinary person,” Mr Ri tells the BBC. But he is in no doubt Mr Kim would do anything to guarantee his survival, even if it meant killing all 25 million of his people: “He could have been a wonderful person and father, but turning him into a god has made him a monstrous being.”

In his first interview with an international broadcaster, Mr Ri provides a rare understanding of what one of the world’s most secretive and repressive states is hoping to achieve.

He says that North Korea still views Mr Trump as someone it can negotiate with over its nuclear weapons programme, despite talks between him and Kim Jong Un breaking down in 2019.

Mr Trump has previously hailed the relationship with Kim as a key achievement of his presidency. He famously said the two “fell in love” exchanging letters. Just last month, he told a rally Mr Kim would like to see him back in office: “I think he misses me, if you want to know the truth.”

North Korea is hoping it can use this close personal relationship to its advantage, says Mr Ri, contradicting an official statement from Pyongyang last month that it “did not care” who became president.

The nuclear state will never get rid of its weapons, Mr Ri says, and would probably seek a deal to freeze its nuclear programme in return for the US lifting sanctions.

But he says Pyongyang would not negotiate in good faith. Agreeing to freeze its nuclear programme “would be a ploy, 100% deception”, he says, adding that this was therefore a “dangerous approach” which would “only lead to the strengthening of North Korea”.

A ‘life or death gamble’

Eight months after his defection, Ri Il Kyu is living with his family in South Korea. Accompanied by a police bodyguard and two intelligence agents, he explains his decision to abandon his government.

After years of being ground down by the corruption, bribery and lack of freedom he faced, Mr Ri says he was finally tipped over the edge when his request to travel to Mexico to get an operation on a slipped disc in his neck was denied. “I lived the life of the top 1% in North Korea, but that is still worse than a middle-class family in the South.”

As a diplomat in Cuba, Mr Ri made just $500 (£294) a month and so would sell Cuban cigars illegally in China to make enough to support his family.

When he first told his wife about his desire to defect, she was so disturbed she ended up in hospital with heart problems. After that, he kept his plans secret, only sharing them with her and his child six hours before their plane was due to depart.

He describes it as a “life-or-death gamble”. Regular North Koreans who are caught defecting would typically be tortured for a few months, then released, he says. “But for elites like us, there are only two outcomes – life in a political prison camp or being executed by a firing squad.”

“The fear and terror were overwhelming. I could accept my own death, but I could not bear the thought of my family being dragged to a gulag,” he says. Although Mr Ri had never believed in God, as he waited nervously at the airport gate in the middle of the night, he began to pray.

The last known high-profile defection to the South was that of Tae Yong-ho in 2016. A former deputy ambassador to the UK, he was recently named the new leader of South Korea’s presidential advisory council on unification.

Turning to North Korea’s recent closer ties with Russia, Mr Ri says the Ukraine war had been a stroke of luck for Pyongyang. The US and South Korea estimate the North has sold Moscow millions of rounds of ammunition to support its invasion, in return for food, fuel and possibly even military technology.

Mr Ri says the main benefit of this deal for Pyongyang was the ability to continue developing its nuclear weapons.

With the deal, Russia created a “loophole” in the stringent international sanctions on North Korea, he says, which has allowed it “to freely develop its nuclear weapons and missiles and strengthen its defence, while bypassing the need to appeal to the US for sanctions relief”.

But Mr Ri says Kim Jong Un understands this relationship is temporary and that after the war, Russia is likely to sever relations. For this reason, Mr Kim has not given up on the US, Mr Ri says.

“North Korea understands that the only path to its survival, the only way to eliminate the threat of invasion and develop its economy, is to normalise relations with the United States.”

While Russia might have given North Korea a temporary respite from its economic pain, Mr Ri says the complete closure of North Korea’s borders during the pandemic “severely devastated the country’s economy and people’s lives”.

When the borders reopened in 2023 and diplomats were preparing to return, Mr Ri says families back home had asked them to “bring anything and everything you have, even your used toothbrushes, because there is nothing left in North Korea”.

The North Korean leader demands total loyalty from his citizens and the mere whiff of dissent can result in imprisonment. But Mr Ri says years of hardship had eroded people’s loyalty, as no-one now expected to receive anything from their “Supreme Leader” Kim Jong Un.

“There is no genuine loyalty to the regime or to Kim Jong Un anymore, it is a forced loyalty, where one must be loyal or face death,” he says.

The ‘most evil act’

Recent change has largely been driven by an influx of South Korean films, dramas and music, which have been smuggled into the North and are illegal to watch and listen to.

“People don’t watch South Korean content because they have capitalist beliefs, they are simply trying to pass the time in their monotonous and bleak lives,” Mr Ri says, but then they begin to ask, “Why do those in the South live the life of a first-world country while we are impoverished?”

But Mr Ri says that although South Korean content was changing North Korea, it would not bring about its collapse, because of the systems of control in place. “Kim Jong Un is very aware that loyalty is waning, that people are evolving, and that’s why he is intensifying his reign of terror,” he says.

The government has introduced laws to harshly punish those who consume and distribute South Korean content. The BBC spoke to one defector last year who said he had witnessed someone be executed after sharing South Korean music and TV shows.

North Korea’s decision, at the end of last year, to abandon a decades-old policy of eventually reunifying with the South, was a further attempt to isolate people from the South, Mr Ri says.

He describes this as Kim Jong Un’s “most evil act”, because all North Koreans dream of reunification. He says that while North Korea’s past leaders had “stolen people’s freedom, money and human rights, Kim Jong Un has robbed what was left of them: hope”.

Outside North Korea, much attention is paid to Kim Jong Un’s health, with some believing that his premature death could trigger the collapse of the regime. Earlier this week, South Korea’s intelligence agency estimated that Mr Kim weighed 140kg, putting him at risk of cardiovascular disease.

But Mr Ri believes the system of surveillance and control is now too well established for Kim’s death to threaten the dictatorship. “Another evil leader will merely take his place,” he says.

It has been widely speculated that Mr Kim is grooming his young daughter, thought to be called Ju Ae, to be his successor, but Mr Ri dismisses the notion.

Ju Ae, he says, lacks the legitimacy and popularity to become the leader of North Korea, especially as the sacred Paektu bloodline, which the Kims use to justify their rule, is believed to run only through the men of the family.

At first, people were fascinated by Ju Ae, Mr Ri says, but not any more. They question why she was attending missile tests rather than going to school, and wearing luxury, designer clothes instead of her school uniform, like other children.

Rather than waiting for Mr Kim to become ill or die, Mr Ri says the international community has to come together, including North Korea’s allies China and Russia, to “persistently persuade it to change”.

“This is the only thing that will bring about the end of the North Korean dictatorship,” he adds.

Mr Ri is hoping that his defection inspires his peers, not to defect themselves, but to push for small changes from the inside. He does not have lofty ambitions, that North Koreans will be able to vote or travel, merely that they can choose what jobs to work, have enough food to eat and be able to share their opinions freely among friends.

For now, though, his priority is helping his family settle into their new life in South Korea and for his child to assimilate into society.

At the end of our interview, he poses a scenario. “Imagine I offer you a venture and tell you, if we succeed we win big, but if we fail it means death.

“You wouldn’t agree, would you? Well that is the choice I forced upon my family, and they silently agreed and followed me,” he says.

“This is now a debt I must repay for the rest of my life.”

‘Still alive’ – graduate Asmaa’s texts to BBC from the ruins of Gaza

Paul Adams

BBC diplomatic correspondent

For six years the BBC’s Paul Adams has been in contact with a young graduate in Gaza. Her text messages give a unique insight into the terrors and small triumphs she has experienced during the current conflict, and her fears for the future.

My phone lights up. It is Asmaa. “Still alive,” she writes.

It is 19 March 2024 and after several weeks of silence, Asmaa Tayeh has reappeared on WhatsApp.

“Sorry. Bad internet connection and dangerous days.” And then silence. For another two months.

It has been like this since 7 October. Long disappearances, punctuated by flurries of text messages, as the 28-year-old emerges, briefly, amid the nightmare of Gaza’s longest war.

It is always late at night. Somewhere, Asmaa has found a signal. Far away in London, my phone pings as the messages tumble in.

I met Asmaa in 2018. I was in Gaza, reporting on daily protests at the border fence with Israel, where thousands of mostly young Palestinians angrily commemorated their ancestors’ displacement during Israel’s War of Independence, 70 years earlier.

Asmaa was not part of the protests. I found her at her family’s home a few miles away in Jabalia, quietly writing stories, some of which I had read online, about daily life in a place she both loved and hated.

Her laptop was a cherished portal to the world outside. She had only ever known the Gaza Strip and its stifling sense of isolation. From her spartan room, she watched vloggers and Youtubers casually exploring places she could only dream of.

As a recent graduate in a place with few job prospects and frequent outbreaks of extreme violence, the exotic images flashing onto her computer screen were intoxicating but painful.

“They show me how handcuffed I am,” she wrote that year.

A refugee camp of tents and tin shacks in the 1950s, Jabalia had long since morphed into a small city, more than 100,000 people crammed together in a place of tall buildings, teeming alleyways and open sewers.

Despite her narrow confines, the young Asmaa was hopeful.

In September 2022, she launched her own business, Star Café, an online coffee delivery service. Her social media feeds suggested an optimistic young entrepreneur, finally achieving long-cherished goals and planning for the future.

A year later, on 6 October 2023, in an Instagram post artfully depicting her branded products alongside a vase of roses and a manicured hand, she thanked God for “the blessing of self-employment”.

But what she didn’t know was that a meteor was hurtling in her direction, about to obliterate everything.

The following day, Hamas gunmen stormed across the border fence, killing about 1,200 Israelis and foreigners in nearby communities and at the Nova music festival.

Israel’s response was like nothing Gazans had ever seen before. Its military would go on to kill tens of thousands of people, displace more than 80% of the population, and render large parts of the Gaza Strip uninhabitable.

Three days later, on 10 October, Asmaa got in touch.

“Hey Paul. It’s nice to hear from you. We are unharmed,” she messaged.

“But to be honest, I don’t feel safe at all. We could be bombed at any minute.”

Despite hearing air strikes hitting nearby targets, Asmaa was hopeful the war would soon be over.

But this was not a repeat of earlier Gaza wars. Within days, Israeli planes dropped leaflets, telling everyone in the northern Gaza Strip – more than one million people – to move south.

Jabalia started to empty, but Asmaa’s family – 13 people spanning three generations – stayed put, fearing going south would prove a one-way journey.

For the descendants of refugees who were forced or fled from their homes in 1948, never to return, the thought of history repeating itself stirred deep fears.

Only her grandparents, elderly and frail, travelled, eventually finding shelter in Rafah.

With electricity cut, food in freezers spoiling, and communications increasingly difficult, the family used a small generator every couple of days to charge mobiles and monitor the news.

Asmaa’s messages were becoming increasingly sporadic.

“It’s dangerous all over the Gaza Strip,” she told me on 15 October.

At the end of October, Jabalia experienced its worst air strikes so far. Israel said it had targeted underground Hamas structures and killed large numbers of fighters.

The scenes were apocalyptic, with civilians and rescue workers searching for survivors through vast craters and wrecked buildings.

Asmaa vanished. My WhatsApp messages were no longer being read. I assumed the worst.

But six weeks later, she suddenly reappeared. “I’m still alive, by God’s miracles,” she wrote on 12 December.

It did, indeed, feel miraculous.

In a torrent of messages that followed, Asmaa described the previous chaotic weeks. The family’s reluctant decision to leave Jabalia, efforts to head south thwarted by the intensity of the fighting, terrifying journeys through a city at war.

“I saw so much that I cannot find words to describe,” she said.

“The streets are scary and the smell of death is everywhere. People are getting skinny and sick. I feel like I’m living inside a horror movie.”

When forced to walk, the family would spread out along the road, hoping this would improve their chances of survival.

“We kept distance between us, so if any air strike comes, not all of us will die.”

During a week-long ceasefire in late November, the family had briefly returned to the house in Jabalia.

The top floor was gone. Asmaa’s own room, which had doubled up as her Star Café office and studio, was pockmarked by shrapnel.

When the ceasefire collapsed on 1 December, they fled once more, finding refuge in a printing shop in Gaza City where one of Asmaa’s brothers had worked before the war. It was filthy, reeked of paint, and had no kitchen, mattresses, or water.

“We basically lived with rats,” she says.

When it was safe enough to go outside, they would walk, sometimes for hours, searching for clean water – especially vital to make up the formula for Asmaa’s two-month-old nephew.

But after less than three weeks in the shop, Asmaa got a phone call from the Israeli army. She was used to the army’s recorded messages and leaflets dropped from the sky, with instructions to leave areas about to be attacked.

But this time she found herself talking to a real person.

The man said Israel was about to start an operation nearby. For her safety, and that of her family, she needed to leave.

“I wanted to curse him, but I couldn’t.”

She says she was curious, after two-and-a-half months of war, to find herself speaking to an Israeli. She imagined what it must feel like to spend your whole day making the same phone call over and over.

“I felt like there is on the other side an employee who’s sick of his work.”

For all the horrifying immediacy of the war consuming the north, this was as close as Asmaa ever came to meeting an Israeli soldier. Part of her wishes that she’d had more contact.

“I’m really curious about the way they’re fighting, how they look at us, how they understand the struggle,” she told me later.

“I feel like I need to dive inside their minds.”

At the end of December, as the bulk of the fighting moved south, the family made its weary way back to the house in Jabalia.

“We started the new year in the best way ever – all together in our partially-destroyed home.”

Asmaa’s father, a retired carpenter, spent the following weeks repairing the damage, fixing windows, doors and cupboards.

But food was in desperately short supply. International aid agencies warned that famine was looming. Asmaa noticed that people in Jabalia were starting to look gaunt.

Asmaa’s family had stocked up on canned goods. But flour, meat, fruit and vegetables had all disappeared from the markets. Aid agencies were struggling to bring humanitarian relief to the north.

The family eked out their dwindling rations, ate twice a day, and drank tea without sugar – something practically unheard of among Palestinians.

On the roof of the house, where her brother’s room had once stood, her father started growing vegetables.

Asmaa had lost 9kg (almost 20lb) and felt her appetite ebbing away. But slowly, the humanitarian situation started to improve. Air drops and new aid routes into the north kept famine at bay.

Flour was back. The family had chicken and tomatoes for the first time in months.

There was more water, too. Enough for the occasional shower.

“We started to feel a little bit settled down.”

But then the war came back.

On 12 May, the Israeli army returned to Jabalia, saying intelligence indicated Hamas was once more operating out of the area.

Asmaa was bewildered.

“Only days ago, they were talking about a very possible ceasefire,” she wrote, “and suddenly I woke to ‘Let’s pack, we have to leave asap.’”

The family went west, to an area known as al-Nasr, near the coast, where her grandparents had lived before the war.

Al-Nasr was a wasteland, much of it reduced to rubble months earlier. But her grandparents’ house was intact. Long-since looted following their departure for the south, but somehow undamaged.

The family moved in and settled down, wondering how long this third dislocation would last.

One day, driven by curiosity, Asmaa walked to the nearby beach, where she marvelled at the sight of Gazans frolicking in the waves, despite the ominous presence of Israeli gunboats patrolling offshore.

“We’ve started to feel careless,” she told me. “We don’t care for our lives any more. That’s how tired we are.”

On 19 May came the news that Asmaa had long dreaded. Her grandfather had died the day before, aged 91. After being forced to move repeatedly, he and his wife had recently settled in a tent in al-Mawasi, a desperately overcrowded place of dismal conditions, where many Palestinians had fled after the Israeli army began an operation in Rafah at the start of the month.

Sheltering in his abandoned house, Asmaa felt bereft. She hadn’t seen her grandfather since just before the war, when she had persuaded him to pose for a selfie.

“I was so happy that I managed to take that memory.”

Israeli forces finally left Jabalia on 1 June. Four days later, the family trudged back through streets so ravaged they were barely recognisable, to find their home still standing but increasingly battle-scarred.

The whole process – of cleaning, repairing and planting – had to start again, made harder this time by the fact that a missile had destroyed the workshop where her father kept all his tools.

For months, Asmaa and I had only ever communicated by text. Finally, in early July, we spoke on the phone. Two long conversations in which Asmaa took me through her Gazan odyssey and described how it had changed her.

Each time, her voice faded in and out and the line crackled, creating the impression of enormous distance.

Each time, Israeli drones, ubiquitous since this war began, could be heard buzzing in the background.

Asmaa said survival was a mixed blessing. Everyone in the house was alive. But the war wasn’t over and the threat of death was constant.

“I feel anxious all the time, thinking that there will be one day in which I will lose something,” she said. “I mean, our turn will come.”

Gaza, where Asmaa had nurtured her dreams, had been devastated. But it wasn’t the physical changes that were absorbing her the most.

Society, she said, had been utterly transformed. The constant shocks of death, displacement and trauma leaving whole neighbourhoods teetering on the brink of disintegration.

Tight-knit communities had been blown apart, she said, with family members and neighbours scattered up and down the length of the Gaza Strip, and beyond.

Sometimes, in the struggle for survival, Gazans had turned on themselves. A total breakdown in law and order leaving gangs and rival families to battle it out for control of precious resources.

“It’s becoming really normal to see people even killing each other,” Asmaa said.

But if war had brought out the worst in people, it had also brought out the best.

In Jabalia, Asmaa said, people were sharing food and water, exchanging the latest news and information on where to charge mobile phones. With basic foodstuffs once again in short supply, women were swapping improvised recipes.

“Everyone is really taking care of each other.”

Asmaa said it would take decades for Gazans to recover the meagre, confined, life they knew before 7 October. Defiant talk of reconstruction and renewal, she said, felt delusional.

As for herself, Asmaa’s only dream now was to escape.

“I don’t have any hope in this place,” she told me. “I’m not the same person any more. I don’t think I’ll recover.”

Spies’ children did not know they were Russian

Malu Cursino

BBC News

The children of a Russian spy couple who returned home on Thursday after the largest prisoner swap between the West and Russia since the Cold War only found out their nationality on the flight to Moscow.

Artem Viktorovich Dultsev and Anna Valerevna Dultseva were posing as an Argentine couple living in Slovenia when they were jailed there.

Their children do not speak a word of Russian and did not know who President Vladimir Putin was, asking their parents who was greeting them upon their arrival, the Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

In total, 24 people jailed in seven different countries were exchanged on Thursday.

Sixteen were Western prisoners detained in Russian jails and eight were Russian prisoners held in the US, Norway, Germany, Poland and Slovenia. Among them was Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich.

The Russian family of four were warmly welcomed, with Mrs Dultseva and her daughter receiving flowers and a warm embrace from President Putin.

“Buenas noches,” the president said to the spies’ children, as he greeted them in Spanish.

As reported by Argentinian media, the couple were known as María Mayer and Ludwig Gisch and arrived in Slovenia sporting their Argentinian passports in 2017.

The husband set up a start-up IT company under his alias name and the wife had an online art gallery.

The family used Ljubljana as their base and it was not until 2022 that the couple were arrested by Slovenian police on espionage charges.

Ahead of the large scale prisoner swap, Mr Dultsev and Mrs Dultseva were sentenced to 19 months in prison each, after pleading guilty to spying charges on Wednesday. But given their arrests in 2022, they were released on time served and ordered to leave Slovenia, as reported by the Associated Press.

