Gaza aid contractor tells BBC he saw colleagues fire on hungry Palestinians
A former security contractor for Gaza’s controversial new Israel- and US-backed aid distribution sites has told the BBC that he witnessed colleagues opening fire several times on hungry Palestinians who had posed no threat, including with machine guns.
On one occasion, he said, a guard had opened fire from a watchtower with a machine gun because a group of women, children and elderly people was moving too slowly away from the site.
When asked to respond the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) said the allegations were categorically false.
They referred us to a statement saying that no civilians ever came under fire at the GHF distribution sites.
The GHF began its operations in Gaza at the end of May, distributing limited aid from several sites in southern and central Gaza. That followed an 11-week total blockade of Gaza by Israel during which no food entered the territory.
The system has been widely criticised for forcing vast numbers of people to walk through active combat zones to a handful of sites. Since the GHF started up, Israeli forces have killed more than 400 Palestinians trying to retrieve food aid from its sites, the UN and local doctors say. Israel says the new distribution system stops aid going to Hamas.
Continuing his description of the incident at one of the GHF sites – in which he said guards fired on a group of Palestinians – the former contractor said: “As that happened, another contractor on location, standing on the berm overlooking the exit, opened up with 15 to 20 shots of repetitive weapons fire at the crowd.
“A Palestinian man dropped to the ground motionless. And then the other contractor who was standing there was like, ‘damn, I think you got one’. And then they laughed about it.”
The contractor, who spoke to us on condition of anonymity, said GHF managers had brushed off his report as a coincidence, suggesting that the Palestinian man could have “tripped” or been “tired and passed out”.
The GHF claimed the man who made these allegations is a “disgruntled former contractor” who they had terminated for misconduct, which he denies. He showed us evidence that he left the post on good terms.
The man we spoke to, who said he had worked at all four of the GHF distribution sites, described a culture of impunity with few rules or controls.
He said contractors were given no clear rules of engagement or standard operating procedures, and were told by one team leader: “if you feel threatened, shoot – shoot to kill and ask questions later”.
The culture in the company, he said, felt like “we’re going into Gaza so it’s no rules. Do what you want.”
“If a Palestinian is walking away from the site and not demonstrating any hostile intent, and we’re shooting warning shots at them regardless, we are wrong, we are criminally negligent,” he told me.
He told us that each site had CCTV monitoring the activity in the area, and GHF insistence that no one there had been hurt or shot at was “an absolute bare-faced lie”.
GHF said that gunfire heard in footage shared with the BBC was coming from Israeli forces.
Team leaders referred to Gazans as “zombie hordes”, the former contractor said, “insinuating that these people have no value.”
The man also said Palestinians were coming to harm in other ways at GHF sites, for example by being hit by debris from stun grenades, being sprayed with mace or being pushed by the crowds into razor wire.
He said he had witnessed several occasions in which Palestinians appeared to have been seriously hurt, including one man who had a full can of pepper spray in his face, and a woman who he said was hit with the metal part of a stun grenade, improperly fired into a crowd.
“This metal piece hit her directly in the head and she dropped to the ground, not moving,” he said. “I don’t know if she was dead. I know for a fact she was unconscious and completely limp.”
Earlier this week more than 170 charities and other NGOs called for the GHF to be shut down. The organisations, including Oxfam and Save the Children, say Israeli forces and armed groups “routinely” open fire on Palestinians seeking aid.
Israel denies its soldiers deliberately shoot at aid recipients and says the GHF’s system provides direct assistance to people who need it, bypassing Hamas interference.
The GHF says it had delivered more than 52 million meals in five weeks and that other organisations “stand by helplessly as their aid is looted”.
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.
At least 57,130 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.
Congress passes Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ cutting taxes and spending
The US Congress has passed Donald Trump’s sprawling tax and spending bill in a significant and hard-fought victory for the president and his domestic agenda.
After a gruelling session on Capitol Hill, the House of Representatives passed the bill by a vote of 218 to 214 on Thursday afternoon. It was approved in the Senate on Tuesday by one vote.
Trump had given the Republican-controlled Congress a deadline of 4 July to send him a final version of the bill to sign into law.
The Congressional Budget Office estimates the bill could add $3.3tn (£2.4tn) to federal deficits over the next 10 years and leave millions without health coverage – a forecast that the White House disputes.
- ANALYSIS: Trump gets major win – but debate over his mega-bill is just beginning
- EXPLAINER: What’s in Trump’s budget bill?
Speaking to reporters on Thursday evening, Trump said the bill would “turn this country into a rocket ship”.
“This is going to be a great bill for the country,” he said.
He is expected to sign it into law at a ceremony on the 4 July national holiday at 17:00 EDT (22:00 BST).
A triumphant Republican Speaker Mike Johnson emerged from the House after the vote and told reporters “belief” was key to rallying support within his party.
“I believed in the people that are standing here behind me… Some of them are more fun to deal with,” he said. “I mean that with the greatest level of respect.”
Among those he had to convince was Representative Chip Roy, a Texas Republican who was a firm “no” just days ago when the Senate passed its version of the bill. He called the Senate version a “travesty”, but changed his mind by the time voting had begun.
“I feel like we got to a good result on key things,” Roy said, although the House did not make any changes to the Senate bill.
While some Republicans, like Roy, had resisted the Senate version, only two lawmakers from Trump’s own party voted “nay” on Thursday: Thomas Massie and Brian Fitzpatrick.
After Johnson announced that the legislation had passed the chamber by four votes, dozens of Republican lawmakers gathered on the House floor chanting “USA! USA!”
The bill’s passage on Thursday was delayed by Democratic House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, who delivered the longest speech in the chamber’s history.
His “magic minute” address, which is a custom that allows party leaders to speak for as long as they like, ran for eight hours and 45 minutes.
Jeffries pledged to take his “sweet time on behalf of the American people”, decrying the bill’s impact on poor Americans.
