Israeli strike on Gaza seafront cafe kills at least 20 Palestinians, witnesses and rescuers say
At least 20 Palestinians were killed in an Israeli air strike that hit a popular seafront cafe frequently used by activists, journalists, and local residents in western Gaza on Monday, according to medics and eyewitnesses.
Rescue teams evacuated 20 bodies and dozens wounded from Al-Baqa Cafeteria, an outdoor venue which consisted of tents along the beach, a spokesperson for Gaza’s Hamas-run Civil Defence told the BBC.
He added that emergency crews were still searching through a deep crater left by the explosion.
“I was on my way to the café to use the internet just a few meters away when a massive explosion hit,” said Aziz Al-Afifi, a cameraman with a local production company, told the BBC.
“I ran to the scene. My colleagues were there, people I meet every day. The scene was horrific – bodies, blood, screaming everywhere.”
Videos posted by activists on social media appeared to show the moment a missile, reportedly fired from an Israeli warplane, struck the area. Footage captured the aftermath of the attack, with bodies scattered across the ground.
Al-Baqa Cafeteria had become a well-known space for journalists, activists, and remote workers, offering internet access, seating, and workspace along Gaza’s Mediterranean coast.
There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military.
The attack came after Israel carried out a wave of air strikes across the Gaza Strip overnight, triggering the mass displacement of hundreds of Palestinian families, witnesses said.
Rescue teams recovered the bodies of five people, while dozens of injured civilians were evacuated to Al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza City, according to local reports.
The bombardment follows one of the largest evacuation orders issued since the war resumed in March.
It comes amid increasing pressure on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to refocus efforts to reach a ceasefire agreement.
On Saturday, US President Donald Trump said on social media that Netanyahu was working on negotiating a deal with Hamas “right now”. That came days after a senior Hamas official said mediators had intensified their efforts to broker a new ceasefire and hostage release deal in Gaza, but that negotiations with Israel remain stalled.
A two-month ceasefire collapsed in March when Israel launched fresh strikes on Gaza. The ceasefire deal – which started on 19 January – was meant to have three stages, but did not make it past the first stage.
Israel followed this with a total blockade on humanitarian aid deliveries to Gaza, which it partially eased after 11 weeks following pressure from US allies and warnings of starvation from global experts.
The partial easing saw the creation of the controversial US- and Israeli-backed aid group, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF). Since GHF took over distribution operations, there have been almost daily incidents of killings and injuries of Palestinians seeking aid.
Eyewitnesses and medics have blamed Israel, though Israel has said it has only fired warning shots towards people it considered a threat.
Residents in Gaza City said dozens of Israeli air raids targeted densely populated eastern neighbourhoods, including Shujaiya, Tuffah, and Zeitoun.
Videos posted by activists on social media captured scenes of chaos and explosions illuminating the night sky, followed by flames and thick plumes of smoke rising above the skyline.
One of the strikes reportedly hit a school in Zeitoun that had been sheltering displaced families.
“Explosions never stopped… it felt like earthquakes,” Salah, 60, from Gaza City told Reuters news agency.
“In the news we hear a ceasefire is near, on the ground we see death and we hear explosions,” the father of five added.
The five fatalities reportedly occurred in a strike at the Al Shati camp, to the west of Gaza City.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) had earlier ordered residents to leave large parts of northern Gaza, in anticipation of the attacks. Most of those displaced overnight moved westwards within Gaza City rather than to the southern region as instructed by the IDF.
“We had no choice but to leave everything behind,” said Abeer Talba, a mother of seven who fled Zeitoun with her family.
“We got phone calls recordings in Arabic telling us we were in a combat zone and must evacuate immediately.
“This is the seventh time we’ve been forced to flee,” she added. “We’re in the streets again, no food, no water. My children are starving. Death feels kinder than this.”
Amid the growing humanitarian crisis, fears are mounting that the evacuation orders and sustained air strikes are part of a broader Israeli plan to expand its ground offensive deeper into Gaza.
But there is also speculation in Israeli media that some generals are close to concluding that military operations in Gaza are near to being achieved.
That is also the view of many former army leaders who fear that the descent of the Gaza campaign into more attritional, guerilla-style warfare would lead to more deaths – of hostages, civilians and soldiers.
The Israeli prime minister’s next moves are being closely watched. While Benjamin Netanyahu’s instincts have always been to continue the war and defeat Hamas, he is coming under increasing pressure at home and abroad to pursue a new ceasefire agreement.
The Israeli military launched its bombardment of Gaza in response to the attack, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
More than 56,000 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.
Is RFK Jr’s divisive plan to Make America Healthy Again fearmongering – or revolutionary?
There’s a saying that Robert F Kennedy Jr is very fond of. He used it on the day he was confirmed as US health secretary. “A healthy person has a thousand dreams, a sick person only has one,” he said as he stood in the Oval Office. “60% of our population has only one dream – that they get better.”
The most powerful public health official in the US has made it his mission to tackle what he describes as an epidemic of chronic illness in America, a catch-all term that covers everything from obesity and diabetes to heart disease.
His diagnosis that the US is experiencing an epidemic of ill health is a view shared by many healthcare experts in the country.
But Kennedy also has a history of promoting unfounded health conspiracies, from the suggestion that Covid-19 targeted and spared certain ethnic groups to the idea that chemicals in tap water could be making children transgender.
And after taking office, he slashed thousands of jobs at the Department of Health and Human Services and eliminated whole programmes at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
“On the one hand, it’s extraordinarily exciting to have a federal official take on chronic disease,” says Marion Nestle, a retired professor of public health at New York University. “On the other, the dismantling of the federal public health apparatus cannot possibly help with the agenda.”
Kennedy is reviled by parts of the medical and scientific communities. He was described to me as an “evil nihilist” by Dr Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease doctor and senior scholar at Johns Hopkins University.
But even some of Kennedy’s critics accept that he is bringing drive and ambition to areas of healthcare that have been neglected. Is it possible that the man who attracts so much criticism – and in some quarters, hate – might actually start making America healthy again?
American ‘kids swimming in a toxic soup’
There’s one industry that Kennedy had set his sights on long before joining the Trump administration: multinational food companies have, he has said, poisoned American children with artificial additives already banned in other countries.
“We have a generation of kids who are swimming around in a toxic soup right now,” he claimed on Fox News last year.
His first target was food colourings, with a promise to phase out the use of petroleum-based dyes by the end of 2026.
Chemicals, with names like ‘Green No. 3’ and ‘Red No. 40’, have been linked to hyperactivity and behavioural issues in children, and cancer in some animal studies.
“What’s happening in this administration is really interesting,” says Vani Hari, a food blogger and former Democrat who is now an influential voice in the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement. “MAHA is all about how do we get people off processed food, and one way to do that is to regulate the chemicals companies use.”
There are some signs this pressure may be paying off.
The food giant PepsiCo, for example, said in a recent trading update that Lays crisps and Tostitos snacks “will be out of artificial colours by the end of this year”.
Kennedy struck a voluntary agreement with the food industry but it only came after individual states from California to West Virginia had already started introducing their own laws.
“In the case of food dyes, companies will have to act because states are banning them [anyway] and they won’t want to have to formulate separate products for separate states,” says Prof Nestle, an author and longtime critic of the industry.
More recently Kennedy has signalled he backs a radical food bill in Texas that could target additives in some products ranging from sweets, to cereals and fizzy drinks
Packets may soon have to carry a high-contrast label stating, “WARNING: This product contains an ingredient that is not recommended for human consumption by the appropriate authority in Australia, Canada, the European Union, or the United Kingdom.”
The Consumer Brands Association, which represents some of the largest food manufacturers, opposes this, saying the ingredients used in the US food supply are safe and have been rigorously studied.
It’s difficult to imagine that kind of regulation could ever be signed off in a state like Texas without the political backing of Kennedy and President Trump.
Is RFK ‘drifting into misinformation’?
“He can’t change everything in a short amount of time, but I think the issue of food dyes will soon be history,” says Ms Hari, who testified before the Senate on this subject last year.
But others worry that the flurry of announcements on additives is tinkering around the edges of what is a much wider problem.
“While some of these individual actions are important, they are a drop in the ocean in the larger context of chronic disease,” argues Nicola Hawley, professor of epidemiology at Yale School of Public Health. “There is a focus on personal choice and access to natural food, but that completely ignores the big, systematic and structural barriers [to healthy eating] like poverty and really aggressive marketing of junk food to children.”
The US government, for example, still heavily subsidises crops including corn and soya beans, key ingredients in processed foods.
Kennedy is now updating the US national dietary guidelines, an important document used to shape everything from school meals to assistance programmes for the elderly. A reduction in added sugars and a switch to more locally-sourced whole foods is expected. Plus he has called on states to ban millions of Americans from using food stamps, a welfare benefit, to buy junk food or sugar-sweetened drinks.
He has also backed local officials who want to stop adding fluoride to drinking water, describing it as a “dangerous neurotoxin”. It is used in some countries, including in parts of the US, to prevent tooth decay, and whilst there is still debate about the possible health effects, the NHS says a review of the risks has found “no convincing evidence” to support any concerns. Other fluoride research has found the mineral only has detrimental health effects at extremely high levels.
Prof Hawley also argues there is a tension between Kennedy’s “important message” on food and chronic disease, and what she feels is a lack of policies backed by solid scientific evidence.
“You’ve got this challenge of him drifting into misinformation about the links between additives and chronic disease, or environmental risk factors,” she argues. “And that really just undermines the science.”
‘He is not anti vax, he is anti corruption’
That tension is even clearer when it comes to another of Kennedy’s big concerns.
Vaccines are still listed on the CDC website as one of the great public health achievements of the last century, alongside family planning and tobacco control. They prevent countless cases of disease and disability each year, and save millions of lives, according to the American Medical Association.
Kennedy, though, is the best known vaccine sceptic in the country. The activist group he ran for eight years, Children’s Health Defense, repeatedly questioned the safety and efficacy of vaccination.
In 2019 he described the disgraced British doctor Andrew Wakefield as the “most unfairly maligned person in modern history” and told a crowd in Washington that “any just society” would be building statues of him.
Wakefield was struck off the UK medical register in 2010 after his research falsely linked the MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccine to autism, leading to a spike in measles cases in England and some other countries.
Over the last year, Kennedy has repeatedly insisted he is not “anti-vax” and will not be “taking away anybody’s vaccines”. Faced with a deadly measles outbreak in unvaccinated children in west Texas, he posted that the MMR was “the most effective way to prevent the spread of the disease”.
In other comments though, he described vaccination as a “personal choice” and emphasised alternative treatments such as vitamin A supplements.
A huge deal with the drugmaker Moderna to develop a vaccine to combat bird flu in humans was scrapped, and new rules were brought in which could mean some vaccines need extra testing before they can be updated each winter.
In May, Kennedy posted a video on social media saying the government would no longer endorse Covid vaccines for healthy children and pregnant women.
However, some doctors point out that reducing eligibility would simply bring the US into line with other countries, including the UK, where free Covid boosters are restricted to those over 75 or with weakened immune systems.
“They are really just aligning themselves with everyone else, which is not in any way outrageous,” says Prof Adam Finn, a paediatric doctor and one of the UK’s leading experts on vaccines.
Then in June, Kennedy suddenly sacked all 17 members of the influential expert committee, which advises the CDC on vaccine eligibility. He accused the panel of being “plagued with persistent conflicts of interest” and rubber-stamping new vaccines without proper scrutiny.
A new, much smaller, committee handpicked by the administration now has the power to change, or even drop, critical recommendations to immunise Americans for certain diseases, as well as shape the childhood vaccination programme.
“It underscores just how much we are backsliding now,” says Dr Amesh Adalja, the infectious disease doctor and senior scholar at Johns Hopkins University. “I think increasingly the panel will become irrelevant if RFK Jr is able to shape it the way he wants to.”
The new panel made its first decision last week, voting to stop recommending a small number of flu vaccines that still contain the preservative thimerosal, something Kennedy wrote a book about in 2015.
His critics say that a new era of vaccine policy has arrived in the US. Whilst his supporters say no subject, including vaccine safety, should be considered off-limits.
“Everything has to be open to discussion and Bobby Kennedy is not anti-vaccine, he’s anti-corruption,” argues Tony Lyons, who co-founded the political action committee that supported his independent presidential campaign.
“It’s about being pro-science, pro-capitalism, and believing you have an obligation to the public to do a thorough job of researching any product that is put in the arms of 40 million children.”
The autism puzzle
Weeks after Kennedy took office news emerged that the CDC would open a research project into the link between vaccines and autism.
Since Wakefield’s now-discredited Lancet paper in 1998, which linked autism to the MMR vaccine given to children, there have been numerous international studies that have looked at this in detail and found no reputable link.
“There is nothing to debate any more, it has been settled by science,” says Eric Fombonne, an autism researcher and professor emeritus at Oregon Health & Science University.
Kennedy, though, has hired David Geier, a noted vaccine sceptic, to look again at the data.
Today autism is widely understood to be a lifelong spectrum condition. It can include those with high support needs who are non-speaking, and those with above-average intelligence who might struggle with social interaction or communication.
Most researchers believe a rise in cases over decades is down to a broadening in the way children with autism are defined, as well as improved awareness, understanding and screening.
But in April, Kennedy dismissed that idea, describing autism as “preventable”. He blamed a mysterious environmental trigger for the increase in eight-year-olds being diagnosed.
“This is coming from an environmental toxin… [in] our air, our water, our medicines, our food,” he said.
He pledged a massive research effort to find that cause by September and “eliminate those exposures”.
Dr Fombonne strongly disputes this. “It is nonsensical and shows a complete absence of understanding,” he says. “We have known for many years that autism has a strong genetic component.”
In the same speech, Kennedy said that many autistic children will never “pay taxes, never hold a job. They’ll never play baseball. They’ll never write a poem. They’ll never go out on a date. Many of them will never use a toilet unassisted.”
Many in the autism community are angry. “What we’re seeing here is a fear-based rhetoric and [a] misleading narrative that is causing harm and perpetuating stigma,” says Kristyn Roth from the Autism Society of America.
But some parents of autistic children are more supportive.
Emily May, a writer who is the mother of a child with autism, wrote in The New York Times that she found herself “nodding along as Mr Kennedy spoke about the grim realities of profound autism”.
“His remarks echo the reality and pain of a subset of parents of children with autism who feel left out of much of the conversation,” she wrote.
The administration has since watered down that promise to find the reasons for autism by September but it is still promising detailed findings of its research by March 2026.
An imperfect messenger?
Ultimately, Robert Kennedy has only been in the job a matter of months. Already though he’s asking some big questions – particularly about chronic disease – which have never been asked in the same way by a health secretary before.
For the first time that issue has both political attention and bipartisan support in the US.
He is clearly not afraid to take on what he perceives to be vested interests in the food and drug industries, and he is still firmly supported by President Trump.
Tony Lyons, who has published books by Kennedy, calls him “uniquely qualified” for the most powerful job in US public health. “He’s a corruption fighter. He has seen what all these kinds of companies do, not just pharmaceutical companies but food companies, and he wants them to do a better job,” he says.
Robert Kennedy’s background as an environmental lawyer taking on big business and the establishment has clearly shaped the views he holds today.
But Jerold Mande, a former federal food policy advisor in three administrations, worries that Kennedy’s own views and biases will mean some of the solutions he’s reaching for are predetermined and unsupported by the evidence.
Now a professor of nutrition at Harvard, Prof Mande describes Kennedy as an imperfect messenger and says he has “great concerns” about the administration’s approach to aspects of public health, from tobacco control to vaccination, where there is “no question that what he’s doing is going to result in enormous harm.”
“At a high level, I’m optimistic but you still need to come up with the right answers, and those answers can only be found through science,” says Prof Mande.
“We now have a shot and he’s provided that by making it a priority. But it’s how you use that shot that’s going to determine whether it’s a success or not. And that is where the jury is still out.”
BBC investigation reveals hidden deaths at India festival crush
A BBC Hindi investigation reveals that Indian officials quietly paid compensation to the families of more people than they admit died in a deadly crowd crush at the Kumbh Mela, a Hindu festival which is the world’s largest religious gathering.
The official death toll is 37, but the BBC found 26 additional cases where families received partial compensation in cash, and 18 more deaths where no payment was made.
On 25 March, a team of plain-clothed police officers from India’s northern Uttar Pradesh (UP) state arrived in neighbouring Bihar with bundles of cash.
The team visited Gopalganj city, where they met the family of 62-year-old Tara Devi. They handed over 500,000 rupees ($5,758; £4,291) in cash to her son, Dhananjay Gond, and asked him to record a statement on video.
In the video, Dhananjay introduces himself, saying: “My mother Tara Devi and I went to the Kumbh Mela for a holy dip. My mother died. Officers from UP came and gave us 500,000 rupees. We have received it.”
Dhananjay says his mother was killed in the crowd crush in the city of Prayagraj in UP on 29 January.
The UP government has not yet released an official list of the crush victims. Tara Devi’s son says police told him the money he got was the first instalment of the 2.5m rupees officially promised to victims’ families. Dhananjay says he hasn’t received the remaining 2m rupees.
The UP government says it has paid 2.5m rupees each to the families of 35 victims (of the 37 deaths, one victim remains unidentified, and another does not have a legal heir). A three-member judicial commission set up to investigate the incident and submit a report within a month has had its tenure extended.
The BBC, however, found one more family which was given a cheque of 2.5m rupees. For the other 35 victims, the compensation was transferred to relatives’ bank accounts.
Apart from this, the BBC found 26 cases – including that of Tara Devi – where police paid 500,000 rupees in cash at people’s homes.
In many instances, officials had families sign documents blaming health issues for the deaths, despite them insisting that their relatives died in the crush. (The UP government typically does not compensate for natural deaths during the Kumbh, held every 12 years.)
The BBC also confirmed 18 deaths where no compensation was given (excluding the case mentioned above where there was no legal heir).
It also found evidence of four separate crush incidents in Prayagraj on 29 January, despite Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath’s claim that only one occurred at what is called the Sangam nose – the point of confluence of three sacred rivers, Ganga, Yamuna and the mythical Saraswati.
In the weeks after the Kumbh crush, the BBC met over 100 families across 11 states in India, who claimed their relatives died in the tragedy. It verified 82 deaths in total with concrete evidence, excluding cases lacking proof.
- BBC reports from scene of India’s Kumbh Mela crush
- Families mourn loved ones who died in Kumbh Mela crush
Some families hold post-mortems, morgue slips, death certificates, or photos and videos as proof. The BBC cross-checked local newspaper reports and spoke to district reporters to trace where bodies were received, mapped these locations, and then visited the victims’ families.
The BBC interviewed families and eyewitnesses to reconstruct timelines for each case – when the victims left for the holy dip, the time of the crush, nearby landmarks, the distance from the bathing site and the immediate aftermath.
From these detailed accounts, clear patterns emerged, leading to the identification of four crush locations: Sangam Nose, Jhusi side of Samudrakup Chauraha, Airavat Marg, and Mukti Marg Chauraha near Kalpavriksha Gate.
Most of the full 2.5m-rupee compensation cases list the death location as “Ward No. 7, Fort Cantt, Prayagraj”, about 1.5km (0.9 miles) from Sangam Nose.
In contrast, the cases that received 500,000 rupees mostly mention “Sector-20 or Sector-21, Kumbh Mela area, Jhusi”. Some of these families claim their relatives also died near Sangam Nose, but that their certificates wrongly cite Jhusi – possibly to downplay the scale of the tragedy there.
As for the 18 families which did not receive any compensation, there does not seem to be a common thread binding them.
For instance, at one crush location, the BBC identified five bodies through photos and the numbers issued during post-death formalities. Of these, the families of three victims received 500,000 rupees in cash, while the other two received nothing. Some other families have photographs from the day of the crush which show bodies of their relatives, but these deaths have not been acknowledged by the government.
The BBC repeatedly tried to contact UP government officials, emailing the information department and district magistrate. Despite promises by the district magistrate’s office, no call was arranged. Attempts to reach the UP police chief went unanswered, while Prayagraj’s police commissioner at the time of the incident, Tarun Gaba, and Mela officer Vijay Kiran Anand refused to answer questions.
The BBC has also found evidence of deaths in crushes that took place at locations other than the Sangam Nose, which the government has acknowledged through giving some compensation.
In UP’s Jaunpur, Dharmbir Rajbhar received 500,000 rupees each for the deaths of his wife and daughter-in-law in the Airavat Marg crush.
A video shot by the BBC on 29 January shows the family sitting with both bodies at the site. Back home, Rajbhar displayed the cash bundles and said, “The government promised 2.5m rupees, but the police gave only 500,000 rupees each and left.”
The UP police also travelled hundreds of kilometres to Paschim Bardhaman in West Bengal, where they handed over 500,000 rupees to the family of Vinod Ruidas.
Not all families accepted the amount, though. In Bihar, the relatives of Sunaina Devi rejected it. They told the BBC that they refused to “sign false documents”.
- Watch: Belongings strewn aside after India crush
- Thirty killed in crowd crush at India’s Kumbh Mela festival
The BBC also identified at least five families who lost their relatives near Kalpavriksha Gate, about 3-4km from Sangam Nose.
Kusum Devi, the wife of Panne Lal Sahni, says that her husband died around 8am on 29 January. “People were stepping over his body. I sat in the sun with his corpse until 4pm. No-one even gave us water,” she says. The family received 500,000 rupees in cash.