It was not until Thursday, during the large scale Russia-West prisoner swap, that the Kremlin spies, and their children, were returned to Russia.

Life for 11-year-old Sofia and 8-year-old Gabriel, who were born in Argentina, changed thereafter and they only learnt they were Russian when the plane set off from Ankara to Vnukovo Airport, the Kremlin said.

“The children of the undercover agents asked their parents yesterday who had greeted them,” Mr Peskov said, adding: “They did not even know who Putin is.”

The Kremlin spokesman said that is how undercover agents (or “illegals”) work, “making such sacrifices for the sake of their work and their dedication to their service”.

Unlike “legal” spies, who are posted abroad under diplomatic or other official cover, illegals are on their own – working normal jobs, living in suburbs and operating without the diplomatic immunity enjoyed by other agents should they be caught.

Beach attack in Somali capital kills dozens

Malu Cursino

BBC News

At least 32 people were killed in a suicide attack carried out by al-Shabab militants at a popular beachfront location in the Somali capital, a police spokesman said on Saturday.

Abdifatah Adan Hassan said around 63 people were also wounded, some of them critically.

Video footage showed a number of bodies and injured people in Mogadishu’s Abdiaziz district.

Al-Shabab controls large parts of southern and central Somalia. The group is affiliated to al-Qaeda and has waged a brutal insurgency for nearly 20 years against the UN-backed government in Somalia.

In a statement claiming the attack, al-Shabab said “politicians, [security] forces and employees from various ministries and offices” were among those killed.

The group says the death toll and injuries are much higher than figures released by the police.

One eyewitness told AFP news agency people were in a state of panic, as “it was hard to know what was happening because shooting started soon after the blast”.

Abdilatif Ali said some people attempted to take cover on Lido beach, while others tried to flee the location.

“I saw wounded people at the beachside. People were screaming in panic and it was hard to notice who was dead and who was still alive,” he added.

At least five people were responsible for the attack, as Mr Hasan said one attacker blew himself up while three others were killed.

One attacker was captured alive, the police spokesman told reporters in Mogadishu.

Moussa Faki Mahamat, chair of the African Union Commission, described the attack as “horrific”.

The Somali Disaster Management Agency urged people to donate blood to support injured victims.

Overwhelming evidence Venezuela opposition won election – Blinken

Ione Wells

BBC News
Reporting fromCaracas
Thomas Mackintosh

BBC News

The US secretary of state has said there was “overwhelming evidence” Venezuela’s opposition won the recent presidential election.

In a statement Antony Blinken said it was clear Edmundo González, had won the most votes – despite incumbent president Nicolás Maduro declaring a disputed victory.

“Given the overwhelming evidence, it is clear to the United States and, most importantly, to the Venezuelan people that Edmundo González Urrutia won the most votes in Venezuela’s 28 July presidential election,” Mr Blinken said.

His intervention comes as the presidents of Brazil, Mexico and Colombia all called on Venezuela to release the full details of last Sunday’s election.

  • Key moments which led to Venezuela protests
  • Maduro manoeuvring to stay in power in Venezuela

The US State Department later said Mr Blinken had spoken to Mr González to congratulate him “for receiving the most votes”.

In a call with Mr González and the opposition party’s leader María Corina Machado, Mr Blinken “expressed his concern for their safety and well-being” and “condemned all political violence and repression”.

On Friday, Venezuela’s election authority ratified Mr Maduro’s disputed victory – saying he had won about 52% of votes to Mr González’s 43%, from 97% of votes counted.

Mr Maduro accused the opposition of producing fake evidence to contest the result of the election and said the US was behind what he described as a farce and a coup attempt.

In a media conference, he also blamed the opposition for spreading false information and encouraging violence in Venezuela.

Last Sunday, the electoral council, which is government-controlled, announced President Maduro had won the election for a third term.

But this was immediately disputed by the opposition who said, with access to the majority of receipts from electronic voting machines around the country, it was false.

The opposition has said its own vote tally shows it won the election by a wide margin. Opinion polls ahead of the election had suggested a clear victory for the challenger.

The announcement of Mr Maduro’s victory on Sunday set off deadly protests in Caracas.

It has also attracted global criticism, with many governments around the world demanding the Venezuelan government release proof of the result.

The result has been recognised by Venezuelan allies China, Russia and Iran.

But, the US, European Union and other G7 countries have called on Mr Maduro’s government to release detailed voting data.

Posting on social media, Mr Blinken said: “Electoral data overwhelmingly demonstrate the will of the Venezuelan people: democratic opposition candidate Edmundo González won the most votes in Sunday’s election.

“Venezuelans have voted, and their votes must count.”

The intervention by Mr Blinken is significant. After the last election in 2018 was widely dismissed as neither free nor fair, countries including the US decided to recognise the then-opposition leader Juan Guaido as interim president and imposed sanctions on Venezuela.

Mr Blinken said it was “time for the Venezuelan parties to begin discussions on a respectful, peaceful transition in accordance with Venezuelan electoral law and the wishes of the Venezuelan people”.

Argentine Foreign Minister Diana Mondino shared Mr Blinken’s view, writing in a post on X, formerly Twitter: “We can all confirm, without a doubt, that the legitimate winner and President-elect is Edmundo González.”

Ecuador, Uruguay, Costa Rica and Peru have also recognised Mr González as the president-elect.

However, the governments of Brazil, Colombia and Mexico called for an “impartial verification” of the result, urging Venezuela to publish voting data broken down by polling stations in a joint statement.

Opposition leader Ms Machado, who says she is in hiding, has called for mass demonstrations on Saturday.

Speaking to the Wall Street Journal, she said Mr Maduro did not win the election.

She claimed her party’s candidate, Mr Gonzalez, won by a landslide and Ms Machado said she could prove this because she had receipts from more than 80% of polling stations.

Ms Machado appealed for help, saying it was now up to the international community to decide whether to tolerate what she called an illegitimate government.

Maui wildfire victims offered $4bn settlement

A $4 billion (£3.1 billion) settlement has been announced for claims from more than two thousand people seeking compensation over last year’s deadly wildfires on Maui, Hawaii’s governor has said.

Josh Green’s office confirmed a deal in principle had been proposed to resolve around 450 legal cases.

The August 2023 wildfires were the deadliest in modern US history, killing more than 100 people and destroying the historic town of Lahaina.

A term sheet, seen by the BBC, said a $4.037 billion agreement had been proposed which “must fully resolve all Maui fires claims”.

The settlement, which Mr Green said was reached after four months of negotiation, will be paid by the seven defendants named in lawsuits lodged in the wake of the fires.

These are the State of Hawaii, County of Maui, Hawaiian Electric, Kamehameha Schools, West Maui Land Co, Hawaiian Telcom and Spectrum/Charter Communications.

Hawaiian Electric has confirmed it will contribute nearly $2 billion, a little under half of the total settlement deal.

The hundreds of legal cases had been launched by individuals, businesses, and insurance companies in state and federal courts, Mr Green said. Approximately 2,200 affected parties had filed lawsuits, he added.

His statement made clear it is currently still an agreement in principle and requires final court and legislative approval.

“The agreement is conditional on the resolution of the insurance companies’ claims that have already been paid for property loss and other damages, with no additional payments from the defendants,” it added.

Mr Green said the deal “will help our people heal”, adding it was his priority to “avoid protracted and painful lawsuits” to allow the recovery process to begin as soon as possible.

“Settling a matter like this within a year is unprecedented, and it will be good that our people don’t have to wait to rebuild their lives as long as others have in many places that have suffered similar tragedies.”

Once a final settlement is agreed it must also be approved by Hawaii’s state legislature, Mr Green said. Payments are expected to begin by mid-2025, he added.

  • Published

After their most successful opening week to a summer Olympics, Team GB showed no signs of slowing down on day eight.

The 10th British gold of Paris 2024 was won in the men’s rowing eights, lifting the team above the USA to fourth in the medal table.

The women’s eights won a hard-earned bronze, as the rowing team reached historic heights in the French capital.

GB’s equestrian team continued their impressive Games with a medal in the team dressage, although they missed out on the golden clean sweep.

There was also bronze for Emma Wilson in the windsurfing, though she was left disappointed by her performance in the delayed final.

Meanwhile, there were mixed fortunes on the track, as Louie Hinchliffe won his men’s 100m heat – but team-mate Jeremiah Azu was disqualified.

In the pool, Adam Peaty made his return following a positive Covid test as GB aim for medals in the relays as the swimming action approaches a conclusion.

Earlier in the archery, 16-year-old Brit Megan Havers – the youngest archer competing at the Olympics – was beaten by number one seed Lim Si-hyeon in the women’s individual competition.

Havers however did herself proud, as she became the first woman to win a point against Lim at these Games by tieing the first set.

“Finishing where I am and shooting how I have just has made me hungry for the next Olympics,” she said after her exit from Paris. “I can’t wait to see what four years brings for me.”

Golden end to rowing regatta

The final day of rowing competition at the 2024 Games brought medals for Team GB in both blue riband events.

Firstly, the women’s eights took bronze after a close battle with Canada, who won silver while Romania ran away with gold.

Then came the men, who were neck and neck with the Netherlands at the halfway mark before charging away in the final 500m to emulate the gold they won in this event in 2016.

Cox Harry Brightmore was on his feet in the boat, pointing out each of the eight rowers to congratulate them on their achievement.

This was GB’s eighth rowing medal in Paris, making it their best medal tally for an overseas games. They won nine at 2012, and eight in 1908 – both in London.

Hinchliffe impresses but heartbreak for Azu

Hinchliffe, the British sprinter trained by American Olympic great Carl Lewis, laid down a marker in the men’s 100m heats.

He won his heat in 9.98 seconds ahead of highly fancied Noah Lyles of the USA, before GB’s Zharnel Hughes also progressed.

Before that, the men’s 100m – arguably the highlight of the Olympics in male competition – could not have got off to a worse start for Team GB.

It was heartbreak for Azu as he was disqualified from his heat for a false start.

The 23-year-old from Cardiff – who ran 9.97 seconds in May, one of the top 10 fastest times ever by a British athlete – fiercely fought his case, but eventually left the track in the most disappointing fashion.

The highlight of tonight’s athletics action is the women’s 100m final at 20.20 BST. GB’s Dina Asher-Smith, Imani Lansiquot and Daryll Neita are all through to the semi-finals.

Peaty returns to the pool

Peaty returned to the pool to help Great Britain qualify fifth-fastest for the men’s 4x100m medley relay final.

The team of Oliver Morgan, Peaty, Joe Litchfield and Matt Richards led their heat at the halfway point and but were pipped into second spot by the United States.

Leon Marchand swam the breaststroke leg in heat one for France, who were roared on their way to victory. The final takes place at 18.10 BST tomorrow.

Earlier, Britain’s Anna Hopkin qualified for the semi-finals of the women’s 50m freestyle – but only just.

Hopkin finished in a tie for fourth in her heat and qualified joint-15th fastest with a time of 24.72 seconds.

Sarah Sjostrom of Sweden, the world record holder who won the 100m freestyle this week, qualified quickest with a time of 23.85secs – almost half a second faster than the rest of the field.

Team GB will defend their mixed 4x100m relay swimming gold at 20.30 BST – with Peaty aiming to be involved.

GB win dressage bronze after difficult build-up

Before these Games, Britain’s dressage team were affected by the withdrawal of multi-gold-winning rider Charlotte Dujardin after a video emerged of her mistreating a horse.

On Saturday they completed their recovery with a bronze medal, as Germany took gold and Denmark silver.

Becky Moody, who replaced Dujardin in the squad, rode first on Jagerbomb followed by Carl Hester – competing in his seventh Games having made his Olympics debut at Barcelona 1992 – on Fame.

Lottie Fry on Glamourdale completed the job to put GB on the podium.

One negative was that GB missed the chance to complete an unprecedented equestrian clean sweep, following golds in team eventing and jumping.

Wilson disappointed with bronze

Having dominated the opening rounds and qualified straight for the final to guarantee a medal, Wilson had high hopes of windsurfing gold.

However, she had to settle for a second successive Olympic bronze, having also finished third in Tokyo.

The disappointment was clear for Wilson as she dropped to her knees on the board after crossing the finish line and had to be comforted by her coach.

Wilson led in the early stages of the final but found herself going off track at the halfway mark and never recovered.

Marta Maggetti of Italy won gold, with silver claimed by Israel’s Sharon Kantor.

  • Published

American gymnast Simone Biles won her third Olympic gold of the Paris Games when she took the vault title in emphatic fashion.

After helping the USA to women’s team gold and then taking the all-around title, the 27-year-old reclaimed another of the titles she first won at Rio 2016, having lost them in Tokyo when she pulled out of several events.

She nailed her huge Biles II vault before sticking her ‘easier’ vault – whose difficulty is harder than many attempt as their best vault – to score an average of 15.300.

Brazil’s Rebeca Andrade, the only gymnast who has skills that can come close to Biles and who won the title in Tokyo, took silver with 14.966 and American Jade Carey got bronze with 14.466.

Biles had said after winning the all-around title two days ago that facing Andrade was “stressful” as she was the only gymnast who has ever pushed her closely and joked she did not want to face her again.

There had been anticipation that Andrade might try a new skill that she has submitted – a triple-twisting Yurchenko vault that would have a difficulty value closer to Biles’ best vault – but that did not materialise.

The 25-year-old, who beat Biles on this apparatus at last year’s World Championships, performed her vaults well. She scored higher than Biles for execution on both vaults, but with difficulty values that were a full mark lower than her rival’s efforts, Andrade would only have had a chance if the American had faltered.

Biles became the third most decorated female gymnast with 10 Olympic medals and with two more finals to come on Monday – floor and beam – she can overtake second-placed Vera Caslavska, who won 11 for Czechoslovakia between 1960 and 1968. The all-time record of 18 is held by Soviet Union gymnast Larisa Latynina.

  • Published

Algeria’s Imane Khelif and Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting have been cleared to compete at the Paris Olympics despite being disqualified from last year’s World Championships after they were said to have failed gender eligibility tests.

Khelif, 25, is through to the quarter-finals of the women’s 66kg category after beating Italy’s Angela Carini, while Lin reached the last eight of the women’s 57kg category with victory over Uzbekistan’s Sitora Turdibekova.

Their participation in the Games has proved controversial given their disqualifications in 2023.

Khelif’s bout, which was abandoned after 46 seconds by Carini, has led to some criticising the International Olympic Committee (IOC) for allowing the entry of a boxer who it is said previously failed to meet gender eligibility criteria.

Italian Carini said she ended the fight to “preserve her life”, but apologised to her Algerian opponent on Friday, saying “if the IOC said she can fight, I respect that decision”.

Khelif, speaking after her victory, said: “I’m here for the gold – I fight everybody.”

Lin won her first fight at Paris 2024 on Friday – the 28-year-old entering the arena to cheers and some boos before beating Sitora Turdibekova in the 57kg category.

The International Boxing Association (IBA), which was the previous organiser of Olympic boxing, has been a vocal critic of the IOC’s decision to permit the two athletes to compete.

Here BBC Sport takes you through some of the key questions around the topic.

What sex were Khelif and Lin assigned at birth? Were they born biologically male or female?

Khelif has always competed in the women’s division and is recognised by the IOC as a female athlete.

“The Algerian boxer was born female, was registered female, lived her life as a female, boxed as a female, has a female passport,” IOC spokesperson Mark Adams said on Friday.

“This is not a transgender case. There has been some confusion that somehow it’s a man fighting a woman. This is just not the case. On that there is consensus, scientifically this is not a man fighting a woman.”

Khelif has spoken about her experience of growing up as a girl in Algeria and the prejudice she faced playing football alongside boys.

“Don’t let obstacles come in your way, resist any obstacles and overcome them,” she said in March 2024. “My dream is to win a gold medal.

“If I win, mothers and fathers can see how far their children can go. I particularly want to inspire girls and children who are disadvantaged in Algeria.”

There is no suggestion Khelif identifies as anything other than a woman.

Lin has also always competed in the women’s division and is recognised by the IOC as a female athlete.

What are their boxing careers to date?

Khelif has been boxing for eight years.

The Algerian made her debut on the world amateur stage at 19, when she came 17th at the 2018 World Championships. A year later, Khelif came 19th in the 2019 Women’s World Boxing Championships.

She made her Olympic debut at the 2020 Games in Tokyo. Fighting in the 60kg lightweight division, Khelif was beaten 5-0 at the quarter-final stage by Ireland’s eventual gold medallist Kellie Harrington.

She then became the first Algerian boxer to win a World Championship medal, taking silver in 2022 after losing the final to Ireland’s Amy Broadhurst, who now represents Britain. Khelif followed that by winning the 2022 African Championships and 2022 Mediterranean Games.

In 2023, she won gold at the Arab Games in the 66kg division and earned her place in the 2024 Games by beating Mozambique’s Alcinda Panguana in the final of the African Olympics qualification tournament in Senegal.

To date, Khelif has fought 50 times in her career, winning 41 and losing nine. Six of those victories have come via knockout.

Lin began boxing as a 13-year-old in 2008 and has enjoyed a successful career since making her debut at the elite level in 2017.

She is a two-time world champion – in 2018 and 2022 – and won bronze in 2019.

She is also a two-time Asian champion (2017 and 2019), and a two-time Asian Games medallist – winning gold in 2023 and bronze in 2018.

Lin made her Olympic debut at Tokyo 2020, losing in the last 16 of the featherweight category to Nesthy Petecio.

Of her 58 bouts, she has won 44 and lost 14. She has one victory by knockout.

Why was Khelif’s win against Carini controversial?

Khelif’s victory attracted controversy after Carini conceded in just 46 seconds.

Much of the criticism from some people stems from Khelif’s disqualification at the 2023 World Championships in New Delhi, India.

She failed a gender eligibility test conducted by the IBA hours before her gold-medal showdown against China’s Yang Liu. The Algerian initially appealed against the decision to the Court of Arbitration of Sport (Cas), but withdrew her appeal during the process, the IBA said.

The Russian-led IBA said Khelif “failed to meet the eligibility criteria for participating in the women’s competition, as set and laid out in the IBA regulations”.

According to the IBA’s regulations: “Boxers will compete against boxers of the same gender, meaning women vs women and men vs men as per the definitions of these rules.

The IBA defines a woman, female or girl as “an individual with chromosome XX” and men, males or boys as “an individual with chromosome XY”.

The IBA denied Khelif’s testosterone levels had been tested.

In an interview with BBC sports editor Dan Roan on Thursday, IBA chief executive Chris Roberts said XY chromosomes were found in “both cases”.

Roberts said there were “different strands involved in that” and therefore the body could not commit to referring to Khelif as “biologically male”.

The IOC has raised doubts over the accuracy of the tests.

“We don’t know what the protocol was, we don’t know whether the test was accurate, we don’t know whether we should believe the test,” said IOC spokesperson Adams.

“There’s a difference between a test taking place and whether we accept the accuracy or even the protocol of the test.”

The BBC has, as yet, been unable to determine what the eligibility tests consisted of.

What happened with Lin at the 2023 World Championships?

At the same 2023 World Championships, Lin was stripped of a bronze medal by the IBA.

The IOC said on its media information portal earlier this week that she had failed to meet “eligibility requirements based on the results of a biochemical test”.

It added: “It was the first time a Chinese Taipei athlete had been required to take a biochemical test for gender eligibility since the IBA started to use the new testing method.”

The IOC removed this information from its portal later in the week.