The legislation makes savings through making cuts to food benefits and health care and rolling back tax breaks for clean energy projects.
It also delivers on two of Trump’s major campaign promises – making his 2017 tax cuts permanent and lifting taxes on tips, overtime and Social Security recipients – at a cost of $4.5tn over 10 years.
About $150bn (£110bn) will be spent on border security, detention centres and immigration enforcement officers. Another $150bn is allocated for military expenditures, including the president’s “gold dome” missile defence programme.
Democrats, who had used procedural manoeuvres to stall the House vote, were roundly critical of the final bill.
They portrayed it as taking health care and food subsidies away from millions of Americans while giving tax cuts to the rich.
California’s Nancy Pelosi, the former speaker, said “today ushers in a dark and harrowing time”, and called the bill a “dangerous checklist of extreme Republican priorities”.
North Carolina’s Deborah Ross said: “Shame on those who voted to hurt so many in the service of so few.”
While Arizona’s Yassamin Ansari said she was “feeling really sad right now”, while Marc Veasey of Texas labelled the Republican Party the party of “cowards, chaos and corruption”.
The fate of the so-called ‘big, beautiful bill’ hung in the balance for much of Wednesday as Republican rebels with concerns about the impact on national debt held firm – prompting a furious missive from Trump.
“What are the Republicans waiting for??? What are you trying to prove??? MAGA IS NOT HAPPY, AND IT’S COSTING YOU VOTES!!!,” he wrote on Truth Social just after midnight local time on Thursday.
Both chambers of Congress are controlled by Trump’s Republican Party, but within the party several factions were at odds over key policies in the lengthy legislation.
In the early hours of Thursday, Republican leadership grew more confident, and a procedural vote on the bill passed just after 03:00 EDT (07:00 GMT).
The final vote on the bill would come almost 12 hours later, at 14:30 EDT (19:30 GMT).
Angélique Kidjo first black African to get Hollywood Walk of Fame star
Musical icon Angélique Kidjo has become the first black African performer to be selected for a star on the prestigious Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Kidjo, who comes from the West African country of Benin and has won five Grammy awards, was among the 35 names announced as part of the Walk of Fame’s class of 2026 list.
The 64-year-old was hailed as Africa’s “premier diva” during a press conference announcing the list on Wednesday.
Singer Miley Cyrus, actor Timothée Chalamet, actress Demi Moore and former basketball player Shaquille O’Neal are also among those set to be honoured with a star on Los Angeles’ famous walk.
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Kidjo receives the honour after making music for more than four decades and releasing 16 albums.
The songstress has won fans across the world with her commanding voice and ability to fuse West African styles with the likes of funk, jazz and R&B.
Her long list of collaborators includes forces such as Burna Boy, Philip Glass, Sting and Alicia Keys.
Kidjo joins Charlize Theron, a white South African actress, in representing Africa on the Walk of Fame, which comprises more than 2,700 stars.
Theron received her star in 2005.
The date on which Kidjo will see her star unveiled on the Walk of Fame has not yet been announced.
After recipients have been selected for a star, they have two years to schedule induction ceremonies.
Kidjo grew up in Benin, but left for Paris in 1983, citing oppression from the country’s then communist government.
“From the moment the communist regime arrived in Benin, I became aware that the freedom we enjoy can be snatched away in a second,” she told the BBC in 2023.
She said she has been driven by curiosity since childhood, adding: “my nickname was ‘when, why, how?’. I want to understand things, to understand my place in this world.”
Kidjo worked as a backing singer in France before striking out as a solo artist in 1990, with the album Parakou.
She is a Unicef and Oxfam goodwill ambassador, and has her own charity, Batonga, which is dedicated to supporting the education of young girls in Africa.
More about African music from the BBC:
- Ghana’s love affair with reggae and Jamaican Patois
- Singer Libianca on ‘horrific threats’ over Cameroon war
- Who should count as African at the Grammy Awards?
- How old English sea shanties inspired Cape Verdean singer
- Brave, inspiring, crazy – the joy of managing Fela Kuti
Dozens killed in Gaza as Israel intensifies bombardment, rescuers say
At least 69 people have been killed by Israeli fire across Gaza on Thursday, rescuers say, as Israel intensified its bombardment of the Palestinian territory.
One air strike killed 15 people at a school-turned-shelter for displaced families in Gaza City, according to the Hamas-run Civil Defence agency. The Israeli military said it targeted a “key” Hamas operative based there.
The Civil Defence also reported that 38 people were killed while queueing for aid, or on their way to pick it up. The military said such reports of extensive casualties were “lies”.
It comes as pressure mounts on both Israel and Hamas to agree to a new ceasefire and hostage release deal being pushed by US President Donald Trump.
Trump announced on Tuesday that Israel had agreed to the “necessary conditions” to finalize a 60-day ceasefire. However, there are still obstacles that could prevent a quick agreement.
Hamas has said it is studying the proposals – the details of which have still not been made public – but that it still wants an end to the war and an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who will travel to Washington on Monday, has meanwhile insisted that the Palestinian armed group must be eliminated.
On Thursday, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said its aircraft had struck around 150 “terror targets” across Gaza over the previous 24 hours, including fighters, tunnels and weapons.
Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry said 118 people had been killed during the same period.
Fifteen people, most of them women and children, were killed when a school housing displaced families in the al-Rimal neighbourhood of Gaza City was struck before dawn on Thursday, the Hamas-run Civil Defence agency and medics said.
Witness Wafaa al-Arqan told Reuters news agency: “Suddenly, we found the tent collapsing over us and a fire burning… What can we do? Is it fair that all these children burned?”
The IDF said it struck a “key Hamas terrorist” who was operating in a “command-and-control centre” in Gaza City, without mentioning the school.
The IDF added that it took numerous steps to mitigate the risk of harming civilians and accused Hamas of using human shields – an allegation the group has repeatedly denied.