Relatives of all five people who died near the Kalpavriksha Gate, had similar stories to narrate – they sat with the bodies from morning till evening.
Over time, 18 more families came forward claiming their relatives died in the crush but they haven’t received compensation yet.
Among the 18 is Meena Pandey from Sultanpur, UP, who travelled to the Kumbh with her husband, and neighbour Archana Singh. Archana recalls sitting with Meena’s body at the crush site until 3pm – seven hours after the crush.
Despite claims of 2,750 AI-enabled CCTVs, 50,000 security personnel, drones and ambulances, no help arrived, relatives said.
By afternoon the body had begun to decay, says Archana.
“We had no choice but to carry it home in our vehicle.”
Like Meena Pandey’s family, relatives of Shyamlal Gond from UP’s Deoria are still waiting for compensation.
His son, Bhagirathi Gond, works as a daily wage labourer in Bengaluru. After the crush, he travelled to Prayagraj looking for his father, and reached the hospital on 3 February.
According to a slip from the hospital, Shyamlal Gond was brought in dead at 10.02 local time on 29 January.
“My father was listed as unidentified. To maintain records, they [hospital staff] had kept a file. They took a photo of the body in the condition it was found and pasted it into a register.”
He adds, “It was difficult to identify him through the photo. After the fall, his head was bent down, chest pushed upward, and his face had slightly turned.”
Bhagirathi says the hospital staff would not give him a death certificate or any other papers.
“They told me to take the body, but I said I would only do so if some official procedure was followed,” he said.
It took four months before he got the death certificate. But he is still waiting for compensation for his loss.
“The government has still not acknowledged that my father died in the crush.”
Guilty plea expected in 2022 murders of four Idaho students
A 30-year-old man who is due to stand trial for the fatal stabbings of four roommates in a small Idaho college town will plead guilty as part of a deal with state prosecutors to avoid the death penalty, according to US media.
Latah County prosecutor’s office refused to confirm to the BBC that a plea deal had been reached with Bryan Kohberger.
But relatives of one victim, Kaylee Goncalves, apparently confirmed the agreement on Facebook. “It’s true! We are beyond furious at the State of Idaho,” the post said. “They have failed us.”
Ms Goncalves, Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle and Madison Mogen were knifed in their off-campus home in Moscow, Idaho, days before Thanksgiving in 2022.
Mr Kohberger, who was a graduate criminology student at nearby Washington State University, is currently due to stand trial in August.
Also on Monday, a judge in the defendant’s home state of Pennsylvania ruled that three people who knew him must travel to Idaho to testify for the defence.
Local media reported that a hearing for the plea deal was set for Wednesday. The BBC has contacted the defendant’s legal team for comment.
Mr Kohberger is expected to plead guilty on all four murder charges and waive his rights to any future appeals, local media reported.
If accepted by a judge, the deal would reportedly see the defendant sentenced to life without the possibility of parole and prosecutors would not seek capital punishment.
“We cannot fathom the toll that this case has taken on your family,” Moscow Prosecuting Attorney Bill Thompson told families in a letter, according to the Idaho Statesman newspaper, which said it had seen a copy.
“This resolution is our sincere attempt to seek justice for your family.
“This agreement ensures that the defendant will be convicted, will spend the rest of his life in prison, and will not be able to put you and the other families through the uncertainty of decades of post-conviction appeals.”
The defendant was arrested at his Pennsylvania family home weeks following the stabbings, after investigators said they found DNA evidence on a “leather knife sheath” at the crime scene. He was indicted by a grand jury in May 2023.
Court documents revealed police recovered a knife, a Glock pistol, black gloves, a black hat and a black face mask during a search of Mr Kohberger’s family home.
His defence team questioned the accuracy of the DNA evidence and succeeded in its bid to move the trial location, after arguing their client would not receive a fair hearing from local jurors.
But they had failed to remove the death penalty as a sentencing option, after citing an autism diagnosis for Mr Kohberger.
Idaho is one of 27 US states that allows for capital punishment, but there have been no executions since 2012, according to a database by the Death Penalty Information Center.
Police launch criminal investigation into Bob Vylan and Kneecap Glastonbury sets
A criminal investigation has been launched over performances by Bob Vylan and Kneecap at Glastonbury on Saturday, Avon and Somerset Police has said.
The force said it had appointed a senior detective to investigate whether comments made by either act amounted to a criminal offence after reviewing footage.
A statement added: “This has been recorded as a public order incident at this time while our enquiries are at an early stage.”
Speaking in Parliament on Monday after the announcement, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy called the scenes broadcast “appalling and unacceptable”.
Police have not specified which part of Bob Vylan’s or Kneecap’s set would be subject to the criminal investigation.
It comes after the BBC said it should have cut away from a live broadcast of Bob Vylan’s performance, during which the band’s singer Pascal Robinson-Foster, who performs under the name Bobby Vylan, led a chant of “death, death to the IDF [Israel Defense Forces]”.
Those comments drew criticism of both the English punk-rap duo and the BBC for its live coverage of their performance.
The corporation said it would “look at our guidance around live events so we can be sure teams are clear on when it is acceptable to keep output on air”, and labelled remarks made during the performance antisemitic.
Lisa Nandy told MPs that she immediately called the BBC’s director general after the set was broadcast.
She said outstanding questions remain, including why the feed “wasn’t immediately cut”, why it was broadcast live “given the concerns regarding other acts in the weeks preceding the festival” and what due diligence had been done ahead of deciding to put Bob Vylan on TV.
“When the rights and safety of people and communities are at risk, and when the national broadcaster fails to uphold its own standards, we will intervene,” she added, and said she will continue to speak to the BBC in the coming days.
Earlier, broadcast regulator Ofcom said the BBC “clearly has questions to answer” over its coverage, and the government questioned why the comments were aired live.
The organisers of Glastonbury have previously said they were “appalled” by the comments, which “crossed a line”.
On Sunday, Robinson-Foster responded to the controversy on Instagram, writing “I said what I said” and a statement in defence of political activism, without addressing his on-stage comments in more detail.
Since then, both members of Bob Vylan – who were due to embark on a tour of America later this year – have had their US visas revoked, it is understood.
US Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau wrote on X: “Foreigners who glorify violence and hatred are not welcome visitors to our country.”
In response, Bobby Vylan released a video statement on social media on Monday, where he said politicians should be “utterly ashamed” about where their “allegiances lie”.
“First it was Kneecap, now it’s us two,” he said.
“Regardless of how it was said, calling for an end to the slaughter of innocents is never wrong. To civilians of Israel, understand this anger is not directed at you, and don’t let your government persuade you that a call against an army is a call against the people.
“To Keir, Kemi and the rest of you, I’ll get you at a later date.”
Avon and Somerset Police also confirmed the criminal investigation would assess Kneecap’s Glastonbury performance.
The Irish-language rap band are known for making pro-Palestinian and political comments during their live performances and have attracted controversy in the past.
Band member Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh, who performs under the name Mo Chara, was charged with a terrorism offence for allegedly displaying the flag of proscribed terrorist organisation Hezbollah at a gig. He has denied the charge.
Although there was no live stream of Kneecap’s performance, the BBC later uploaded a largely unedited version of the set to its Glastonbury highlights page on BBC iPlayer.
Idaho gunman in deadly ambush of fire crews had ‘idolised’ firefighters
A 20-year-old Idaho man who fatally shot firefighters after luring them into an ambush once dreamed of becoming a fireman himself, police say.
Two firefighters, Frank Harwood and John Morrison, were killed and a third, Dave Tysdal, was injured after Wess Roley shot at them as they arrived at a blaze at Canfield Mountain, just north of Coeur d’Alene, on Sunday, officials say.
Authorities say Roley deliberately lit the fire to send emergency services to the area. The motive for the attack remains unclear.
After an hours-long standoff, a police Swat team discovered a dead man – identified as Roley – close to where the attack took place.
Kootenai County Sheriff Bob Norris told a news conference on Monday that Roley had once aspired to be a fireman.
The suspect’s grandfather also told NBC News his grandson had “actually really respected law enforcement”.
Dale Roley said his grandson “had been in contact to get a job with a fire department”, and “wanted to be part of a team that he sort of idolised”.
“He loved firefighters,” said Mr Roley. “It didn’t make sense that he was shooting firefighters. Maybe he got rejected or something.”
Sheriff Norris said the homeless suspect had attacked fire crews after they asked him to move his vehicle, which he had been living in.
“There was an interaction with the firefighters,” Norris said. “It has something to do with his vehicle being parked where it was.”
Investigators believe Roley used a flint that was found near his body to deliberately start the fire.
“This was a total ambush,” Norris told reporters. “These firefighters did not have a chance.”
One firefighter who was killed worked for the city’s fire service, while another worked for Kootenai County Fire and Rescue.
A third was “fighting for his life, but is in stable condition”, Norris added.
Idaho’s governor ordered flags be flown at half-staff on Monday to honour the firefighters who were killed.
The first report of a fire in the mountainside community was made around 13:21 PST (20:21 GMT), which was followed 40 minutes later by reports firefighters were being shot at, Norris said.
The so-called Nettleton Gulch Fire grew to 26 acres and continued to burn on Monday, Norris said. No structures are threatened, and officials hope to have the blaze extinguished by Monday night.
More than 300 law enforcement officers from city, county, state and federal authorities responded to the shooting, including two helicopters with snipers on board.
Norris said authorities believed the suspect used a high-powered rifle to fire rapidly at first responders, with officers initially unsure of the number of assailants involved.
A shotgun has been recovered, and several bullets or fragments possibly from a rifle have been found. Officials say more guns may be hidden on the mountain.
After an hours-long barrage of gunfire, the suspect was found by tracing his mobile phone on the popular hiking trail, which officials said was being used by hundreds on that Sunday afternoon.
“It appears that he shot himself,” Norris told journalists.
The sheriff said the suspect had had five “very minor” interactions with police since moving to Idaho in 2024. He said that in one case, he was found to be trespassing at a restaurant by police.
In order to prevent the suspect from fleeing, officials disabled his vehicle and “pushed it off the mountain”, the sheriff said. They have not yet been able to access the vehicle for a more thorough search.
Several fire department vehicles also had their tyres flattened to prevent the suspect from driving away in one of them during the chaotic manhunt.
Norris ruled out the suspect having “any nexus to Islamic jihad”, which he said had been falsely suggested on social media.
According to a social media post from his mother, the suspect moved from Arizona to Idaho in 2023 to work for his father’s tree-trimming company.
She wrote in October 2024 that her son was “doing great living in Idaho”.
‘Unprecedented’ alerts in France as blistering heat grips Europe
A record number of heat alerts are in place across France as the country, and other parts of southern and eastern Europe, remain in the grip of soaring temperatures.
Sixteen French regions, including Paris, have been placed on red alert for Tuesday, the country’s highest, while 68 others are on orange alert.
On Monday, 84 of 96 mainland regions were under an orange alert, which France’s Climate Minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher called an “unprecedented” situation.
Heat warnings are also in place for parts of Spain, Portugal, Italy, Germany, the UK and Balkan countries including Croatia.
Both Spain and Portugal had their hottest June days on record at the weekend.
El Granado in Andalucía saw a temperature of 46C on Saturday, while 46.6C was recorded in the town of Mora in central Portugal on Sunday.
Many countries have emergency medical services on standby and have warned people to stay inside as much as possible.
Nearly 200 schools across France have been closed or partially closed as a result of the heatwave, which has gripped parts of Europe for more than a week now but is expected to peak mid-week.
France’s red alert will come into effect at 12:00 local time on Tuesday.
Several forest fires broke out in the southern Corbières mountain range on Sunday, leading to evacuations and the closure of a motorway. The fires have since been contained, officials told French media.
- Top tips on how to sleep in the heat
Meanwhile, 21 Italian cities are also on the highest alert, including Rome, Milan and Venice, as is Sardinia.
Mario Guarino, vice-president of the Italian Society of Emergency Medicine, told AFP news agency that hospital emergency departments across the country had reported a 10% increase in heatstroke cases.
Parts of the UK were just shy of being one of the hottest June days ever on Monday.
The highest UK temperature of the day was recorded at Heathrow Airport in London at 33.1C. Meanwhile, Wimbledon recorded a temperature of 32.9C, the tennis tournament’s hottest opening day on record.
Meanwhile, heat alerts across Spain, which is on course to record its hottest June on record, remained in place.
“I can’t sleep well and have insomnia. I also get heat strokes, I stop eating and I just can’t focus,” Anabel Sanchez, 21, told Reuters news agency in Seville.
It is a similar situation in Portugal, where seven districts, including the capital, Lisbon, are on the highest alert level.
In Germany, the country’s meteorological service warned that temperatures could reach almost 38C on Tuesday and Wednesday – further potentially record-breaking temperatures.
The heatwave lowered levels in the Rhine River – a major shipping route – limiting the amount cargo ships can transport and raising freighting costs.
Countries in and around the Balkans have also been struggling with the intense heat, although temperatures have begun to cool.
In Turkey, rescuers evacuated more than 50,000 people – mostly from the resort city of Izmir in the country’s west – as firefighters continued to put out hundreds of wildfires that had broken out in recent days.
The fires were fuelled by winds of 120km/h (75 mph) and destroyed at least 20 homes.
Wildfires also broke out in Croatia, where red heat warnings are in place for coastal areas. An extreme temperature alert was issued for neighbouring Montenegro.
Temperatures in Greece have been approaching 40C for several days and coastal towns near the capital Athens last week erupted in flames that destroyed homes – forcing people to evacuate.
On Wednesday, Serbia reported its hottest day since records began, and the meteorological service warned on Monday that “severe and extreme drought conditions prevail” in much of the country.
A record 38.8C was recorded in Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina on Thursday. In Slovenia, the hottest-ever June temperature was recorded on Saturday.
The temperature in North Macedonia’s capital, Skopje, reached 42C on Friday – and are expected to continue in that range.
While the heatwave is a potential health issue, it is also impacting the environment. Higher temperatures in the Adriatic Sea are encouraging invasive species such as the poisonous lionfish, while also causing further stress on alpine glaciers that are already shrinking at record rates.
The UN’s human rights chief, Volker Turk, warned on Monday that the heatwave highlighted the need for climate adaptation – moving away from practices and energy sources, such as fossil fuels, which are the main cause of climate change.
“Rising temperatures, rising seas, floods, droughts, and wildfires threaten our rights to life, to health, to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment, and much more,” he told the UN’s Human Rights Council.
Heatwaves are becoming more common due to human-caused climate change, according to the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Extreme hot weather will happen more often – and become even more intense – as the planet continues to warm, it has said.
Richard Allan, Professor of Climate Science at the University of Reading in the UK, explained that rising greenhouse gas levels are making it harder for the planet to lose excess heat.
“The warmer, thirstier atmosphere is more effective at drying soils, meaning heatwaves are intensifying, with moderate heat events now becoming extreme.”
Sign up for our Future Earth newsletter to keep up with the latest climate and environment stories with the BBC’s Justin Rowlatt. Outside the UK? Sign up to our international newsletter here.
Father jumps off cruise ship after daughter falls overboard
After his daughter fell from the fourth deck of a 14-deck Disney Cruise ship on Sunday afternoon, a father jumped into the ocean to try to save her, according to witnesses.
Videos on social media showed passengers cheering as the two were safely recovered by a rescue boat. They were picked up after treading water for 10 minutes, according to witnesses.
The girl appeared to fall when her father took her picture against a railing, witnesses said. A man overboard alert was broadcast on the ship, and crew rushed to recover them.
“The ship was moving quickly, so quickly, it’s crazy how quickly the people became tiny dots in the sea, and then you lost sight of them,” passenger Laura Amador said.
“The captain slowed the ship and turned it around, and then they deployed a tender ship with people on it to go get them, and we saw them rescue the dad and daughter,” she told CBS News, the BBC’s US partner.
The 4,000-person capacity Disney Dream, was returning to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, after sailing for four days around the Bahamas.
Disney confirmed in a statement that two passengers were rescued, but offered few details about what occurred.
“The Crew aboard the Disney Dream swiftly rescued two guests from the water,” a Disney Cruise Line spokesperson said. “We commend our Crew Members for their exceptional skills and prompt actions, which ensured the safe return of both guests to the ship within minutes.
“We watched it, you could see two little things…it was crazy, it was horrific,” passenger Gar Frantz told NBC News, describing how he witnessed the two enter the ocean and nearly disappear into the horizon.
The incident took place on the last day of the cruise, and the ship returned to port in Florida as normal.
While it is rare for passengers to fall from cruise ships, rescues are not often successful when they do.
According to a Cruise Lines International Association report from 2019, 25 people fell overboard that year from cruise ships and only nine were saved from the water.
‘We’re not safe here anymore’ – Syria’s Christians fear for future after devastating church attack
“Your brother is a hero.”
This is what Emad was told after finding out his brother had been killed in a suicide explosion at a church in the Syrian capital of Damascus.
His brother, Milad, and two others had tried to push the suicide attacker out of the church building. He was killed instantly – alongside 24 other members of the congregation.
Another 60 people were injured in the attack at Greek Orthodox Church of the Prophet Elias, in the eastern Damascus suburb of Dweila on 22 June.
It was the first such attack in Damascus since Islamist-led rebel forces overthrew Bashar al- Assad in December, ending 13 years of devastating civil war.
It was also the first targeting of the Christian community in Syria since a massacre in 1860, when a conflict broke out between Druze and Maronite Christians under Ottoman rule.
The Syrian authorities blamed the attack on the Islamic State (IS) group. However, a lesser- known Sunni extremist group, Saraya Ansar al-Sunnah, has said it was behind the attack – though government officials say they do not operate independently of IS.
Milad had been attending a Sunday evening service at the church, when a man opened fire on the congregation before detonating his explosive vest.
Emad heard the explosion from his house and for hours was unable to reach his brother.
“I went to the hospital to see him. I couldn’t recognise him. Half of his face was burnt,” Emad told me, speaking from his small two bedroom-home which he shares with several other relatives.
Emad is a tall, thin man in his 40s with an angular face that bears the lines of a hard life. He, like his brother, had been working as a cleaner in a school in the poor neighbourhood, which is home to many lower to middle class and predominantly Christian families.
During Bashar al-Assad’s rule, members of Syria’s many religious and ethnic minority communities believed the state protected them. Now, many fear the new Islamist-led government, established by the rebels who overthrew him last December, will not do the same.
While interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa and his government have pledged to protect all citizens, recent deadly sectarian violence in Alawite coastal areas and then in Druze communities around Damascus have made people doubt its ability to control the situation.
Many of Emad’s family members echoed this sentiment, saying: “We are not safe here anymore.”
Angie Awabde, 23, was just two months away from graduating university when she got caught up in the church attack.
She heard the gunshots before the blast.
“It all happened in seconds,” she told me, speaking from her hospital bed as she recovers from shrapnel wounds to her face, hand and leg, as well as a broken leg.
Angie is frightened and feels there is no future for Christians in Syria.
“I just want to leave this country. I lived through the crisis, the war, the mortars. I never expected that something would happen to me inside a church,” she said.
“I don’t have a solution. They need to find a solution, this is not my job, if they can’t protect us, we want to leave.”
Before the 13-year civil war, Christians made up about 10% of the 22 million population in Syria – but their numbers have shrunk significantly since then with hundreds of thousands fleeing abroad.
Churches were among the buildings bombed by the Syrian government and allied Russian forces during the war – but not while worshippers were inside.
Thousands of Christians were also forced from their homes due to the threat from hardline Islamist and jihadist groups, such as IS.
Outside the hospital where Angie is being treated, coffins of some of the victims of the church attack were lined up, ready for burial.
People from all walks of life, and representing different parts of Syrian society, attended the service at a nearby church, which took place under a heavy security presence.
In a sermon at the service, the Patriarch of the Greek Orthodox Church in Syria, John Yazigi, insisted “the government bears responsibility in full”.
He said a phone call from President Ahmed al-Sharaa expressing his condolences was “not enough for us”, drawing applause from the congregation.
“We are grateful for the phone call. But the crime that took place is a little bigger than that.”
Sharaa last week promised that those involved in the “heinous” attack would face justice.
A day after the bombing, two of the suspects were killed and six others arrested in a security operation on an IS cell in Damascus.
But this has done little to allay fears here about the security situation, especially for religious minorities.
Syria has also seen a crack down on social freedoms, including decrees on how women should dress at beaches, attacks on men wearing shorts in public and bars and restaurants closing for serving alcohol.
Many here fear that these are not just random cases but signs of a wider plan to change Syrian society.
Archimandrite Meletius Shattahi, director-general of the charitable arm of the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch, feels the government is not doing enough.
He refers to videos circulating online showing armed religious preachers advocating for Islam over loud speakers in Christian neighbourhoods, saying these are not “individual incidents”.
“These are taking place in public in front of everybody, and we know very well that our government is not taking any action against [those] who are breaching the laws and the rules.”
This alleged inaction, he says, is what led to the attack at the Church of the Prophet Elias.
Royal train to be cut in Palace cost-saving measure
The royal train is going to be taken out of service by 2027, in a cost-saving measure announced by Buckingham Palace.
There have been dedicated trains for monarchs since Queen Victoria’s reign, but as part of a “drive to ensure we deliver value for money” it’s been decided to decommission the historic rolling stock.
The announcement came alongside the annual publication of royal finances, which showed that a journey on the royal train, from Gloucestershire to Staffordshire and then London, over two days in February, had cost more than £44,000.
The Royal Family will still travel on regular train services – and the annual report showed 141 helicopter trips were taken last year, costing £475,000.