In a statement on Thursday, the IOC said instead that Khelif and Lin had been “victims of a sudden and arbitrary decision by the IBA”.

“Towards the end of the IBA World Championships in 2023, they were suddenly disqualified without any due process,” the IOC said.

“According to the IBA minutes available on their website, this decision was initially taken solely by the IBA secretary general and CEO. The IBA board only ratified it afterwards and only subsequently requested that a procedure to follow in similar cases in the future be established and reflected in the IBA Regulations. The minutes also say that the IBA should ‘establish a clear procedure on gender testing’.

“The current aggression against these two athletes is based entirely on this arbitrary decision, which was taken without any proper procedure – especially considering that these athletes had been competing in top-level competition for many years.

“Such an approach is contrary to good governance.”

The IBA insisted its decision was “necessary to uphold the level of fairness and utmost integrity of the competition”.

It said in a statement earlier this week: “The athletes did not undergo a testosterone examination but were subject to a separate and recognised test, whereby the specifics remain confidential. This test conclusively indicated that both athletes did not meet the required necessary eligibility criteria and were found to have competitive advantages over other female competitors.”

The IBA said Lin did not appeal against the IBA’s decision to Cas, “thus rendering the decision legally binding”.

Some reports in Taiwan in 2023 suggested, external Lin’s test failure was due to “weight control and menstrual cycle” medication that affected hormonal levels.

What has changed in Olympic boxing regulation and governance since the IBA’s decision?

Unlike previous Games, boxing at the Tokyo Olympics was organised by the IOC rather than the IBA.

The IOC suspended the IBA in 2019 because of concerns over its finances, governance, ethics, refereeing and judging.

Having failed to meet required reforms set out by the IOC, the IBA was stripped of its status as the sport’s world governing body in 2023. That decision was upheld in April 2024 by Cas following an appeal.

The IOC’s decision to strip the IBA of its status came four months after the body disqualified Khelif and Lin from the World Championships.

In 2021, the IOC released a framework on ‘Fairness, Inclusion and Non-Discrimination on the Basis of Gender Identity and Sex Variations’, external.

The document sets out 10 principles – not rules – for national bodies to follow when selecting athletes for the Games.

The IOC said it “supports the participation of any athlete who has qualified and met the eligibility criteria to compete in the Olympic Games as established by their IF (International Federation). The IOC will not discriminate against an athlete who has qualified through their IF (International Federation), on the basis of their gender identity and/or sex characteristics.”

What testing is conducted in boxing?

In 2019, the IOC delegated responsibility for the organisation and management of doping control at the Olympics to the International Testing Agency (ITA).

The IOC said it took a “zero-tolerance policy” to anyone found using or providing doping products.

Tests include, but are not excluded to, determining an athlete’s levels of testosterone.

“There are many women with higher levels of testosterone than men,” said IOC spokesperson Adams.

“So the idea that a testosterone test is a magic bullet is actually not true.”

Is this a transgender debate?

No.

There is no suggestion that Khelif or Lin identify as transgender.

Some reports have taken the IBA statement that the boxers have XY chromosomes to speculate they might have differences of sexual development (DSD) like runner Caster Semenya.

However, the BBC has not been able to confirm whether this is or is not the case.

On Saturday, IOC president Thomas Bach told a news conference this was not a “DSD case” – but later issued a correction.

He had told journalists at the IOC daily briefing: “We are not talking about the transgender issue here. This is about a woman taking part in a women’s competition.

“I repeat, this is not a DSD case.”

The IOC later posted a correction on social media , external saying Bach did not mean to say it was “not a DSD case”, he was meant to say “this is a not a transgender case”.

In posting their correction they did not give any further details on whether this is a DSD case.

Similarly, neither the Olympic teams representing the athletes nor the boxers themselves have given any details.

And even if this was the case, it might be considered medically private information that was not made public.

DSD is a group of rare conditions, whereby a person’s hormones, genes and/or reproductive organs may be a mix of male and female characteristics.

Some of those affected prefer the term “intersex”, which is an umbrella term used to describe people who are born with biological variations in their sex characteristics that don’t fit typical male or female categories.

Other sports have rules in place for athletes with DSD, whose elevated testosterone levels can lead to increased muscle mass and strength.

World Athletics, for example, only allows athletes with DSD to compete in female track events if they reduce their testosterone levels.

When do Khelif and Lin next fight?

Khelif takes on Hungarian boxer Anna Luca Hamori on Saturday at about 16:20 BST.

On Friday Hamori, 23, said she doesn’t “think it’s fair” Khelif is taking part in the women’s category.

She wrote on social media: “In my humble opinion I don’t think it’s fair that this contestant can compete in the women’s category.

“But I cannot concern myself with that now. I cannot change it, it’s life.

“I will do my best to win.”

Lin faces Bulgarian Svetlana Kamenova Staneva – the featherweight European champion – on Sunday at 10:00 BST.

What have people said?

– Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.

. Steve Bunce, 5 Live commentator

Chris Roberts, CEO of IBA

Mark Adams, IOC spokesperson.

Lisa Nandy, Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport.

Whisper it, but is now a good time to holiday in Paris?

James FitzGerald in Paris, with Ido Vock & Sean Seddon in London

BBC News

For all those concerns about high prices and big crowds ahead of the Olympics, now might just be an unexpectedly good time to holiday in Paris.

Hotels and restaurants have told the BBC they have dropped their prices to entice customers – after what some call a “catastrophic” downturn in takings during the Games that have left them asking what the event has done for them.

The French capital might seem to be the centre of the world for those watching the sport on TV – but the city’s relatively quiet streets and empty dining tables tell a different story.

Earlier this week, local media ran reports of a “deserted” Disneyland and of Parisians’ bemusement as they managed to secure seats on metro trains at rush hour.

  • How to get to Paris for the Olympics
  • Parisians’ Olympic spirit not dampened – but grumbles remain

So, what is happening?

Analysts suggest that many Parisians have left the city in droves for the summer, as is their tradition. But also, some overseas visitors have been put off by concerns around price-gouging and overcrowding on an Olympic scale.

One of the locals who used the word “catastrophic” was a restaurateur called Lies in the usually bustling Latin Quarter, who said July had been his worst month for 25 years. During the height of Covid, at least people continued to order meal deliveries, he told the BBC.

Tourists had been put off coming to the area because of security blockades that were put in the place for the previous week’s opening ceremony, Lies suggested.

Another nearby restaurateur hovering in his doorway, Yarva, said would-be visitors had chosen not to pay hotel prices which multiplied several times ahead of the Games.

The event was “only for the rich”, he said, and used a hand gesture to indicate he thought the price inflation had been crazy.

Ahead of the Games, airlines warned there was a low appetite for journeys to Paris, with both Delta and the company that owns Air France predicting an impact on their business.

“Unless you’re going to the Olympics, people aren’t going to Paris,” the Delta boss told CNBC.

This was reflected in flight prices that were well below the usual asking price for this time of year, according to travel expert Simon Calder, writing this week for The Independent.

Next-day one-way flights from UK cities were as low as £31 (€36; $39) per adult (from Edinburgh) at the time of writing this article. However, tickets for the Eurostar trains, which were last week affected by a sabotage attack on the French railway network, were considerably higher.

June and July saw an “avoidance effect”, said Raphael Batko of hotel marketing firm Doyield, which represents about one in 20 of the city’s hotels. He also used the word “catastrophic” to describe the phenomenon, though he said visitor numbers had picked up and were now satisfactory.

A similar avoidance phenomenon has been noticed in previous Olympics, including in London in 2012, when businesses suggested that the Games had deterred visitors and shrunk their profits.

What remains to be seen is whether the emergency action taken by the hospitality industry will be enough to salvage the Olympic trade for many Parisian businesses.

With restaurants dropping their prices, it was now possible to get a meal for as little as €8 (£6.80, $8.70) in the Latin Quarter, claimed Riad, the proprietor of the Olympie diner, as he tried to entice diners.

Hotels, too have tried a similar trick – largely reversing the earlier rises which appear to have been so off-putting. Tourism authorities confirmed that average prices had returned to €258 (£219; $279) per night during the Games, following a massive hike that had previously seen them peak at €342 last month.

The BBC saw that a number of Airbnbs on offer were advertising price reductions, although the company said prices had remained stable since the start of the year, and more locals had been opening their homes in host cities.

Individual hoteliers in Paris spoke of mixed success.

One reception manager, Dino, said bookings had reached normal levels – but only after rates were slashed by half when things “looked bleak”.

Another, Isabelle, said her own price drop had been ineffective and lamented that “we didn’t gain anything from the Olympics”.

As well as the sport, there were plenty of good reasons to come to the French capital for the summer, said Christophe Decloux, head of the Choose Paris regional tourist board.

He cited the city’s rich cultural offering, plus smooth transportation and a “very joyful” atmosphere during the Games.

“Paris is usually very calm in late July and August because people leave for the holidays,” he said, “and right now it is just as calm as usual in August except in some areas around the venues where people are bonding over the sport.”

Organisers of Paris 2024 have trumpeted the positive effects of the Games on Paris following record ticket sales.

It remains possible to sign up to see events, as tickets are released each day. About 800,000 of them are still up for grabs, organisers told the BBC on Friday.

The sporting spectacle itself has already proven memorable – and with some disgruntled businesses doing everything they can to coax in visitors, last-minute bookers to Paris might find themselves in with a chance of scoring a bargain.

Why Putin thinks he’s the winner in prisoner swap

Steve Rosenberg

Russia editor

It’s something Vladimir Putin does rarely: go to the airport to meet people off a plane. Personally.

But he was there last night: on the tarmac at Moscow’s Vnukovo Airport to meet and greet those Russians whose release he’d secured from foreign jails; part of the largest prisoner swap between Russia and the West since the Cold War.

Out of the plane and down the steps came 10 people, including spies, sleeper agents and a convicted assassin.

“Congratulations on your return to the Motherland!” he told them.

You could tell that the Kremlin believes it has something to celebrate.

For the returning Russians there was a red carpet reception and a guard of honour. There were bouquets of flowers and – for some – hugs from the president. Mr Putin embraced Vadim Krasikov, the FSB hitman who’d been serving a life sentence in Germany for assassinating a Georgian-born Chechen dissident.

President Putin promised them all state awards.

“I would like to address those of you who have a direct connection to military service,” he continued. “Thank you for your loyalty to your oath and your duty to your Motherland, which has never forgotten you for a moment.”

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  • Watch: Putin hugs Russian prisoners as they arrive in Moscow

There’s another message the pro-Kremlin press is putting out right now: good riddance to those Russia has freed from its prisons and who’ve been flown abroad.

“Eight Russians who’d been jailed in Nato countries have returned to the Motherland in exchange for individuals who had been acting to the detriment of Russia’s national security,” says the government paper.

Referring to the dissidents released by Moscow, Komsomolskaya Pravda claims “they have ditched their former Motherland and flown to those who hired them.”

Attempts to discredit critics and opponents; lavish praise for loyal supporters who are portrayed as true patriots. All this helps the authorities make the case with the Russian people that the prisoner swap was a success for the Kremlin.

Russia-West prisoner swap: Watch how the night unfolded

There is little doubt that the Kremlin views the prisoner swap as a victory for Moscow. It got what it wanted… it got its agents back, including the man who was No.1 on its wish list, Krasikov. The German authorities had initially been unwilling to release a convicted assassin, who a German court had concluded had acted on behalf of the Russian authorities.

That reluctance softened as a wider deal took shape.

But why was it so important for the Kremlin to secure Vadim Krasikov’s release and to bring him home?

Today’s Russian newspapers provide a clue.

“We’re returning our guys” is the headline in the government paper Rossiyskaya Gazeta,

“We don’t abandon our own!” declares the pro-Putin tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda.

That is precisely the message the Kremlin wants to send to its agents and spies: if we send you on missions abroad, and things go wrong, we’ll find a way of getting you home.

‘Dead reyt’: The love letter to Yorkshire making gamers cry laughing

Laura Cress

BBC News
Tom Richardson

BBC Newsbeat
Reporting fromBarnsworth

“Dead reyt”, “faff” and “keep gu’in” are words you don’t often see in video games.

But two pals from Yorkshire have changed all that.

God’s Own Country, as the locals call it, is the inspiration for Thank Goodness You’re Here!, a new game created by James Carbutt and Will Todd, from Barnsley.

The pair – aka development team Coal Supper – are the minds behind the fictional northern town of Barnsworth.

Players pilot a tiny, silent character through a series of surreal odd-jobs given to them by local residents.

It’s a deliberately weird experience, but it’s also been hailed as hilariously funny and “reyt proper Yorkshire”.

One of the first buildings players enter – the local pub, of course – has a blackboard outside advertising today’s special.

“Drinks.”

It’s little touches like this, along with a script full of regional slang delivered in Yorkshire accents, that have led people to call Thank Goodness “the most northern game ever”.

But how did it get made?

Will and James, who provide voices for many characters in the game, say the distinctive script came naturally as they developed it.

“The more we worked on it, the more we started drawing out characters that just sounded more and more like us, because we’re doing it in our voices,” says Will.

The video games industry has been criticised for becoming more risk-averse and leaning into sequels and remakes as the cost of making blockbuster titles has increased.

James and Will admit that a lot of publishers were “sceptical” when they pitched their unique project to them.

“I think part of that was we were obviously trying to shirk traditional game design,” says Will.

“Tropes and genres and stuff. And it wasn’t necessarily super-clear what the game was going to be.”

They say the Yorkshire setting was a bit of a hurdle too.

Some of the bigger indie game publishers are US-based and Will says there are “assumptions about what Britishness is when you’re pitching for funding”.

“Colin Firth and the rain British,” says James.

“This is more like flat caps and whippets,” adds Will.

They eventually signed a deal with Panic! – the publisher behind mega-hit Untitled Goose Game, which cast players as a wildfowl on a mission to cause havoc in a small village.

The publisher helped them to get IT Crowd and What We Do in the Shadows actor Matt Berry – known for his deadpan baritone – on board for a bit of star power.

And they have made some allowances for an international audience.

“There’s subtitles for people from Yorkshire and subtitles for proper English – translation options for Southerners,” says James.

“If we wrote the script in the dialect and then recorded everything, we had to go through and then put the proper English in,” says Will.

Thank Goodness isn’t the only high-profile game released this year to feature strong UK accents.

Horror game Still Wakes the Deep, set on a North Sea oil rig in 1975, employs a mostly Scottish voice cast.

Creative lead John McCormack says developers The Chinese Room agreed early on that they wanted the story of the ill-fated Beira D rig to feel “like it actually happened”.

And that meant no compromise on the way it sounded.

“To be authentic to the setting and the period there was only one way to do it,” he says.

“And that was to hire the right voices for the story.”

John admits it will be “hard to understand” in places for some, but the performances help to convey the mood of a scene even when the audience doesn’t understand every word.

“When you bring in realistic accents to double down on that authenticity, it just sort of solidifies the kind of sense of place,” says John.

“So when the horror kicks in, it feels more real.”

John feels audiences have “completely embraced” the performances in Still Wakes the Deep, even if conventional wisdom suggests otherwise.

“When it comes to funding, when you’re going to publishers and you’re trying to sell your idea, it’s generally looking for global appeal,” he says.

“And in the gaming space that tends to be a clean American accent or kind of posh English accents or something that can be fully understood.”

John says that Still Wakes the Deep is relatively unusual because it’s grounded in real-life, and many games are set in fantastical worlds where they aren’t tied to a geographical location.

But he hopes projects placing regional voices front and centre will inspire others.

“If you’ve got a story to tell, and you want it to feel authentic, be specific and own the place that it’s set,” he says.

“The audience is intelligent, the audience will, as we’ve seen, they’ll embrace that even more.”

So far Thank Goodness You’re Here! has had a positive response since its release on Thursday.

But Yorkshire lads Will and James are humble about their aspirations for it.

“It’s something that we always dreamed about as kids,” says Will.

“And I think other than massive financial success, I hope it finds an audience.

“It really is a love letter to the north and specifically our hometown.

“And we will be reaching as many of those people as possible.

“And then also an audience of 100,000 Americans.”

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

The Saudi wife who fled to Melbourne – then disappeared

Hannah Ritchie

BBC News, Sydney

When Lolita came to Australia in 2022, she was fleeing an older man she’d been forced to marry as a child in Saudi Arabia.

She told confidants she’d escaped a cycle of violence and sexual servitude so extreme it had repeatedly landed her in hospital.

But less than a year after her arrival, she vanished – last seen by a friend who claims he watched as she was taken from her apartment by a group of Saudi men in a black van.

Records show that Lolita, who is in her early 30s and goes by a single name, was put on a flight from Melbourne to Kuala Lumpur in May 2023. From there, her lawyer believes she was returned to Saudi Arabia and detained.

But Lolita’s exact whereabouts and safety – or whether she is even alive – remain unknown.

It’s far from the first time the mysterious plight of a Saudi woman fleeing her homeland has ended up in the headlines.

“What makes this case particularly compelling, compared to some other cases of Saudi women who have disappeared… or turned up dead, is that we have a witness,” says solicitor Alison Battisson.

The Saudi Arabian embassy in Canberra declined to comment. However, in a statement to the BBC, the Australian Federal Police said it became “aware” of the alleged kidnapping in June and had “started making immediate inquiries” both within the country and “offshore”.

Advocates fear Lolita’s case is part of a growing trend in Australia, in which agents of other countries are monitoring, harassing or assaulting their expats with impunity.

The government has declared foreign interference – of all forms – its “most significant” national security threat and promised a crackdown.

But Ms Battisson and other rights campaigners are questioning how a woman – who had told immigration authorities she was fleeing violence – could allegedly be snatched from her home in broad daylight.

Up and vanished

Lolita first came to Melbourne in May 2022, according to flight records.

Although she mostly kept to herself, she soon struck up a friendship with a Sudanese refugee who had also lived in Saudi Arabia, as an undocumented migrant.

It was Ali – not his real name – who put Lolita in touch with Ms Battisson, as she had helped him with his own asylum claim.

The human rights lawyer spoke frequently with Lolita from that point onwards, describing her as a “soft spoken” woman with a clear resolve to take back her life: “She was determined this was her time.”

But their correspondence ended abruptly in May of last year, after Ms Battisson received a “strange” text message from Lolita.

“It was in much more formal language than she had ever used, and it said, ‘What is my visa status’,” she tells the BBC.

Lolita’s claim for a protection visa – for people at risk of persecution in their home country – had previously been rejected, but Ms Battisson was helping her appeal against the decision. She says that is something her client was acutely aware of, as the two discussed it frequently.

“I now believe that message was actually from the people who had taken Lolita,” Ms Battisson says. She thinks they were trying to work out whether Lolita had a permanent visa, which would have given her the right to Australian consular assistance back in Saudi Arabia.

Then came the radio silence. As the weeks turned to months, Ms Battisson knew in her gut that “something was seriously wrong”.

She couldn’t reach Ali either, which was highly unusual as the two kept in regular contact.

When Ali eventually did return Ms Battisson’s calls, her worst fears were confirmed.

He said that he had witnessed Lolita being taken, but that the incident had left him so paralysed with fear for his own family, that he’d gone to ground.

He detailed his last conversation with Lolita – a frantic phone call in which she pleaded for protection from a group of men planning to take her to Saudi Arabia.

She even sent him pictures of the bags she claimed they had forced her to pack.