At least another five displaced people were reportedly killed when a tent was struck overnight in the southern al-Mawasi area, where the IDF has told residents of areas affected by its evacuation orders to head for their own safety.
Ashraf Abu Shaba, who lived in a neighbouring tent, said he saw the bodies of children and women wrapped in blankets afterwards.
“The occupation [Israel] claims there are safe zones, but there are no safe zones. Every place is a target… The situation is unbearable,” he added.
Later, Civil Defence spokesman Mahmoud Bassal told AFP news agency that another 38 people were killed by Israeli forces while seeking aid.
He said 25 were killed near the Israeli military’s Netzarim corridor in central Gaza. Six died at another location nearby, while seven were killed in the southern Rafah area, he added.
Medics at Nasser hospital in the southern city of Khan Younis separately told Reuters that at least 20 people were killed while making their way to an aid distribution centre.
There was no direct response to the reports from the IDF.
Last week, the IDF said it was examining reports of civilians being harmed while approaching sites in southern and central Gaza run by the US- and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).
On Thursday, IDF spokesman Brig-Gen Effie Defrin acknowledged at a briefing that Israeli forces were facing a “complex challenge” and drawing “lessons from every incident to prevent similar cases in the future”.
But he declared: “The reports of allegations of extensive casualties in the aid distribution centres are lies.”
There have been reports of deadly incidents near the distribution sites almost every day since the GHF began operating on 26 May.
According to Gaza’s health ministry, at least 408 people have been killed near GHF centres over the past five weeks. Another 175 people have been killed seeking aid elsewhere, including along routes used by UN aid convoys, it says.
The GHF, which uses US private security contractors, said “distribution at all sites ran smoothly” on Thursday and that it had now handed out more than one million boxes of food.
The GHF also rejected as “categorically false” allegations from a former security contractor, who told the BBC that he witnessed colleagues opening fire on civilians waiting for aid.
The UN and other aid groups refuse to co-operate with the GHF, saying its new system contravenes fundamental humanitarian principles.
The US and Israel say the GHF’s system will prevent aid being stolen by Hamas.
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.
At least 57,130 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s health ministry.
Russia becomes first state to recognise Afghanistan’s Taliban government
Russia has become the first country to formally recognise Taliban rule, with Afghanistan’s Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi calling it a “courageous” decision.
He met Russia’s ambassador to Afghanistan, Dmitry Zhirnov, in Kabul on Thursday, where Mr Zhirnov officially conveyed his government’s decision to recognise the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
Muttaqi said it was “a new phase of positive relations, mutual respect, and constructive engagement”, and that the shift would serve as “an example” to other countries.
The Taliban have sought international recognition and investment since they returned to power in August 2021, despite reports of increasing violations on human rights.
“We believe that the act of official recognition of the government of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan will give impetus to the development of productive bilateral cooperation between our countries,” Russia’s foreign ministry said in a statement.
It said Russia saw the potential for “commercial and economic” cooperation in “energy, transportation, agriculture and infrastructure”, and that it would continue to help Kabul to fight against the threats of terrorism and drug trafficking.
Russia was one of very few countries that did not close down their embassy in Afghanistan in 2021, and said on Telegram that “expanding the dialogue with Kabul” was critical in terms of regional security and economic development.
The country was also the first to sign an international economic deal with the Taliban in 2022, where they agreed to supply oil, gas and wheat to Afghanistan.
The Taliban was removed from Russia’s list of terrorist organisations in April this year with the intention to pave the way for the establishment of a “full-fledged partnership” with Kabul, according to the Russian foreign ministry.
Russian President Vladimir Putin also referred to the Taliban as an “ally” in fighting terrorism in July last year, with representatives travelling to Moscow for talks as early as 2018.
The two countries have a complex history, after the Soviet Union invaded the country in 1979 and fought a nine-year war that cost them 15,000 personnel.
The decision to install a USSR-backed government in Kabul turned the Soviets into an international pariah, and they eventually withdrew from Afghanistan in February 1989.
Western governments and humanitarian organisations have widely condemned the Taliban government, in particular for their implementation of Sharia, which places heavy restrictions on women and girls.
In the past four years, women have been barred from accessing secondary and higher education, are unable to leave their homes without a male chaperone and are subject to strict dress codes.
Legislation has become increasingly restrictive, with the latest installation of “virtue” laws banning women from speaking outside of their home.
The United Nations has said the rules amount to “gender apartheid”, while also reporting public floggings and brutal attacks on former government officials.
Strict sanctions were placed on Afghanistan in 2021 by the United Nations Security Council, most notably the freezing of approximately $9bn in assets.
While China, the United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan and Pakistan have all designated ambassadors to Kabul, Russia is now the only country to recognise the Taliban government since their return to power almost four years ago.
Oasis ‘sounding huge’ as comeback tour launches
It’s the gig that fans have been waiting 5,795 days for, as Oasis kick off their reunion tour at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium on Friday night.
The venue has been hosting soundchecks and rehearsals all week, with passersby treated to snatches of songs such as Cigarettes & Alcohol, Wonderwall and Champagne Supernnova.
“It’s sounding huge,” Noel Gallagher told talkSPORT radio. “This is it, there’s no going back now.”
The Oasis Live ’25 tour was the biggest concert launch ever seen in the UK and Ireland, with more than 10 million fans from 158 countries queuing to buy tickets last summer.
- Cardiff gets Oasis fever as tour launches at Principality Stadium
Around 900,000 tickets were sold, but many fans complained when standard standing tickets advertised at £135 plus fees were re-labelled “in demand” and changed on Ticketmaster to £355 plus fees.
The sale prompted an investigation from the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), which said Ticketmaster may have breached consumer protection law by selling “platinum” tickets for almost 2.5 times the standard price, without explaining they came with no additional benefits.