James Chalmers, the Keeper of the Privy Purse, responsible for the royal finances, said the decision to stop the royal train would mean “the fondest of farewells”, but “in moving forwards we must not be bound by the past”.
The royal train will be taken around the UK before it is removed from service, after which it could be put on public display. The royal train consists of nine carriages, with different locomotives hired to pull them.
The idea of a royal train goes back to Queen Victoria commissioning special coaches in 1869, with the service being used to take the Royal Family around the country.
“The royal train, of course, has been part of national life for many decades, loved and cared for by all those involved,” said Mr Chalmers.
The train had been used extensively for events during the late Queen Elizabeth’s golden and diamond jubilees – with the most recent update to the carriages taking place in the mid-1980s.
But the latest accounts, for 2024-25, show the train only being used on two occasions, raising questions about maintenance and storage costs.
That’s alongside other travel costs such as 55 private charter flights costing almost £600,000 and scheduled flights costing £126,000. The total cost of royal travel is £4.7 million, a rise of £500,000 from the previous year.
The single biggest travel item was £400,000 for the King and Queen’s trip to Australia and Samoa.
The latest financial report for 2024-25 shows the Sovereign Grant remaining at £86.3m. This grant is the public funding for the running costs of the monarchy, such as travel for official duties, staffing and the maintenance of royal buildings.
The level of funding for 2025-26 is rising to £132.1m – with this higher level of funding staying for two years to complete renovation work at Buckingham Palace.
The cost of this 10-year, £369m building scheme at Buckingham Palace has pushed up the Sovereign Grant – which in real terms, taking into account inflation, is now about three times higher than when the Sovereign Grant funding was introduced in 2012.
Funding comes from the Treasury, with the amount based on a percentage of the profits of the Crown Estate.
This year’s annual report shows the Royal Family carried out over 1,900 engagements, with almost 94,000 guests attending events at royal residences.
There were also diplomatic occasions, such as hosting Qatar’s state visit to the UK.
A financial report for the Duchy of Cornwall, the estates which provide an income for the Prince of Wales, showed a profit of £22.9m, slightly down on the previous year.
There had been media criticism of the duchy’s finances – and in response Kensington Palace has said that the emphasis will be on a positive social impact.
Will Bax, the duchy’s new secretary, said there would be a “modern, socially minded” approach, which could see some charitable organisations and community groups having their rents waived and others with 50% reductions.
This would cost “significant sums”, said Mr Bax, but it was part of a focus on turning the duchy into a social enterprise, supporting communities and reflecting Prince William’s interest in projects such as reducing homelessness and tackling climate change.
Anti-monarchy campaigners Republic criticised the levels of royal income at a time when there were debates about “cutting welfare for people with disabilities”.
Republic’s chief executive Graham Smith described royal funding as a “scandalous abuse of public money”, with published figures not including costs such as security.
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Wimbledon 2025
Dates: 30 June-13 July Venue: All England Club
Coverage: Live across BBC TV, radio and online with extensive coverage on BBC iPlayer, Red Button, Connected TVs and mobile app. Full coverage guide.
Katie Boulter and Sonay Kartal both produced impressive victories at either end of a record-breaking day for British players at Wimbledon.
Former British number one Boulter took to Centre Court in the evening and secured a rare victory over a top 10 player as she beat Spain’s Paula Badosa 6-2 3-6 6-4.
Earlier, Kartal was the first player through from the 14-strong British contingent in action on day one with victory over 20th seed Jelena Ostapenko.
In total, seven Britons in the men’s and women’s draw progressed to the second round on day one, making it the most successful day for British players at Wimbledon in the Open era.
Boulter, 28, and Kartal were joined by British number one Emma Raducanu – who beat compatriot Mimi Xu – Cameron Norrie, Arthur Fery, Oliver Tarvet and Billy Harris.
“It’s incredible with so many Brits in the draw,” Raducanu, 22, said.
“I think it’s great for the spectators, too, to have so many Brits to follow in the draw. As we win matches, it’s more and more exciting.”
Boulter, who will face Argentine lucky loser Solana Sierra next, said: “Centre Court Wimbledon, as a Brit, against a top-10 player, for me doesn’t get that much better.
“It is one of the reasons why I do play tennis, to win matches like that, and to have a go at the best in the world.
“I do feel like it is one of the best [wins] for sure in my career.”
On a sweltering day at SW19, Kartal toppled the former French Open champion 7-5 2-6 6-2 to book her place in the second round.
Kartal, 23, was one of 10 British women in action at the All England Club – the most since 1992.
She had to come from behind to win the opening set on a lively court three.
But a dominant deciding set secured her progression to round two for the second time in her career, following a breakout tournament at last year’s Wimbledon where she reached the third round.
“That was by far one of the toughest matches I’ve played,” she said after the win, her third over a top-20 player this year.
“I would say I struggle against the big hitters. I’ve made a conscious effort this year to play the bigger matches and put myself under the most pressure out on court.
“I knew I wouldn’t get the results straight away but that it would eventually pay off, and that’s what happened today.”
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Raducanu gives coach ’11 out of 10′ after win over Xu
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Published7 hours ago
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‘My most proud day’ – GB’s Fery upsets 20th seed Popyrin at Wimbledon
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‘I can win against anyone’ – British qualifier Tarvet to face Alcaraz
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Boulter battles to big win
This is the sixth successive time Boulter has reached the second round at Wimbledon, but this was one of her best opening-round wins against a tricky opponent, having only beaten a top-10 opponent three times before.
Badosa is a former world number two but her recent struggles with injuries will have given Boulter hope of getting a result, something that looked likely in a first set she dominated.
Badosa had to withdraw from the Berlin Open earlier this month at the quarter-final stage because of a back injury and it appeared that may have still been a concern as she was twice broken in the opener.
But it was a different story in the second set as Badosa showed her top 10 qualities, attacking Boulter on her serve to secure two breaks on her way to levelling matters.
An absorbing third set had the Centre Court crowd enthralled, with Badosa, 27, getting a break in the first game but Boulter broke back immediately.
From then on there was little to separate the two before Boulter got the decisive break at 5-4 to seal the win.
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Published8 hours ago
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Kartal’s remarkable rise
Kartal has enjoyed a remarkable rise through the rankings in the past 18 months.
At Wimbledon last year, she arrived as a wildcard ranked 281 in the world and went on to reach the third round.
On her return this year, ranked 230 places above that, she cut a calm and mature figure.
Ostapenko, 28, had beaten Kartal comfortably in the opening round at Eastbourne last week but the Briton maintained her composure as she fell 5-2 behind in the opening set.
A wayward Ostapenko forehand into the net was the catalyst for Kartal to go on and win the next five games, saving set points at 5-4 before motoring ahead to take the set.
Ostapenko was left stunned when Kartal sent a ripping forehand round the net post but the former Wimbledon semi-finalist managed to cut out the errors and take the second set comfortably to level things up.
That said, Ostapenko grew increasingly frustrated throughout the match – muttering under her breath and berating herself while shouting up at her coaches.
Fans in the crowd were also on the receiving end of glaring looks as she complained that they were being too noisy, asking the umpire to tell them to be quiet before shouting at them and raising her arms in exasperation.
But throughout that Kartal remained steadfast and raced through the third set, securing a double break before serving out for an impressive victory.
A total of 23 Britons had qualified for Wimbledon in the men’s and women’s singles at the All England Club – the most since 1984.
While Raducanu, Boulter and Kartal progressed, there were exits for Harriet Dart, Hannah Klugman and Mika Stojsavljevic in the women’s draw.
Dart won the first set of her match against Hungary’s Dalma Galfi but went on to lose 3-6 6-3 7-5.
Teenager Klugman lost to Canada’s 29th seed Leylah Fernandez 6-1 6-3 on her Grand Slam main-draw debut.
The 16-year-old, who last month became the first Briton in almost 50 years to reach the French Open girls’ final, was one of three British players aged 17 and under in the women’s singles draw at the All England Club.
Stojsavljevic, also 16, was beaten 6-3 6-2 by American Ashlyn Krueger.
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Published31 January
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UK F-35 parts exports to Israel are lawful, High Court rules
The UK’s High Court has rejected a case brought by campaigners trying to stop the transfer to Israel of all British-made spare parts for US-produced F-35 fighter jets, saying it didn’t have the constitutional authority to intervene.
The government suspended about 30 arms export licences to Israel last September because of a risk of UK-made weapons being used in violations of international law in the Gaza Strip.
But the UK supplies components to a global pool of F-35s which Israel can access. The government had argued it could not pull out of the defence programme without endangering international peace.
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch expressed their dismay at the ruling.
Both groups had intervened in the case.
“The horrifying reality in Gaza is unfolding in full view of the world: entire families obliterated, civilians killed in so-called safe zones, hospitals reduced to rubble, and a population driven into starvation by a cruel blockade and forced displacement,” said Sacha Deshmukh, chief executive of Amnesty International UK.
“This judgment does not change the facts on the ground, nor does it absolve the UK government of its responsibilities under international law.”
The two judges said the case was not about whether the UK should supply arms and other military equipment to Israel – because the government had decided it should not.
They were being asked to decide on a particular issue: whether the UK “must withdraw from a specific multilateral defence collaboration” because of the prospect that some UK-manufactured parts may be supplied to Israel and used in contravention of international law in the conflict in Gaza.
“Under our constitution, that acutely sensitive and political issue is a matter for the executive which is democratically accountable to parliament and ultimately to the electorate, not for the courts,” they ruled.
UK industry makes 15% of every F-35, according to the Campaign Against the Arms Trade.
Oxfam, which provided evidence to the court, said: “It is unconscionable that the government would continue to license the sale of components for F-35 jets knowing that they are used to deliberately attack civilians in Gaza and destroy their means of survival, including vital water supplies.”
The case was brought by al-Haq, a group based in the Israel-occupied West Bank, and the Global Legal Action Network against the Department for Business and Trade.
The court said that Business Minister Jonathan Reynolds was “faced with the blunt choice of accepting the F-35 carve out or withdrawing from the F-35 programme and accepting all the defence and diplomatic consequences which would ensue”.
The government also argued pulling out of the defence programme could undermine US confidence in the UK and Nato.
But human rights groups argue that the global rule of law is under threat over Gaza.
“The atrocities we are witnessing in Gaza are precisely because governments don’t think the rules should apply to them,” said Yasmine Ahmed, UK director of Human Rights Watch.
“Judicial deference to the executive in this case has left the Palestinians in Gaza without access to the protections of international law, despite the government and the court acknowledging that there is a serious risk that UK equipment might be used to facilitate or carry out atrocities against them.”
The government says it will continue to keep its defence export licensing under review.
“The court has upheld this government’s thorough and lawful decision-making on this matter,” a spokesman said.
Lawyers for the human rights groups are considering if they can find grounds to appeal.
As Squid Game ends, South Koreans return to the reality that inspired it
Millions of fans are bidding farewell to Squid Game, the Emmy award-winning TV series that has topped Netflix’s charts and become a symbol of South Korea’s ascendance in Hollywood.
The fictional show follows cash-strapped players as they battle it out in a series of traditional Korean children’s games – with a gory twist, as losers are killed in every round.
Squid Game has sucked in viewers since 2021 with its candy-coloured sets and bleak messages about capitalism and humanity. And with its third and final season released last Friday, fans across the world are returning to reality.
Some South Koreans, however, have found themselves reflecting on the society that inspired the dystopian series.
“I feel like Squid Game 3 revealed the true feelings and raw inner thoughts of Korean people,” reads one YouTube comment under a clip from season three.
“It reflected reality so well like how in real life, at work, it’s just full of ruthless people ready to crush you. This show nailed it.”
Relatable struggles
Squid Game was born against the backdrop of cut-throat competition and widening inequality in South Korean society – where people are too stressed to have children and a university placement exam is seen as the defining moment of a person’s life.
The diverse characters of the show – which include a salaryman, a migrant factory worker and a cryptocurrency scammer – are drawn from figures many South Koreans would find familiar.
The backstory of protagonist Seong Gi-hun, a car factory worker who was laid off and later went on strike, was also inspired by a real-life event: a 2009 strike at the SsangYong Motor factory, where workers clashed with riot police over widespread layoffs. It’s remembered today as one of the country’s largest labour confrontations.
“The drama may be fictional, but it feels more realistic than reality itself,” Jeong Cheol Sang, a film enthusiast, wrote in his review of Squid Game’s final season.
“Precarious labour, youth unemployment, broken families – these aren’t just plot devices, but the very struggles we face every day.”
Those darker messages seemed to be brushed to the side on Saturday night, as a massive parade celebrated the release of the blockbuster’s final season. A giant killer doll and dozens of faceless guards in tracksuits – among other motifs of the deadly games – marched down central Seoul to much fanfare.
For South Korea’s leaders, Squid Game has become a symbol of K-drama’s success on the global stage. It is also part of a string of successes – along with K-pop act BTS and Oscar-winning film Parasite – on which newly elected president Lee Jae Myung wants to capitalise as he sets his sights on exporting K-culture far and wide.
There are signs the Squid Game hype may even go further: the show’s final scene, where Cate Blanchett plays a Korean game with a man in a Los Angeles alley, has fuelled rumours of an American spinoff.
The series ended on an “open-ended” note, Lee Jung-jae, the star of the series, told the BBC. “So it poses a lot of questions to the audience. I hope people will talk about those questions, ponder upon themselves about the questions and try to find an answer.”
Mixed reactions
In the show’s later seasons, viewers follow Gi-hun’s quest to bring down the eponymous games, which are packaged as entertainment for a group of wealthy VIPs.
But his rebellion fails, and by the end Gi-hun is forced to sacrifice himself to save another player’s baby – an ending that has polarised viewers.
Some argued that Gi-hun’s actions did not square with the dark portrait of reality that showrunners had developed – one that had so well captured the ruthless elements of human nature.
“The characters’ excessive altruism was disturbing – almost to the point of seeming unhinged,” reads a comment on popular South Korean discussion site Nate Pann. “It felt like a fake, performative kind of kindness, prioritising strangers over their own families for no real reason.”
But others said Gi-hun’s death was in line with the show’s commitment to uncomfortable truths.
“This perfectly describes humanity and the message of the show,” another commented on YouTube.
“As much as we wanted to see Gi-Hun win, kill the frontman and the VIPs, and stop the games once and for all before riding off into the sunset, that’s just not the world we live in and it’s certainly not the one that Gi-Hun lived in.”
Hwang Dong-hyuk, the show’s creator, told reporters on Monday that he understood the “mixed reaction” to the final season.
“In season one there were no expectations, so the shock and freshness worked. But by seasons two and three, expectations were sky high, and that makes all the difference,” Hwang said on Monday.
“Game fans wanted more games, others wanted deeper messages, and some were more invested in the characters. Everyone expected something different.”
For some, at least, Gi-hun’s final choice offered a hopeful reflection of reality: that even in times of adversity, kindness can prevail.
“That paradox – of cruelty and warmth coexisting – is what made the finale so moving,” said Mr Jeong, the film blogger. “Watching the Squid Game made me reflect on myself. As someone who has worked in education and counselling, I’ve questioned whether kindness can really change anything.”
“That’s why I stayed with this story. That’s why I call this ending beautiful.”
Trans troops in US military ‘in survival mode’ as ban on serving kicks in
After 17 years in the US Army, Maj Kara Corcoran, 39, was preparing to graduate from an elite military leadership programme.
But there was a complication.
Two days before the ceremony, Kara was told that she would need to conform to male regulations, which meant wearing male uniform and cutting the long blonde hair she had grown since she told the Army she identified as a woman in 2018.
The directive had come from the Pentagon, and filtered down through her chain of command at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
“Nothing about me is a man, but we’re going to force me into male regs just so I can walk across the stage with my peers,” she said in the hours leading up to the ceremony. “It’s not my choice to cut my hair. I’m doing it because I have to.”
Kara is one of several thousand transgender people affected by a ban, announced by President Trump in January, that prevents them from serving in any job in the US military.
A previous ban in his first term focused on new recruits and allowed some exceptions, particularly for those already serving. The 2025 policy removes virtually all of the exceptions.
Official figures say there are about 4,200 transgender service members in the US armed forces, however other estimates are much higher, at about 10,000.
The new policy states that a history or diagnosis of gender dysphoria – where a person feels their gender differs from their sex registered at birth – is “incompatible with the high mental and physical standards necessary for military service”.
An executive order outlined President Trump’s position that “the Armed Forces have been afflicted with radical gender ideology” and that the policy would ensure staff were “free of medical conditions or physical defects that may reasonably be expected to require excessive time lost from duty for necessary treatment or hospitalization”.
The order also stated that “a man’s assertion that he is a woman, and his requirement that others honor this falsehood, is not consistent with the humility and selflessness required of a service member”.
A Gallup poll in February this year suggested that 58% of Americans “favor allowing openly transgender men and women to serve in the US military, but support has declined from 71% in 2019 and 66% in 2021”.
Critics have called the ban discriminatory and legal challenges have been filed from serving transgender officers and human rights groups.
Since February, the BBC has followed the lives of Maj Kara Corcoran and an officer in the Navy, Lt Rae Timberlake, as they navigate the uncertainty of their military careers. They have shared their thoughts and feelings in a personal capacity, not as spokespeople for the US military or other colleagues.
A career in question
Kara has spent most of her adult life in the US Army. Her combat deployments included time in Afghanistan where she was both a platoon leader and a company commander, when she was living as a man, before she transitioned. Since then, she says she has legally changed her name and gender and uses female pronouns.
Transgender people were disqualified from all jobs in the military until 2016, but over the past decade, as governments have changed, US policy has flip-flopped.
- 2016: Obama lifts ban on trans people serving, allowing them access to funding through the military for gender-related treatment
- 2017: Trump announces ban on trans people serving, citing medical costs and potential disruptions
- 2021: Biden signs order restoring the right of trans people to serve
- 2025: Trump announces new ban and bases are told to initiate separation proceedings against personnel with gender dysphoria
“For a long time, I stayed silent,” says Kara. When she joined up in 2008, women were not allowed in combat positions either.
Kara married a woman and had children, although the relationship broke down and ended as she grappled with her identity.
Kara came out as a transgender woman in 2018 and began her hormonal and surgical transition. She says she had the support of her commanding officers, who were still working to the previous set of guidelines, despite Trump’s 2017 ban. She tells the BBC that the transition improved her ability to serve.
“It’s made me more focused, more resilient,” she says. “There’s a common misconception that transitioning is a liability. For me, it’s been the opposite.”
Now, with Trump’s latest policy in effect, Kara has been told that unless she leaves voluntarily, she may be forced out of the service against her will through a process called involuntary separation.
Involuntary separation happens when someone is discharged and they do not choose to leave of their own accord. It can affect any service member, not just people in combat roles.
As well as losing their jobs, people can also potentially lose benefits, such as pensions, healthcare and disability provisions.
The Department of Defense said that if someone went involuntarily they may get half what they would get if they left voluntarily – the difference could be tens of thousands of dollars.
Despite this, Maj Kara Corcoran says she does not want to walk away.
“I’m not going to get voluntarily separated,” she says. “I’ll go through the involuntary separation and what that looks like and how horrific they want to make that for me and other service members.”
‘The single dumbest phrase in military history’
Others such as former US Navy Seal, Carl Higbie, support Trump’s ban, though. Carl now hosts a TV show on the conservative network Newsmax.
He believes that transgender people are not fit for service in the US military, arguing that gender dysphoria may require ongoing medical care and accommodations that could affect deployability.
“You can’t take Ritalin [which is used to treat ADHD] or certain types of prescription medications and be an eligible service member in combat. Why should you be on hormone therapy, which we know has sometimes emotional effects?” he asks.
When asked if he thought that biological women, who may be on other medications containing hormones, such as treatment for the menopause, are fit to serve in the armed forces, he said: “I think there are certain times where we should be more concerned about killing bad guys than making sure that we have gender quotas on a combat operation.”
- Listen to Inside the US trans military ban on BBC Sounds
The ban on transgender service members is part of a broader shift in US military policy – Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, a Trump appointee and former army officer, has moved to eliminate diversity, equity, and inclusion programmes.
“I think the single dumbest phrase in military history is ‘our diversity is our strength’,” Hegseth said at a Pentagon event in February.
And in April, he posted on X that he “proudly ended” the Women, Peace and Security programme, an initiative to invite more women and girls to be part of conflict resolution. He called it a distraction from the core task of “war-fighting”.
A family on the brink of change
Many had seen the policy shift coming. In the early hours of 6 November, when Donald Trump secured his victory in the 2024 US presidential election, Lt Rae Timberlake made a decision.
A non-binary navy officer, Rae joined the Navy aged 17 and has served aboard the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Nimitz and in the Middle East.
Rae falls under the trans umbrella because, although they were registered female at birth, they identify as neither male nor female and use they/them pronouns.
Rae says that coming out as non-binary in 2020 and transitioning brought clarity to their identity. “The moment I heard the word ‘non-binary’, I knew it fit,” they told the BBC.
But with the 2024 Trump victory, Rae felt the clock was ticking on their career. They requested to transfer from their West Coast base, to a base closer to family in the east, who could give them support.
Rae, their wife and daughter moved in the middle of a school term, in the anticipation that a possible separation from the Navy was imminent.
“It felt like the safest move for us, in case I was forced to leave the service,” says Rae.
They add that they weren’t surprised by President Donald Trump’s executive order in January, or a memorandum from the Department of Defense the following month.