Ali told Ms Battisson he rushed to her flat, but on arrival an Arabic-speaking man threatened him, using personal details that Ali believes could only have come from the Saudi embassy in Canberra.

Changing tack, he contacted a friend and asked him to go to the airport, so the two of them could “create a fuss” and get the attention of security.

But they never saw Lolita in the terminal.

“It took me a year in total to confirm she had been taken,” Ms Battisson says, the dismay in her voice palpable.

The pro-bono lawyer has since been building a paper trail to try to piece together what happened.

“We have phone records and message records of her talking about being frightened. And we also have a pattern of her moving house because of that fear,” she says.

And then there’s the recent testimony of a relative. “As far as they know, Lolita is now in a Saudi prison or detention centre,” Ms Battisson says.

Glaring gaps in the story remain, but one thing Ms Battisson is unequivocal about is that “there are simply no safe options” for Lolita in her home country.

Since becoming the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia in 2017, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has, in some ways, sought to modernise the kingdom by loosening its long-standing restrictions on women.

Crucially though, all females still require a male guardian to sign them out of prison, and in Lolita’s case, that obligation would fall to the husband she allegedly fled halfway across the world to escape.

That fact alone, Ms Battisson says, should be enough to convince Australian authorities that there is “simply no way she would have willingly gone back to Saudi Arabia”.

‘The threat is real’

Around the same time Lolita came to Australia, the country was grappling with the mysterious deaths of two other Saudi women.

In June of 2022, the badly decomposed bodies of sisters Asra and Amaal Alsehli were discovered in their Western Sydney apartment.

Little is known about how they died, but police have described the case as both “suspicious” and “unusual”, and it will soon be the subject of a coronial inquest.

But according to those who witnessed their behaviour, Asra and Amaal – who travelled to Australia from Saudi Arabia in 2017 to seek asylum – were living in fear.

Reports of Saudi women turning up dead while living abroad or being dragged back to the kingdom while trying to seek asylum are not new.

High profile examples include the case of Tala Farea and Rotana Farea, two sisters who were found duct-taped together in the Hudson River in 2018 after applying for asylum in the US. Or Dina Ali Lasloom, who claims she was intercepted by her uncles during a transit in Manila Airport, while trying to flee to Australia in 2017.

In recent years, scores of Australians with Chinese, Iranian, Indian, Cambodian and Rwandan heritage have also come forward to report incidents of monitoring, harassment, or assault, by agents they believed were employed by their respective governments.

And Australia’s intelligence chief has said that more people are now “being targeted for espionage and foreign interference” inside the country “than ever before”.

“Australians need to know that the threat is real. The threat is now. And the threat is deeper and broader than you might think,” Mike Burgess said in February.

Earlier this year, a parliamentary review of national foreign interference legislation found “significant flaws in its design and implementation” and that it had “failed to achieve its intended purpose”.

In response, the government announced reforms – which it calls “world-leading” – including the establishment of a support network to help diaspora communities identify and report suspicious behaviour, and a permanent foreign interference task force.

“These are complex problems, and we’re constantly working with our agencies to… protect vulnerable people,” Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil said in a statement about the measures.

But it is too early to assess how effective the changes will prove.

It is not, however, too late for the government to help Lolita, Ms Battisson argues. They could issue her a visa and help her return to Australia, a decision that would fall to the Immigration Minister, Tony Burke.

“As a country now, we have the opportunity to ensure that a victim of gendered violence is finally safe,” she says.

“All women deserve a safe environment in which to flourish, which is what Lolita was doing before she was taken.”

Beauty contest sparks row over who counts as South African

Danai Nesta Kupemba

BBC News

When law student Chidimma Adetshina clinched a coveted spot as a Miss South Africa finalist, her triumph unleashed a vicious backlash, unearthing a seam of xenophobia that lies close to the surface for some in the country.

The 23-year-old’s name hints at her connection to Nigeria, but internet detectives wanted to know more and combed through every inch of her life. They found that her father is Nigerian and though her mother is South African, her family had come from neighbouring Mozambique.

“On behalf of South Africans, we don’t recognise her and that name! She better start packing and go home,” raged one commenter on X.

But where is home? Ms Adetshina is South African, as verified by the organisers of the pageant. She has said in interviews that she was born in Soweto – the township next to Johannesburg – and grew up in Cape Town.

However, the “go-home” sentiment, and even harsher attacks, flooded social media. There was also a petition demanding her removal from the high-profile televised competition that amassed more than 14,000 signatures before it was taken down.

The country’s Culture Minister Gayton McKenzie, the leader of the Patriotic Alliance party, which has joined a coalition government and made migration issues a key part of its platform, chimed in.

“We truly cannot have Nigerians compete in our Miss SA competition. I wanna get all facts before I comment but it gives funny vibes already,” he said on X.

The issue has touched a nerve in South Africa that goes beyond who will appear on stage at the final next weekend.

Ms Adetshina declined a BBC request for an interview but she did tell the Sowetan Live news site that the online hate she was facing made her think twice about competing.

“I am representing a country, but I don’t feel the love from the people I’m representing,” she said.

Ms Adetshina added that the whole situation felt like “black-on-black hate”, highlighting a particular strain of xenophobia in South Africa known as “afrophobia”, which targets other Africans.

She felt that she was not the only contestant among the last 16 women with a name that had origins from beyond the country’s shores – there are some with South Asian and European names – yet she was receiving the bulk of the criticism.

Asked to respond to the comments that Ms Adetshina has faced, a Miss South Africa spokesperson did not address them directly but simply said that she was eligible to take part in the competition.

This was not the first time that this has happened. For Melissa Nayimuli, a Miss South Africa contestant last year, it has brought up difficult memories.

The 28-year-old was the target of the same vitriol heaped on Ms Adetshina because her father is Ugandan.

She told the BBC she was unsurprised at the reaction she had received as she had experienced it for most of her life.

“It’s something I tried to run away from, but how do you run away from yourself?” she questioned.

Ms Nayimuli said that while growing up she would constantly speak Xhosa, her mother tongue and one of South Africa’s official languages, to “prove her South African-ness”.

Melissa Nayimuli
At home my father was my hero, but outside I saw him treated as an enemy”

Her voice cracked as she admitted that she felt shame at her Ugandan identity when she was younger because of the afrophobia that she experienced.

“I would not want to be seen with my father because of his darker skin and East African features were a dead giveaway,” she told the BBC.

“At home my father was my hero, but outside I saw him treated as an enemy.”

University of the Free State sociologist Dr Nombulelo Shange links this hostility to South Africa’s history of racism and the apartheid system – which imposed a strict hierarchy that privileged white people.

There is a “sad apartheid mentality that we are struggling to shake as a country”, she said.

“It shows the deep self-hate that we as black South Africans carry with us.”

Dr Shange added that South Africans had internalised oppressive racist reasoning such as colourism, where lighter skin tones are perceived as better.

After apartheid ended in 1994, the government led by Nelson Mandela’s African National Congress (ANC) welcomed African migrants and asylum seekers to the country in part to aid its reintegration into the continent after years of isolation.

But with many South Africans struggling financially, foreigners became the target for some frustrated by their situation.

Zimbabweans, Nigerians and Somalis, among others, have been accused of taking opportunities and resources from South Africans.

There is a “perception of outsiders as competitors for scarce jobs, resources, living space and services”, Michael Morris, head of media at the South African Institute of Race Relations, told the BBC.

He said the growing number of Africans succeeding in South Africa could “easily trigger resentment and violence”.

This climate of hostility has occasionally erupted into attacks. South Africa experienced its worst outbreak of violence against mostly African foreigners in 2008, when more than 60 people died.

“There are black South Africans who will argue that Africans from elsewhere in the continent don’t belong in South Africa,” Mr Morris said.

More than a decade ago, Ms Nayimuli felt this animosity acutely when her father was arrested.

“My dad is the most kind-hearted, gentle soul in the entire universe,” she said – yet he was treated like a criminal because, she believes, he looked like a foreigner.

When Ms Nayimuli’s mother reached the police station in the capital, Pretoria, where her husband was being held officers did not even have an explanation or a charge against him.

Her father was released and Ms Nayimuli’s family never spoke about it again.

They had often “tiptoed” around the xenophobia they faced but when it bubbled up during last year’s Miss South Africa it was a chance for them to address the issue directly and was, for Ms Nayimuli, part of a healing process.

Now, seeing Ms Adetshina experience the same level of abuse her heart goes out to her.

“She is not just a trending topic. She is a human being. She is a young woman getting bullied online – it’s wrong, hurtful and so dangerous,” she said.

But she emphasised that the xenophobes are a small minority and there are many South Africans who call for unity.

Leader of the opposition Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party Julius Malema defended Ms Adetshina last week, saying: “Why do people want to say she’s from Nigeria or Mozambique? She was born here.”

This message of coming together is one that Ms Nayimuli ended her Miss South Africa journey on.

Last year, as the bright lights shone on her during the final round of the competition, she called for African unity in the face of hate.

“Let’s step into our power as Africa. We are one,” she said to a raucous auditorium who cheered on her message of togetherness.

But it seems it did not take root as the discrimination has resurfaced.

Next Saturday, Ms Adetshina will get her chance to take to the stage, but it is not yet clear if she will tackle the haters head on.

You may also be interested in:

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  • Nigerian anger over South African xenophobia
  • Behind the scenes in South Africa’s beauty industry
  • Inside the beauty pageant in one of the world’s worst places to be a woman
  • African beauty: How photography changed my way of seeing

BBC Africa podcasts

A bear mauled a Romanian teen to death. Will a cull solve the problem?

Nick Thorpe

Central Europe correspondent

On 9 July, Diana Cazacu, a 19-year-old hiker, was mauled to death by a young female bear in the Bucegi mountains north of Bucharest. In response, the government overturned a 2016 moratorium on bear hunting – and reignited a fierce debate about what to do with Romania’s growing bear population, the largest in Europe outside Russia.

The staff at the Salvamont headquarters, Romania’s mountain rescue service, radiate calm and efficiency.

When Diana and her boyfriend rang the emergency number, 112, in panic at 15:00 on 9 July, the call was transferred here.

Sergiu Frusinoiu, in charge that day, set out immediately with two teams. One approached the incident spot from above, the other from below. Bears rarely attack humans, except in self-defence – so Sergiu assumed this would be a simple rescue mission.

At the scene they found the woman’s distraught boyfriend. The bear had grabbed Diana, and thrown her down the ravine. They descended by rope, and found the bear standing over the victim.

The bear attacked the rescue team, who defended themselves with pepper spray, firecrackers and rocks, until a hunter arrived and shot the bear. It was too late for Diana, lying on her stomach, her head in the stream.

“Even if the fall or her injuries didn’t kill her, the water could have,” Sergiu told me.

He said Diana’s mistake had been to run away when faced with the bear. Sergiu grew up in these mountains, and has had hundreds of encounters with bears, without incident, he said.

The standard advice is to make noise in bear territory as you walk. If you encounter a bear, stand quiet and still, then back slowly away. As with a dog, the worst thing you can do is run away, as it is sure to follow.

At the base of the footpath which Diana climbed that day, it becomes clear why the bear was on the path. Three large municipal waste bins, the remains of a cage around one, stand open to the sky. One has been tipped over, and there is rotting food, tins and plastic strewn over a wide area.

Around 8,000 bears live in the arc of the Carpathian mountains, one of Europe’s last wilderness regions, their habitat constantly eroded by logging, the spread of towns, and tourism.

In the nearby town of Busteni, at seven in the evening, I get a bear alert on my phone, and rush to the scene, a residential street.

Angry locals say they’re afraid to walk home at night, because of the bears.

The police arrive, and the locals harangue them for doing too little. “But what do you want us to do?” asks a young officer. “Keep us safe!” shouts one man.

I get through to the hunter who shot the bear who killed Diana, but he says he will not speak until the inquest is over.

Former Environment Minister Barna Tanczos is the author of the new law, passed by the Chamber of Deputies and approved by President Klaus Iohannis in July, that allows people to kill up to 500 bears over the next 18 months .

“The bear population is increasing daily, monthly, yearly in Romania, so if we don’t do something we will have thousands, tens of thousands of bears, which is not good for humans, and not good for the bears,” Mr Tanczos said.

“So we have to establish control, we need a balance in human – bear relations, and conflicts, and contacts.”

According to Cristi Remus Papp, head of the large carnivore department of the Worldwide Fund for Nature, the new law will do nothing to improve the situation, and could make it worse.

There is a growing number of “troublesome” bears, he admits, but there are no accurate statistics for how many bears there are overall.

In any case, the number is not the point, he says: “We have to address the root causes of the conflicts, starting with the mass feeding of bears close to settlements, and along the roads in tourist areas.”

Since the communist era, hunters’ associations are obliged by law to feed the bears – a practice initially meant to make them easier to shoot, and keep them out of towns, but is now partly done for tour operators, who want to guarantee a sighting of bears to their clients.

Social media feeds are full of video clips of tourists feeding bears from their cars. A future change in the law could be to fine those who do so.

Other bear management methods have been tried with some success – like tranquillising and removing bears to wild areas of the mountains. But now that bears have got into the habit of raiding bins or begging for food, even conservationists say there may be no alternative to culling them.

One example of good practice is the town of Baile Tusnad.

“In 2021 we had 220 bear alerts. This year so far, only 3,” Zsolt Butyka, the mayor told me proudly. His municipality bought 14 neat, stainless steel bear-proof bins, cut down 50 fruit trees in the town, and ran regular bear awareness campaign for the public.

A poster near the town hall reads: “If you feed a bear, you kill a bear.”

The town is on a main migration route for bears, across the Olt river valley, but now they skirt round the edges. “They’ve learnt there’s nothing for them here,” the mayor tells me.

On a sultry summer evening, Janos Szin, a tour operator who runs a number of bear hides in the Tusnad area, sends me the map coordinates where to wait. A forest ranger in a four-wheel drive picks me up.

Once we’re installed behind a large glass window in a raised hide, he produces a sack and scatters maize. The bears arrive while he is still there – two females, one with three cubs. After a while, a large male ambles up, and the others scatter. He climbs onto the scales, disguised as a feeding trough, and we see his weight: 240 kg (37 stone).

In a phone conversation, Mr Szin tells me the law is bad.

The “wrong bears” will be killed – the large males, minding their business up in the mountains. These males help keep the population down, he says, because they kill the cubs, so they can mate with their mothers.

This is a common practice among lions in the wild, but experts disagree about its prevalence among bears.

Poachers, trying to steal bear cubs, are another problem, Mr Szin suggests.

He’s afraid that hunters from all over the world will now flock to Romania – the only place where they can bag a bear pelt and a skull, to hang on their walls.

Life with the ‘ugliest’ dog-turned Hollywood star

Pritti Mistry

BBC News

The transformation of Britain’s “ugliest” dog into a Hollywood star has been unexpected and “surreal”, her owner has said.

Peggy is appearing alongside Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman in the latest Marvel superhero film, Deadpool & Wolverine.

The five-year-old pugese – a pug and Chinese crested cross – was cast as “Dogpool” after finding fame last year when she was crowned the ugliest pooch in a national contest.

Recalling the past 18 months, Peggy’s owner Holly Middleton, from East Yorkshire, said: “Not in my wildest dreams did I think anything like that would have ever happened.”

“When we submitted her picture [to the ugly dog competition], I didn’t think it would get to the heights it did,” she added.

“I didn’t think that’d be as big a deal as it was.”

However, despite amassing “a massive fan base”, Mrs Middleton said Peggy was not displaying any “diva behaviour” at home.

On the contrary, the usually “reserved and lazy” pugese had gained “a bit more confidence” from the trainer who was tasked with looking after her during production of Deadpool & Wolverine.

“She’s still just plain old Peg,” said Mrs Middleton.

The 37-year-old make-up artist said the family had missed Peggy when she was away filming.

“It was really, really strange not to have her here,” her owner said. “I’ve got two boys and they missed her terribly.

“We didn’t tell them where she was. Everything had to be kept quiet.

“I’m glad she’s back. We missed her.”

Watching Peggy making her debut at a premiere in New York and being held on the red carpet by Hollywood A-listers was “surreal”, Mrs Middleton said.

“I loved it. Peggy looked really comfortable the entire time, as probably most people would being cuddled by Ryan Reynolds.

“They seem to really, really love her and they’re so gentle with her, and you can see… they’re giving her kisses and giving her little rubs on her head.

“I just loved every second of it. I loved seeing her up there doing her thing.

“She just looked so chilled and so happy.”

Mrs Middleton said there were no plans at present for future film roles and Peggy was content with chilling at home.

“First and foremost, she is a family pet,” she added. “There’s nothing she likes more than either cuddling with us on the couch, or snuggling in her bed.”

Despite Peggy’s global recognition, Mrs Middleton said she was “the same as every other dog that gets walked in the village” – though she “absolutely loves” attention and had become accustomed to turning people’s heads.

“When I read comments online, they’re all very positive and very much in favour of Peggy, saying how beautiful she is.

“Before all of this, just the way she looks she would get attention, but it was usually people sort of nudging each other and whispering, ‘Oh, what’s wrong with that dog’.

“So since everything’s happened, the public perception of Peggy, and whether she’s beautiful, ugly, or whatever has definitely changed for the better.”

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US to send jets and warships as Iran threatens Israel

Graeme Baker

BBC News
Jenny Hill

BBC News
Reporting fromTel Aviv

The US will deploy additional warships and fighter jets to the Middle East to help defend Israel from possible attacks by Iran and its proxies, the Pentagon said.

Tensions remain high in the region over the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Iran and a key commander of the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah.

Missile defence forces were placed on a state of increased readiness to deploy, the Pentagon said, adding that its commitment to defend Israel was “ironclad”.

Iran’s leader Ayatollah Khamenei has vowed “harsh punishment” against Israel for the assassination of Haniyeh.

The Hamas leader was killed in Tehran on Wednesday. Iran and its proxy in Gaza blamed the attack on Israel, which has not commented.

Haniyeh, 62, was widely considered Hamas’s overall leader and played a key role in negotiations aimed at reaching a ceasefire in the Gaza war.

His death came just hours after Israel claimed it killed Fuad Shukr, the top military commander of Iran’s proxy in Lebanon, Hezbollah.

A Pentagon statement said the new deployments would “improve US force protection… increase support for the defence of Israel, and … ensure the US is prepared to respond to various contingencies”.

The deployments would include additional ballistic missile defense-capable cruisers and destroyers, it said.

High alert

On Tel Aviv’s seafront, the mood appears relaxed with bronzed bodies lazing under beach umbrellas.

But few are in any doubt that the Middle East stands perilously close to full- scale war.

Israel is on high alert.

Several international airlines have suspended flights to the country.

Meanwhile, Israeli ministers were sent home this weekend with satellite phones in case of an attack on communication infrastructure.

Earlier on Saturday, Israeli forces killed a Hamas operative in the West Bank.

Dozens of Palestinians were reported to have been killed in strikes on Gaza in the last 24 hours – a reminder that Israel’s war in the region continues even as diplomats scramble to prevent its escalation.

The US military has stepped-up deployments before, on 13 April when Iran launched an attack on Israel with drones and missiles. Israel and its allies shot down almost all of roughly 300 drones and missiles that were fired.

Israel has not commented directly on the strike which killed Haniyeh. But Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his country had delivered “crushing blows” to its enemies in recent days, including the killing of Shukr in Beirut.

He warned Israelis that “challenging days lie ahead… we have heard threats from all sides. We are prepared for any scenario”.