The CMA ordered Ticketmaster to change the way it labels tickets and reveals prices to fans in the future. Ticketmaster said it “welcomed” the advice.
Still, the debacle has done nothing to dampen the excitement in Cardiff, where fans have arrived from Spain, Peru, Japan, America and elsewhere for the opening night.
“For me, Oasis represents an overwhelming optimism about being young and loving music,” says Jeff Gachini, a fan from Kenya who’s making his first visit to the UK for the show.
“To write simple music that relays the simple truth of life is very difficult. For me, they do that better than anyone.”
Brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher will be joined on stage by Gem Archer, Paul “Bonehead” Arthurs and Andy Bell, all former members of Oasis, alongside drummer Joey Waronker, who has previously recorded with Beck and REM; and toured with Liam.
The band will also be augmented by a brass section, and backing singer Jess Greenfield, who is part of Noel’s side project the High Flying Birds.
Meanwhile, rumours about the setlist have been swirling all week, as Oasis songs echoed around the Principality Stadium.
One purported running order that was leaked to Reddit suggested the band would open with Hello and finish with Champagne Supernova, with other highlights including Acquiesece, Roll With It, Live Forever and Supersonic.
Noel is also expected to take lead vocals twice during the show, on short sets including songs such as Half The World Away and The Masterplan.
Britain’s biggest band
Oasis were the biggest band in Britain from 1994 to 1997, selling tens of millions of copies of their first three albums Definitely Maybe, (What’s The Story) Morning Glory and Be Here Now.
Liam’s sneering vocals and Noel’s distorted guitars brought a rock and roll swagger back to the charts, revitalising British guitar music after an influx of self-serious Seattle grunge.
Born and raised in Manchester, they formed the band to escape the dead-end mundanity of their working class backgrounds.
“In Manchester you either became a musician, a footballer, a drugs dealer or work in a factory. And there aren’t a lot of factories left, you know?” Noel Gallagher once said.
“We didn’t start in university or anything like this. We’re not a collection of friends that kind of come together and discuss things musically.
“We started the group… because we were all on the dole and we were unemployed and we rehearsed and we thought we were pretty good.”
Oasis was originally Liam’s band, performing under the name The Rain. But after watching them live, Noel offered to join – on the condition that he became chief songwriter and de facto leader.
That fait accompli brought them worldwide fame, culminating in two open-air gigs at Knebworth House in summer 1996.
Nearly five per cent of the UK population applied for tickets, with a then-record 125,000 people watching the band top a line-up that also included The Prodigy, Manic Street Preachers, Ocean Colour Scene, The Chemical Brothers, The Charlatans and a Beatles tribute.
But festering tension between the Gallagher brothers often spilled over into verbal and physical violence.
Backstage at a gig in Barcelona in 2000, for example, Noel attacked Liam after he questioned the legitimacy of his eldest daughter. The guitarist walked out for the rest of the European tour, leaving the band to continue with a stand-in.
Although they repaired the relationship, the insults and in-fighting continued until 28 August, 2009, when Oasis split up minutes before they took the stage at the Rock en Seine festival in Paris.
“People will write and say what they like, but I simply could not go on working with Liam a day longer,” Noel wrote in a statement at the time.
He would later recount a backstage argument in which his younger brother grabbed his guitar and started “wielding it like an axe”, adding, “he nearly took my face off with it”.
Since then, they’ve pursued successful solo careers, while constantly fielding questions about an Oasis reunion.
Liam called the idea “inevitable” in 2020, and said the band should reform to support NHS workers during the Covid-19 pandemic. However, he said his brother had spurned the idea, despite a lucrative offer from promoters.
“There was a lot of money knocking about,” he told ITV’s Jonathan Ross Show. “It was £100 million to do a tour.
“But [Noel] isn’t into it. He’s after a knighthood, isn’t he?”
The reconciliation took another five years and, with neither of the Gallaghers consenting to an interview, it’s hard to know what informed their decision to get back together.
Tabloid newspapers suggested that Noel’s divorce from Sara McDonald in 2022 led to a thaw in relations. Others have suggested the brothers simply wanted the Oasis story to have a more satisfactory conclusion than a dressing room bust-up.
“I’ve heard everything is honky dory and they’re getting on great,” says Tim Abbott, former managing director of Oasis’s record label, Creation.
“I’ve worked with bands in the past that had separate limos, separate walkways onto the stage. I don’t think they’ll get to that. They’re grown men.”
Whatever sparked the reunion, the sold-out tour will see the band play 41 shows between July and November, spanning the UK & Ireland, North America, Oceania and South America.
“Probably the biggest and most pleasing surprise of the reunion announcement is how huge it was internationally,” said Oasis’s co-manager Alec McKinlay in an interview with Music Week.
“Honestly, we knew it would be big here, and that doesn’t take much intuition. But looking outside the UK, we knew they had a strong fanbase, we did all the stats.
“We were quite cautious about what that would mean when it came to people actually buying tickets but we were just bowled over by how huge it was.”
McKinlay added that the band had no plans for new music, and described the tour as their “last time around”.
They take to the stage for the first time in 16 years at 20:15 UK time on Friday night.
Shunning the usual rock and roll trappings, Noel Gallagher was spotted arriving for the show by train.
Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom confirm split
Pop star Katy Perry and actor Orlando Bloom have officially confirmed they have split, US media outlets say, six years after getting engaged.
The couple have been romantically linked since 2016 and have a four-year-old daughter.
In a joint statement issued to US media outlets, representatives for the couple said the pair “have been shifting their relationship over the past many months to focus on co-parenting”.
“They will continue to be seen together as a family, as their shared priority is – and always will be – raising their daughter with love, stability and mutual respect.”
The statement was being released due to the “abundance of recent interest and conversation” surrounding their relationship, it added.
The pop star, 40, and the 48-year-old actor split in 2017 but got back together shortly afterwards. They got engaged on Valentine’s Day in 2019.