The memo specified that military bases must identify service members diagnosed with or exhibiting symptoms of gender dysphoria. The final deadlines to come forward voluntarily were eventually set as 6 June for active-duty personnel and 7 July for reserve and National Guard members.
In May, the Department of Defense said 1,000 service personnel had self-identified as trans, but there has been no update of the number since then.
The military has 30 days from a deadline to start involuntary separation proceedings.
The memo includes a provision for people to be considered for a waiver on a case-by-case basis. There are a few conditions including that staff must have “never attempted to transition to any sex other than their sex”.
By the time the memorandum was published, Rae had taken a new post in Maryland, and the family was adjusting to their new home.
“Watching Rae lose their career, it’s painful,” their wife, Lindsay, says. “We’re in survival mode. We haven’t had time to connect as a family. We just keep making hard choices.”
For Rae, the emotional cost has been high. They have decided they want more control over the future, so have requested to retire from the Navy, and believe that in doing so have self-identified for voluntary separation. The application hasn’t been accepted yet, but Rae believes it will be.
They expect the financial implications to be substantial. Without completing 20 years of service, Rae says they will likely forfeit eligibility for a military pension. They estimate pension payments could have added up to about $2.5m (£1.8m) over the course of their retirement.
A legal and political battle
While the Department of Defense says the ban will maintain consistent medical and readiness standards across the forces, opponents, argue that the policy targets a vulnerable group unfairly.
Three lawsuits have been filed challenging its legality.
In one high-profile ruling, a federal judge blocked the ban temporarily, citing concerns over its constitutionality and suggesting it discriminated based on gender identity. However, in April, the Supreme Court lifted the injunction, allowing the policy to move forward while litigation continues.
The legal back-and-forth has left transgender service members in limbo.
Rae has found job hunting in the civilian sector tough. “I applied for a position that had over 800 applicants in one day,” they say, adding that civilian life will offer less security than the Navy. “It’s competitive and daunting out there.”
But they say the next chapter is about not feeling “under threat for who I am”.
Looking ahead
Kara didn’t self-identify by the 6 June deadline, so is waiting to see if the military flags her for separation – the 30-day window means that should happen by 6 July. She will see what unfolds from there.
The US Department of Defense declined to give a statement to the BBC but pointed to previous statements saying it was committed to treating all service members impacted by the policy with dignity and respect. A US defence official said that “characterization of service will be honorable except where the Service member’s record otherwise warrants a lower characterization”.
For now Kara remains at her base in Fort Leavenworth but is prepared to leave with little notice if she has to. She has turned her car into a mobile home with a chunky power bank, cooking equipment, and a fold-out mattress. “On top I’ve got an eight-gallon water tank. I fill it up, pump it with an air compressor, and I can take a shower out in the wild. At least I have somewhere to live.”
When she graduated from the leadership programme with distinction, after complying with male uniform and grooming standards, she said it “meant a lot, but how I had to do it felt like erasing my identity”.
“This is about people who’ve dedicated their lives to service, now being told they’re no longer fit, not because of performance, but because of who they are.”
Thomas Sweeney’s first incentive to become a line judge was the offer of a free sandwich.
For Pauline Eyre, who called the lines at Wimbledon for 16 years, some natty blazers and the chance to buy tickets for the tournament were the main recompense for work she had to take annual leave to do.
Nowadays the best officials might earn up to £200 a day plus expenses.
But line judging has never been about the money for those who spend hours leaning forward, hands resting on knees, staring intently at a line of chalk to determine in a split second on which side of it the yellow ball has bounced.
Being so close to Jana Novotna on Centre Court that she could see her foot shaking on the first point of a Wimbledon final or being “psyched out” by John McEnroe were priceless experiences for Eyre.
And then there were the outfits.
“There’s nothing quite like walking out on to the iconic grass courts at SW19, wearing the uniform of what many consider the best-dressed officials in all of sport,” Malgorzata Grzyb, chair of the Association of British Tennis Officials (ABTO), told BBC Sport.
But times have changed. At Wimbledon there will be no line judges for the first time in its 148-year history, with electronic line calling being introduced.
Players and umpires have already got used to the new set-up as it has been at other tournaments for a while, but on the green grass at Wimbledon, where advertising logos are muted and the players are dressed in white, the emptier courts may feel that bit more noticeable.
“It’s all the tradition of Wimbledon – the people and the funny uniforms – and that’s a bit of personality that’s gone,” said Eyre. “I think it’s all of those little things that made Wimbledon Wimbledon.”
Traditionalists will miss them, but technology fans will point to progress.
BBC Sport has been finding out what umpires, players and line judges make of the move.
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Will there be line judges at Wimbledon 2025?
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Published4 days ago
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Why does French Open not have electronic line calling?
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Published26 May
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Challenges are ‘out’
“Mr Djokovic is challenging the call on the right baseline; the ball was called out.”
There was often a buzz of excitement when the umpire signalled there would be a video replay of a line judge’s decision.
The rhythmic clap-clap-clapping built up to the moment being shown on the big screen, and the obligatory “ooooooooh” followed when the split-second judgement of the human eye was laid bare to a packed arena and millions watching on TV.
More than 14,000 pairs of eyes on Centre Court could bore into the line judge who had been wrong by less than the width of a blade of grass. But when the official was shown to be correct, their poker faces had to fight the urge to look even mildly smug.
This year players can still ask for a replay on the screen, although fans’ gasps will be over the depiction of a ‘close call’ rather than a verdict on human instinct versus technology. And, if recent tournaments are anything to go by, their laughs may be at the delayed reaction for some of the “out” calls.
Paul Hawkins, inventor of the Hawk-Eye technology that was first introduced at Wimbledon in 2007, said the challenge system had probably “had its day” with fans.
“When it was new, there was certainly more excitement – people kind of got into it,” he said.
“It got to the point where there was a little bit of a case of ‘we’ve been there, we’ve had that joke, let’s just get on with the tennis’ and obviously doing away with the challenge system does mean you can get on with the game a bit quicker.”
Some line judges are still ‘in’
The absence of line judges now gives players fewer people to take out their frustrations on, with Eyre remembering being “yelled at” by players and being hit by many balls.
Djokovic was disqualified from the 2020 US Open for accidentally hitting a ball at a line judge, while last year Andrey Rublev was defaulted in Dubai for screaming in the face of one.
Not all of the 300 line judges who have been cut will be out of work at Wimbledon, with about 80 being used as ‘match assistants’ who are on hand in case the technology fails and will also undertake duties such as escorting players who need to leave the court.
But their opportunities to work at big tournaments are dwindling, with the French Open now the only one of the four Grand Slams not using electronic line calling.
The men’s ATP Tour and the combined ATP/WTA tournaments introduced the technology this year and WTA-only events are moving in that direction.
Eyre fears this could have an impact on the quality of umpiring in years to come since line judging is a pathway to becoming a chair umpire.
“Why would you go to call the lines at Finchley Tennis Club under-12s if you haven’t got that carrot of ‘maybe one day I can get to call lines at Wimbledon’?” said Eyre, who called the lines in 12 Wimbledon finals in the 1990s and 2000s and is now a comedian touring a show about her line judge experiences.
However, Grzyb says the development pathway for officials has evolved and stressed that line judges are still used at many events below the top tier of tennis.
“Instead of starting solely as line umpires, new officials now receive training in both line and chair umpiring from the outset, enabling them to progress more rapidly to chair umpire roles,” the ABTO chair said.
“[This] is not dissimilar to the systems in place in many countries without a home Grand Slam, and who have been able to produce world-class chair umpires.”
‘Out… I think’ – You cannot be serious!
Being a line judge usually means being able to stand for a long period of time and, crucially, bellow out the call in a way that makes it obvious what is happening.
As British number one Jack Draper found out at Queen’s, the automated calls cannot always be heard over a raucous crowd.
Set point to take his semi-final to a decider was met with confusion as neither Draper nor the crowd were sure whether there had been an “out” call.
With players also no longer able to rely on the line judges’ arm gestures to indicate if the ball is out, Eyre says the voices used at the grass-court tournament were not loud enough.
“They have used very calm voices – it sort of sounds like the voice isn’t sure,” she said.
“Sort of like it’s saying ‘out… I think’. It feels a bit awkward. That’s very different psychologically, not hearing something sharp.”
And while some prefer the technology – Briton Heather Watson recently said a bad experience with line judges’ calls at Birmingham “ruined the match” – others are unsure.
Compatriot Sonay Kartal said she struggled at the Australian Open as she could hear automated calls from the other courts, leading to confusion and even players stopping the point because they thought the call was on their court.
It is not yet known what the voices of the Wimbledon calls will sound like, with the tournament using the voices of some of its behind-the-scenes staff and tour guides. The All England Club will be using different voices on different courts to avoid confusion between neighbouring courts.
It would have been great if the booming voice of McEnroe himself had been one of the voices, Eyre suggests.
“It would be fun to have McEnroe calling them, wouldn’t it? We’re all yelling at the telly going ‘you cannot be serious!’ – I’d like that, we could yell at him and that would be good karma!”
What information do we collect from this quiz?
Could umpires be next to go?
First it was a pencil, paper and a stopwatch. Then came an electronic scoring system and next Hawk-Eye.
As technology continues to develop, the need for human intervention diminishes.
So what will go next? Chair umpires?
Seven-time Grand Slam singles champion McEnroe, known for his on-court outbursts, has previously suggested getting rid of umpires and relying on the technology.
Sweeney – he of the free sandwich – is now a chair umpire who oversaw the 2023 women’s French Open final.
He has overseen numerous matches on Wimbledon’s Centre Court and cannot imagine time being called on umpires in top-level tennis any time soon.
“There will always be that need to have a human to facilitate at the end of where technology has its limitations,” Sweeney said.
“There are aspects to life that can’t be prepared for, and you need that human to be able to absorb pressure, provide the opportunity for understanding and empathy for a player, and to be able to help, guide and govern how the court itself operates.”
But with nine fewer people on court during matches, Sweeney said it “can feel a bit lonely out there” after the “tradition of living the match together and encouraging each other to stay focused”.
Ball kids and match officials are still on hand to assist with tasks like fetching towels for players or facilitating bathroom breaks, while one review official monitors the line technology.
“We still have that team,” said Sweeney. “Even with smaller numbers, we’re still a very strong and supporting team of each other. It just looks a bit different.”
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Published31 January
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Bob Vylan: Who are the controversial rap-punk duo?
Ipswich punk-rap duo Bob Vylan grabbed the headlines at Glastonbury Festival over the weekend, but for many readers, the name might be a new one.
Organisers of the festival said they were “appalled” after frontman Bobby Vylan led a crowd in chants of “death, death to the IDF [Israel Defense Forces]”.
The prime minister condemned them for using what he called “appalling hate speech”. And on Monday, Avon and Somerset Police said a criminal investigation has been launched over performances by the band and Irish outfit Kneecap.
The BBC said it should have cut away from the live broadcast of Bob Vylan’s performance and a spokesperson for media watchdog Ofcom said: “We are very concerned about the live stream of this performance, and the BBC clearly has questions to answer.”
Posting on Instagram on Sunday evening, Bobby – real name Pascal Robinson-Foster – appeared to stand by his on-stage comments, with the caption: “I said what I said.” He told fans he had been “inundated” with messages of both “support and hatred” and also called for “a change in foreign policy”.
The provocative band were formed in Suffolk in 2017 by the singer, guitarist and poet alongside drummer Bobbie Vylan.
Collectively known as “the Bobs”, they perform under their similar stage names.
The pair blend elements of punk rock and UK grime/hip-hop, drawing influence from the likes of the Sex Pistols, Dizzee Rascal and Stormzy as well as reggae dancehall, reflecting Robinson-Foster’s Jamaican heritage.
Their lyrics tackle themes around racism, police violence, capitalism and fatherhood; as well as the ills of homophobia and toxic masculinity.
After a string of early singles, they released their debut album, We Live Here, in 2020.
They then went on to tour with the likes of the Offspring, the Hives and Biffy Clyro and performed at the Reading and Leeds Festivals in 2021.
Their second (of five) studio albums, Bob Vylan Presents the Price of Life, entered the UK album chart at number 18, winning the Kerrang! magazine award for best album in 2022.
The same year, they bagged the inaugural award for best alternative music act at the Mobo Awards.
‘Free to disagree’
Robinson-Foster, 34, initially started writing verse as a teenager around 2004, becoming an established performance poet under the name Nee Hi, as well as being part of a grime outfit called Ear 2 da Street.
He was invited to perform at the Black and Asian Police Association conference in Manchester in 2005, and served as a mentor for young people in his home town Ipswich.
He once said in an interview with Tribune magazine that he started the band Bob Vylan in a bid to “wind people up”, score some victories and alleviate boredom.
Speaking to the BBC’s Newsbeat at the Download Festival in 2023, the stage-diving provocateur explained their high-energy and highly politicised approach to music.
“I suppose it’s a life of experience under certain power structures that have kept us at a certain place within the hierarchy of this country,” he explained.
“When I’m recounting those lyrics, it can be quite cathartic to play these songs in front of crowds of people, and tell them about my experience.
“It’s also a very, I suppose at certain points, emotional experience and emotional ride talking about these things in front of a crowd of people.”
He added: “You’re vulnerable… we put ourselves up there and we we talk about our life and the lives of people living in our communities, and people are free to enjoy it but they’re also free to disagree with it and they’re also free to heckle us or throw something at us or whatever it might be.
“So it’s quite a vulnerable position to be in, but you just have to have trust.”
In the past he has appeared to take aim at members of the crowd, verbally, and also swung a baseball bat on stage; as well as wearing football shirts of the rivals of the town or city in which they were playing.
The band previously performed at Glastonbury in 2022 for the BBC, playing a rendition of their track Wicked and Bad, which denigrates former UK PM Margaret Thatcher and includes the line “eat the rich”.
During their Glastonbury set this year, the rapper – whose band have also played Coachella and collaborated with Amyl And The Sniffers singer Amy Taylor, Soft Play guitarist Laurie Vincent and rock band Kid Kapichi – brought out his daughter to sing with him on the track Dream Bigger.
The performance took place on the West Holts stage on Saturday afternoon, just ahead of another controversial rap group, Kneecap.
Although there was no live stream of Kneecap’s performance, the BBC later uploaded a largely unedited version of the set to its Glastonbury highlights page on BBC iPlayer.
The Irish-language act recently lost their US visa sponsor. Bob Vylan were set to tour the US later this year but US Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau has now confirmed that the band will have their visas revoked.
In response, Bobbie Vylan released a video statement on social media on Monday, where he said politicians should be “utterly ashamed” about where their “allegiances lie”.
“First it was Kneecap, now it’s us two,” he said.
“Regardless of how it was said, calling for an end to the slaughter of innocents is never wrong…”
Just like Kneecap, Bob Vylan’s name isn’t going away any time soon.
White House says Harvard violated civil rights of Jewish students
The Trump administration says that Harvard University violated civil-rights laws over its treatment of Israeli and Jewish students, potentially further endangering its federal funding.
In a letter sent to Harvard, the administration accused the university of deliberate indifference towards the concerns of Jewish students who felt threatened on campus.
The move is the latest in a series of legal and financial battles between Harvard and the White House – the stakes of which have dramatically escalated over the last few months.
Harvard says it has made “significant strides” to combat discrimination and “strongly disagrees” with the government’s findings.
The letter – viewed by the BBC – says that “failure to institute adequate changes immediately will result in the loss of all federal financial resources” for Harvard.
“Harvard may of course continue to operate free of federal privileges, and perhaps such an opportunity will spur a commitment to excellence that will help Harvard thrive once again,” says the letter addressed to Harvard University President Alan Gerber.
According to the letter, federal investigators found that a “majority” of Jewish students reported discrimination or bias against them, with one quarter having felt physically threatened.
Among the behaviours detailed in the letter are Jewish students being spat upon or assaulted, and images being widely circulated depicting a dollar sign in the Star of David and antisemitic stickers being distributed, including one showing an Israel flag with a swastika in place of the Star of David.
“Harvard’s inaction in the face of these civil rights violations is a clear example of the demographic hierarchy that has taken hold of the university,” the letter adds. “Harvard’s commitment to racial hierarchies—where individuals are sorted and judged according to their membership in an oppressed group identity and not individual merit—has enabled anti-Semitism to fester.”
The letter is what is known as a “notice of violation” that often precedes a lawsuit or a voluntary resolution if corrective measures are taken.
In a statement, Harvard said that it had taken “substantive, proactive steps” to combat antisemitism on campus, and had made “significant strides to combat bigotry, hate and bias”.
“We are not alone in confronting this challenge and recognise that this work is ongoing,” the statement added.
Speaking at the White House on Monday, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said that negotiations between the administration and Harvard are taking place “behind closed doors”, without elaborating.
Leavitt added that incidents of antisemitism on campus are “facts that Harvard cannot dispute”.
In April, Harvard released the findings of an internal investigation which found that the university was deeply polarised by the ongoing war in Gaza, with students on both sides feeling unsafe.
In a message from Mr Garber which accompanied the report, the university president apologised for “moments in which we failed to meet the high expectations we rightfully set for our community”.
The university has also taken a number of steps to address the issue, including facilitating dialogue problems, expanding non-discrimination and anti-bullying policies and enhancing antisemitism training.
The letter is the latest in a series of clashes between Harvard and the Trump administration, which has ramped up its crackdown on universities it claims have failed to tackle antisemitism amid protests against the war in Gaza.
Earlier, in May, the administration directed US federal agencies to review Harvard University’s grants to potentially end or redistribute funding. The administration estimated about 30 contracts, collectively worth $100m (£74m), could be reviewed.
It already had frozen $2.65bn in federal grants and tried to revoke Harvard’s ability to enrol international students.
The Trump administration also issued Columbia University a similar notice last month accusing it of violation of civil-rights law for allegedly failing to protect Jewish students from harassment. Columbia is also negotiating with the administration over its federal funding and autonomy.
Trump revokes US sanctions on Syria
Donald Trump has signed an executive order to end US sanctions against Syria, which the White House said was a move to support the country’s “path to stability and peace”.
The sanctions, which blocked any foreign financing, were imposed on the government of Bashar al-Assad, who was overthrown by rebels in December.
The White House said it would monitor the new Syrian government’s actions including “taking concrete steps toward normalising ties with Israel” as well as “addressing foreign terrorists” and “banning Palestinian terrorist groups”.
Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad al-Shibani said the move would “lift the obstacle” to economic recovery and open the country to the international community.
However the US has maintained sanctions on Assad and his associates as well as the Islamic State group and Iranian proxies.
Trump said he would lift sanctions on Syria in May, before he met the country’s new president, former rebel leader Ahmed al-Sharaa in Riyadh. The announcement sparked celebrations in the streets of Damascus.
Sharaa’s Islamist group, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) – which led the overthrow of Assad – was al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria until he severed ties in 2016. HTS is still designated as a terrorist organisation by the UN, US and UK.
Monday’s executive order directs Secretary of State Marco Rubio “to review” HTS’s designation. It also says that the US wants the new Syrian government to take over responsibility for detention camps in north-eastern Syria where Islamic State prisoners are being held.
Earlier this year, Rubio called for Syria’s transitional authorities to be supported, warning that a failure to achieve economic progress could lead to a “full-scale civil war of epic proportions”.
Ninety percent of Syria’s population were left under the poverty line when the Assad regime was ousted at the end of 13 years of devastating civil war.
Syria’s new leader has promised to protect the country’s ethnic minorities. However, the mass killings of hundreds of civilians from Assad’s minority Alawite sect in the western coastal region in March, during clashes between the new security forces and Assad loyalists, has hardened fears among minority communities.
There have also been deadly clashes between Islamist armed factions, security forces and fighters from the Druze religious minority. And in June at least 25 people were killed in a suicide attack on a church in Damascus.
- ‘We’re not safe here anymore’ – Syria’s Christians fear for future after devastating church attack
Ahead of Monday’s signing, White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told reporters it Trump was making good on his commitment to support Syria’s stability and peace.
“This is another promise made and promise kept by this president to promote peace and stability in the region,” she added.
The US Special Envoy for Syria Thomas Barrack told reporters that cancelling the sanctions regime had been the “culmination of a very tedious, detailed, excruciating process of, how do you unwrap these sanctions.”
“Syria needs to be given a chance, and that’s what’s happened,” he added.
More than 600,000 people were killed and 12 million others forced from their homes during former president Assad’s rule.
Israeli military investigates ‘reports of harm to civilians’ after hundreds killed near Gaza aid sites
The Israeli military has said it is examining reports of civilians being “harmed” while approaching aid distribution centres in Gaza run by the US- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
Since GHF operations began in late May, following a three-month Israeli blockade on Gaza, there have been almost daily reports from medics, eyewitnesses and the Hamas-run health ministry of Israeli fire killing people seeking aid at these sites.
The UN says more than 400 Palestinians have been killed while seeking aid.
The Israeli military said on Monday instructions had been issued to forces after “lessons learned”, but did not specify what these lessons were.
The IDF has on numerous occasions said it has fired what it has described as “warning shots” on “suspects” approaching its troops.
Multiple Israeli media outlets, including the Times of Israel, reported on Monday that the IDF had acknowledged that some Palestinians had been killed while seeking aid, but that the IDF said Hamas’s casualty figures were inaccurate.
Israeli media reported that the military had admitted that in some cases “inaccurate” fire by Israeli forces had led to casualties and some deaths.
The BBC put these points to the IDF, which said in response that “reports of incidents of harm” were being “examined” and that “any allegation of a deviation from the law or IDF directives will be thoroughly examined and further action will be taken as necessary.”