Earlier, Pentagon spokesperson Sabrina Singh said the US did not believe escalation was inevitable.

“I think we are being very direct in our messaging that certainly we don’t want to see heightened tensions and we do believe there is an off-ramp here and that is that ceasefire deal,” Singh said.

An Israeli delegation will travel to Cairo in coming days for negotiations to reach a Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal, Mr Netanyahu said on Friday.

Hamas sparked the war with its 7 October attack on Israel, which killed 1,200 people. Israel responded with an ongoing military operation in Gaza that has killed almost 40,000 people, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

The circumstances surrounding Haniyeh’s death are, as yet, still unclear.

On Saturday, the Daily Telegraph reported that Iranian agents hired by Israel’s Mossad spy agency had planted bombs in a building where Haniyeh was staying.

The newspaper says that two agents placed bombs in three rooms of an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corp guesthouse in Tehran, which were detonated from abroad.

An earlier report by the New York Times said that the bombs had been snuck into the building two months earlier.

The BBC has not been able to verify these claims.

Freed Russian dissidents refused to sign plea for mercy from Putin

Sarah Rainsford

BBC News
Reporting fromBonn
Mallory Moench

BBC News
Reporting fromLondon

Two Russian dissidents released in a prisoner swap on Thursday have said they refused to sign a petition for mercy to be sent to Russian President Vladimir Putin as requested by prison officials.

During a news conference in Germany, Vladimir Kara-Murza and Ilya Yashin said they did not admit guilt nor give Russian officials their consent to be removed, and vowed to return home one day.

Mr Kara-Murza said the deal had saved “16 human lives” and that he had been convinced he would die in prison.

The two men were released as part of the exchange, which saw 24 people jailed in seven different countries exchanged.

Those released by Russia included US journalist Evan Gerschkovich and former US Marine Paul Whelan.

The Russians released by Western nations included convicted assassin Vadim Krasikov, who had been serving a life sentence in Germany for killing a Georgian-born Chechen dissident in a Berlin park.

On Friday, Mr Kara-Murza and Mr Yashin – along with a third dissident, Andrei Pivovarov – pledged to continue working towards a “free” Russia and advocating on behalf of political prisoners still being held there.

Mr Yashin said he had “conflicting feelings” about the swap. While he expressed gratitude for those who worked to free him, he said his first desire when he arrived in Germany was to buy a ticket to return to Russia.

Mr Yashin told the BBC that it was “much more comfortable” for Mr Putin to have an exiled opposition “because the voice of opposition in prison always has much more weight than the voice in emigration”.

“I never imagined myself outside Russia,” he said. “I am eternally grateful for their help. But I am a guest here – and my main wish is to return to Russia.”

He added: “I’m not the only one who demanded not to be sent into exile… but no-one asked our opinion.”

However, he acknowledged that his return to Russia would make it more difficult to negotiate the exchange of other political prisoners and could intensify criticism of the German government, which he said had faced an “ethical dilemma” in releasing Krasikov.

Russian rights group Memorial says hundreds of political prisoners are currently held in prison.

While Mr Pivovarov argued the latest swap was a “sign of light” for them that release was possible, Mr Kara-Murza said the exchange was a “drop in the ocean, because so many innocent people who’ve never committed a crime in their life are being held in torturous conditions”.

Mr Kara-Murza, a dual Russian and British citizen, said he had been held in solitary confinement for more than 10 months – and was only able to talk to his wife over the phone once during two-and-a-half years of imprisonment.

“I did not believe I would ever see my wife again,” he recalled. “I did not believe I’d ever see my family again and this feels really surreal. This feels like a film.”

The political activist said he thought he might be shot on the day of his release – only realising what was happening when he saw the other imprisoned dissidents.

He recounted how, sitting on the plane out of Russia, a man he identified as a government agent told him it was the last time he would see his homeland.

Mr Kara-Murza said he responded: “I know that I will be back in my home country.”

Sasha Skochilenko, another Russian dissident and artist among those freed told BBC Newshour that she also believed she was going to be killed on the day of her release.

Ms Skochilenko said she was in “shock” and “on adrenaline” as a now-free woman.

“I’m so glad, I’m so happy and I’m so grateful”, she continued. “I’m finally with my beloved family, with my girlfriend, my fiancée. We’re going to marry. We finally can do it in Germany… This is the happiest day of my life”.

The freed dissidents also paid tribute to Alexei Navalny, a leading critic of Mr Putin who died in prison in February after Russian officials said he became unwell.

The White House said on Thursday that Mr Navalny had been due to be included in a deal.

Mr Yashin said: “The fact that Alexei Navalny is not with us is a crime committed by Putin, who bears direct responsibility for his murder.”

Mr Kara-Murza said he wanted “to remind people in democratic countries that Russia and Putin are not the same thing”.

“I will absolutely carry on,” he told the BBC following the news conference.

“I care about my country – and I think Russia deserves better than a corrupt KGB dictator. I want to make sure that Russia becomes… a normal, modern, democratic country.”

Ping pong prowess to Red Sea bubbles: Africa’s top shots

A selection of the week’s best photos from across the African continent and beyond:

From the BBC in Africa this week:

  • Kenya rolls out poison in bid to cull a million crows
  • Frustrated Nigerians vow ‘days of rage’ as hardships mount
  • The Kenyan enthralled by the healing power of plants
  • My family went to help landslide victims and ended up dead

BBC Africa podcasts

Intel axes 15,000 jobs after sales tumble

Nick Edser & Natalie Sherman

Business reporters, BBC News

US chip-maker Intel has said it plans to cut more than 15,000 job cuts as it seeks to revive the business and catch up with competitors.

Shares in the company plunged by up to 20% after it announced the measures, and also reported falling sales.

The news from Intel also hit other shares in other tech giants, and contributed to a sharp fall in Asian stock markets.

Japan’s Nikkei share index closed down 5.8%, the largest percentage fall since March 2020 at the start of the pandemic, with Japanese tech firms among the biggest losers.

The Nikkei ended the day down 2,216.63 points at 35,909.70, the second-biggest points drop in its history, with worries about the strength of the US economy also affecting stocks.

A downbeat survey of US manufacturing firms triggered fears the economy is weakening, and has increased interest in the latest US jobs figures that are due out later on Friday.

The three major share indexes in the US closed lower on Thursday, and shares in big names, including Amazon, continued to fall in after-hours trade.

Amazon shares dropped more than 4%, after the e-commerce giant reported a 10% rise in sales to $148bn.

That marked a slowdown from the prior quarter and it forecast further weakening in the months ahead, putting pressure on margins, even as the firm ramps up investments in areas such as artificial intelligence (AI).

‘Bolder actions’ needed

Intel has been struggling as businesses turn to rivals such as Nvidia, known for its powerful AI chips.

The company said sales fell 1% year-on-year in the three months to June and warned that the second half of the year would be worse than expected.

“Our revenues have not grown as expected – and we’ve yet to fully benefit from powerful trends, like AI,” chief executive Pat Gelsinger wrote in a memo to staff.

He said the situation required “bolder actions” and the firm had to “fundamentally change the way we operate”.

Intel has slashed investment plans and also said it would suspend dividend payments.

“It’s really having to pull back on spending on its data centres and it’s struggling to take market from other providers, so it’s a real shock to the market,” Lucy Coutts, investment director at JM Finn, told the BBC.

There was better news from Apple, which saw sales rebound in spring, overcoming weakness in China and a dip in iPhone sales.

Revenues in the three months to June were $85.8bn (£67.3bn), up 5% year-on-year and marking a return to growth after a slump at the start of 2024.

Apple said it was well positioned to benefit from the increased use of AI, as AI-powered improvements to the company’s software convince customers to upgrade their devices.

The company recently released some of the new features, branded as “Apple Intelligence”, to developers in the US.

The new system makes it easier for iPhone users to record and transcribe phone conversations, generate personalised emojis while messaging and interact more conversationally with the company’s voice assistant, Siri, among other changes.

“We remain incredibly optimistic about the possibilities of AI and we will continue to make significant investments in this technology,” said Apple boss Tim Cook.

Over the April to June period, sales of iPhones slipped 1%, a drop outweighed by increased sales of Macs and iPads.

Apple also reported an all-time record in revenue from its services division, which includes offerings such as Apple Pay and Apple News.

Kim Jong Un wants Trump back, elite defector tells BBC

Jean Mackenzie

Seoul correspondent
‘Kim Jong Un will even kill all 25 million North Koreans to ensure his survival’

Donald Trump returning to the White House would be “a once-in-a-thousand-year opportunity” for North Korea, according to a man in a unique position to know.

Ri Il Kyu is the highest-ranking defector to escape North Korea since 2016 and has been face to face with Kim Jong Un on seven separate occasions.

The former diplomat, who was working in Cuba when he fled with his family to South Korea last November, admits to “shivering with nerves” the first time he met Kim Jong Un.

But during each meeting, he found the leader to be “smiling and in a good mood”.

“He praised people often and laughed. He seems like an ordinary person,” Mr Ri tells the BBC. But he is in no doubt Mr Kim would do anything to guarantee his survival, even if it meant killing all 25 million of his people: “He could have been a wonderful person and father, but turning him into a god has made him a monstrous being.”

In his first interview with an international broadcaster, Mr Ri provides a rare understanding of what one of the world’s most secretive and repressive states is hoping to achieve.

He says that North Korea still views Mr Trump as someone it can negotiate with over its nuclear weapons programme, despite talks between him and Kim Jong Un breaking down in 2019.

Mr Trump has previously hailed the relationship with Kim as a key achievement of his presidency. He famously said the two “fell in love” exchanging letters. Just last month, he told a rally Mr Kim would like to see him back in office: “I think he misses me, if you want to know the truth.”

North Korea is hoping it can use this close personal relationship to its advantage, says Mr Ri, contradicting an official statement from Pyongyang last month that it “did not care” who became president.

The nuclear state will never get rid of its weapons, Mr Ri says, and would probably seek a deal to freeze its nuclear programme in return for the US lifting sanctions.

But he says Pyongyang would not negotiate in good faith. Agreeing to freeze its nuclear programme “would be a ploy, 100% deception”, he says, adding that this was therefore a “dangerous approach” which would “only lead to the strengthening of North Korea”.

A ‘life or death gamble’

Eight months after his defection, Ri Il Kyu is living with his family in South Korea. Accompanied by a police bodyguard and two intelligence agents, he explains his decision to abandon his government.

After years of being ground down by the corruption, bribery and lack of freedom he faced, Mr Ri says he was finally tipped over the edge when his request to travel to Mexico to get an operation on a slipped disc in his neck was denied. “I lived the life of the top 1% in North Korea, but that is still worse than a middle-class family in the South.”

As a diplomat in Cuba, Mr Ri made just $500 (£294) a month and so would sell Cuban cigars illegally in China to make enough to support his family.

When he first told his wife about his desire to defect, she was so disturbed she ended up in hospital with heart problems. After that, he kept his plans secret, only sharing them with her and his child six hours before their plane was due to depart.

He describes it as a “life-or-death gamble”. Regular North Koreans who are caught defecting would typically be tortured for a few months, then released, he says. “But for elites like us, there are only two outcomes – life in a political prison camp or being executed by a firing squad.”

“The fear and terror were overwhelming. I could accept my own death, but I could not bear the thought of my family being dragged to a gulag,” he says. Although Mr Ri had never believed in God, as he waited nervously at the airport gate in the middle of the night, he began to pray.

The last known high-profile defection to the South was that of Tae Yong-ho in 2016. A former deputy ambassador to the UK, he was recently named the new leader of South Korea’s presidential advisory council on unification.

Turning to North Korea’s recent closer ties with Russia, Mr Ri says the Ukraine war had been a stroke of luck for Pyongyang. The US and South Korea estimate the North has sold Moscow millions of rounds of ammunition to support its invasion, in return for food, fuel and possibly even military technology.

Mr Ri says the main benefit of this deal for Pyongyang was the ability to continue developing its nuclear weapons.

With the deal, Russia created a “loophole” in the stringent international sanctions on North Korea, he says, which has allowed it “to freely develop its nuclear weapons and missiles and strengthen its defence, while bypassing the need to appeal to the US for sanctions relief”.

But Mr Ri says Kim Jong Un understands this relationship is temporary and that after the war, Russia is likely to sever relations. For this reason, Mr Kim has not given up on the US, Mr Ri says.

“North Korea understands that the only path to its survival, the only way to eliminate the threat of invasion and develop its economy, is to normalise relations with the United States.”

While Russia might have given North Korea a temporary respite from its economic pain, Mr Ri says the complete closure of North Korea’s borders during the pandemic “severely devastated the country’s economy and people’s lives”.

When the borders reopened in 2023 and diplomats were preparing to return, Mr Ri says families back home had asked them to “bring anything and everything you have, even your used toothbrushes, because there is nothing left in North Korea”.

The North Korean leader demands total loyalty from his citizens and the mere whiff of dissent can result in imprisonment. But Mr Ri says years of hardship had eroded people’s loyalty, as no-one now expected to receive anything from their “Supreme Leader” Kim Jong Un.

“There is no genuine loyalty to the regime or to Kim Jong Un anymore, it is a forced loyalty, where one must be loyal or face death,” he says.

The ‘most evil act’

Recent change has largely been driven by an influx of South Korean films, dramas and music, which have been smuggled into the North and are illegal to watch and listen to.

“People don’t watch South Korean content because they have capitalist beliefs, they are simply trying to pass the time in their monotonous and bleak lives,” Mr Ri says, but then they begin to ask, “Why do those in the South live the life of a first-world country while we are impoverished?”

But Mr Ri says that although South Korean content was changing North Korea, it would not bring about its collapse, because of the systems of control in place. “Kim Jong Un is very aware that loyalty is waning, that people are evolving, and that’s why he is intensifying his reign of terror,” he says.

The government has introduced laws to harshly punish those who consume and distribute South Korean content. The BBC spoke to one defector last year who said he had witnessed someone be executed after sharing South Korean music and TV shows.

North Korea’s decision, at the end of last year, to abandon a decades-old policy of eventually reunifying with the South, was a further attempt to isolate people from the South, Mr Ri says.

He describes this as Kim Jong Un’s “most evil act”, because all North Koreans dream of reunification. He says that while North Korea’s past leaders had “stolen people’s freedom, money and human rights, Kim Jong Un has robbed what was left of them: hope”.

Outside North Korea, much attention is paid to Kim Jong Un’s health, with some believing that his premature death could trigger the collapse of the regime. Earlier this week, South Korea’s intelligence agency estimated that Mr Kim weighed 140kg, putting him at risk of cardiovascular disease.

But Mr Ri believes the system of surveillance and control is now too well established for Kim’s death to threaten the dictatorship. “Another evil leader will merely take his place,” he says.

It has been widely speculated that Mr Kim is grooming his young daughter, thought to be called Ju Ae, to be his successor, but Mr Ri dismisses the notion.

Ju Ae, he says, lacks the legitimacy and popularity to become the leader of North Korea, especially as the sacred Paektu bloodline, which the Kims use to justify their rule, is believed to run only through the men of the family.

At first, people were fascinated by Ju Ae, Mr Ri says, but not any more. They question why she was attending missile tests rather than going to school, and wearing luxury, designer clothes instead of her school uniform, like other children.

Rather than waiting for Mr Kim to become ill or die, Mr Ri says the international community has to come together, including North Korea’s allies China and Russia, to “persistently persuade it to change”.

“This is the only thing that will bring about the end of the North Korean dictatorship,” he adds.

Mr Ri is hoping that his defection inspires his peers, not to defect themselves, but to push for small changes from the inside. He does not have lofty ambitions, that North Koreans will be able to vote or travel, merely that they can choose what jobs to work, have enough food to eat and be able to share their opinions freely among friends.

For now, though, his priority is helping his family settle into their new life in South Korea and for his child to assimilate into society.

At the end of our interview, he poses a scenario. “Imagine I offer you a venture and tell you, if we succeed we win big, but if we fail it means death.

“You wouldn’t agree, would you? Well that is the choice I forced upon my family, and they silently agreed and followed me,” he says.

“This is now a debt I must repay for the rest of my life.”

Whisper it, but is now a good time to holiday in Paris?

James FitzGerald in Paris, with Ido Vock & Sean Seddon in London

BBC News

For all those concerns about high prices and big crowds ahead of the Olympics, now might just be an unexpectedly good time to holiday in Paris.

Hotels and restaurants have told the BBC they have dropped their prices to entice customers – after what some call a “catastrophic” downturn in takings during the Games that have left them asking what the event has done for them.

The French capital might seem to be the centre of the world for those watching the sport on TV – but the city’s relatively quiet streets and empty dining tables tell a different story.

Earlier this week, local media ran reports of a “deserted” Disneyland and of Parisians’ bemusement as they managed to secure seats on metro trains at rush hour.

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So, what is happening?

Analysts suggest that many Parisians have left the city in droves for the summer, as is their tradition. But also, some overseas visitors have been put off by concerns around price-gouging and overcrowding on an Olympic scale.

One of the locals who used the word “catastrophic” was a restaurateur called Lies in the usually bustling Latin Quarter, who said July had been his worst month for 25 years. During the height of Covid, at least people continued to order meal deliveries, he told the BBC.

Tourists had been put off coming to the area because of security blockades that were put in the place for the previous week’s opening ceremony, Lies suggested.

Another nearby restaurateur hovering in his doorway, Yarva, said would-be visitors had chosen not to pay hotel prices which multiplied several times ahead of the Games.

The event was “only for the rich”, he said, and used a hand gesture to indicate he thought the price inflation had been crazy.

Ahead of the Games, airlines warned there was a low appetite for journeys to Paris, with both Delta and the company that owns Air France predicting an impact on their business.

“Unless you’re going to the Olympics, people aren’t going to Paris,” the Delta boss told CNBC.

This was reflected in flight prices that were well below the usual asking price for this time of year, according to travel expert Simon Calder, writing this week for The Independent.

Next-day one-way flights from UK cities were as low as £31 (€36; $39) per adult (from Edinburgh) at the time of writing this article. However, tickets for the Eurostar trains, which were last week affected by a sabotage attack on the French railway network, were considerably higher.

June and July saw an “avoidance effect”, said Raphael Batko of hotel marketing firm Doyield, which represents about one in 20 of the city’s hotels. He also used the word “catastrophic” to describe the phenomenon, though he said visitor numbers had picked up and were now satisfactory.

A similar avoidance phenomenon has been noticed in previous Olympics, including in London in 2012, when businesses suggested that the Games had deterred visitors and shrunk their profits.

What remains to be seen is whether the emergency action taken by the hospitality industry will be enough to salvage the Olympic trade for many Parisian businesses.

With restaurants dropping their prices, it was now possible to get a meal for as little as €8 (£6.80, $8.70) in the Latin Quarter, claimed Riad, the proprietor of the Olympie diner, as he tried to entice diners.

Hotels, too have tried a similar trick – largely reversing the earlier rises which appear to have been so off-putting. Tourism authorities confirmed that average prices had returned to €258 (£219; $279) per night during the Games, following a massive hike that had previously seen them peak at €342 last month.

The BBC saw that a number of Airbnbs on offer were advertising price reductions, although the company said prices had remained stable since the start of the year, and more locals had been opening their homes in host cities.

Individual hoteliers in Paris spoke of mixed success.

One reception manager, Dino, said bookings had reached normal levels – but only after rates were slashed by half when things “looked bleak”.