A year later Perry revealed she was pregnant in the music video for her single Never Worn White.
Their daughter Daisy Dove was born later that year, with Unicef announcing the news on its Instagram account. Both Perry and Bloom are goodwill ambassadors for the United Nations agency that helps children.
The couple’s split follows a tough year for Perry. Her most recent album, 143, and its lead single Woman’s World, were not as well received as her previous music.
The singer is currently on tour, but ticket sales have reportedly been slower than earlier in her career.
Perry and a group of other female celebrities also faced backlash after their Blue Origin space trip in in April, a reaction which Perry said left her feeling “battered and bruised”.
The US singer, who was previously married to Russell Brand, shot to fame in 2008 with the single I Kissed A Girl, which reached number one in the UK.
Her hits since then have included Roar, California Gurls, Firework and Never Really Over.
Bloom was previously married to Australian model Miranda Kerr, and they have a son, 14-year-old Flynn.
The British actor has starred in Pirates Of The Caribbean, The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit.
American teen pilot detained on small island in Antarctica
An American teenager has been detained on an Antarctic island, creating a major delay in his attempt to fly his small plane to every continent that is being followed online by more than a million people.
Chilean authorities stopped Ethan Guo, 19, after he submitted a false flight plan, according to the BBC’s US partner CBS News.
His deviation from that plan in the air had “activated alert protocols”, Chile’s General Directorate of Civil Aeronautics said in a statement.
Mr Guo was taken into custody after landing on King George Island, home to a number of international research stations and their staffs, where July temperatures typically stay well below freezing.
Mr Guo’s small Cessna 182 aircraft took off from the city of Punta Arenas, near the southernmost point of Chile, and flew to the island off the Atlantic coast, which is claimed by Chile. It is named after England’s King George III.
He was detained at Teniente R. Marsh airport.
Mr Guo had allegedly submitted a plan to fly over Punta Arenas, but not beyond that, according to regional prosecutor Cristian Cristoso Rifo, as cited by CBS.
He has been charged for violating two articles of the country’s aeronautical code, including one that could lead to short-term imprisonment.
In the statement, Chile’s General Directorate of Civil Aeronautics said Mr Guo had also allegedly violated the Antarctic Treaty, which regulates international relations with respect to the uninhabited continent.
Mr Guo posted an update on X on Wednesday, saying: “I’m alive everyone, I’ll make an update soon.”
Ethan Guo has flown his Cessna aircraft to all the other six continents in his journey spanning more than 140 days, according to his social media feed.
He is hoping to become the first pilot to complete solo flights across all seven continents in the Cessna aircraft, and simultaneously aims to raise $1m (£ 731,000) for cancer research at the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.
Zarah Sultana says she is quitting Labour to start party with Corbyn
Ex-Labour MP Zarah Sultana has announced she is resigning from the party, saying she will be founding a new party with her former leader Jeremy Corbyn.
Sultana, the Coventry South MP stripped of the Labour whip last year for backing a move to scrap the two-child benefit cap, said the new party would be formed with other independent MPs and activists, aiming to challenge a “broken” Westminster system.
Corbyn has been contacted but has not confirmed his involvement to the BBC.
However last night, he had hinted he may form a new party, telling ITV’s Peston “there is a thirst for an alternative” and that a “grouping will come together”.
In a social media post, Sultana said the government is “an active participant in genocide” in Gaza – and highlighted growing poverty, the government’s position on welfare, and the cost of living as reasons for establishing her new party.
“Labour has completely failed to improve people’s lives. And across the political establishment, from Farage to Starmer, they smear people of conscience trying to stop a genocide in Gaza as terrorists.
“But the truth is clear: this government is an active participant in genocide. And the British people oppose it.”
Israel has strenuously denied accusations it is committing genocide or genocidal acts in Gaza.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has described the situation in Gaza as “appalling and intolerable” and repeatedly called for a ceasefire, as well as the release of hostages.
But some MPs want him to go further and describe the situation in Gaza as a genocide, claims currently being examined by the International Court of Justice.
Sultana also referenced the government’s welfare bill that passed this week, adding: “The government wants to make disabled people suffer; they just can’t decide how much.”
“We’re not an island of strangers,” she says, referencing a speech given by the prime minister in May about immigration, which he has since said he regrets. And she says at the next election, “the choice will be stark: socialism or barbarism”.
Asked for a response to her resignation and comments, a Labour Party spokesperson said: “In just 12 months, this Labour government has boosted wages, delivered an extra four million NHS appointments, opened 750 free breakfast clubs, secured three trade deals and four interest rate cuts lowering mortgage payments for millions.
“Only Labour can deliver the change needed to renew Britain.”
Sultana was elected as a Labour MP at the 2024 general election but was suspended not long after, and has since sat in the Commons as an independent.
She was suspended with seven other Labour MPs, including former shadow chancellor John McDonnell, for defying the government over its two-child benefit cap.
Four of the rebels have since returned to Labour, but Sultana and McDonnell remain independents.
Despite her suspension, she had remained a member of the Labour Party.
Responding to Sultana’s announcement, McDonnell posted on social media: “I am dreadfully sorry to lose Zarah from the Labour Party.
“The people running Labour at the moment need to ask themselves why a young, articulate, talented, extremely dedicated socialist feels she now has no home in the Labour Party and has to leave.”
Last year, Corbyn united with four other MPs elected as independents to establish an alliance in the House of Commons.
All five of the group beat Labour candidates in July’s election with their pro-Palestinian stance in constituencies with large Muslim populations.
Speaking to ITV’s Peston programme, he said he and fellow pro-Gaza independents would “come together” and “there will be an alternative”.
He said it would be based on “peace rather than war”.
His alliance includes MPs Shockat Adam, Ayoub Khan, Adnan Hussain, and Iqbal Mohamed.