It said it had no further comment regarding the claims made in Israeli media on Monday.
However it denied any allegations of deliberate fire at civilians, such as those raised in a report by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz on Friday.
That report quoted unnamed IDF soldiers who said they were ordered to shoot at unarmed civilians near aid distribution sites, to drive them away or disperse them.
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu strongly rejected the report, calling the allegations “malicious falsehoods”.
The GHF aid system has been condemned by UN agencies, and on Friday UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres branded it “inherently unsafe”. It is intended to bypass the UN as the main supplier of aid to Palestinians. Israel and the US said the system would prevent aid being stolen by Hamas, which the group denies doing.
Within days of GHF operations starting in late May, dozens of Palestinians were killed in separate incidents on 1 and 3 June, sparking international condemnation.
On Friday GHF boss Johnnie Moore told the BBC he was not denying reports of deaths near aid sites, but said “100% of those casualties are being attributed to close proximity to GHF” and that was “not true”.
Israel does not allow international news organisations, including the BBC, to send journalists into Gaza.
In its statement on Monday, the IDF said it was reorganising access to the sites and this would include new “fencing” and signposting, including directional and warning signs. This was aimed at “improving the operational response in the area, minimising friction with the population, and ensuring that the aid reaches its intended recipients”, it said.
It also said it had decided to close an aid distribution centre in the Tel al-Sultan area near Rafah in southern Gaza to establish a new one nearby.
Last week the US State Department announced $30m (£22m) in funding for the GHF, which is its first known direct contribution to the group.
Israel partially eased its three-month blockade of Gaza following pressure from US allies and warnings from global experts that half a million people were facing starvation.
The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack on Israel, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
More than 56,500 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s health ministry.
Prada acknowledges footwear design’s Indian roots after backlash
Italian luxury fashion label Prada has said it acknowledges the Indian roots of its new footwear line, days after the design sparked a controversy in India.
The sandals, showcased at the Milan Fashion Week last week, had an open-toe braided pattern that closely resembled the traditional Kolhapuri sandals made in the Indian states of Maharashtra and Karnataka.
Prada described the sandals as “leather footwear” but did not mention its Indian origins, prompting backlash and allegations of cultural appropriation in India.
Responding to the controversy, Prada told the BBC in a statement that it recognises that the sandals are inspired by traditional Indian footwear.
A Prada spokesperson said that the company has “always celebrated craftsmanship, heritage and design traditions”, adding that it was “in contact with the Maharashtra Chamber of Commerce, Industry & Agriculture on this topic”. This is a prominent industry trade body in the state.
Last week, its chief had written to the brand, saying the design was commercialised without crediting the artisans who have preserved its heritage for generations.
Lorenzo Bertelli, Prada’s head of Corporate Social Responsibility, responded to his letter saying that the sandals were “at an early stage of design”, according to Reuters.
He also said that Prada was open to a “dialogue for meaningful exchange with local Indian artisans” and the company would organise follow-up meetings to discuss this further.
Named after a city in Maharashtra where they are made, Kolhapuri sandals trace their roots back to the 12th Century.
Made from leather and sometimes dyed in natural colours, the traditional handcrafted sandals are sturdy and well-suited to India’s hot climate.
They were awarded the Geographical Indication (GI) status by the Indian government in 2019.
According to the World Trade Organisation, a geographical indication tag credits a good or product as having originated from a certain region or place, and is considered a mark of authenticity.
Following the controversy, many artisans in Kolhapur said they were saddened by Prada’s use of the design without giving due credit.
“These sandals are made with the hard work of leather workers in Kolhapur. They should be named after Kolhapur. Don’t take advantage of others’ labour,” Prabha Satpute, a Kolhapuri artisan, told BBC Marathi.
The sandals cost a few hundreds rupees in India but Prada’s reported premium pricing angered some, though the brand’s website does not mention the price tag. Most other sandals sold by the fashion house, retail at between £600 to £1,000 in the UK.
Industrialist Harsh Goenka highlighted this, saying the local artisans barely make any money for the same hand-made products. “They lose, while global brands cash in on our culture,” he said.
This is not the first time that global brands have been accused to appropriating Indian traditional products without crediting their roots.
At the 2025 Cannes Film Festival, Gucci described a sari worn by Bollywood star Alia Bhatt as a gown, sparking backlash.
Earlier in May, a popular TikTok trend was criticised for calling dupatta, a traditional South Asian scarf, a Scandinavian scarf.
In Kolhapur, however, some said the move had instilled a sense of pride in them.
“Artisans are happy that someone is recognising their work,” Kolhapur-based businessman Dileep More told Reuters.
Man, 92, guilty of 1967 rape and murder of woman
A 92-year-old man has been found guilty of the rape and murder of a Bristol woman in a case that remained unsolved for nearly six decades.
Louisa Dunne, 75, was found strangled on her living room floor by a neighbour on Britannia Road in Easton, Bristol, on 28 June 1967.
Convicted rapist Ryland Headley, of Clarence Road in Ipswich, has now been found guilty of Mrs Dunne’s murder following a trial at Bristol Crown Court.
Senior investigating officer Det Insp Dave Marchant said Headley, who was in his 30s when he killed Mrs Dunne, had left “a legacy of misery and pain”.
Despite the efforts of police investigating Mrs Dunne’s death 58 years ago, no key suspect was identified.
Police collected about 19,000 prints from men and boys at the time with no success. They also made about 8,000 house-to-house inquiries and took 2,000 statements.
It was only when the case was re-examined by Avon and Somerset Police decades later that DNA testing of a swab that contained semen was linked to Headley.
Det Insp Marchant called him a “dangerous serial offender” with a “shocking and abhorrent history” and said there was a sense of “gravity” when police were told of the positive result.
“This is a marrying of old school and new school policing techniques,” he said.
Det Insp Marchant added it was believed to be the oldest cold case solved in the UK.
Mrs Dunne had been twice widowed and lived alone, but was well-known in the local area.
Headley was accused of forcing entry into her home before sexually attacking her and then strangling her.
The night of her death, neighbours reported hearing a woman’s “frightening scream”.
Det Insp Marchant said a neighbour was first alerted to something unusual happening when the paper they left for Mrs Dunne was not taken in on the morning of 28 June 1967.
After Headley’s arrest, fingerprint experts compared his palm print to one collected from the rear window of Mrs Dunne’s home, which matched Headley’s.
He previously admitted breaking into the homes of two widows, aged 84 and 79, and raping them in Suffolk in October 1977, in crimes police described as “eerily similar”.
Trevor Mason, a Special Branch detective in Suffolk drafted in to assist in the 1977 cases, described Headley as “worse than an animal”.
Speaking to Channel 4 News, Mr Mason said what the women had suffered was “absolutely horrendous”, adding Headley’s victims were “obviously frail” and “didn’t stand a chance”.
Headley had denied both the rape and murder of Mrs Dunne after being charged in November 2024. He is set to be sentenced for both crimes on Tuesday.
US Senate begins voting on Trump’s ‘big beautiful bill’
The US Senate has begun a marathon vote on a sprawling budget that is critical to President Donald Trump’s agenda, but the spending plan is hanging in the balance after weeks of fraught negotiations.
Republicans – who control both chambers of Congress – are divided over how much to cut welfare programmes in order to extend tax breaks in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
The president’s party is sprinting to pass the legislation by this week’s self-imposed deadline of the Fourth of July public holiday.
If the measure does clear the Senate, it will have to go back for another vote to the House of Representatives, which passed its own version of the bill last month by a single vote.
Senators zipped through the halls of the Capitol on Monday, making their way to the chamber floor for various amendment votes, then back to their private meeting rooms where they hashed out grievances outside the view of reporters.
Senators are currently arguing for or against adding amendments to the nearly 1,000-page bill in a process called “vote-a-rama”, which could entail up to 20 hours of debate.
The session is expected to continue through the night into Tuesday morning.
“We’re still obviously perfecting a few things,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune said on Monday.
An amendment to the proposal for Medicaid cuts recently proposed by Florida Senator Rick Scott could cause roughly 20 million Americans to lose their health insurance coverage, according to one estimate.
When asked about the report, Thune said there are “lots of analyses out there”.
“The thing that [Scott’s] bill doesn’t do is it doesn’t take effect until 2031. So I’m not sure how you can make the argument that it’s going to kick any people off of health insurance tomorrow,” Thune said.
Democrats, who have repeatedly denounced the bill, particularly for cutting health insurance coverage for millions of poorer Americans, are expected to use all 10 of their allotted hours of debate, while Republicans probably won’t.
Senator Adam Schiff, a California Democrat and longstanding critic of Trump, called the bill “terrible”.
He told the BBC he was unsure if Senate Republicans would meet Trump’s deadline of passage by this Friday, when America celebrates Independence Day, adding that, even if they did, “who knows what happens in the House”.
Speaking at the White House on Monday, press secretary Karoline Leavitt said that Trump is “confident” the bill would be passed and still expects it on his desk by his self-imposed deadline.
Senator John Fetterman, a Pennsylvania Democrat, appeared frustrated on Monday afternoon, after no signs of a final draft of the bill emerged.
“Oh my God, I just want to go home,” he said, adding that the extended negotiations and voting rounds have caused him to miss his “entire trip to the beach”.
“I don’t think it’s really helpful to put people here till some ungodly hour,” he said.
On Sunday, Democrats used a political manoeuvre to stall the bill’s progress, calling on Senate clerks to read all 940 pages of the bill aloud, a process that took 16 hours.
The move followed weeks of public discussion and the Senate narrowly moving on the budget bill in a 51-49 vote over the weekend.
Two Republicans sided with Democrats in voting against opening debate, arguing for further changes to the legislation.
One of those Republicans, North Carolina Senator Thom Tillis, announced his retirement following that vote and said the legislation broke promises that Trump and Republicans made to voters.
“Too many elected officials are motivated by pure raw politics who really don’t give a damn about the people they promised to represent on the campaign trail,” Tillis wrote in his announcement.
The White House reacted angrily to Tillis’ comments on Monday, with Leavitt telling reporters the senator is “just wrong” and that “the President and the vast majority of Republicans who are supportive of this legislation are right”.
The other Republican who voted against moving the bill was Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky. He objected to the debt increase, and cuts to Medicaid, a healthcare programme that is relied on by millions of elderly, disabled and low-income Americans.
On Monday, Senator Dan Sullivan, an Alaska Republican, sought to quell concerns about cuts to Medicaid, saying “we’re going to be fine in this”.
- A look at the key items in Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’
- The woman who could bust Trump’s ‘big beautiful bill
When the bill comes up for a full Senate vote – expected either late on Monday night or early Tuesday morning – Republicans can only afford three defections in order for the bill to pass.
If they lose three votes, Vice-President JD Vance will have to cast a tie-breaking vote.
The bill would then return to the House of Representatives, where leadership has advised a full vote on the Senate’s bill could come as early as Wednesday morning.
While Republicans control the House, they can also only lose a handful of votes. There are frustrations with the Senate version of the bill among some Republicans in the House, which could make for another close vote.
The fiscal hawks of the Republican-led House Freedom Caucus have threatened to torpedo the Senate version over budget disagreements.
The Senate proposal adds over $650bn to the national deficit, the group said in a post on social media on Monday.
“That’s not fiscal responsibility,” they said. “It’s not what we agreed to.”
Democrats in both chambers have largely objected to the spending cuts and the proposed extension of tax breaks.
Meanwhile, Republican debate has focused on how much to cut welfare programmes in order to extend $3.8tn (£2.8tn) in Trump tax breaks.
The proposed cuts could strip nearly 12 million Americans of their health insurance coverage and add $3.3tn (£2.4tn) in debt, according to the Congressional Budget Office, a non-partisan federal agency.
The version of the bill senators will soon vote on contains tax cuts that Trump campaigned on, such as a tax deduction on Social Security benefits, and the elimination of taxes on overtime work and tips.
The bill also authorises $5tn in new borrowing that will add to a swelling US debt load – a move that goes against what many conservatives have argued for and infuriated one-time Trump confidant Elon Musk.
Musk fired off social media posts on Monday, vowing to fund challengers to any conservative who votes for the bill and to set up an alternative political party.
“If this insane spending bill passes, the America Party will be formed the next day,” he wrote on X.
“Our country needs an alternative to the Democrat-Republican uniparty so that the people actually have a VOICE.”
The national debt currently sits at $36 trillion, according to the treasury department.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has urged Congress to address the debt limit by mid-July and warned if they do not, the US could be unable to pay its bills as early as August.
Woman dies from injuries suffered in Boulder antisemitic attack
An 82-year-old woman who was one of the 12 victims in an attack on a gathering in support of Israeli hostages has died from her injuries in Colorado, officials say.
Karen Diamond was severely injured after the suspect, Mohamed Sabry Soliman, shouting “free Palestine” tossed Molotov cocktails at the group in what federal officials have called a “terrorist attack”.
The suspect told police after he was arrested that he wanted to “kill all Zionist people”, according to court documents.
Because of the death of one of the victims, prosecutors are now adding new first-degree murder charges in addition to multiple others faced by the suspect, who remains jailed.
Diamond was among the 20 or so people gathered on 1 June to participate in a Run for Their Lives gathering at Pearl Street Mall in Boulder, Colorado, to generate awareness for the release of Israeli hostages in Gaza.
She died as a result of “the severe injuries that she suffered in the attack”, the district attorney’s office said.
“This horrific attack has now claimed the life of an innocent person who was beloved by her family and friends,” District Attorney Michael Dougherty said. “Our hearts are with the Diamond family during this incredibly difficult time.”
Officials say the suspect planned the attack for a year, watching videos on how to make Molotov cocktails before driving from his home in Colorado Springs to Boulder to carry out the attack.
The suspect allegedly posed as a gardener wearing a construction vest to get close to the group ahead of the attack, prosecutors say.
Near the scene of the crime, officials say they found 16 unlit Molotov cocktails in a plastic container within arm’s reach, as well as a weed sprayer filled with petrol.
Last week, Mr Soliman was indicted on 12 federal hate crime counts. He also faces at least 100 state criminal charges, including attempted murder.
Mr Soliman’s attorney, David Kraut, entered a not guilty plea on his behalf last week for the hate crime charges.
Federal authorities say Mr Soliman, an Egyptian national, has been living in the US illegally with his family.
Days after the attack his wife and five children were taken into custody by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials.
Data from the Anti-Defamation League suggests antisemitic incidents spiked to a record level in 2023 and again in 2024.
Father jumps off cruise ship after daughter falls overboard
After his daughter fell from the fourth deck of a 14-deck Disney Cruise ship on Sunday afternoon, a father jumped into the ocean to try to save her, according to witnesses.
Videos on social media showed passengers cheering as the two were safely recovered by a rescue boat. They were picked up after treading water for 10 minutes, according to witnesses.
The girl appeared to fall when her father took her picture against a railing, witnesses said. A man overboard alert was broadcast on the ship, and crew rushed to recover them.
“The ship was moving quickly, so quickly, it’s crazy how quickly the people became tiny dots in the sea, and then you lost sight of them,” passenger Laura Amador said.
“The captain slowed the ship and turned it around, and then they deployed a tender ship with people on it to go get them, and we saw them rescue the dad and daughter,” she told CBS News, the BBC’s US partner.
The 4,000-person capacity Disney Dream, was returning to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, after sailing for four days around the Bahamas.
Disney confirmed in a statement that two passengers were rescued, but offered few details about what occurred.
“The Crew aboard the Disney Dream swiftly rescued two guests from the water,” a Disney Cruise Line spokesperson said. “We commend our Crew Members for their exceptional skills and prompt actions, which ensured the safe return of both guests to the ship within minutes.
“We watched it, you could see two little things…it was crazy, it was horrific,” passenger Gar Frantz told NBC News, describing how he witnessed the two enter the ocean and nearly disappear into the horizon.
The incident took place on the last day of the cruise, and the ship returned to port in Florida as normal.
While it is rare for passengers to fall from cruise ships, rescues are not often successful when they do.
According to a Cruise Lines International Association report from 2019, 25 people fell overboard that year from cruise ships and only nine were saved from the water.
‘Unprecedented’ alerts in France as blistering heat grips Europe
A record number of heat alerts are in place across France as the country, and other parts of southern and eastern Europe, remain in the grip of soaring temperatures.
Sixteen French regions, including Paris, have been placed on red alert for Tuesday, the country’s highest, while 68 others are on orange alert.
On Monday, 84 of 96 mainland regions were under an orange alert, which France’s Climate Minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher called an “unprecedented” situation.
Heat warnings are also in place for parts of Spain, Portugal, Italy, Germany, the UK and Balkan countries including Croatia.
Both Spain and Portugal had their hottest June days on record at the weekend.
El Granado in Andalucía saw a temperature of 46C on Saturday, while 46.6C was recorded in the town of Mora in central Portugal on Sunday.
Many countries have emergency medical services on standby and have warned people to stay inside as much as possible.
Nearly 200 schools across France have been closed or partially closed as a result of the heatwave, which has gripped parts of Europe for more than a week now but is expected to peak mid-week.
France’s red alert will come into effect at 12:00 local time on Tuesday.
Several forest fires broke out in the southern Corbières mountain range on Sunday, leading to evacuations and the closure of a motorway. The fires have since been contained, officials told French media.
- Top tips on how to sleep in the heat
Meanwhile, 21 Italian cities are also on the highest alert, including Rome, Milan and Venice, as is Sardinia.
Mario Guarino, vice-president of the Italian Society of Emergency Medicine, told AFP news agency that hospital emergency departments across the country had reported a 10% increase in heatstroke cases.
Parts of the UK were just shy of being one of the hottest June days ever on Monday.
The highest UK temperature of the day was recorded at Heathrow Airport in London at 33.1C. Meanwhile, Wimbledon recorded a temperature of 32.9C, the tennis tournament’s hottest opening day on record.
Meanwhile, heat alerts across Spain, which is on course to record its hottest June on record, remained in place.
“I can’t sleep well and have insomnia. I also get heat strokes, I stop eating and I just can’t focus,” Anabel Sanchez, 21, told Reuters news agency in Seville.
It is a similar situation in Portugal, where seven districts, including the capital, Lisbon, are on the highest alert level.
In Germany, the country’s meteorological service warned that temperatures could reach almost 38C on Tuesday and Wednesday – further potentially record-breaking temperatures.
The heatwave lowered levels in the Rhine River – a major shipping route – limiting the amount cargo ships can transport and raising freighting costs.
Countries in and around the Balkans have also been struggling with the intense heat, although temperatures have begun to cool.
In Turkey, rescuers evacuated more than 50,000 people – mostly from the resort city of Izmir in the country’s west – as firefighters continued to put out hundreds of wildfires that had broken out in recent days.
The fires were fuelled by winds of 120km/h (75 mph) and destroyed at least 20 homes.
Wildfires also broke out in Croatia, where red heat warnings are in place for coastal areas. An extreme temperature alert was issued for neighbouring Montenegro.
Temperatures in Greece have been approaching 40C for several days and coastal towns near the capital Athens last week erupted in flames that destroyed homes – forcing people to evacuate.
On Wednesday, Serbia reported its hottest day since records began, and the meteorological service warned on Monday that “severe and extreme drought conditions prevail” in much of the country.
A record 38.8C was recorded in Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina on Thursday. In Slovenia, the hottest-ever June temperature was recorded on Saturday.
The temperature in North Macedonia’s capital, Skopje, reached 42C on Friday – and are expected to continue in that range.
While the heatwave is a potential health issue, it is also impacting the environment. Higher temperatures in the Adriatic Sea are encouraging invasive species such as the poisonous lionfish, while also causing further stress on alpine glaciers that are already shrinking at record rates.
The UN’s human rights chief, Volker Turk, warned on Monday that the heatwave highlighted the need for climate adaptation – moving away from practices and energy sources, such as fossil fuels, which are the main cause of climate change.
“Rising temperatures, rising seas, floods, droughts, and wildfires threaten our rights to life, to health, to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment, and much more,” he told the UN’s Human Rights Council.
Heatwaves are becoming more common due to human-caused climate change, according to the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Extreme hot weather will happen more often – and become even more intense – as the planet continues to warm, it has said.
Richard Allan, Professor of Climate Science at the University of Reading in the UK, explained that rising greenhouse gas levels are making it harder for the planet to lose excess heat.
“The warmer, thirstier atmosphere is more effective at drying soils, meaning heatwaves are intensifying, with moderate heat events now becoming extreme.”
Sign up for our Future Earth newsletter to keep up with the latest climate and environment stories with the BBC’s Justin Rowlatt. Outside the UK? Sign up to our international newsletter here.
Idaho gunman in deadly ambush of fire crews had ‘idolised’ firefighters
A 20-year-old Idaho man who fatally shot firefighters after luring them into an ambush once dreamed of becoming a fireman himself, police say.
Two firefighters, Frank Harwood and John Morrison, were killed and a third, Dave Tysdal, was injured after Wess Roley shot at them as they arrived at a blaze at Canfield Mountain, just north of Coeur d’Alene, on Sunday, officials say.
Authorities say Roley deliberately lit the fire to send emergency services to the area. The motive for the attack remains unclear.
After an hours-long standoff, a police Swat team discovered a dead man – identified as Roley – close to where the attack took place.
Kootenai County Sheriff Bob Norris told a news conference on Monday that Roley had once aspired to be a fireman.
The suspect’s grandfather also told NBC News his grandson had “actually really respected law enforcement”.