Another, Isabelle, said her own price drop had been ineffective and lamented that “we didn’t gain anything from the Olympics”.

As well as the sport, there were plenty of good reasons to come to the French capital for the summer, said Christophe Decloux, head of the Choose Paris regional tourist board.

He cited the city’s rich cultural offering, plus smooth transportation and a “very joyful” atmosphere during the Games.

“Paris is usually very calm in late July and August because people leave for the holidays,” he said, “and right now it is just as calm as usual in August except in some areas around the venues where people are bonding over the sport.”

Organisers of Paris 2024 have trumpeted the positive effects of the Games on Paris following record ticket sales.

It remains possible to sign up to see events, as tickets are released each day. About 800,000 of them are still up for grabs, organisers told the BBC on Friday.

The sporting spectacle itself has already proven memorable – and with some disgruntled businesses doing everything they can to coax in visitors, last-minute bookers to Paris might find themselves in with a chance of scoring a bargain.

Iran says Hamas leader killed from close range

Matt Murphy and Jenny Hill

BBC News
Reporting fromLondon and Tel Aviv

Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh was killed with a “short-range projectile” fired from outside his guesthouse in Tehran, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) says.

The paramilitary organisation said the projectile weighed about 7kg (16lbs) and caused a “strong blast”, killing Haniyeh and his bodyguard last Wednesday. The Hamas leader had been visiting the Iranian capital for the inauguration of President Massoud Pezeshkian.

The IRGC accused Israel of designing and implementing the operation – supported by the US. Israel has not commented on Haniyeh’s death.

The IRGC account is at odds with reports in Western media, which have suggested that explosives were planted in the guesthouse by Israeli operatives.

The failures surrounding Haniyeh’s death, especially on a day marked by intense security, have caused embarrassment for Iran and the IRGC.

Dozens of IRGC officers have been arrested or dismissed in the days since Haniyeh’s death, the New York Times reported on Saturday.

The paper said the organisation’s intelligence agency had taken over the investigation. Staff members at Haniyeh’s guesthouse have been interrogated and their phones and other electronics have been seized, it added.

Meanwhile, the security details of Iranian politicians have been overhauled. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei led prayers for Haniyeh on Thursday, but was whisked away soon after the ceremony by his security detail.

The IRGC’s statement on Saturday came after Britain’s Daily Telegraph said Haniyeh was killed by bombs planted in his room by agents of Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency

Citing Iranian officials, the paper said two Mossad agents had entered the guesthouse and planted explosives in three rooms. The Iranians, who had viewed CCTV footage of the operatives, said the two subsequently left the country before detonating the bombs from outside Iran.

The New York Times also reported that Haniyeh was killed by explosives detonated in his room, saying they could have been planted up to two months earlier. The BBC has not been able to verify these claims.

But Hamas officials told the BBC earlier this week that Haniyeh had stayed at the same guesthouse before. He had made up to 15 visits to Iran since becoming the head of the political bureau in 2017.

The papers’ reports – if true – would represent an even bigger failure for the IRGC, who have long controlled internal security in the country. Experts also said it would highlight the degree to which Mossad can operate with impunity in Iran.

Regardless of the manner of Haniyeh’s death, both Iran and Hamas have vowed to retaliate.

The IRGC said on Saturday that Israel would receive “a severe punishment at the appropriate time, place and manner”.

Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed militia and political group in Lebanon, has also vowed reprisals. One of their top commanders, Fuad Shukr, was killed in an Israeli strike last Tuesday.

After an Israeli operation killed IRGC Brig Gen Mohammad Reza Zahedi in Damascus earlier this year, Iran fired 170 drones, 30 cruise missiles and at least 110 ballistic missiles towards Israel.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned Israelis that “challenging days lie ahead… We have heard threats from all sides. We are prepared for any scenario”.

His ministers were sent home this weekend with satellite phones in case of an attack on the country’s communication infrastructure.

Despite the government’s warnings, the mood appeared relaxed on Tel Aviv’s seafront, with bronzed bodies lazing under beach umbrellas.

But few are in any doubt that the Middle East stands perilously close to full-scale war.

Israel is on high alert and several international airlines have suspended flights to the country.

The US has also deployed additional warships and fighter jets to the Middle East to help defend Israel from possible attacks by Iran and its proxies, the Pentagon said.

UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy has warned that the risk that “the situation on the ground could deteriorate rapidly is rising”.

Meanwhile, at least 10 people have been killed in an Israeli airstrike on a school sheltering displaced people in Gaza’s Sheikh Radwan neighbourhood, the Hamas-run government media office has said.

It comes as Israel said an airstrike it conducted in the occupied West Bank killed a Hamas commander and four senior Palestinian Islamic Jihad fighters on Saturday.

The Israeli military said the air strike hit a vehicle as the men were on the way to carry out an attack.

Elsewhere, Israeli officials – including the directors of Mossad and the internal security agency Shin Bet – have arrived in Cairo for fresh ceasefire talks.

They will meet Egyptian intelligence chief, Abbas Kamel, and other senior military officials in a bid to rescue a potential truce. But US President Joe Biden admitted on Friday that Haniyeh’s death had damaged the talks.

Haniyeh was heavily involved in negotiations and Mr Biden said his death “doesn’t help” efforts to end the ten-month old conflict.

The war began in October when Hamas carried out an unprecedented attack on Israel, killing about 1,200 people and taking 251 others back to Gaza as hostages.

The attack triggered a massive Israeli military response, which has killed at least 39,550 Palestinians in Gaza, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.

Video shows Haniyeh in Iran hours before his death

Mystery surrounds US woman found starving and chained to tree in India

Geeta Pandey & Cherylann Mollan

BBC News
Mushtaq Khan

BBC Marathi

Mystery surrounds an American woman who was found chained to a tree “screaming” in a forest in the western Indian state of Maharashtra.

Lalita Kayi, 50, was discovered a week ago in the dense forests of Sindhudurg district after her cries for help were heard by shepherds. They alerted the police who sawed off the chain and rescued her.

Ms Kayi, who appeared completely emaciated, was taken to hospital. Her physical health has since improved and, on Friday, she was moved to a psychiatric facility for further treatment, doctors treating her told the BBC.

In a written statement to the police, she has alleged that her husband “chained her and left her in the forest to die without food or water”.

Police say they are looking for her husband in the southern state of Tamil Nadu on the basis of information she provided them.

But seven days after Ms Kayi was rescued, many questions remain unanswered.

Pandurang Gawkar, a cow herder who found her last Saturday, told BBC Marathi that he had taken his cattle to graze in the forest when he heard “a woman screaming loudly”.

“The sound was coming from the forest on the side of the mountain. When I went there, I saw that one of her legs was tied to a tree. She was screaming like an animal. I called other villagers and the local police.”

Police said that on her they found a copy of her passport, which stated that she was an American citizen, and her Aadhaar card – a unique ID for Indians – with her home address in Tamil Nadu.

They said she also had a mobile phone, a tablet and 31,000 rupees ($370; £290) in her possession – which allowed them to rule out theft as a motive.

Locals say that it was the woman’s good fortune that the shepherd picked a spot near her to graze his flock that day. The forest she was discovered in is vast and she otherwise could have gone for days without anyone hearing her cries for help.

Police initially took her to a local hospital before moving her to a hospital in the neighbouring state of Goa.

Dr Shivanand Bandekar, dean of Goa Medical College, told The Indian Express newspaper that she had some wounds on her leg and that she appeared to be suffering from a mental health condition.

“We do not know for how long she did not eat, but her vital signs are stable,” Dr Bandekar said.

On Friday, the woman’s physical health had improved enough to be moved to a psychiatric hospital in Ratnagiri district of Maharashtra state.

“Currently, her health is stable,” hospital superintendent Dr Sanghamitra Phule told BBC Marathi.

“She is taking medication, eating, and interacting with people. If she wants something, she can communicate it. She only knows English.”

According to the police, Ms Kayi was a ballet dancer and yoga practitioner in America – some reports say specifically Massachusetts – and moved to India about 10 years ago to study yoga and meditation in Tamil Nadu.

It was there that she met her husband – in some media reports, police have called him Satish. Police say they believe at some point she fell out with her husband.

Some reports say that she stayed in a hotel in Goa for two days and then travelled to Mumbai city, India’s financial capital.

But there is no clarity surrounding when or how she then ended up in the forest where she was discovered last week.

Ms Kayi, who was initially unable to speak, communicated with the police and doctors by scribbling notes on a pad. Through them she blamed her husband for tying her to the tree and claimed that she had gone without food and water for 40 days.

She also claimed that she had been given an “injection for extreme psychosis” which locked her jaw and prevented her from drinking water, and that she had to be provided nutrition intravenously.

“I am a victim and survived. But he ran away from here,” she alleged.

Police say they have been unable to verify these claims and believe it is unlikely that someone would survive without food or water for so long.

They have registered a case of attempted murder against her husband and have dispatched teams to Tamil Nadu, Goa and Maharashtra to investigate the matter further. Her husband is yet to be traced by the police and hasn’t made any statements to the media.

Police say they are also looking for clues in the mobile phone and the tablet they found on the woman.

The US embassy in Delhi – which media reports say has been “exerting pressure on the police to speed up the investigation” – has refused to comment on the case.

A spokesperson told the BBC that it could not respond to inquiries “due to the US Privacy Act”, which governs the dissemination of private information.

US to send jets and warships as Iran threatens Israel

Graeme Baker

BBC News
Jenny Hill

BBC News
Reporting fromTel Aviv

The US will deploy additional warships and fighter jets to the Middle East to help defend Israel from possible attacks by Iran and its proxies, the Pentagon said.

Tensions remain high in the region over the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Iran and a key commander of the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah.

Missile defence forces were placed on a state of increased readiness to deploy, the Pentagon said, adding that its commitment to defend Israel was “ironclad”.

Iran’s leader Ayatollah Khamenei has vowed “harsh punishment” against Israel for the assassination of Haniyeh.

The Hamas leader was killed in Tehran on Wednesday. Iran and its proxy in Gaza blamed the attack on Israel, which has not commented.

Haniyeh, 62, was widely considered Hamas’s overall leader and played a key role in negotiations aimed at reaching a ceasefire in the Gaza war.

His death came just hours after Israel claimed it killed Fuad Shukr, the top military commander of Iran’s proxy in Lebanon, Hezbollah.

A Pentagon statement said the new deployments would “improve US force protection… increase support for the defence of Israel, and … ensure the US is prepared to respond to various contingencies”.

The deployments would include additional ballistic missile defense-capable cruisers and destroyers, it said.

High alert

On Tel Aviv’s seafront, the mood appears relaxed with bronzed bodies lazing under beach umbrellas.

But few are in any doubt that the Middle East stands perilously close to full- scale war.

Israel is on high alert.

Several international airlines have suspended flights to the country.

Meanwhile, Israeli ministers were sent home this weekend with satellite phones in case of an attack on communication infrastructure.

Earlier on Saturday, Israeli forces killed a Hamas operative in the West Bank.

Dozens of Palestinians were reported to have been killed in strikes on Gaza in the last 24 hours – a reminder that Israel’s war in the region continues even as diplomats scramble to prevent its escalation.

The US military has stepped-up deployments before, on 13 April when Iran launched an attack on Israel with drones and missiles. Israel and its allies shot down almost all of roughly 300 drones and missiles that were fired.

Israel has not commented directly on the strike which killed Haniyeh. But Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his country had delivered “crushing blows” to its enemies in recent days, including the killing of Shukr in Beirut.

He warned Israelis that “challenging days lie ahead… we have heard threats from all sides. We are prepared for any scenario”.

Earlier, Pentagon spokesperson Sabrina Singh said the US did not believe escalation was inevitable.

“I think we are being very direct in our messaging that certainly we don’t want to see heightened tensions and we do believe there is an off-ramp here and that is that ceasefire deal,” Singh said.

An Israeli delegation will travel to Cairo in coming days for negotiations to reach a Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal, Mr Netanyahu said on Friday.

Hamas sparked the war with its 7 October attack on Israel, which killed 1,200 people. Israel responded with an ongoing military operation in Gaza that has killed almost 40,000 people, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

The circumstances surrounding Haniyeh’s death are, as yet, still unclear.

On Saturday, the Daily Telegraph reported that Iranian agents hired by Israel’s Mossad spy agency had planted bombs in a building where Haniyeh was staying.

The newspaper says that two agents placed bombs in three rooms of an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corp guesthouse in Tehran, which were detonated from abroad.

An earlier report by the New York Times said that the bombs had been snuck into the building two months earlier.

The BBC has not been able to verify these claims.

Trump and Harris at odds over presidential debate

Tom Bennett

BBC News
Reporting fromLondon

US presidential candidates Donald Trump and Kamala Harris are at odds over their first head-to-head debate, with each in favour of a different broadcaster and date.

The Harris campaign is pushing for a debate to take place on ABC News on 10 September, in a slot previously scheduled for a debate between President Joe Biden and Mr Trump.

But Mr Trump says the ABC debate has been “terminated” by Mr Biden leaving the race – and has instead pushed for himself and Ms Harris to debate on Fox News on 4 September.

The pair will face off for the presidency when the US goes to the polls on 5 November.

The disagreement began after President Biden dropped out of the race on 21 July, with Ms Harris immediately becoming favourite to secure the Democratic nomination.

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Since then, Mr Trump has been non-committal about whether he will still take part in the previously scheduled ABC News debate.

US TV networks have been negotiating with both campaigns to arrange new dates.

On Friday night, Mr Trump wrote on his social network Truth Social that he had accepted Fox News’ proposal for a debate on 4 September, which is pencilled to take place in Pennsylvania – a key battleground state.

He wrote that the moderators would be Fox News’ Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum – and that the rules would be similar to his debate with Mr Biden.

“If for any reason Kamala is unwilling or unable to debate on that date, I have agreed with Fox to do a major Town Hall on the same September 4th evening,” he wrote.

The Harris campaign hit back, saying: “Donald Trump is running scared and trying to back out of the debate he already agreed to and running straight to Fox News to bail him out.”

“He needs to stop playing games and show up to the debate he already committed to on Sept 10,” Michael Tyler, Harris Campaign communications director said.

Ms Harris secured enough pledges to become the Democratic nominee on Friday.

During a campaign rally in Atlanta on Wednesday, Ms Harris challenged Mr Trump to debate her, saying “if you got something to say, say it to my face”.

The debate news comes just hours after a report by the Homeland Security Department revealed that the US Secret Service made mistakes in their response to the 6 January attack on the US Capitol.

Ms Harris, who was then vice-president-elect, came within 20ft (6m) of a “viable” pipe bomb planted outside the Democratic National Committee’s headquarters in Washington.

That bomb – and a similar one found at the Republican National Committee headquarters – were placed near the buildings the night before Trump supporters stormed the US Capitol. It remains unclear who planted both pipe bombs.

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Spies’ children did not know they were Russian

Malu Cursino

BBC News

The children of a Russian spy couple who returned home on Thursday after the largest prisoner swap between the West and Russia since the Cold War only found out their nationality on the flight to Moscow.

Artem Viktorovich Dultsev and Anna Valerevna Dultseva were posing as an Argentine couple living in Slovenia when they were jailed there.

Their children do not speak a word of Russian and did not know who President Vladimir Putin was, asking their parents who was greeting them upon their arrival, the Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

In total, 24 people jailed in seven different countries were exchanged on Thursday.

Sixteen were Western prisoners detained in Russian jails and eight were Russian prisoners held in the US, Norway, Germany, Poland and Slovenia. Among them was Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich.

The Russian family of four were warmly welcomed, with Mrs Dultseva and her daughter receiving flowers and a warm embrace from President Putin.

“Buenas noches,” the president said to the spies’ children, as he greeted them in Spanish.

As reported by Argentinian media, the couple were known as María Mayer and Ludwig Gisch and arrived in Slovenia sporting their Argentinian passports in 2017.

The husband set up a start-up IT company under his alias name and the wife had an online art gallery.

The family used Ljubljana as their base and it was not until 2022 that the couple were arrested by Slovenian police on espionage charges.

Ahead of the large scale prisoner swap, Mr Dultsev and Mrs Dultseva were sentenced to 19 months in prison each, after pleading guilty to spying charges on Wednesday. But given their arrests in 2022, they were released on time served and ordered to leave Slovenia, as reported by the Associated Press.

It was not until Thursday, during the large scale Russia-West prisoner swap, that the Kremlin spies, and their children, were returned to Russia.

Life for 11-year-old Sofia and 8-year-old Gabriel, who were born in Argentina, changed thereafter and they only learnt they were Russian when the plane set off from Ankara to Vnukovo Airport, the Kremlin said.

“The children of the undercover agents asked their parents yesterday who had greeted them,” Mr Peskov said, adding: “They did not even know who Putin is.”

The Kremlin spokesman said that is how undercover agents (or “illegals”) work, “making such sacrifices for the sake of their work and their dedication to their service”.

Unlike “legal” spies, who are posted abroad under diplomatic or other official cover, illegals are on their own – working normal jobs, living in suburbs and operating without the diplomatic immunity enjoyed by other agents should they be caught.

Beauty contest sparks row over who counts as South African

Danai Nesta Kupemba

BBC News

When law student Chidimma Adetshina clinched a coveted spot as a Miss South Africa finalist, her triumph unleashed a vicious backlash, unearthing a seam of xenophobia that lies close to the surface for some in the country.

The 23-year-old’s name hints at her connection to Nigeria, but internet detectives wanted to know more and combed through every inch of her life. They found that her father is Nigerian and though her mother is South African, her family had come from neighbouring Mozambique.

“On behalf of South Africans, we don’t recognise her and that name! She better start packing and go home,” raged one commenter on X.

But where is home? Ms Adetshina is South African, as verified by the organisers of the pageant. She has said in interviews that she was born in Soweto – the township next to Johannesburg – and grew up in Cape Town.

However, the “go-home” sentiment, and even harsher attacks, flooded social media. There was also a petition demanding her removal from the high-profile televised competition that amassed more than 14,000 signatures before it was taken down.

The country’s Culture Minister Gayton McKenzie, the leader of the Patriotic Alliance party, which has joined a coalition government and made migration issues a key part of its platform, chimed in.

“We truly cannot have Nigerians compete in our Miss SA competition. I wanna get all facts before I comment but it gives funny vibes already,” he said on X.

The issue has touched a nerve in South Africa that goes beyond who will appear on stage at the final next weekend.

Ms Adetshina declined a BBC request for an interview but she did tell the Sowetan Live news site that the online hate she was facing made her think twice about competing.

“I am representing a country, but I don’t feel the love from the people I’m representing,” she said.

Ms Adetshina added that the whole situation felt like “black-on-black hate”, highlighting a particular strain of xenophobia in South Africa known as “afrophobia”, which targets other Africans.

She felt that she was not the only contestant among the last 16 women with a name that had origins from beyond the country’s shores – there are some with South Asian and European names – yet she was receiving the bulk of the criticism.

Asked to respond to the comments that Ms Adetshina has faced, a Miss South Africa spokesperson did not address them directly but simply said that she was eligible to take part in the competition.

This was not the first time that this has happened. For Melissa Nayimuli, a Miss South Africa contestant last year, it has brought up difficult memories.

The 28-year-old was the target of the same vitriol heaped on Ms Adetshina because her father is Ugandan.

She told the BBC she was unsurprised at the reaction she had received as she had experienced it for most of her life.