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Boxer Julio Cesar Chavez Jr arrested by US immigration
US immigration agents have arrested famed Mexican boxer Julio Cesar Chavez Jr, 39, and plan to deport him to Mexico where he has “an active arrest warrant… for his involvement in organised crime”, US officials announced on Thursday.
Less than a week before his arrest, the former middleweight world champion was defeated by influencer-turned-boxer Jake Paul at a match in California.
US officials say he is affiliated with the notorious Mexican Sinaloa drug cartel. His lawyer denied the claims.
“Under President Trump, no one is above the law – including world-famous athletes,” a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said in a statement following his arrest.
Chavez Jr was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers in Studio City, Los Angeles, on Thursday.
His fight against Paul was in nearby Anaheim on Saturday. Chavez Jr is the son of former boxing champion Julio Cesar Chavez Sr, who is considered to be the best boxer in Mexico’s history.
The DHS statement said that the “prominent Mexican boxer and criminal illegal alien” is being processed for “expedited removal” .
“Chavez is a Mexican citizen who has an active arrest warrant in Mexico for his involvement in organized crime and trafficking firearms, ammunition, and explosives,” the statement said.
It added that officials believe that he may be affiliated with the Sinaloa Cartel, which President Donald Trump designated as a terrorist organisation on his first day back in office in January.
Describing the alleged connection, the statement says he applied for US permanent residency last year due to his marriage to a US citizen “who is connected to the Sinaloa Cartel through a prior relationship with the now-deceased son of the infamous cartel leader Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman”.
According to US officials, Chavez Jr has been arrested and jailed for several offences in the US, many involving weapons.
In January 2024, he was arrested and later convicted for illegal possession of an assault weapon, officials said.
In 2023, a local judge in the US issued an arrest warrant against him for allegedly trafficking weapons for a criminal organisation. Nearly a decade earlier, in 2012, he was arrested for driving without a licence under the influence drugs or alcohol.
He also allegedly made multiple fraudulent statements to US immigration authorities in his attempts to gain permanent residency and over-stayed a tourist visa that expired last February.
A lawyer for Chavez Jr called his arrest “nothing more than another headline to terrorise the Latin community”.
Asked about the allegations of a cartel connection, lawyer Michael Goldstein told NBC: “This is the first we’ve ever heard of these outrageous allegations.”
Two weeks before the bout against Paul, Chavez Jr held a public workout in LA where he spoke to the LA Times about the massive uptick in immigration raids that have swept the city in the past month.
He said that his own trainer was afraid to come to work, due to fear of deportation.
“I was even scared, to tell you the truth. It’s very ugly,” he said, accusing US immigration agents of “giving the community an example of violence”.
“I’m from Sinaloa, where things are really ugly, and to come here, to such a beautiful country with everything… and see Trump attacking immigrants, Latinos, for no reason. Not being with God makes you think you know everything. Trump made a bad decision.”
He added: “After everything that’s happened, I wouldn’t want to be deported.”
Reservoir Dogs actor Michael Madsen dies aged 67
Hollywood actor Michael Madsen died in his California home on Thursday morning, US media reported. He was 67.
He was found unresponsive by authorities responding to a 911 call at his Malibu home and pronounced dead at 08:25 local time (15:25 GMT), according to The Hollywood Reporter.
He is believed to have died of cardiac arrest, according to a representative.
Madsen was a prolific actor, best known for his roles in the Quentin Tarantino movies Reservoir Dogs, Kill Bill: Vol. 2, The Hateful Eight and Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.
In Reservoir Dogs, one of the seminal movies of the 1990s, he played the thief Mr Blonde, described by fellow characters as “psycho”, and shocked audiences in a scene where he cut off a policeman’s ear.
During a career spanning four decades, Madsen also took on a number of tv roles.
In both TV and film, he often portrayed the law enforcers like sheriffs and detectives, as well as the law breakers, such as a washed-out hitman in the Kill Bill franchise.
In recent years, he lent his voices to video games, including Grand Theft Auto III and the Dishonored series.
Madsen was born in Chicago in September 1957. His father was a Navy veteran of World War Two who later became a firefighter, and his mother was a film-maker.
He was the brother of Virginia Madsen, who is known for several movies including Sideways, for which she was nominated for an Oscar and Golden Globe.
He was married three times, and is survived by four children, including actor Christian Madsen.
Madsen divorced his wife of 28 years, DeAnna, in 2024, over the death of their son Hudson, according to People magazine.
“My brother Michael has left the stage,” Virginia wrote in a statement to Variety.
“He was thunder and velvet. Mischief wrapped in tenderness. A poet disguised as an outlaw. A father, a son, a brother – etched in contradiction, tempered by love that left its mark.”
BBC senior staff told to ‘step back’ from duties following row
The BBC has told a small number of senior staff to step back from their day-to-day duties on music and live events, following the broadcast of Bob Vylan’s controversial Glastonbury set.
The punk duo led a chant of “death, death to the IDF [Israel Defence Forces]” and made other derogatory comments during their performance, which was available to watch via a live stream on iPlayer.
In a statement, the BBC said there was “no place for antisemitism” in its output, and that it was taking action to “ensure proper accountability for those found to be responsible” for the broadcast.
The BBC also said Bob Vylan were one of seven Glastonbury acts it had deemed “high risk” in advance of the festival.
The broadcaster said it would make “immediate changes to livestreaming music events”, so that “any music performances deemed high risk by the BBC will now not be broadcast live or streamed live” in the future.
The corporation’s chair, Samir Shah, said the decision not to pull the live feed was “unquestionably an error of judgement”.
Earlier on Thursday, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy told the House of Commons she was unsatisfied with the BBC’s response after she had asked questions about due diligence, senior oversight, and the delay in pulling the live feed.