Dale Roley said his grandson “had been in contact to get a job with a fire department”, and “wanted to be part of a team that he sort of idolised”.
“He loved firefighters,” said Mr Roley. “It didn’t make sense that he was shooting firefighters. Maybe he got rejected or something.”
Sheriff Norris said the homeless suspect had attacked fire crews after they asked him to move his vehicle, which he had been living in.
“There was an interaction with the firefighters,” Norris said. “It has something to do with his vehicle being parked where it was.”
Investigators believe Roley used a flint that was found near his body to deliberately start the fire.
“This was a total ambush,” Norris told reporters. “These firefighters did not have a chance.”
One firefighter who was killed worked for the city’s fire service, while another worked for Kootenai County Fire and Rescue.
A third was “fighting for his life, but is in stable condition”, Norris added.
Idaho’s governor ordered flags be flown at half-staff on Monday to honour the firefighters who were killed.
The first report of a fire in the mountainside community was made around 13:21 PST (20:21 GMT), which was followed 40 minutes later by reports firefighters were being shot at, Norris said.
The so-called Nettleton Gulch Fire grew to 26 acres and continued to burn on Monday, Norris said. No structures are threatened, and officials hope to have the blaze extinguished by Monday night.
More than 300 law enforcement officers from city, county, state and federal authorities responded to the shooting, including two helicopters with snipers on board.
Norris said authorities believed the suspect used a high-powered rifle to fire rapidly at first responders, with officers initially unsure of the number of assailants involved.
A shotgun has been recovered, and several bullets or fragments possibly from a rifle have been found. Officials say more guns may be hidden on the mountain.
After an hours-long barrage of gunfire, the suspect was found by tracing his mobile phone on the popular hiking trail, which officials said was being used by hundreds on that Sunday afternoon.
“It appears that he shot himself,” Norris told journalists.
The sheriff said the suspect had had five “very minor” interactions with police since moving to Idaho in 2024. He said that in one case, he was found to be trespassing at a restaurant by police.
In order to prevent the suspect from fleeing, officials disabled his vehicle and “pushed it off the mountain”, the sheriff said. They have not yet been able to access the vehicle for a more thorough search.
Several fire department vehicles also had their tyres flattened to prevent the suspect from driving away in one of them during the chaotic manhunt.
Norris ruled out the suspect having “any nexus to Islamic jihad”, which he said had been falsely suggested on social media.
According to a social media post from his mother, the suspect moved from Arizona to Idaho in 2023 to work for his father’s tree-trimming company.
She wrote in October 2024 that her son was “doing great living in Idaho”.
Is RFK Jr’s divisive plan to Make America Healthy Again fearmongering – or revolutionary?
There’s a saying that Robert F Kennedy Jr is very fond of. He used it on the day he was confirmed as US health secretary. “A healthy person has a thousand dreams, a sick person only has one,” he said as he stood in the Oval Office. “60% of our population has only one dream – that they get better.”
The most powerful public health official in the US has made it his mission to tackle what he describes as an epidemic of chronic illness in America, a catch-all term that covers everything from obesity and diabetes to heart disease.
His diagnosis that the US is experiencing an epidemic of ill health is a view shared by many healthcare experts in the country.
But Kennedy also has a history of promoting unfounded health conspiracies, from the suggestion that Covid-19 targeted and spared certain ethnic groups to the idea that chemicals in tap water could be making children transgender.
And after taking office, he slashed thousands of jobs at the Department of Health and Human Services and eliminated whole programmes at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
“On the one hand, it’s extraordinarily exciting to have a federal official take on chronic disease,” says Marion Nestle, a retired professor of public health at New York University. “On the other, the dismantling of the federal public health apparatus cannot possibly help with the agenda.”
Kennedy is reviled by parts of the medical and scientific communities. He was described to me as an “evil nihilist” by Dr Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease doctor and senior scholar at Johns Hopkins University.
But even some of Kennedy’s critics accept that he is bringing drive and ambition to areas of healthcare that have been neglected. Is it possible that the man who attracts so much criticism – and in some quarters, hate – might actually start making America healthy again?
American ‘kids swimming in a toxic soup’
There’s one industry that Kennedy had set his sights on long before joining the Trump administration: multinational food companies have, he has said, poisoned American children with artificial additives already banned in other countries.
“We have a generation of kids who are swimming around in a toxic soup right now,” he claimed on Fox News last year.
His first target was food colourings, with a promise to phase out the use of petroleum-based dyes by the end of 2026.
Chemicals, with names like ‘Green No. 3’ and ‘Red No. 40’, have been linked to hyperactivity and behavioural issues in children, and cancer in some animal studies.
“What’s happening in this administration is really interesting,” says Vani Hari, a food blogger and former Democrat who is now an influential voice in the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement. “MAHA is all about how do we get people off processed food, and one way to do that is to regulate the chemicals companies use.”
There are some signs this pressure may be paying off.
The food giant PepsiCo, for example, said in a recent trading update that Lays crisps and Tostitos snacks “will be out of artificial colours by the end of this year”.
Kennedy struck a voluntary agreement with the food industry but it only came after individual states from California to West Virginia had already started introducing their own laws.
“In the case of food dyes, companies will have to act because states are banning them [anyway] and they won’t want to have to formulate separate products for separate states,” says Prof Nestle, an author and longtime critic of the industry.
More recently Kennedy has signalled he backs a radical food bill in Texas that could target additives in some products ranging from sweets, to cereals and fizzy drinks
Packets may soon have to carry a high-contrast label stating, “WARNING: This product contains an ingredient that is not recommended for human consumption by the appropriate authority in Australia, Canada, the European Union, or the United Kingdom.”
The Consumer Brands Association, which represents some of the largest food manufacturers, opposes this, saying the ingredients used in the US food supply are safe and have been rigorously studied.
It’s difficult to imagine that kind of regulation could ever be signed off in a state like Texas without the political backing of Kennedy and President Trump.
Is RFK ‘drifting into misinformation’?
“He can’t change everything in a short amount of time, but I think the issue of food dyes will soon be history,” says Ms Hari, who testified before the Senate on this subject last year.
But others worry that the flurry of announcements on additives is tinkering around the edges of what is a much wider problem.
“While some of these individual actions are important, they are a drop in the ocean in the larger context of chronic disease,” argues Nicola Hawley, professor of epidemiology at Yale School of Public Health. “There is a focus on personal choice and access to natural food, but that completely ignores the big, systematic and structural barriers [to healthy eating] like poverty and really aggressive marketing of junk food to children.”
The US government, for example, still heavily subsidises crops including corn and soya beans, key ingredients in processed foods.
Kennedy is now updating the US national dietary guidelines, an important document used to shape everything from school meals to assistance programmes for the elderly. A reduction in added sugars and a switch to more locally-sourced whole foods is expected. Plus he has called on states to ban millions of Americans from using food stamps, a welfare benefit, to buy junk food or sugar-sweetened drinks.
He has also backed local officials who want to stop adding fluoride to drinking water, describing it as a “dangerous neurotoxin”. It is used in some countries, including in parts of the US, to prevent tooth decay, and whilst there is still debate about the possible health effects, the NHS says a review of the risks has found “no convincing evidence” to support any concerns. Other fluoride research has found the mineral only has detrimental health effects at extremely high levels.
Prof Hawley also argues there is a tension between Kennedy’s “important message” on food and chronic disease, and what she feels is a lack of policies backed by solid scientific evidence.
“You’ve got this challenge of him drifting into misinformation about the links between additives and chronic disease, or environmental risk factors,” she argues. “And that really just undermines the science.”
‘He is not anti vax, he is anti corruption’
That tension is even clearer when it comes to another of Kennedy’s big concerns.
Vaccines are still listed on the CDC website as one of the great public health achievements of the last century, alongside family planning and tobacco control. They prevent countless cases of disease and disability each year, and save millions of lives, according to the American Medical Association.
Kennedy, though, is the best known vaccine sceptic in the country. The activist group he ran for eight years, Children’s Health Defense, repeatedly questioned the safety and efficacy of vaccination.
In 2019 he described the disgraced British doctor Andrew Wakefield as the “most unfairly maligned person in modern history” and told a crowd in Washington that “any just society” would be building statues of him.
Wakefield was struck off the UK medical register in 2010 after his research falsely linked the MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccine to autism, leading to a spike in measles cases in England and some other countries.
Over the last year, Kennedy has repeatedly insisted he is not “anti-vax” and will not be “taking away anybody’s vaccines”. Faced with a deadly measles outbreak in unvaccinated children in west Texas, he posted that the MMR was “the most effective way to prevent the spread of the disease”.
In other comments though, he described vaccination as a “personal choice” and emphasised alternative treatments such as vitamin A supplements.
A huge deal with the drugmaker Moderna to develop a vaccine to combat bird flu in humans was scrapped, and new rules were brought in which could mean some vaccines need extra testing before they can be updated each winter.
In May, Kennedy posted a video on social media saying the government would no longer endorse Covid vaccines for healthy children and pregnant women.
However, some doctors point out that reducing eligibility would simply bring the US into line with other countries, including the UK, where free Covid boosters are restricted to those over 75 or with weakened immune systems.
“They are really just aligning themselves with everyone else, which is not in any way outrageous,” says Prof Adam Finn, a paediatric doctor and one of the UK’s leading experts on vaccines.
Then in June, Kennedy suddenly sacked all 17 members of the influential expert committee, which advises the CDC on vaccine eligibility. He accused the panel of being “plagued with persistent conflicts of interest” and rubber-stamping new vaccines without proper scrutiny.
A new, much smaller, committee handpicked by the administration now has the power to change, or even drop, critical recommendations to immunise Americans for certain diseases, as well as shape the childhood vaccination programme.
“It underscores just how much we are backsliding now,” says Dr Amesh Adalja, the infectious disease doctor and senior scholar at Johns Hopkins University. “I think increasingly the panel will become irrelevant if RFK Jr is able to shape it the way he wants to.”
The new panel made its first decision last week, voting to stop recommending a small number of flu vaccines that still contain the preservative thimerosal, something Kennedy wrote a book about in 2015.
His critics say that a new era of vaccine policy has arrived in the US. Whilst his supporters say no subject, including vaccine safety, should be considered off-limits.
“Everything has to be open to discussion and Bobby Kennedy is not anti-vaccine, he’s anti-corruption,” argues Tony Lyons, who co-founded the political action committee that supported his independent presidential campaign.
“It’s about being pro-science, pro-capitalism, and believing you have an obligation to the public to do a thorough job of researching any product that is put in the arms of 40 million children.”
The autism puzzle
Weeks after Kennedy took office news emerged that the CDC would open a research project into the link between vaccines and autism.
Since Wakefield’s now-discredited Lancet paper in 1998, which linked autism to the MMR vaccine given to children, there have been numerous international studies that have looked at this in detail and found no reputable link.
“There is nothing to debate any more, it has been settled by science,” says Eric Fombonne, an autism researcher and professor emeritus at Oregon Health & Science University.
Kennedy, though, has hired David Geier, a noted vaccine sceptic, to look again at the data.
Today autism is widely understood to be a lifelong spectrum condition. It can include those with high support needs who are non-speaking, and those with above-average intelligence who might struggle with social interaction or communication.
Most researchers believe a rise in cases over decades is down to a broadening in the way children with autism are defined, as well as improved awareness, understanding and screening.
But in April, Kennedy dismissed that idea, describing autism as “preventable”. He blamed a mysterious environmental trigger for the increase in eight-year-olds being diagnosed.
“This is coming from an environmental toxin… [in] our air, our water, our medicines, our food,” he said.
He pledged a massive research effort to find that cause by September and “eliminate those exposures”.
Dr Fombonne strongly disputes this. “It is nonsensical and shows a complete absence of understanding,” he says. “We have known for many years that autism has a strong genetic component.”
In the same speech, Kennedy said that many autistic children will never “pay taxes, never hold a job. They’ll never play baseball. They’ll never write a poem. They’ll never go out on a date. Many of them will never use a toilet unassisted.”
Many in the autism community are angry. “What we’re seeing here is a fear-based rhetoric and [a] misleading narrative that is causing harm and perpetuating stigma,” says Kristyn Roth from the Autism Society of America.
But some parents of autistic children are more supportive.
Emily May, a writer who is the mother of a child with autism, wrote in The New York Times that she found herself “nodding along as Mr Kennedy spoke about the grim realities of profound autism”.
“His remarks echo the reality and pain of a subset of parents of children with autism who feel left out of much of the conversation,” she wrote.
The administration has since watered down that promise to find the reasons for autism by September but it is still promising detailed findings of its research by March 2026.
An imperfect messenger?
Ultimately, Robert Kennedy has only been in the job a matter of months. Already though he’s asking some big questions – particularly about chronic disease – which have never been asked in the same way by a health secretary before.
For the first time that issue has both political attention and bipartisan support in the US.
He is clearly not afraid to take on what he perceives to be vested interests in the food and drug industries, and he is still firmly supported by President Trump.
Tony Lyons, who has published books by Kennedy, calls him “uniquely qualified” for the most powerful job in US public health. “He’s a corruption fighter. He has seen what all these kinds of companies do, not just pharmaceutical companies but food companies, and he wants them to do a better job,” he says.
Robert Kennedy’s background as an environmental lawyer taking on big business and the establishment has clearly shaped the views he holds today.
But Jerold Mande, a former federal food policy advisor in three administrations, worries that Kennedy’s own views and biases will mean some of the solutions he’s reaching for are predetermined and unsupported by the evidence.
Now a professor of nutrition at Harvard, Prof Mande describes Kennedy as an imperfect messenger and says he has “great concerns” about the administration’s approach to aspects of public health, from tobacco control to vaccination, where there is “no question that what he’s doing is going to result in enormous harm.”
“At a high level, I’m optimistic but you still need to come up with the right answers, and those answers can only be found through science,” says Prof Mande.
“We now have a shot and he’s provided that by making it a priority. But it’s how you use that shot that’s going to determine whether it’s a success or not. And that is where the jury is still out.”
Israeli strike on Gaza seafront cafe kills at least 20 Palestinians, witnesses and rescuers say
At least 20 Palestinians were killed in an Israeli air strike that hit a popular seafront cafe frequently used by activists, journalists, and local residents in western Gaza on Monday, according to medics and eyewitnesses.
Rescue teams evacuated 20 bodies and dozens wounded from Al-Baqa Cafeteria, an outdoor venue which consisted of tents along the beach, a spokesperson for Gaza’s Hamas-run Civil Defence told the BBC.
He added that emergency crews were still searching through a deep crater left by the explosion.
“I was on my way to the café to use the internet just a few meters away when a massive explosion hit,” said Aziz Al-Afifi, a cameraman with a local production company, told the BBC.
“I ran to the scene. My colleagues were there, people I meet every day. The scene was horrific – bodies, blood, screaming everywhere.”
Videos posted by activists on social media appeared to show the moment a missile, reportedly fired from an Israeli warplane, struck the area. Footage captured the aftermath of the attack, with bodies scattered across the ground.
Al-Baqa Cafeteria had become a well-known space for journalists, activists, and remote workers, offering internet access, seating, and workspace along Gaza’s Mediterranean coast.
There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military.
The attack came after Israel carried out a wave of air strikes across the Gaza Strip overnight, triggering the mass displacement of hundreds of Palestinian families, witnesses said.
Rescue teams recovered the bodies of five people, while dozens of injured civilians were evacuated to Al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza City, according to local reports.
The bombardment follows one of the largest evacuation orders issued since the war resumed in March.
It comes amid increasing pressure on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to refocus efforts to reach a ceasefire agreement.
On Saturday, US President Donald Trump said on social media that Netanyahu was working on negotiating a deal with Hamas “right now”. That came days after a senior Hamas official said mediators had intensified their efforts to broker a new ceasefire and hostage release deal in Gaza, but that negotiations with Israel remain stalled.
A two-month ceasefire collapsed in March when Israel launched fresh strikes on Gaza. The ceasefire deal – which started on 19 January – was meant to have three stages, but did not make it past the first stage.
Israel followed this with a total blockade on humanitarian aid deliveries to Gaza, which it partially eased after 11 weeks following pressure from US allies and warnings of starvation from global experts.
The partial easing saw the creation of the controversial US- and Israeli-backed aid group, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF). Since GHF took over distribution operations, there have been almost daily incidents of killings and injuries of Palestinians seeking aid.
Eyewitnesses and medics have blamed Israel, though Israel has said it has only fired warning shots towards people it considered a threat.
Residents in Gaza City said dozens of Israeli air raids targeted densely populated eastern neighbourhoods, including Shujaiya, Tuffah, and Zeitoun.
Videos posted by activists on social media captured scenes of chaos and explosions illuminating the night sky, followed by flames and thick plumes of smoke rising above the skyline.
One of the strikes reportedly hit a school in Zeitoun that had been sheltering displaced families.
“Explosions never stopped… it felt like earthquakes,” Salah, 60, from Gaza City told Reuters news agency.
“In the news we hear a ceasefire is near, on the ground we see death and we hear explosions,” the father of five added.
The five fatalities reportedly occurred in a strike at the Al Shati camp, to the west of Gaza City.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) had earlier ordered residents to leave large parts of northern Gaza, in anticipation of the attacks. Most of those displaced overnight moved westwards within Gaza City rather than to the southern region as instructed by the IDF.
“We had no choice but to leave everything behind,” said Abeer Talba, a mother of seven who fled Zeitoun with her family.
“We got phone calls recordings in Arabic telling us we were in a combat zone and must evacuate immediately.
“This is the seventh time we’ve been forced to flee,” she added. “We’re in the streets again, no food, no water. My children are starving. Death feels kinder than this.”
Amid the growing humanitarian crisis, fears are mounting that the evacuation orders and sustained air strikes are part of a broader Israeli plan to expand its ground offensive deeper into Gaza.
But there is also speculation in Israeli media that some generals are close to concluding that military operations in Gaza are near to being achieved.
That is also the view of many former army leaders who fear that the descent of the Gaza campaign into more attritional, guerilla-style warfare would lead to more deaths – of hostages, civilians and soldiers.
The Israeli prime minister’s next moves are being closely watched. While Benjamin Netanyahu’s instincts have always been to continue the war and defeat Hamas, he is coming under increasing pressure at home and abroad to pursue a new ceasefire agreement.
The Israeli military launched its bombardment of Gaza in response to the attack, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
More than 56,000 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.
Police launch criminal investigation into Bob Vylan and Kneecap Glastonbury sets
A criminal investigation has been launched over performances by Bob Vylan and Kneecap at Glastonbury on Saturday, Avon and Somerset Police has said.
The force said it had appointed a senior detective to investigate whether comments made by either act amounted to a criminal offence after reviewing footage.
A statement added: “This has been recorded as a public order incident at this time while our enquiries are at an early stage.”
Speaking in Parliament on Monday after the announcement, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy called the scenes broadcast “appalling and unacceptable”.
Police have not specified which part of Bob Vylan’s or Kneecap’s set would be subject to the criminal investigation.
It comes after the BBC said it should have cut away from a live broadcast of Bob Vylan’s performance, during which the band’s singer Pascal Robinson-Foster, who performs under the name Bobby Vylan, led a chant of “death, death to the IDF [Israel Defense Forces]”.
Those comments drew criticism of both the English punk-rap duo and the BBC for its live coverage of their performance.
The corporation said it would “look at our guidance around live events so we can be sure teams are clear on when it is acceptable to keep output on air”, and labelled remarks made during the performance antisemitic.
Lisa Nandy told MPs that she immediately called the BBC’s director general after the set was broadcast.
She said outstanding questions remain, including why the feed “wasn’t immediately cut”, why it was broadcast live “given the concerns regarding other acts in the weeks preceding the festival” and what due diligence had been done ahead of deciding to put Bob Vylan on TV.
“When the rights and safety of people and communities are at risk, and when the national broadcaster fails to uphold its own standards, we will intervene,” she added, and said she will continue to speak to the BBC in the coming days.
Earlier, broadcast regulator Ofcom said the BBC “clearly has questions to answer” over its coverage, and the government questioned why the comments were aired live.
The organisers of Glastonbury have previously said they were “appalled” by the comments, which “crossed a line”.
On Sunday, Robinson-Foster responded to the controversy on Instagram, writing “I said what I said” and a statement in defence of political activism, without addressing his on-stage comments in more detail.
Since then, both members of Bob Vylan – who were due to embark on a tour of America later this year – have had their US visas revoked, it is understood.
US Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau wrote on X: “Foreigners who glorify violence and hatred are not welcome visitors to our country.”
In response, Bobby Vylan released a video statement on social media on Monday, where he said politicians should be “utterly ashamed” about where their “allegiances lie”.
“First it was Kneecap, now it’s us two,” he said.
“Regardless of how it was said, calling for an end to the slaughter of innocents is never wrong. To civilians of Israel, understand this anger is not directed at you, and don’t let your government persuade you that a call against an army is a call against the people.
“To Keir, Kemi and the rest of you, I’ll get you at a later date.”
Avon and Somerset Police also confirmed the criminal investigation would assess Kneecap’s Glastonbury performance.
The Irish-language rap band are known for making pro-Palestinian and political comments during their live performances and have attracted controversy in the past.
Band member Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh, who performs under the name Mo Chara, was charged with a terrorism offence for allegedly displaying the flag of proscribed terrorist organisation Hezbollah at a gig. He has denied the charge.
Although there was no live stream of Kneecap’s performance, the BBC later uploaded a largely unedited version of the set to its Glastonbury highlights page on BBC iPlayer.