“It’s something I tried to run away from, but how do you run away from yourself?” she questioned.

Ms Nayimuli said that while growing up she would constantly speak Xhosa, her mother tongue and one of South Africa’s official languages, to “prove her South African-ness”.

Melissa Nayimuli
At home my father was my hero, but outside I saw him treated as an enemy”

Her voice cracked as she admitted that she felt shame at her Ugandan identity when she was younger because of the afrophobia that she experienced.

“I would not want to be seen with my father because of his darker skin and East African features were a dead giveaway,” she told the BBC.

“At home my father was my hero, but outside I saw him treated as an enemy.”

University of the Free State sociologist Dr Nombulelo Shange links this hostility to South Africa’s history of racism and the apartheid system – which imposed a strict hierarchy that privileged white people.

There is a “sad apartheid mentality that we are struggling to shake as a country”, she said.

“It shows the deep self-hate that we as black South Africans carry with us.”

Dr Shange added that South Africans had internalised oppressive racist reasoning such as colourism, where lighter skin tones are perceived as better.

After apartheid ended in 1994, the government led by Nelson Mandela’s African National Congress (ANC) welcomed African migrants and asylum seekers to the country in part to aid its reintegration into the continent after years of isolation.

But with many South Africans struggling financially, foreigners became the target for some frustrated by their situation.

Zimbabweans, Nigerians and Somalis, among others, have been accused of taking opportunities and resources from South Africans.

There is a “perception of outsiders as competitors for scarce jobs, resources, living space and services”, Michael Morris, head of media at the South African Institute of Race Relations, told the BBC.

He said the growing number of Africans succeeding in South Africa could “easily trigger resentment and violence”.

This climate of hostility has occasionally erupted into attacks. South Africa experienced its worst outbreak of violence against mostly African foreigners in 2008, when more than 60 people died.

“There are black South Africans who will argue that Africans from elsewhere in the continent don’t belong in South Africa,” Mr Morris said.

More than a decade ago, Ms Nayimuli felt this animosity acutely when her father was arrested.

“My dad is the most kind-hearted, gentle soul in the entire universe,” she said – yet he was treated like a criminal because, she believes, he looked like a foreigner.

When Ms Nayimuli’s mother reached the police station in the capital, Pretoria, where her husband was being held officers did not even have an explanation or a charge against him.

Her father was released and Ms Nayimuli’s family never spoke about it again.

They had often “tiptoed” around the xenophobia they faced but when it bubbled up during last year’s Miss South Africa it was a chance for them to address the issue directly and was, for Ms Nayimuli, part of a healing process.

Now, seeing Ms Adetshina experience the same level of abuse her heart goes out to her.

“She is not just a trending topic. She is a human being. She is a young woman getting bullied online – it’s wrong, hurtful and so dangerous,” she said.

But she emphasised that the xenophobes are a small minority and there are many South Africans who call for unity.

Leader of the opposition Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party Julius Malema defended Ms Adetshina last week, saying: “Why do people want to say she’s from Nigeria or Mozambique? She was born here.”

This message of coming together is one that Ms Nayimuli ended her Miss South Africa journey on.

Last year, as the bright lights shone on her during the final round of the competition, she called for African unity in the face of hate.

“Let’s step into our power as Africa. We are one,” she said to a raucous auditorium who cheered on her message of togetherness.

But it seems it did not take root as the discrimination has resurfaced.

Next Saturday, Ms Adetshina will get her chance to take to the stage, but it is not yet clear if she will tackle the haters head on.

You may also be interested in:

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  • Nigerian anger over South African xenophobia
  • Behind the scenes in South Africa’s beauty industry
  • Inside the beauty pageant in one of the world’s worst places to be a woman
  • African beauty: How photography changed my way of seeing

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Plea deal with accused 9/11 plotters revoked

Max Matza

BBC News

US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin has revoked a pre-trial agreement reached with men accused of plotting the 11 September 2001 attacks.

In a memo on Friday, Mr Austin also said he was revoking the authority of the officer overseeing the military court who signed the agreement on Wednesday.

The original deal, which would reportedly have spared the alleged attackers the death penalty, was criticised by some families of victims.

The 9/11 attacks in New York, Virginia and Pennsylvania were the deadliest assault on US soil since the 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, where 2,400 people were killed. They sparked the “War on Terror” and the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq.

In his memo, Mr Austin named five defendants including the alleged ringleader of the plot, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, all of whom are held in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. The original deal named three men.

“I have determined that, in light of the significance of the decision to enter into pre-trial agreements with the accused… responsibility for such a decision should rest with me as the superior authority,” Mr Austin wrote to Brig Gen Susan Escallier.

“I hereby withdraw your authority. Effective immediately, in the exercise of my authority, I hereby withdraw from the three pre-trial agreements.”

The White House said on Wednesday that it had played no role in the plea deal.

The five men named in the memo were: Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, often referred to as KSM, Walid Muhammad Salih Mubarak bin Attash, Mustafa Ahmed Adam al-Hawsawi; and two others not mentioned in the original plea: Ramzi bin al-Shibh and Ali Abdul Aziz Ali.

The men have been in custody for decades without trial. All have alleged they were tortured – KSM was subjected to simulated drowning, so-called “waterboarding”, 183 times before it was banned by the US government.

All have already faced more than a decade of pre-trial hearings, complicated by the allegations and evidence of torture against them.

Several family members of victims had criticised the terms of the deal struck on Wednesday as too lenient.

Brett Eagleson, the president of 9/11 Justice, which represents survivors and relatives of victims, had told the BBC earlier this week that the families were “deeply troubled by these plea deals”.

Speaking on Saturday, Terry Strada, who lost her husband Tom and chairs the 9/11 Families United group, told the BBC she was “very pleased” to see the Pentagon revoke the plea deal and put the death penalty back on the table.

If the men are found guilty after a trial, Mrs Strada said she would want to see the death penalty, “not because I am ghoulish or a horrible person, it’s because it fits the crime”.

“They’ve murdered nearly 3,000 Americans on American soil… lives were just permanently altered on that day,” she added.

A lawyer at Guantanamo representing Mohammed told The New York Times that he was shocked by the sudden u-turn.

“If the secretary of defence issued such an order, I am respectfully and profoundly disappointed that after all of these years the government still has not learned the lessons of this case,” said lawyer Gary Sowards.

“And the mischief that results from disregarding due process and fair play.”

The men have been accused of a litany of charges, including attacking civilians, murder in violation of the laws of war, hijacking and terrorism.

In September, the Biden administration reportedly rejected the terms of a plea deal with five men held at the US Navy base in Cuba, including Mohammed.

The men had reportedly sought a guarantee from the president that they would not be kept in solitary confinement and would have access to trauma treatment.

KSM is alleged to have brought the idea of hijacking and flying planes into buildings to al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. He was captured in Pakistan in 2003 along with Hawsawi, a Saudi who was an alleged fundraiser.

Ali, a computer scientist and nephew of KSM, is accused of providing technical support to the 9/11 operation.

Bin al-Shibh, a Yemeni, allegedly co-ordinated the attacks and had planned to be a hijacker but could not secure a US visa.

Bin Attash, also a Yemeni, is accused of bombing the USS Cole in Yemen in 2000, which killed 17 sailors, and involvement in the 11 September attacks.

Several Republicans applauded the defence secretary for revoking the deal.

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson said the “Biden-Harris Administration is correct to reverse course”, which he said followed Republicans “launching investigations into this terrible plea deal”.

“Now deliver long awaited justice for 9/11 families,” he said.

South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham said the decision “exercised good command judgement”.

“The previous plea deal would have sent absolutely the wrong signal to terrorists throughout the world,” he added.

Earlier on Friday, Republican Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee Mike Rogers demanded answers from Mr Austin on how the deal was struck.

“This deal signals willingness to negotiate with terrorists who deliberately harm Americans,” he wrote in a letter to the defence secretary.

Zoo hails birth of ‘one of world’s rarest animals’

Gemma Sherlock

BBC News, Cheshire

Chester Zoo has celebrated the birth of what it said was one of the rarest animals on earth.

The Cheshire attraction said the Persian onager was born to mum Azita after a year-long pregnancy.

Onagers hail from the semi-desert regions of Iran, and are related to domestic donkeys.

The foal was named Jasper, whose Persian meaning relates to treasure.

‘Full of energy’

Conservationists at the zoo said there are less than 600 surviving wild onagers, but the birth “of the leggy youngster” could help safeguard the species from extinction.

Mike Jordan, animal and plant director at Chester Zoo, said the zoo was “delighted” with the birth of Jasper.

Mr Jordan said Jasper is “doing very well” and added that “mum Azita is doing a fantastic job of nurturing and bonding with her new charge”.

“He’s full of energy and enjoys playfully kicking up sand as he races around his habitat”, Mr Jordan added.

Wild asses were once found in abundance across the deserts of Mongolia, China and Iran, but now very few species remain.

Onagers only survive in two small, protected areas in Iran, a Chester Zoo spokesman said.

According to conservationists, the species has suffered at the hands of illegal poaching, overgrazing, drought, and disease passed from farm animals.

Their numbers have plummeted by more than 50% in the last two decades.

The species has been listed as endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

“With numbers having declined so rapidly in the wild, and the species now teetering on the edge of existence in Iran, it’s sadly very possible that onagers could become extinct in the wild within our lifetime,” added Mr Jordan.

Related stories

In one US state, women politicians dominate. What pointers can it offer Kamala Harris?

Madeline Halpert

North America reporter@m_halpert
Reporting fromGrand Rapids, Michigan

In a country where women still find it challenging to reach high office, the swing state of Michigan is an outlier.

Its three most senior elected officials are all women – nationally women fill only around a quarter of senior political roles.

With no woman having ever served as president, the state run by women could offer pointers for a route to the White House for Democrat Kamala Harris.

Opinion polling does not offer a clear answer on whether people are less willing to vote for a woman, but they certainly end up electing fewer overall.

And you don’t have to look far to find the perception that women still have to fight harder to get elected.

Robyn Kepplinger may be one of the few in her pro-gun, anti-abortion rural western Michigan town who is thrilled at the chance to vote for a Democratic woman for president.

The 33-year-old says she could not imagine a better candidate to lead the country “in the direction that we need to go”.

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Ms Kepplinger, a resident of Jenison, has thrown her support behind Vice-President Harris. On Friday, the 59-year-old secured enough delegate votes to become Democratic nominee following President Joe Biden’s decision to drop out of the race on 21 July.

But even some Harris fans worry that being a woman could be a significant obstacle between her and the presidency. “For anyone to be doing something that has not been done before, it’s difficult,” Ms Kepplinger said. “I don’t think that most people are behind a change as drastic as a female leader.”

Such a change, however, has proven possible in the key battleground state of Michigan, where three female Democrats now hold the top positions: Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer, and Attorney General Dana Nessel. In fact, Michigan has had two female Democratic governors in the past 20 years, Jennifer Granholm and Ms Whitmer.

Only around a quarter of senators and state governors in the US are women. The figure for representatives is slightly higher at 29%.

“Women are still underestimated,” said Marcie Paul, the chair of Fems for Dems, an advocacy group for liberal women in Michigan. “It’s going to be no different for her [Ms Harris], I believe, than it was when they said three women on the top of the ticket cannot possibly win in Michigan.”

Ms Harris, however, shares some of the traits that made women in Michigan successful candidates, according to Kim Gates, Democratic chair of Kent County, Michigan.

Ms Harris, Ms Whitmer and Ms Granholm managed to strike a balance between compassion and strength as “straight-talking, strong women”, Ms Gates said.

“They have great speaking skills. They’re able to sound like they’re talking to the average person,” she said. “They’re compassionate.”

Combining straight-talking, strength and compassion is easier said than done, but if Ms Harris can, it may bode well for her.

Female candidates may also prove more adept than men at galvanising voters around the issue of reproductive rights after the fall of Roe v Wade.

Voters nationwide cite abortion rights among the most important election issues, with one recent poll from KFF finding 1 in 8 voters saw it as a top priority for November. The issue has been relevant at the polls, with anti-abortion advocates losing a series of contests in Republican states since the federal right to abortion was overturned in 2022. In the past two years, a handful of states have passed ballot measures protecting the right to abortion, including in the Republican strongholds of Kansas, Kentucky and Ohio.

The cause helped propel Ms Whitmer to victory in her race for re-election in Michigan in 2022, the same year Michigan residents voted to enshrine abortion rights in the state’s constitution. During Ms Harris’ tenure, she has shown a strong focus on reproductive rights, recently visiting a clinic that provides abortions.

It’s an area where her gender could prove an advantage, said Adrian Hemond, a political strategist in Michigan.

“Vice-President Harris is a much better messenger on that issue than Joe Biden,” he said.

‘Excitement in the air’

As concerns grew around 81-year-old Mr Biden’s ability to beat Trump in November, some major donors paused funds when the president’s poll numbers were falling in swing states, including Michigan.

Meanwhile, Trump, 78, also saw a boost in personal ratings after a gunman attempted to assassinate him at a rally in Pennsylvania last month.

But after Mr Biden stepped down, Ms Harris received a record level of donations – $81m (£63m) within 24 hours. Since then, a Morning Consult poll released on Tuesday showed Harris’s approval rating at 50%, up from 43% a week previously, and a separate poll from Reuters/Ipsos found Ms Harris was supported by 43% of registered voters, and Trump supported by 42%.

Some Democratic campaigners in Michigan say that her background as a black woman has helped Ms Harris reach some voters. Her Indian heritage – and the fact she is significantly younger than both Mr Biden and Trump – are also said to boost her appeal to some of the electorate.

Greg Bowens, a member of the executive board of the NAACP in Grosse Pointe, said there is “excitement in the air” in Detroit. He added this hasn’t been seen in Detroit – Michigan’s largest majority African-American city – since Barack Obama, the first black president.

“She has electrified black and brown folks,” he said.

While an apparent wave of enthusiasm grows among some Democratic voters, Ms Harris has been subjected to attacks based on her gender and background.

A 2021 video of Trump’s running mate JD Vance resurfaced has resurfaced, with the Republican criticising the political left – including Ms Harris – for being full of “childless cat ladies with miserable lives”. The remark was criticised widely, including by actor Jennifer Aniston, but they were seized on by some conservative figures on social media, who argued that Ms Harris is less suitable to be president because she lacks a stake in the future. Ms Harris is step-mother to her husband’s two children.

More generally, female candidates face more superficial criticisms than male politicians about how they look, how they carry themselves and how they speak, said Ms Paul, the Fems for Dems leader who helps encourage women to vote and run for office.

It’s a point seemingly not lost on many voters – a Pew Research Center poll from September 2023 said 62% of Americans believed there was too much of a focus on female candidates’ appearances, versus 35% for male candidates.

Female politicians of colour are targeted more than their white male counterparts, said Nazita Lajevardi, a Michigan State University political science professor. “Women of colour politicians face attacks that are gendered and raced at the same time,” she said. “They report experiencing more verbal attacks, more online abuse.”

Female, black public figures can be subjected to scrutiny of their past sexual history, said Jamil Scott, an assistant professor of government at Georgetown University. Images have circulated on social media with criticisms of Ms Harris’ past romantic partners. Whatever the motivation for circulating these images, Ms Harris has been married to Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff for 10 years.

Ms Scott said that as a female politician, Ms Harris will also likely be forced to walk a tightrope where she is perceived as strong in attacking her Republican rival, but doesn’t risk being seen as angry.

“We want women to be tough as candidates, but then we don’t want them to be too tough,” she said.

Ms Scott pointed to Hillary Clinton – the first US major party female presidential candidate – who was perceived by some to be unlikeable and too aggressive in her attacks against Trump in 2016.

Trump attempted to exploit this sense, famously calling Ms Clinton a “nasty woman”.

While Ms Harris’s background and stance on abortion may appeal to some, they do not guarantee support among left-leaning voters.

Tressa Johnson, a 31-year-old liberal voter from Grand Rapids, believes Ms Harris’s policy stances are what make her undesirable – not her ethnicity or gender. She says the vice-president’s past as a tough-on-crime prosecutor and the Biden administration’s limited criticism of Israel’s actions in Gaza make her a poor candidate.

“People just want to go, ‘Look, she’s a woman of colour,’” said Ms Johnson, who plans to vote for Green Party candidate Jill Stein. “I just want a competent person that cares about the working class people in this country.”

A ‘potent’ rival in Trump

What Ms Whitmer’s Michigan victory can’t help the Harris campaign with is how to beat a candidate as high profile as Trump. Mr Hemond, the political strategist, said that while Ms Whitmer defeated two “ill-equipped” Republican opponents, Ms Harris is up against a tougher candidate.

“It is very fair to say that Donald Trump is a much more potent electoral force,” he said.

The former president and his supporters have already started to attack Ms Harris based on her gender and ethnicity.

Echoing comments from Trump’s 2016 race, in which the former president accused Ms Clinton of playing the “woman card” to attract voters, Trump’s allies have claimed Ms Harris was picked solely for the purpose of “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion” (DEI).

It’s the kind of attack that Ms Harris would do best to ignore, as Ms Whitmer has done, said Mr Hemond.

During Ms Whitmer’s run for governor and time in office, she has been subjected to a host of sexist remarks, including from Michigan’s former Republican Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey, who once said he had “spanked” Ms Whitmer “hard” while working with her on the state’s budget.

“Gov. Whitmer largely let others litigate the sexist comments that were made about her, which was smart,” Mr Hemond said. “There does seem to be a perceptual danger for female candidates in engaging directly with these types of comments.”

Mr Hemond added that ignoring these types of comments often makes for an effective strategy because a majority of voters are women themselves, many of whom can relate to having to handle “sexist comments gracefully”.

Some liberal residents in Michigan hope voters will see beyond the DEI attacks against Ms Harris.

“She is intelligent, she has deep experience governing and making policy,” said Brandy, a voter in Southeast Michigan.

The Morning Consult poll also showed that Ms Harris’ ratings are a significant improvement on Mr Biden’s in swing states, and that she has gained 5 points in Michigan.

But Trump has strong support here too. A week after the shooting, he spoke to a crowd of 12,000 in Grand Rapids in his first public rally since the attack.

It’s a state Trump won by 11,000 votes in 2016 when he beat Hillary Clinton. Mr Biden won it back in 2020 by over 100,000 votes.

A changing climate

In some respects, the political backdrop has changed since 2016, Ms Scott said.

Voters were “not excited about Hillary Clinton”, she said. “They didn’t see the power in the moment of having a woman run for president.’’

But another wave of women may have been inspired by Ms Clinton’s defeat, and Trump’s victory, Ms Scott said. After millions of women participated in marches across the US to protest Trump’s inauguration, the country saw a record number of female candidates running for office in 2018.

Meanwhile, the percentage of Americans who believe men better suited to politics than women fell from 19% in 2014 to 14% in 2018, according to data from the University of Chicago’s National Opinion Research Center. In 1975, 47% of Americans believed men made better politicians than women.

Ms Harris has already seen an outpouring of support, in particular among black women and on social media, where memes of the vice-president are ubiquitous.

She is framing the race in November as a choice between “freedom” and “chaos” under Trump who she points out has been convicted of 34 felonies.

But ultimately, it may be her diverse background and experience that pulls more voters into the race, experts said.

“So many people see themselves in her, especially in a state like Michigan, where many people are of immigrant backgrounds or are black or South Asian,” said Ms Lajevardi, the Michigan State professor. “It matters when someone knows your community’s interests and seeks to represent them.”