“Given the seriousness of what happened, and particularly we heard in the House the absolute shocking stories of the impact this has had on the Jewish community in this country – given the seriousness of this, I would expect there to be accountability at the highest levels [of the BBC],” she said.
Shadow culture secretary Stuart Andrew said the BBC’s “belated response suggests a lack of vigilance and proper oversight”, adding the BBC has “clear responsibilities when broadcasting live events”.
The BBC has also been criticised by the UK’s chief rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis, while media regulator Ofcom said the corporation had “questions to answer”.
During their Glastonbury set, Bob Vylan’s singer Pascal Robinson-Foster, who performs under the stage name Bobby Vylan, also spoke about a record label boss he used to work for.
That boss would “speak very strongly about his support for Israel”, and had put his name to a letter urging Glastonbury to cancel Irish-language rap trio Kneecap’s performance, the musician said.
“Who do I see on that list of names but that bald-headed [expletive] I used to work for. We’ve done it all, all right? From working in bars to working for [expletive] Zionists.”
In a message to staff on Thursday, director general Tim Davie said: “I deeply regret that such offensive and deplorable behaviour appeared on the BBC and want to say sorry – to our audience and to all of you, but in particular to Jewish colleagues and the Jewish community.”
The BBC said Bob Vylan had been deemed high risk following a risk assessment process applied to all acts appearing at Glastonbury.
The duo, along with six other acts, were included in this category, but the BBC said they “were all deemed suitable for live streaming with appropriate mitigations”.
The statement continued: “Prior to Glastonbury, a decision was taken that compliance risks could be mitigated in real time on the live stream – through the use of language or content warnings – without the need for a delay. This was clearly not the case.”
The BBC noted that the live stream was monitored “in line with the agreed compliance protocols and a number of issues were escalated”.
Warnings appeared on the stream on two occasions, but, the BBC added: “The editorial team took the decision not to cut the feed. This was an error.”
Davie, who was attending Glastonbury himself on the day, was “subsequently made aware of what had happened and instructed the team that none of the performance should feature in further coverage”.
The BBC said the team on duty prioritised stopping the performance from becoming available on demand, meaning that the set would not appear separately on iPlayer or BBC Sounds.
However, the live feed remained available for more than four hours, which meant viewers were able to rewind and view the content.
“Given the failings that have been acknowledged, we are taking actions to ensure proper accountability for those found to be responsible for those failings in the live broadcast,” the BBC said. “We will not comment further on those processes at this time.”
In a statement, Shah apologised “to all our viewers and listeners and particularly the Jewish community for allowing the ‘artist’ Bob Vylan to express unconscionable antisemitic views live on the BBC”.
“This was unquestionably an error of judgement,” he added. “I was very pleased to note that as soon as this came to the notice of Tim Davie – who was on the Glastonbury site at the time visiting BBC staff – he took immediate action and instructed the team to withdraw the performance from on demand coverage.”
Since Glastonbury, Bob Vylan have had several bookings cancelled, including festival appearances in Manchester and France and a slot in Germany.
In response to the cancellations, the band reiterated their position, telling followers: “Silence is not an option. We will be fine, the people of Palestine are hurting.”
Avon and Somerset Police have launched a criminal investigation into their Glastonbury comments.
On Wednesday, London’s Metropolitan Police said the band are also under investigation for comments they allegedly made during a concert at Alexandra Palace in May.
After the media coverage of their comments, Bob Vylan said in a statement on Tuesday: “We are not for the death of Jews, Arabs or any other race or group of people. We are for the dismantling of a violent military machine”.
They added that “we, like those in the spotlight before us, are not the story. We are a distraction from the story, and whatever sanctions we receive will be a distraction”.
Trump gets major win now – but it comes with risks down the road
Donald Trump has his first major legislative victory of his second presidential term.
The “big, beautiful bill”, as he calls it, is a sprawling package that includes many key pieces of his agenda – delivering on promises he made on the campaign trail.
It also, however, contains the seeds of political peril for the president and his party.
That Trump and his team were able to shepherd the legislation through Congress despite narrow majorities in both the House of Representatives and the Senate is no small achievement.
His success required him and his allies to win over budget hawks within his Republican Party who were intent on slashing government spending, as well as centrists who were wary of cuts to social programmes.
When this congressional session started in January, there were doubts about whether House Republicans could even agree to return Congressman Mike Johnson to the speaker’s chair, let alone agree on major pieces of legislation.
Agree they did, however – as did Republicans in the Senate, a notoriously unwieldy chamber.
- Congress passes Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’
- A look at the key items in the legislation
- BBC Verify: Fact-checking three claims about the bill
The spending package approved by lawmakers directs about $150bn (£110bn) in new spending for border security, detention centres and immigration enforcement officers. Another $150bn is allocated for military expenditures, including the president’s “gold dome” missile defence programme.
The really big numbers, however, are in the tax cuts in this legislation. They amount to more than $4.5tn over 10 years.
Some of these are cuts that were first enacted in Trump’s first term, and were set to expire before the bill makes them permanent. Others, like ending taxes on tips and overtime, where 2024 campaign promises that are implemented by will end in 2028.
All this adds up to massive new debt for the US. The White House contends that the tax cuts will spur economic growth that will generate sufficient new revenue, when taken alongside tariff collections.
But outside projections suggest that this legislation will add more than $3tn in new US debt.
As critics like Republican Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky have pointed out, the legislation raises the amount of new debt the federal government can issue by $5tn – a step that would not be necessary if the White House truly believed their budget projections.
Paul and others like tech multibillionaire Elon Musk have warned that this massive amount of debt will be growing burden on the federal government, as interest payments crowd out other spending and drive up interest rates. A fiscal reckoning is coming, they warn.
Another senator who voted against the legislation, Thom Tillis of North Carolina, had a different warning for Trump and his party. In a fiery speech on the floor of the chamber, he accused the president of breaking a promise to those who supported him – citing the bill’s cuts worth approximately $1tn to Medicaid, a government-run health insurance programme for low-income Americans.