US Senate begins voting on Trump’s ‘big beautiful bill’
The US Senate has begun a marathon vote on a sprawling budget that is critical to President Donald Trump’s agenda, but the spending plan is hanging in the balance after weeks of fraught negotiations.
Republicans – who control both chambers of Congress – are divided over how much to cut welfare programmes in order to extend tax breaks in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
The president’s party is sprinting to pass the legislation by this week’s self-imposed deadline of the Fourth of July public holiday.
If the measure does clear the Senate, it will have to go back for another vote to the House of Representatives, which passed its own version of the bill last month by a single vote.
Senators zipped through the halls of the Capitol on Monday, making their way to the chamber floor for various amendment votes, then back to their private meeting rooms where they hashed out grievances outside the view of reporters.
Senators are currently arguing for or against adding amendments to the nearly 1,000-page bill in a process called “vote-a-rama”, which could entail up to 20 hours of debate.
The session is expected to continue through the night into Tuesday morning.
“We’re still obviously perfecting a few things,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune said on Monday.
An amendment to the proposal for Medicaid cuts recently proposed by Florida Senator Rick Scott could cause roughly 20 million Americans to lose their health insurance coverage, according to one estimate.
When asked about the report, Thune said there are “lots of analyses out there”.
“The thing that [Scott’s] bill doesn’t do is it doesn’t take effect until 2031. So I’m not sure how you can make the argument that it’s going to kick any people off of health insurance tomorrow,” Thune said.
Democrats, who have repeatedly denounced the bill, particularly for cutting health insurance coverage for millions of poorer Americans, are expected to use all 10 of their allotted hours of debate, while Republicans probably won’t.
Senator Adam Schiff, a California Democrat and longstanding critic of Trump, called the bill “terrible”.
He told the BBC he was unsure if Senate Republicans would meet Trump’s deadline of passage by this Friday, when America celebrates Independence Day, adding that, even if they did, “who knows what happens in the House”.
Speaking at the White House on Monday, press secretary Karoline Leavitt said that Trump is “confident” the bill would be passed and still expects it on his desk by his self-imposed deadline.
Senator John Fetterman, a Pennsylvania Democrat, appeared frustrated on Monday afternoon, after no signs of a final draft of the bill emerged.
“Oh my God, I just want to go home,” he said, adding that the extended negotiations and voting rounds have caused him to miss his “entire trip to the beach”.
“I don’t think it’s really helpful to put people here till some ungodly hour,” he said.
On Sunday, Democrats used a political manoeuvre to stall the bill’s progress, calling on Senate clerks to read all 940 pages of the bill aloud, a process that took 16 hours.
The move followed weeks of public discussion and the Senate narrowly moving on the budget bill in a 51-49 vote over the weekend.
Two Republicans sided with Democrats in voting against opening debate, arguing for further changes to the legislation.
One of those Republicans, North Carolina Senator Thom Tillis, announced his retirement following that vote and said the legislation broke promises that Trump and Republicans made to voters.
“Too many elected officials are motivated by pure raw politics who really don’t give a damn about the people they promised to represent on the campaign trail,” Tillis wrote in his announcement.
The White House reacted angrily to Tillis’ comments on Monday, with Leavitt telling reporters the senator is “just wrong” and that “the President and the vast majority of Republicans who are supportive of this legislation are right”.
The other Republican who voted against moving the bill was Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky. He objected to the debt increase, and cuts to Medicaid, a healthcare programme that is relied on by millions of elderly, disabled and low-income Americans.
On Monday, Senator Dan Sullivan, an Alaska Republican, sought to quell concerns about cuts to Medicaid, saying “we’re going to be fine in this”.
- A look at the key items in Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’
- The woman who could bust Trump’s ‘big beautiful bill
When the bill comes up for a full Senate vote – expected either late on Monday night or early Tuesday morning – Republicans can only afford three defections in order for the bill to pass.
If they lose three votes, Vice-President JD Vance will have to cast a tie-breaking vote.
The bill would then return to the House of Representatives, where leadership has advised a full vote on the Senate’s bill could come as early as Wednesday morning.
While Republicans control the House, they can also only lose a handful of votes. There are frustrations with the Senate version of the bill among some Republicans in the House, which could make for another close vote.
The fiscal hawks of the Republican-led House Freedom Caucus have threatened to torpedo the Senate version over budget disagreements.
The Senate proposal adds over $650bn to the national deficit, the group said in a post on social media on Monday.
“That’s not fiscal responsibility,” they said. “It’s not what we agreed to.”
Democrats in both chambers have largely objected to the spending cuts and the proposed extension of tax breaks.
Meanwhile, Republican debate has focused on how much to cut welfare programmes in order to extend $3.8tn (£2.8tn) in Trump tax breaks.
The proposed cuts could strip nearly 12 million Americans of their health insurance coverage and add $3.3tn (£2.4tn) in debt, according to the Congressional Budget Office, a non-partisan federal agency.
The version of the bill senators will soon vote on contains tax cuts that Trump campaigned on, such as a tax deduction on Social Security benefits, and the elimination of taxes on overtime work and tips.
The bill also authorises $5tn in new borrowing that will add to a swelling US debt load – a move that goes against what many conservatives have argued for and infuriated one-time Trump confidant Elon Musk.
Musk fired off social media posts on Monday, vowing to fund challengers to any conservative who votes for the bill and to set up an alternative political party.
“If this insane spending bill passes, the America Party will be formed the next day,” he wrote on X.
“Our country needs an alternative to the Democrat-Republican uniparty so that the people actually have a VOICE.”
The national debt currently sits at $36 trillion, according to the treasury department.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has urged Congress to address the debt limit by mid-July and warned if they do not, the US could be unable to pay its bills as early as August.
Royal train to be cut in Palace cost-saving measure
The royal train is going to be taken out of service by 2027, in a cost-saving measure announced by Buckingham Palace.
There have been dedicated trains for monarchs since Queen Victoria’s reign, but as part of a “drive to ensure we deliver value for money” it’s been decided to decommission the historic rolling stock.
The announcement came alongside the annual publication of royal finances, which showed that a journey on the royal train, from Gloucestershire to Staffordshire and then London, over two days in February, had cost more than £44,000.
The Royal Family will still travel on regular train services – and the annual report showed 141 helicopter trips were taken last year, costing £475,000.
James Chalmers, the Keeper of the Privy Purse, responsible for the royal finances, said the decision to stop the royal train would mean “the fondest of farewells”, but “in moving forwards we must not be bound by the past”.
The royal train will be taken around the UK before it is removed from service, after which it could be put on public display. The royal train consists of nine carriages, with different locomotives hired to pull them.
The idea of a royal train goes back to Queen Victoria commissioning special coaches in 1869, with the service being used to take the Royal Family around the country.
“The royal train, of course, has been part of national life for many decades, loved and cared for by all those involved,” said Mr Chalmers.
The train had been used extensively for events during the late Queen Elizabeth’s golden and diamond jubilees – with the most recent update to the carriages taking place in the mid-1980s.
But the latest accounts, for 2024-25, show the train only being used on two occasions, raising questions about maintenance and storage costs.
That’s alongside other travel costs such as 55 private charter flights costing almost £600,000 and scheduled flights costing £126,000. The total cost of royal travel is £4.7 million, a rise of £500,000 from the previous year.
The single biggest travel item was £400,000 for the King and Queen’s trip to Australia and Samoa.
The latest financial report for 2024-25 shows the Sovereign Grant remaining at £86.3m. This grant is the public funding for the running costs of the monarchy, such as travel for official duties, staffing and the maintenance of royal buildings.
The level of funding for 2025-26 is rising to £132.1m – with this higher level of funding staying for two years to complete renovation work at Buckingham Palace.
The cost of this 10-year, £369m building scheme at Buckingham Palace has pushed up the Sovereign Grant – which in real terms, taking into account inflation, is now about three times higher than when the Sovereign Grant funding was introduced in 2012.
Funding comes from the Treasury, with the amount based on a percentage of the profits of the Crown Estate.
This year’s annual report shows the Royal Family carried out over 1,900 engagements, with almost 94,000 guests attending events at royal residences.
There were also diplomatic occasions, such as hosting Qatar’s state visit to the UK.
A financial report for the Duchy of Cornwall, the estates which provide an income for the Prince of Wales, showed a profit of £22.9m, slightly down on the previous year.
There had been media criticism of the duchy’s finances – and in response Kensington Palace has said that the emphasis will be on a positive social impact.
Will Bax, the duchy’s new secretary, said there would be a “modern, socially minded” approach, which could see some charitable organisations and community groups having their rents waived and others with 50% reductions.
This would cost “significant sums”, said Mr Bax, but it was part of a focus on turning the duchy into a social enterprise, supporting communities and reflecting Prince William’s interest in projects such as reducing homelessness and tackling climate change.
Anti-monarchy campaigners Republic criticised the levels of royal income at a time when there were debates about “cutting welfare for people with disabilities”.
Republic’s chief executive Graham Smith described royal funding as a “scandalous abuse of public money”, with published figures not including costs such as security.
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Guilty plea expected in 2022 murders of four Idaho students
A 30-year-old man who is due to stand trial for the fatal stabbings of four roommates in a small Idaho college town will plead guilty as part of a deal with state prosecutors to avoid the death penalty, according to US media.
Latah County prosecutor’s office refused to confirm to the BBC that a plea deal had been reached with Bryan Kohberger.
But relatives of one victim, Kaylee Goncalves, apparently confirmed the agreement on Facebook. “It’s true! We are beyond furious at the State of Idaho,” the post said. “They have failed us.”
Ms Goncalves, Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle and Madison Mogen were knifed in their off-campus home in Moscow, Idaho, days before Thanksgiving in 2022.
Mr Kohberger, who was a graduate criminology student at nearby Washington State University, is currently due to stand trial in August.
Also on Monday, a judge in the defendant’s home state of Pennsylvania ruled that three people who knew him must travel to Idaho to testify for the defence.
Local media reported that a hearing for the plea deal was set for Wednesday. The BBC has contacted the defendant’s legal team for comment.
Mr Kohberger is expected to plead guilty on all four murder charges and waive his rights to any future appeals, local media reported.
If accepted by a judge, the deal would reportedly see the defendant sentenced to life without the possibility of parole and prosecutors would not seek capital punishment.
“We cannot fathom the toll that this case has taken on your family,” Moscow Prosecuting Attorney Bill Thompson told families in a letter, according to the Idaho Statesman newspaper, which said it had seen a copy.
“This resolution is our sincere attempt to seek justice for your family.
“This agreement ensures that the defendant will be convicted, will spend the rest of his life in prison, and will not be able to put you and the other families through the uncertainty of decades of post-conviction appeals.”
The defendant was arrested at his Pennsylvania family home weeks following the stabbings, after investigators said they found DNA evidence on a “leather knife sheath” at the crime scene. He was indicted by a grand jury in May 2023.
Court documents revealed police recovered a knife, a Glock pistol, black gloves, a black hat and a black face mask during a search of Mr Kohberger’s family home.
His defence team questioned the accuracy of the DNA evidence and succeeded in its bid to move the trial location, after arguing their client would not receive a fair hearing from local jurors.
But they had failed to remove the death penalty as a sentencing option, after citing an autism diagnosis for Mr Kohberger.
Idaho is one of 27 US states that allows for capital punishment, but there have been no executions since 2012, according to a database by the Death Penalty Information Center.
The Vivienne ‘died two days before body found’
Drag artist James Lee Williams, better known as The Vivienne, was found dead in the bath by a neighbour after worried friends had struggled to get in touch, an inquest has heard.
Williams, the first winner of Ru Paul’s Drag Race UK in 2019, had likely died at their home in Chorlton-by-Backford, near Chester, just under two days before their body was discovered on 5 January.
Cheshire Coroner’s Court heard the 32-year-old had privately struggled with addiction to ketamine and had recently relapsed after years of sobriety.
Senior Coroner Jacqueline Devonish recorded a conclusion of death by misadventure after the court heard Williams had suffered a cardiac arrest brought on by the drug.
Williams, who went by they/them and he/him pronouns, had spoken about their addiction struggles on an episode of Ru Paul’s Drag Race – which their father Lee Williams told the court was the first their family had known about it.
However, he believed his son had been successful staying sober, and their immediate family were unaware that they had relapsed.
Mr Williams told the court: “He was just an outgoing character full-of-life.
“He just wanted to give people laughs and help them on the way, and I think in a way he achieved that.”
Giving evidence at the court in Warrington, the drag performer’s best friend of 16 years Bobby Musker told the court how he had last spoken to them on the night of 3 January.
Mr Musker fought back tears as he told the court: “Him taking drugs didn’t define him as a person because he’d done so much more than that.
“He did so much good, I don’t want the public to see him as what happened with his drug use.”
Williams had just finished the first leg of a tour performing in a musical stage adaptation of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and had a few months off before returning to work, the inquest heard.
The court had heard Williams had last chatted to their father via WhatsApp messages at around 21:30 GMT on 3 January, and Mr Musker on a video call at around 20:22 that evening.
But by the morning of Sunday 5 January, Williams’ manager had got in touch with Mr Musker asking if he had heard from the drag artist.
Williams said he knew his friend’s “work was his life” and found it strange they had not been responding to their manager.
After being unable to get hold of Williams, Mr Musker called his friend’s neighbour Janine Godbold, who had grown close to Williams since they moved to the village about three years earlier and had a key to their front door.
Ms Godbold said she was not initially concerned as there had been bad weather including snowfall, and as a semi-rural area there were regularly problems with phone signal.
In emotional testimony in court, Ms Godbold said her son, Ryan Godbold, drove her the two minutes to Williams’s house where they approached the front door.
“I thought something was strange because there was no footprints in the snow”, she said.
Ms Godbold said Williams’ dog, Panda, also “threw itself” at the front door when they knocked, which was also unusual.
‘He looked like he was sleeping’
After nobody responded to their knocks, Ms Godbold and her son entered the property and found all the lights were on downstairs.
She found the star’s body in the bath of their en-suite, although their face was not submerged under the water.
“He just looked like he was sleeping,” she told the court.
“I ran over to him and put my hand under his head because I didn’t want his face to go underwater.
“I screamed for Ryan, telling him he needed to call an ambulance and to get some help.”
Ms Godbold said she stayed and talked to Williams while her son called an ambulance.
Police officers and paramedics who attended the scene said it was immediately clear Williams had died some time ago.
Cheshire Police officer Det Sgt Thomas Philpott told the inquest that there were no signs of any forced entry, or any disturbance.
He said police search teams found five empty snap bags in the house, which looked as if they had contained drugs, the inquest heard.
Four of them were in a bathroom bin spaced out evenly “with rubbish between them”, which the court heard suggested Williams had not taken them all at once.
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Mr Musker said he knew his friend was taking ketamine again due to their demeanour on the video call, and the fact they had referenced going to Liverpool where they usually bought the drug.
However he said they did not appear overly intoxicated.
Mr Musker said: “He wasn’t taking it constantly, I know that.
“When he was off work, and he was at home alone, he would struggle with his sobriety sometimes.”
Ms Devonish said she was satisfied there was no evidence to suggest Williams had intended to take their own life.
“He wasn’t taking drugs every day, it was occasional and the focus should be on him because drugs don’t define the person he was.”
Williams grew up and went to school in Colwyn Bay, North Wales before moving to Liverpool as a teenager, where their love of Vivienne Westwood clothing inspired their drag name.
It was on the circuit in Liverpool’s drag scene that they met Mr Musker.
They performed regularly in bars and clubs around what is now known as the city’s Pride Quarter before moving to Gran Canaria, a hotspot for drag performers across Europe.
Williams first rose to national prominence when they won the first series of Drag Race UK, and later went on to become the only British drag queen to appear in the American series.
As well as the world of drag, their appearances in London’s West End and in TV shows such as Emmerdale, Dancing on Ice and Saturday Night Takeaway saw them become a household name.
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Wimbledon 2025
Dates: 30 June-13 July Venue: All England Club
Coverage: Live across BBC TV, radio and online with extensive coverage on BBC iPlayer, Red Button, Connected TVs and mobile app. Full coverage guide.
Katie Boulter and Sonay Kartal both produced impressive victories at either end of a record-breaking day for British players at Wimbledon.
Former British number one Boulter took to Centre Court in the evening and secured a rare victory over a top 10 player as she beat Spain’s Paula Badosa 6-2 3-6 6-4.
Earlier, Kartal was the first player through from the 14-strong British contingent in action on day one with victory over 20th seed Jelena Ostapenko.
In total, seven Britons in the men’s and women’s draw progressed to the second round on day one, making it the most successful day for British players at Wimbledon in the Open era.
Boulter, 28, and Kartal were joined by British number one Emma Raducanu – who beat compatriot Mimi Xu – Cameron Norrie, Arthur Fery, Oliver Tarvet and Billy Harris.
“It’s incredible with so many Brits in the draw,” Raducanu, 22, said.
“I think it’s great for the spectators, too, to have so many Brits to follow in the draw. As we win matches, it’s more and more exciting.”
Boulter, who will face Argentine lucky loser Solana Sierra next, said: “Centre Court Wimbledon, as a Brit, against a top-10 player, for me doesn’t get that much better.
“It is one of the reasons why I do play tennis, to win matches like that, and to have a go at the best in the world.
“I do feel like it is one of the best [wins] for sure in my career.”
On a sweltering day at SW19, Kartal toppled the former French Open champion 7-5 2-6 6-2 to book her place in the second round.
Kartal, 23, was one of 10 British women in action at the All England Club – the most since 1992.
She had to come from behind to win the opening set on a lively court three.
But a dominant deciding set secured her progression to round two for the second time in her career, following a breakout tournament at last year’s Wimbledon where she reached the third round.
“That was by far one of the toughest matches I’ve played,” she said after the win, her third over a top-20 player this year.
“I would say I struggle against the big hitters. I’ve made a conscious effort this year to play the bigger matches and put myself under the most pressure out on court.
“I knew I wouldn’t get the results straight away but that it would eventually pay off, and that’s what happened today.”
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Raducanu gives coach ’11 out of 10′ after win over Xu
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Boulter battles to big win
This is the sixth successive time Boulter has reached the second round at Wimbledon, but this was one of her best opening-round wins against a tricky opponent, having only beaten a top-10 opponent three times before.
Badosa is a former world number two but her recent struggles with injuries will have given Boulter hope of getting a result, something that looked likely in a first set she dominated.
Badosa had to withdraw from the Berlin Open earlier this month at the quarter-final stage because of a back injury and it appeared that may have still been a concern as she was twice broken in the opener.
But it was a different story in the second set as Badosa showed her top 10 qualities, attacking Boulter on her serve to secure two breaks on her way to levelling matters.
An absorbing third set had the Centre Court crowd enthralled, with Badosa, 27, getting a break in the first game but Boulter broke back immediately.
From then on there was little to separate the two before Boulter got the decisive break at 5-4 to seal the win.
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Kartal’s remarkable rise
Kartal has enjoyed a remarkable rise through the rankings in the past 18 months.
At Wimbledon last year, she arrived as a wildcard ranked 281 in the world and went on to reach the third round.
On her return this year, ranked 230 places above that, she cut a calm and mature figure.
Ostapenko, 28, had beaten Kartal comfortably in the opening round at Eastbourne last week but the Briton maintained her composure as she fell 5-2 behind in the opening set.
A wayward Ostapenko forehand into the net was the catalyst for Kartal to go on and win the next five games, saving set points at 5-4 before motoring ahead to take the set.
Ostapenko was left stunned when Kartal sent a ripping forehand round the net post but the former Wimbledon semi-finalist managed to cut out the errors and take the second set comfortably to level things up.
That said, Ostapenko grew increasingly frustrated throughout the match – muttering under her breath and berating herself while shouting up at her coaches.
Fans in the crowd were also on the receiving end of glaring looks as she complained that they were being too noisy, asking the umpire to tell them to be quiet before shouting at them and raising her arms in exasperation.
But throughout that Kartal remained steadfast and raced through the third set, securing a double break before serving out for an impressive victory.
A total of 23 Britons had qualified for Wimbledon in the men’s and women’s singles at the All England Club – the most since 1984.
While Raducanu, Boulter and Kartal progressed, there were exits for Harriet Dart, Hannah Klugman and Mika Stojsavljevic in the women’s draw.
Dart won the first set of her match against Hungary’s Dalma Galfi but went on to lose 3-6 6-3 7-5.
Teenager Klugman lost to Canada’s 29th seed Leylah Fernandez 6-1 6-3 on her Grand Slam main-draw debut.
The 16-year-old, who last month became the first Briton in almost 50 years to reach the French Open girls’ final, was one of three British players aged 17 and under in the women’s singles draw at the All England Club.
Stojsavljevic, also 16, was beaten 6-3 6-2 by American Ashlyn Krueger.
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Published31 January
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Brentford are in “constant dialogue” with forward Bryan Mbeumo and it is “not impossible” he will stay, says director of football Phil Giles.
Cameroon international Mbeumo is the subject of serious interest from Manchester United, who have had two offers for the striker rejected – the second of which was worth up to £62.5m.
Mbeumo, 25, wants to join United and is understood to have told the west London club that.
Speaking on Monday, Giles told BBC Sport there had been “not so much” progress regarding a potential deal.
“He had a fantastic season,” he said. “We expected big interest in him, we have had big interest in him.
“He has his ideas about where he wants to take his career. He is well within his rights to do that.
“It is not impossible he is still a Brentford player next season if we agree he is going to stay.”