Technically, Ms Harris became the first female president in 2021 – when she was handed presidential powers for 85 minutes while Mr Biden underwent a health check. Now the challenge for her campaign is to see whether she can extend that to four years.

Michigan offers pointers as to how women can take the top jobs, and stay in them.

Dozens of children killed in Bangladesh protests – Unicef

Flora Drury and Ethirajan Anbarasan

BBC News

At least 32 children have died during student protests that engulfed Bangladesh last month, the UN’s children’s agency has said.

The youngest child killed had yet to turn five years old, a Unicef spokesperson said, adding that most of those who died were bystanders.

They were among more than 200 people who were killed during demonstrations against job quotas in the civil service, according to figures verified by BBC Bangla.

The quota system has now been scaled back by the government following a Supreme Court ruling, but students have continued protesting – now demanding justice for those who died or have been injured or detained.

While the protests are now smaller in scale, the government is struggling to control the rising tide of anger over how it initially responded to the demonstrations.

“Why are our brothers in graves and the killers outside?” asked a crowd which had gathered outside the largest mosque in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, following Friday prayers, according to the AFP news agency.

Security forces responded to the thousands who filled the streets with tear gas and rubber bullets, according to Reuters news agency. It reported that at least 20 people were injured.

Sanjay Wijesekera, Unicef’s regional director for south Asia, said he had been made aware of reports of children being detained during a visit to Bangladesh this week.

He added that the 32 deaths the organisation had confirmed were “a terrible loss”.

A spokesperson for the UN agency said most of those killed were aged 13 or older, with one under five and one child aged between six and 12.

“Children must be protected at all times,” Mr Wijesekera said. “That is everyone’s responsibility.”

Bangladeshi junior Information Minister Mohammad Ali Arafat responded that the government had no information regarding Unicef’s death toll.

“We don’t know where they [Unicef] got the numbers from,” he told the BBC, adding: “Our position is clear: Whoever has been killed, we are going to investigate and bring the perpetrators to book.”

Security forces have been accused of using excessive force to quell the initial protests, with many of the dead and injured suffering gunshot wounds, according to doctors who spoke to the BBC.

But the government – which has said a number of police officers were also killed – has blamed political opponents for the unrest.

On Thursday, it banned the country’s main Islamist party – Jamaat-e-Islami and its student wing, Islami Chhatra Shibir – which it claimed was behind some of the violence.

“We have evidence that they have participated in the killings and in the destruction of government and private properties,” Anisul Huq, Bagladesh’s law minister, told the BBC.

The opposition party’s leader described the move as “illegal, extrajudicial and unconstitutional”.

Leaders of the student protest were also detained for a week – something done for their own protection, officials claimed. However, their release on Thursday has done little to dampen the outrage.

In a joint statement released on Friday, the students questioned the grounds on which they were held.

The group alleged “harassment, torture and drama” towards them and their families during their seven days of detention.

“No one is safe in the custody of those who kill unarmed students and citizens,” the statement said, as it urged people to continue taking to the streets.

Nearly 10,000 people have reportedly been detained since the authorities began their crackdown on the protests.

But Mr Arafat rebuffed the statement by the student leaders.

He said the authorities had to take the student leaders into custody because the government was aware of a potential threat to their lives.

“Their protection became our top priority,” he added.

  • Published

Tottenham slipped to their first defeat of pre-season as they were beaten 2-1 by Bayern Munich in front of a 67,000 sell-out crowd in Seoul.

Son Heung-min, James Maddison and summer signings Archie Gray and Lucas Bergvall all featured for Spurs, who were outplayed by the Bundesliga giants despite the absence of Harry Kane.

Gabriel Vidovic capitalised on a poor pass out from Spurs goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario to give Bayern an early lead, and Leon Goretzka doubled their advantage after the break.

Pedro Porro’s 25-yard strike reduced the arrears but Spurs were unable to find an equaliser against Bayern, who also gave former Fulham midfielder Joao Palhinha a second-half run out.

Ange Postecoglou’s side are next in action on Saturday, 10 August, when they will face Bayern again at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium (17:30 BST).

Elsewhere, Newcastle suffered a 2-0 loss to Yokohama F Marinos in the final match of their tour of Japan.

Goals from Brazilian winger Elber and midfielder Jun Amano proved enough for the J League club in Tokyo as Lloyd Kelly made his first appearance in Newcastle colours.

Who else is in action?

A number of Premier League clubs are currently on overseas tours as they prepare for the new campaign.

Aston Villa face Mexico’s Club America in Chicago on Saturday (22:30 BST), while Chelsea play Manchester City at the Ohio Stadium, Columbus, at the same time.

Newly-promoted Ipswich beat Bundesliga side Hoffenheim 1-0 in Austria, while back in England Southampton claimed a narrow 1-0 victory at Millwall.

Brentford, Brighton and Everton are also in action on Saturday.

  • Published
  • 81 Comments

Windsurfer Emma Wilson says she is “done with the sport” after coming away with bronze in the women’s IQFoil event.

The 25-year-old was guaranteed Great Britain’s first sailing medal at the Paris Olympics after dominating the opening series off the Marseille coast.

But she had to settle for bronze in the final as Italy’s Marta Maggetti won gold and Israel’s Sharon Kantor took silver.

Wilson had finished well clear at the top of the standings after winning eight of the 14 preliminary races, coming outside the top three just once, but was third in the one-off final.

Windsurfing and the new Olympic sport of kitesurfing are the only sailing classes to adopt a winner-takes-all medal race.

At last year’s World Championships in Lanzarote, Wilson won 15 of the 20 opening races, but finished with silver behind Kantor in the final.

“I think it’s obvious I’m at a disadvantage, and I think they [sailing officials] should think about it, and think about people’s mental health as well,” Wilson said after the event.

“It’s not OK to put people in this position every time. I had a 60-point lead at the World Championships and a 30-point lead here.

“I don’t know how many times you can come back. I think I’m done with the sport.”

It is Wilson’s second Olympic medal having also won bronze at the Tokyo 2020 Games in the RS:X event, which has been replaced by IQFoil.

Wilson slumped on to her board in disappointment at the finish, having been unable to reproduce her fine form from the preliminary races.

That secured a bye to the final by finishing top of the standings, while Kantor and Maggetti went through to the semi-final after being second and third respectively.

The duo progressed to the medal race from a semi-final which was staged over the same course less than half an hour before the final.

Wilson started well, holding a narrow advantage at the first and second marks, before Maggetti charged from third place to lead around marks three and four.

The Italian then held off Kantor to the finish to claim her first Olympic medal, having been fourth at Tokyo.

“I just made a mistake on the lay line,” added Wilson, referring to the calculation required to reach the next mark, or buoy, in the quickest time.

“I hadn’t done a race yet and all these girls knew where the lay line was.

“I’m really happy for her [Maggetti] but I’m just not sure I can keep putting myself through that format.”

  • Published
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Belgium’s Remco Evenepoel survived a late puncture to secure a dominant victory in the Olympic men’s road race in Paris and add to the gold medal he won in the time trial seven days ago.

The 2022 world champion became the first man to win both road cycling events at the same Games.

Evenepoel, 24, attacked from the peloton and bridged across to the front group inside the final 40km.

He then set a punishing pace with the last rider, France’s Valentin Madouas, dropping off his wheel on the penultimate climb with 15km to go.

The Belgian had a late scare, having to change bikes after a puncture inside the final four kilometres, but he had already built a substantial lead and cruised to victory one minute and 11 seconds ahead of Madouas in second.

Madouas’ fellow Frenchman Christophe Laporte won bronze as he out-sprinted a small group for third.

Ireland’s Ben Healy, who spent much of the race in the leading group, rolled home in 10th, while Great Britain’s Tom Pidcock, who won mountain bike gold on Monday, finished 13th.

Olympic men’s road race results

  1. Remco Evenepoel (Bel) 6hrs 19mins 34secs

  2. Valentin Madouas (Fre) +1min 11secs

  3. Christophe Laporte (Fre) +1min 16secs

  4. Attila Valter (Hun) Same time

  5. Toms Skujins (Lat)

  6. Marco Haller (Aut)

  7. Stefan Kung (Sui)

  8. Jan Tratnik (Slo)

  9. Matteo Jorgenson (USA)

  10. Ben Healy (Irl) +1min 20secs

Selected others:

13. Tom Pidcock (GB) +1min 50secs

31. Stephen Williams (GB) +3min 42secs

43. Fred Wright (GB) +7mins 23secs

47. Joshua Tarling (GB) +7mins 23secs

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Great Britain powered to a thrilling gold in the men’s eight and bronze in the women’s race, as the rowing team surpassed their previous best medal haul for an overseas Olympics.

The men traded the lead with the Netherlands before surging ahead in the third quarter of the 2,000m race.

The Netherlands tried to fight back but the British boat rose to the challenge and won by 1.08 seconds in five minutes and 22.8 seconds.

Cox Harry Brightmore and Sholto Carnegie in the bow seat climbed to their feet and roared with delight after winning the GB squad’s eighth medal in France.

The crew of Carnegie, Rory Gibbs, Morgan Bolding, Jacob Dawson, Charlie Elwes, Tom Digby, James Rudkin and Tom Ford – plus their motivator-in-chief Brightmore – are now European, world and Olympic champions.

But such was the effort required that Bolding and Gibbs needed medical attention before the medal ceremony.

“How can you put into words something that you’ve always dreamed of? It’s pretty epic,” said Dawson after receiving his medal.

Ford’s gold came just 20 minutes after his younger sister Emily won bronze in the women’s race.

Heidi Long, Rowan McKellar, Holly Dunford, Ford, Lauren Irwin, Eve Stewart, Harriet Taylor and Annie Campbell-Orde – coxed by Henry Fieldman – battled all the way to the line to finish behind champions Romania and Tokyo winners Canada.

“I saw about the last five strokes of Tom’s race, the most important, said Emily.

“I’m really proud Tom’s achieved gold, but also super-proud of what we’ve done to get on the podium as we’ve overcome so much in the past few months with injuries and other things.”

Fieldman, who steered the men’s eight to bronze in Tokyo, made history by becoming the first person to win an Olympic medal in both men’s and women’s events.

The women’s bronze is only Britain’s second medal in the event after their silver at the Rio Olympics in 2016 and comes after they failed to make the final in Tokyo.

However, the men have now won medals in the eights at five consecutive Games, including gold in Rio in 2016.

The successes mean Britain finish the rowing competition with a record haul for an overseas Games, and their best tally since London 2012, where they won nine on home water.

Redemption for Britain after Tokyo trauma

It has been a remarkable turnaround for Britain after the team only managed two rowing medals in Tokyo, neither of them gold, and finished 14th in the medal table.

Here in Paris they have secured three golds, two silvers and three bronzes, and finished second in the medal table behind the Dutch, who have won the same number but four golds.

Eight of the 10 British crews won medals and two, the women’s four and the men’s pair, fell agonisingly short of winning gold.

Britain’s preparations for the Tokyo Games suffered the double setback of Covid restrictions disrupting training camps and the twin departures of Jurgen Grobler, the legendary coach behind Sir Steve Redgrave and Sir Matt Pinsent’s successes, and women’s head coach Paul Thompson.

After Tokyo, new performance director Louise Kingsley, men’s head coach Paul Stannard and women’s head coach Andrew Randell have overhauled the team.

“I think it was about putting the past behind us and very much looking forward,” said Dawson, about the team’s revival in France.

“Obviously we’ve had a change in leadership and change of direction on where we want to go.”

‘Masochists even in the depth of pain’

“One engine, one machine,” was how Rudkin described the team’s ethos before the Games, and he was proved right as the crew motored to victory.

Elwes – one of four survivors from the bronze medal-winning crew in Tokyo – said a poor stroke at the start of the race spurred them on.

“99.9% of that was perfect,” he said. “We did have a bit of a duff stroke on stroke one and that really scared us.

“But it almost fires you up another 20% so we shot out of the start and never looked back.”

Brightmore shouted out the orders from his cox’s seat to ensure Britain held the Dutch at bay.

“These guys are masochists,” he said. “They like to be told – even when they’re in the depths of pain – that they can put out more. It’s my job to crack the whip.

“Even though it was nip and tuck and we were ahead at certain points, we needed to be totally ruthless.”

Dawson, who took time away from the sport in 2022 because of a life-threatening blood clot on the lung caused by Covid complications, admitted to mixed emotions.

“It’s sadness that this project is now at an end,” he said. “Today is probably the last day that any of us will row in the same crew – but there’s also complete elation.”

‘Did we get it? Did we get a medal?’

Britain’s McKellar said she had to ask whether they had won a medal such was her focus on rowing all the way to the line in a tight finish to the women’s final.

“I turned around and I was like, ‘Did we get it? Did we get a medal?’. I didn’t realise how close it was,” she said.

“I looked to my right and I saw Australia really close to us. We were just heads in, the whole way.”

Team-mate Long added: “It’s really special to get a medal in this race and this boat class, and the girls have done amazingly. It was a tough competition.”

Cox Fieldman wants the bronze to lead to the women’s eight becoming regular medallists at future global events.

“I hope that now that we’ve had two Olympic medals in the women’s eight that this could be the start of more women’s eights medals to come – stepping on to greater things,” he said.

Britain’s rowing medallists at Paris 2024

Britain finished the Paris Olympics with eight medals to beat their previous best at an overseas Games.

Here are the medal winners:

Gold

  • Men’s eight – Sholto Carnegie, Rory Gibbs, Morgan Bolding, Jacob Dawson, Charlie Elwes, Tom Digby, James Rudkin, Tom Ford and cox Harry Brightmore

  • Women’s lightweight double sculls – Emily Craig and Imogen Grant

  • Women’s quadruple sculls – Lauren Henry, Lola Anderson, Hannah Scott and Georgina Brayshaw

Silver

  • Men’s pair – Oliver Wynne-Griffith and Tom George

  • Women’s four – Helen Glover, Esme Booth, Sam Redgrave and Rebecca Shorten

Bronze

  • Women’s eight – Heidi Long, Rowan McKellar, Holly Dunford, Emily Ford, Lauren Irwin, Eve Stewart, Harriet Taylor, Annie Campbell-Orde and cox Henry Fieldman

  • Men’s four – Oli Wilkes, David Ambler, Matt Aldridge and Freddie Davidson

  • Women’s double sculls – Mathilda Hodgkins-Byrne and Becky Wilde

  • Published

Great Britain’s dressage riders put a turbulent build-up behind them to win team bronze at the Paris Olympics.

Seven-time Olympian Carl Hester, Lottie Fry and Becky Moody scored a combined 232.492% to place behind gold medallists Germany and Denmark in silver on the podium at Chateau de Versailles.

It came less than two weeks after Charlotte Dujardin, the star of British dressage, withdrew on the eve of the Games and was provisionally suspended by equestrian’s world governing body for “excessively” whipping a horse.

Prior to their podium finish being confirmed, Hester told BBC Sport: “Any medal will be great, let’s face it, after the couple of weeks we’ve had. It will be great for the whole team.”

GB have now won medals in this event at four consecutive Games.

This was also their fourth equestrian medal at Paris 2024 so far, following golds in the team eventing and jumping, and Laura Collett’s individual eventing bronze.

After Dujardin’s withdrawal, Moody was promoted from alternate to make her Olympic debut and, going first for GB in Saturday’s final, scored a personal best of 76.489% on Jagerbomb – who she bred herself – to put her team top of the standings after the opening group of riders.

Hester, the veteran and team talisman, had hoped for more than his 76.520% score on Fame, as Denmark and then Germany – who had always been expected to contest the gold – moved ahead in the standings.

Fry, the 2022 individual world champion, scored 79.483% on Glamourdale to secure a medal for the British trio, though they had to wait to have the colour confirmed.

“It has been a long, long, week,” said Hester. “A new member on the team, it’s always fantastic to bring new blood on to the team, and Lottie again bringing in that amazing score to give us a chance.

“It was very close at the top, we knew it would be a hard-fought competition.”

Germany, who won by just 0.12 points, now have a record 15 golds in the team dressage event, including eight of the past nine – with Great Britain’s victory at London 2012 the only blip.

German rider Isabell Werth, 55, became the first athlete to win a medal at seven different Olympics.

‘I was expecting to come for a holiday’

The equestrian world was rocked on 23 July when Dujardin, British dressage’s darling and GB’s joint-most decorated female Olympian, announced her withdrawal from the Games after a video emerged showing her “making an error of judgement”.

That error of judgement, it later transpired, was her whipping a horse around its legs during a training session.

As a result, the FEI suspended the six-time Olympic medallist pending an investigation, while Dujardin also had her UK Sport funding suspended and lost a host of sponsors.

It came as a “huge shock” to the team, according to 57-year-old Hester. But with an Olympics about to start, there was no time to dwell.

“You dream of coming to an Olympic Games and getting a personal best, so that was amazing,” Moody, 44, told BBC Sport after her performance in the final.

“Two weeks ago I was expecting to come for a lovely 10-day holiday in France, to be inspired, learn, and go home better.

“Having to do this, there’s been a bit of nausea but it’s been an amazing experience with an incredible team around me.”

Fry, who won team bronze alongside Hester and Dujardin in Tokyo three years ago, said: “It wasn’t the easiest build-up, that’s for sure, but I think it’s really brought us closer together.”

The individual dressage final takes place on Sunday with Fry, Hester and Moody all in contention.

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Bayern Munich have rejected Manchester United’s joint bid for Netherlands centre-half Matthijs de Ligt, 24, and 26-year-old Morocco full-back Noussair Mazraoui. (Telegraph – subscription required), external

Newcastle are planning to open talks over a new contract with England winger Anthony Gordon, 23, when he returns from a break following Euro 2024. (Athletic – subscription required), external

West Ham are working on a deal to sign Argentina midfielder Guido Rodriguez, 30, as a free agent after his exit from Real Betis. (Standard), external

Fulham are interested in Aston Villa‘s 31-year-old Brazilian defender Diego Carlos. (Mail), external

QPR and Celtic are interested in Liverpool‘s 21-year-old Welsh left-back Owen Beck. (Sky Sports), external

Arsenal are interested in Brighton‘s 22-year-old Brazilian forward Joao Pedro. (Football Transfers), external

Villarreal’s Spanish defender Jorge Cuenca, 24, is set to join Fulham. (Sky Sports), external

Rennes midfielder Desire Doue, 19, prefers a move to Bayern Munich over staying in his native France with Paris St-Germain. (Sky Germany), external

Nottingham Forest owner Evangelos Marinakis wants to persuade Arsenal sporting director Edu Gaspar to leave Emirates Stadium and move to the City Ground. (Universo Online – in Portuguese), external

Inter Milan have joined West Ham in the race to sign 26-year-old English right-back Aaron Wan-Bissaka from Manchester United. (Football Insider), external

Bournemouth are considering Aston Villa’s English forward Cameron Archer, 22, as a potential replacement if his compatriot Dominic Solanke, 26, is sold to Tottenham. (Football.London), external

Tottenham are not interested in signing Federico Chiesa, 26, from Juventus despite reports linking them to the Italy forward. (Football Insider), external

Aston Villa have made a formal offer to Sunderland for 17-year-old England age grade forward Mason Cotcher. (Fabrizio Romano), external

Manchester City have agreed to send 19-year-old Finland defender Tomas Galvez on loan to Austrian champions LASK. (Teamtalk), external

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