Giles said Mbeumo would only be sold if it was “the right deal” for Brentford.
“Any club will tell you that,” he added. “If it’s not right deal, why would we do it?
“He is certainly one of our best players, if not our best player, and we need our best players. There’s no harm in keeping your best players.”
Meanwhile, Giles also confirmed captain Christian Norgaard was close to joining Arsenal.
BBC Sport revealed last week the two Premier League clubs had agreed a fee – believed to be up to £15m inclusive of add-ons – for the Denmark midfielder.
“We have been in conversations with Arsenal for the last week to 10 days,” said Giles. “As it stands it hasn’t been completed yet but it is heading in that direction.
“If that happens for him then fantastic, he’s earned it. He’s been a brilliant captain for us.
“Let’s see how that story ends but we are pretty open about that interest there.”
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Published26 July 2022
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Seeing Ben Stokes celebrating with Josh Tongue, gesturing that his fast bowler was gobbling up rabbit pie, was an amusing aside during England’s win over India in the first Test.
Mopping up the tail is a bit of an art and not always straightforward.
Believe me, this is from someone who had to bowl at and field while the West Indies’ Tino Best compiled a Test-match 95 at Edgbaston in 2012.
Last week’s Test at Headingley, as amazing as it was, was won by England and lost by India in two facets.
Firstly, India’s catching was poor, as was their discipline of keeping their foot behind the line. The errors gave England reprieves worth 200 runs in the game.
Secondly, the India lower order offered no resistance at all.
The last four wickets put on 18 runs in the first innings and 29 in the second with Tongue picking up three of these in each innings.
Tongue’s performance was eye catching.
To tailenders you want to be aggressive, intimidating and ruthless.
‘Kill the tail’ we used to say in team meetings and remind each other at the back of our marks in order to make sure the opposition tail didn’t wag.
Using your short ball is imperative to unsettle the tailender but as soon as you realise the short ball has done its job of making sure the batter isn’t interested in getting forward, you want to be back to a good length.
Tongue’s awkward angle is immediately off-putting to a tailender. You think everything is going to hit you in the ribs.
In the second innings he bowled a triple wicket-maiden to take the seventh, eighth and ninth wickets of the innings. It was the perfect example of how to intimidate and then dismiss the tail.
A full away swinger was nicked to first slip by number eight Shardul Thakur. That was followed a heavy, awkward ball to Mohammad Siraj that left Siraj walking off wringing his hand in pain after gloving it behind to Jamie Smith.
Jasprit Bumrah’s middle stump was flattened two balls later with him backing away and having a big swing at one – a shot that was almost certainly as a result of what Bumrah sat and watched while Siraj was batting.
It is horrible as a tailender sat there watching someone be aggressive to the tail.
Gone are the days of the bowlers union where you would not bang one in to your opposite number in the knowledge he would not bowl one to you.
Helmets, padding and the ability to practice better has made everyone fair game and you’re acutely aware that you’ll receive a bouncer when you walk out there, especially as you’ll be tasked to do the same when you have the ball in your hand.
Your palms get sweaty, you need a nervous trip to the toilet every five minutes and you can’t take your eyes off who the opposition captain is gesturing at to bowl next.
I made the mistake of bouncing Jofra Archer in a County Championship match in 2018, hitting him on the head.
As soon as it was my turn to bat, I knew who’d have the ball in his hand.
The index finger on my right hand is still swollen from where the first ball I faced from him squeezed in against my bat handle in front of my face. He got me out next ball for nought.
The psychological lift a wagging tail gives to a dressing room is also huge.
It lightens the mood, it gives players the confidence that the momentum in the game is in their favour and you can physically see the frustration in the opposition as they toy with how to extract the last few wickets.
The top order batters’ minds are distracted from facing the opening overs of the following innings and if the tail really wags it can descend into chaos.
England were the sixth worst at removing the tail in the previous cycle of the World Test Championship, with the opposition averaging 87.04 after the sixth wicket fell in that period.
With the best in the world, New Zealand, conceding an average of 61.92, that is a significant 50.24-run swing across a Test.
Cast your mind back to the first Ashes Test at Edgbaston in 2023 that Australia won by two wickets.
In a chase of 282, Scott Boland as nightwatchman scored 20 from 40 balls, Pat Cummins 44 not out from 73 and Nathan Lyon a 28-ball unbeaten 16.
More was made of the Stokes declaration on day one, but fundamentally, the inability to blow the tail away in the second innings was where the game was lost.
Killing the tail is going to be imperative to England’s success not only in this series, but in this winter’s Ashes too. Tongue has shown he has the skills. The likes of Carse, Archer or Gus Atkinson could do it too.
Gobbling up rabbit pie could be more important than anyone thinks.
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Wimbledon 2025
Dates: 30 June-13 July Venue: All England Club
Coverage: Live across BBC TV, radio and online with extensive coverage on BBC iPlayer, Red Button, Connected TVs and mobile app. Full coverage guide.
Two-time defending champion Carlos Alcaraz avoided a seismic shock against Italian veteran Fabio Fognini in the Wimbledon first round to set up a meeting with British qualifier Oliver Tarvet.
Alcaraz dug deep to win 7-5 6-7 (5-7) 7-5 2-6 6-1 as he opened the Centre Court play on a sweltering first day of the grass-court Grand Slam tournament.
The 22-year-old Spaniard quickly secured victory when an entertaining contest resumed after a 15-minute pause in the deciding set.
A spectator who had been sitting in the sun was taken ill, with Alcaraz going over with a bottle of cold water to help their recovery.
Alcaraz, who is the second seed behind Italian rival Jannik Sinner, struggled on serve and made uncharacteristic errors off the ground throughout a four-and-a-half hour contest in temperatures topping 32C.
In his final Wimbledon appearance before his planned retirement, 38-year-old Fognini twice fought back to force the decider but Alcaraz regained control to extend his winning streak to 19 matches.
Alcaraz claimed his fifth Grand Slam title at the French Open earlier this month – beating Sinner in an all-time classic final – before lifting the Queen’s trophy on his return to the British grass.
Alcaraz roared in relief when he finally ended Fognini’s resistance, breaking into a broad smile and sharing a friendly embrace with his opponent.
“I tried my best but I can be better. I need to improve in the next round,” said Alcaraz.
Next he will face 21-year-old Tarvet, who gets a shot at one of sport’s superstars after beating Switzerland’s Leandro Riedi on his Wimbledon debut.
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British qualifier Tarvet into Wimbledon second round
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GB’s Fery upsets 20th seed Popyrin at Wimbledon
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Wimbledon’s hottest opening day sees players deal with sweltering conditions
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Published10 hours ago
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Nightmare start for Alcaraz
Coming from the sun-drenched region of Murcia, Alcaraz is well accustomed to playing in searing heat.
Nevertheless, having to start his latest title defence with a lengthy contest in the tricky conditions was far from ideal.
The players expecting to go deep over the fortnight want to preserve as much energy as possible in the earlier rounds, but Alcaraz needed to dig deep into his physical and mental reserves to see off Fognini.
“Playing in such a high heat is really difficult to deal with and it is even tougher when you’re playing long matches, long rallies,” Alcaraz said.
“Part of the match you can feel down a little bit because of the sun hitting all the time. I have to be ready to battle.”
Alcaraz is used to playing the opening match of Wimbledon on its most iconic court – as tradition dictates the reigning men’s champion does – but lacked the freedom and fluency for which he is known.
On a buzzing Centre Court where the atmosphere rarely faded despite the stifling weather, Alcaraz lost serve five times in an absorbing contest between two of the sport’s finest entertainers.
Alcaraz has tinkered with his opening shot this season and that may have been a contributing factor to a first-serve percentage below 50% which allowed Fognini to constantly apply pressure.
Fognini turned professional when Alcaraz was still a toddler but the expressive Italian showed how he stills loves to show off his skills on the grandest stages.
Returning smartly and playing with his trademark variety befuddled Alcaraz, whose frustration was shown in his gesturing and chuntering towards his team.
But when Alcaraz is hitting freely, it spells troubles for his opponents.
A light-hearted exchange at the start of the decider – when Fognini playfully threatened to hit a ball at his younger rival – brought the smile back to Alcaraz’s face.
From that point, he found more rhythm and cruised through the fifth set, either side of the enforced emergency break which disrupted Fognini’s focus.
“Playing the first match on Centre Court is never easy,” said Alcaraz.
“I’ve been practising really well and playing really well but Wimbledon is different. I could feel the difference.”
Fognini waves goodbye to Wimbledon
Fognini is a colourful character who can be a joy to watch but has also been known to overstep the mark – notably in a 2019 outburst when he said he wished a bomb would explode on Wimbledon.
The manner in which he pushed Alcaraz, though, was a reminder of the fluid, natural talent which has regularly troubled the very best players over the years.
The former world number nine is one of the few players to have earned multiple wins over Rafael Nadal on clay, while his ability on the red dirt also troubled Britain’s Andy Murray.
Fognini, whose best run at a major came in a run to the 2011 French Open quarter-finals, has announced he planned to retire at the end of this year, although he has not specifically said when.
After sealing victory, Alcaraz quickly directed the crowd to applaud Fognini and he was given a heartfelt ovation before flinging his shoes into the crowd.
“I don’t know why this is his last Wimbledon because with the level he is playing he can play for another three or four years,” said Alcaraz.
“Fabio is a great player and has shown his level and talent throughout his career.
“I’m sad it’s probably his last Wimbledon but I’m happy to have shared the court with him.”
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Published31 January
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Extreme weather during the Club World Cup in the United States this summer means Fifa should think about playing the men’s World Cup final at 9am next year, according to an expert.
Professor Mike Tipton of Portsmouth University, a leading specialist on the effect of extreme temperature on the human body, was asked by BBC Sport how football’s governing body should handle a heatwave at next year’s tournament.
Like many, Tipton has been struck by the brutal conditions that players have been exposed to in some matches at the Club World Cup in the US, and which have underlined the potential threat facing Fifa’s 2026 showpiece when it returns to the same country at the same time of year.
Last week saw the summer’s first major heatwave descend on eastern North America, with dozens of people hospitalised for heat-related illnesses. In New York on 24 June, for instance, the temperature rocketed to 39C – a record for June.
The MetLife Stadium just outside the city is due to stage eight matches at the World Cup, including the final itself. Like most of the other venues across the US, Canada and Mexico, it has no roof and there is limited shade for those inside.
Kick-off times for all fixtures will only be revealed after December’s draw, but insiders told BBC Sport they expect matches in the eastern time zone to start at noon, 15:00, 18:00 and 21:00 local time – with all-important European audiences and the interests of broadcasters, advertisers and sponsors in mind.
Tipton – who works with Team GB athletes including triathlete Jonny Brownlee since his collapse from heat exhaustion in Mexico in 2016 – argues that if there is a repeat of the conditions seen over the past 10 days, rescheduling to a morning slot would be the best and safest solution, even for the World Cup final.
“I’d move it to an air-conditioned stadium with a roof, and preferably to a cooler time of the year,” he said.
“But we’re already stuck with this, so the only thing you can do is go to a cooler time of day. From a thermal-physiological perspective, for both health and performance reasons, I’d be looking to start games as early as possible – but I understand the logistical caveats,” he added, acknowledging the task of getting tens of thousands of fans inside a stadium so early in the day.
“The health risks are not purely to the players, it’s also the officials and spectators, many of whom are much, much less fit. If you continue in conditions when all the rational scientific data says ‘stop’, organisers are taking on a fair amount of responsibility. What would probably happen is the game would be changed radically.
“Fifa should be thinking about where, when and how they play such games. It’s not beyond the realms that matches have to go to quarters rather than halves.”
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Published22 June
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‘Wake-up call’
While such suggestions may seem far-fetched to some, a more flexible approach is something global players’ union Fifpro is now calling for after what it calls the “wake-up call” of the Club World Cup.
At a news conference on Monday, its medical director Dr Vincent Gouttebarge said extended half-time breaks of 20 minutes in extreme heat to keep players’ core temperatures within their normal range should be considered.
Alexander Bielefeld, Fifpro’s director of policy, claimed the weather was of “increasing concern”, and that while postponing matches for heat was “slightly trickier” than in a domestic league “we clearly believe that from a health and safety perspective this is something that must take priority over commercial interests.”
Fifa guidelines currently rely on the Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT), a measure of heat stress combining temperature and humidity. If the WBGT exceeds 32C, short ‘cooling breaks’ are mandatory in both halves of a match.
In contrast, Fifpro believes breaks should be introduced once the WBGT goes above 28C, and that if it exceeds 32C matches should be delayed. On this basis, so far at the Club World Cup both PSG v Atletico Madrid in Pasadena and Chelsea v ES Tunis in Philadelphia “should have been postponed to a better place in the day and, if not available (another slot), then rescheduled”.
“We are partially happy, because Fifa have been quite responsive once the tournament was underway [and] have actually modified how they’ve been dealing with heat during matches, based on our input,” said Fifpro general secretary Alex Phillips.
“Obviously it would have been better if that had happened in advance, but they’ve put in place measures such as additional water and towels around the pitch.
“There’s a question at some point [over] what the industry sees as a precautionary threshold to players, but also to spectators, to potentially delay kick-off later on. You can apply so many pragmatic measures, such as shading, hydration, cooling, etc. At some point, that probably won’t be enough. And that’s a discussion which we need to have, even though this is a difficult conversation based on commercial interests.”
Earlier this year, researchers from Queen’s University Belfast warned the temperatures at 14 of the 16 stadiums being used for the 2026 World Cup could exceed potentially dangerous levels, with Miami and Monterrey posing the greatest risk as they do not have air-conditioned stadiums.
While Dallas and Houston do have cooling systems, it said there was still a risk to spectators if games were played in the afternoon. Significantly, the report also suggested afternoon games be avoided in New York, along with Kansas City, Boston and Philadelphia.
Fifpro says any afternoon kick-offs at six venues; Kansas City, Miami, Monterrey, Houston, Dallas and Atlanta carry an “extremely high-risk” of a “heat-stress injury”. Only two; San Francisco and Vancouver are rated “low-risk”.
When asked if Fifpro will make recommendations to Fifa before the World Cup when it comes to kick-off times at certain venues, Phillips said, “We have absolutely no power to force them to, we can only use informal pressure.
“We will use common sense arguments. We can use the MLS [Major League Soccer] protocols. They don’t play matches at midday in Florida, for example, and haven’t done for a number of years. So those kind of arguments are strong.”
However, with more matches next year (104) than at any previous World Cup, Fifa may feel its ability to adapt scheduling and postpone matches is limited.
Lessons from 1994
The dangers of playing in high temperatures in the US have been known for some time.
In 2017, England forward Rachel Daly was treated for heat exhaustion in hospital after collapsing during a match in Houston, while playing in the National Women’s Soccer League. And during last year’s Copa America, Guatemalan assistant referee Humberto Panjoj had to be withdrawn from a game in Kansas City after collapsing on the field.
But the heat seems to have been a constant theme throughout the Club World Cup. Last week Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca said it was “impossible” to organise normal training sessions amid a severe “code red” warning in Philadelphia, where 45% humidity made 37C feel a roasting 45C.
Meanwhile, Borussia Dortmund’s substitutes watched the first half of their match against Mamelodi Sundowns in Cincinnati from the dressing room, with manager Niko Kovac likening conditions to “a sauna”.
Someone who has also experienced such conditions is former Republic of Ireland goalkeeper Packie Bonner, who in 1994 played in a match against Mexico in Orlando that is still remembered for the intense 41C heat his team had to endure.
“It was unbelievable,” he told BBC Sport. “Kick-off was at noon and we couldn’t handle it at all. We were a high-pressing team and we couldn’t do that. But also your decision-making was affected. Your brain goes into a fog.”
Bonner believes conditions next year will be “treacherous from a heat point of view”.
But he added that, unlike back then when Fifa only allowed water to be given to players on the touchline, they are now allowed to drink on the pitch.
“We didn’t have all the things that they have now. Players now are a little bit more used to it, and as long as they’re hydrated it shouldn’t be a problem,” he said.
‘Climate change has loaded the dice’
So just how hot is next year’s tournament across US, Canada and Mexico likely to be?
“The hottest [so far] was USA 1994 where the temperatures in Florida and Texas were in excess of 38C,” said senior BBC weather forecaster Simon King.
“The Qatar 2022 World Cup was moved from summer, where temperatures regularly reached 40-45C, to the cooler winter. Temperatures have been in the mid to high 30s in this latest US heatwave, but in some locations such as New York the ‘heat index’ (what it feels like when considering humidity too) would have felt like it was more than 50C outside.
“Scientists are very clear that as our climate changes, extreme heat such as this are likely to become more frequent in the future. And the heatwaves could be hotter.
“In June 2023, an extreme heatwave was seen in Texas, Florida and Mexico for weeks. In Monterrey, Mexico the heat index was close to 50C and in Miami it was as high as 44C.
“While it is impossible to say a year ahead whether host cities like those will experience heatwave conditions, climate change has loaded the dice to an increasing chance of this happening. And if it does, it could feasibly be the hottest World Cup on record.
“While I can’t say that it will be just as hot as one played in the Qatari summer, it’s possible – if a heatwave occurred – that some games could be played in heat that would not be that dissimilar.”
What does Fifa say?
In a statement, Fifa said its “top priority” is the health of everyone involved in football, and that its medical experts have advised Club World Cup teams on heat management and acclimatisation.
A “sound, preventative concept” includes cooling breaks in the 30th and 75th minutes, the right to use five substitutions and an additional sub if a match goes into extra time.
Additionally, as at next year’s World Cup, all teams have a minimum of three rest days between matches to facilitate recovery.
Meanwhile, fans “are welcome to bring empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to one litre capacity into the stadiums, and local authorities may implement additional measures such as hydration reminders via stadium announcements, cooling buses and water stations. ‘Beat the heat tips’ will be shared with all ticket holders,” the statement added.
Fifa has faced criticism over its growing links with the fossil-fuel industry, and its decision to expand the 2026 World Cup to an unprecedented 48 teams has led some environmental campaigners to claim it is actually contributing to the climate change that may now be having an impact on its tournaments.
The governing body has pledged to reduce its carbon emissions by 50% by 2030, and to achieve net zero emissions by 2040.
But what seems clear is the issue of extreme heat is not going away. The majority of matches at the 2030 World Cup will be played in Spain, currently in the grip of its own heatwave.
Storm delays
It is not just the heat that could pose a threat to next year’s tournament.
On Sunday, Maresca said the decision to suspend his team’s last-16 Club World Cup tie with Benfica in Charlotte for two hours because of extreme weather was “a joke”, adding that the US is “probably not the right place” to host a major tournament.
It was the sixth match of the competition suspended because of seasonal summer thunderstorms, in line with US safety regulations, and has obviously added to fears of similar disruption at next year’s World Cup – with all the ramifications that could mean for players, fans and broadcasters.
Interestingly, back in 1994 no matches at the World Cup were delayed by storm warnings, and while the US National Weather Service suggests this is due to advancements in forecasting technology and standardised safety regulations over the past 20 years, others think the weather may also be changing.
“Climate change will also bring more extreme weather like thunderstorms as warmer air holds more moisture and energy for more frequent thunderstorms,” said King. “Studies show that for every 1C in global warming, there’s a 12% increase in lightning.”
Whatever the reason, while such delays are rare in Europe, the chances of suspensions at World Cup matches next year appear considerable.
In the last week alone, MLS matches between Columbus and Philadelphia, Colorado and LA, and Dallas and San Jose have all featured storm delays of up to two hours.
Fifa may draw comfort from the fact that only one of the six match suspensions at the Club World Cup – at the MetLife outside New York – took place in a city staging World Cup games.
Meanwhile, the Concacaf Gold Cup – which has also been taking place in the US over the past few weeks – has suffered no weather delays to date. But perhaps significantly, seven of the host stadiums are covered.
Given that only five of those being used for the 2026 World Cup have a roof, scrutiny over Fifa’s choice of venues – along with the kick-off times of matches – is likely to intensify.
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Published31 January
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Published
World number 33 Yulia Putintseva raised security concerns about a spectator during her first-round match at Wimbledon, asking for them to be ejected.
Early on in her match against Amanda Anisimova on court 15, the 30-year-old complained directly to the umpire about a spectator, whom she described as “crazy” and “dangerous”.
A club spokesperson said the matter was “dealt with”.
During a change of ends when trailing 3-0 in the opening set, Putintseva, from Kazakhstan, first voiced her concerns.
“Can you take him out, I am not going to continue playing until he leaves. These people are dangerous, they are crazy,” she said.
She was then seen pointing towards an area of the crowd and described the person as wearing green.
The chair umpire came down onto the court and spoke to three members of security staff.
When Putintseva was told play would resume, she was heard saying she did not want to do so until security had handled it.
“Take him out, because maybe he has a knife,” she said.
Putintseva was emotional later in the match and went on to lose 6-0 6-0 in 45 minutes.
She did not speak to the media afterwards.
A spokesperson for the All England Lawn Tennis Club (AELTC) told BBC Sport: “Following a complaint about the behaviour of a spectator at the match on court 15, the chair umpire informed security and the matter was dealt with.”
Anisimova, meanwhile, told the BBC she believed the spectator had been saying something “when [Putintseva] was about to serve” and added: “I am sure that we were protected”.
Earlier, AELTC chief executive Sally Bolton said on the subject of security: “We’re well-versed in the measures that need to be put in place so players can go about playing here in the confidence they’re being well looked after.”
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Published31 January
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