“Republicans are about to make a mistake on healthcare and betray a promise,” he said, declaring that more than 660,000 people in North Carolina would be “pushed off” Medicaid.
A year after Trump made inroads with working-class Americans, including minority voters who traditionally have supported opposing Democrats, his legislation will cause nearly 12 million Americans to lose Medicaid coverage in the next 10 years, according to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office.
Democrats are already preparing an onslaught of attacks against Republicans for what they say is legislation that cuts social service in order to provide tax cuts to wealthier Americans.
Although those cuts won’t come into effect until after next year’s congressional midterm elections, Democrats will try to remind American voters of the consequences the decisions Republicans made over the past few weeks.
Trump is preparing what should be a celebratory bill signing ceremony on 4 July – American Independence Day – and will tout his ability to govern not just through executive order, but also through enacting new law.
But the fight to define the benefits – and consequences – of this bill is just beginning.
Diddy’s reputation is tarnished, but could he find a way back?
After the verdicts were delivered in Sean “Diddy” Combs’ trial in New York on Wednesday, emotions boiled over outside court in heated confrontations between fans and protesters who voiced opposing views about the outcome.
Some thought the rap star should have been found guilty on the more serious counts, not just the two lesser charges on which he was convicted.
But they were outnumbered by pro-Diddy influencers and fans who were chanting “free Diddy” and “let him go” and spraying each other in baby oil in celebration.
The jury’s mixed verdicts did not present a clear-cut result – but it was seen as a better-than-expected outcome for the star.
He still faces significant jail time and dozens of civil legal cases, though. His reputation will forever be tarnished by months of ugly allegations and revelations – and the two convictions.
But some observers believe that’s unlikely to stop him trying to mount a comeback.
Driving force of hip-hop
As a songwriter, rapper, producer and record label impresario, Combs – formerly known as Puff Daddy – was one of the driving forces in hip-hop and R&B in the 1990s.
He launched the careers of Notorious BIG and Mary J Blige, signed acts such as Faith Evans, 112, Mase and Janelle Monae to his Bad Boy Records label, and worked with stars including Mariah Carey, Usher and Busta Rhymes.
He won three Grammy Awards as an artist and scored his biggest pop hit with I’ll Be Missing You, sampling The Police’s Every Breath You Take, in 1997 – his tribute after BIG’s murder.
Combs “was one of the most famous people in hip-hop”, says Los Angeles Times music writer August Brown.
“He was an incredibly important figure in evolving both that genre and the music industry as a whole into a commercial juggernaut.”
Dark side of Diddy’s parties
Like many at the peak of the music industry, he also threw lavish parties. But sordid details emerged during the legal cases, revealing a darker side.
These so-called “freak offs” were hotel sex encounters which could last for days, involving multiple male escorts, routine violence and copious amounts of drugs and baby oil.
The question for the jury was whether this was a criminal enterprise designed to force two alleged victims into sex against their will or whether, as Combs claimed, the women willingly took part.
The defence argued that these orgies were “kinky” but consensual – and that organising them was not criminal.
In the end, the jury agreed and he was found not guilty of the most serious charge of racketeering conspiracy, as well as two charges of sex trafficking.
“The jury was just unpersuaded that what amounted to an extremely baroque and violent and drug-stoked sex life on Diddy’s behalf amounted to a criminal organisation on the racketeering charge, or trafficking in the way that we understand it now,” Mr Brown told the BBC World Service.
“This isn’t to say that it wasn’t possible, but they just didn’t think it rose to ‘beyond a shadow of a doubt’.”
Jail then comeback?
Combs was, however, convicted on two counts of transporting two former girlfriends, including singer Cassie, to participate in sex acts and prostitution.
He will face up to 10 years in jail for each charge when he’s sentenced in October. But the sentences are likely to be lower than the maximum and to run simultaneously, with the year he will have already spent in jail to be deducted. So it’s quite possible he could be free in several years.
His supporters will be waiting – but most people will be unwilling to accept a comeback, Mr Brown says.
“I cannot imagine any kind of redemption arc as far as him [remaining] as an artist or a music mogul in light of this.
“I think the public will remember him as an important figure whose name is now permanently associated with this very-difficult-to-process range of charges, even if he’s not been convicted on the worst of it.”
Alvin Blanco, content director of Hiphopwired.com, agrees that Combs is too tarnished to make a successful comeback. “He’s definitely going to try, but I think the damage is just too irreparable at this point.”
Mark Anthony Neal, professor of African American Studies at Duke University in North Carolina, also believes there’s “no doubt” the revelations have tarnished Combs’ legacy as the man who helped take hip-hop “from the ghettos to the mainstream of America to the global mainstream”.
However, his influence on music had diminished even before the allegations, says Jem Aswad, executive editor of music at Variety.
“He doesn’t really have much of a music career any more, and he hasn’t for about 15 years,” Mr Aswad told BBC News.
“It’s not that he was unpopular, although he wasn’t enormously popular recently – he just moved on to other businesses. He got into beverages, he got into apparel, he got into lots of other businesses.
“Anything he did in music over the last 15 years was almost just for fun. I think he’s released two, maybe three albums in that time period, and they just did OK, and frankly they just were OK.”
Awards success
His stock was still pretty high, though. His last LP, The Love Album: Off The Grid, was nominated for a Grammy Award in 2024. The previous year, he was named a Global Icon at the MTV Awards.
And he wouldn’t be the first star to retain support despite facing allegations.
Michael Jackson was cleared of child abuse in court in 2005 but persuasive claims about him have persisted, and many people still wrestle with how to reconcile those with the brilliance of the King of Pop’s catalogue.
R&B star R. Kelly was jailed for 30 years in 2022 for racketeering and sex trafficking. He still has five million monthly listeners on Spotify at the last count.
Some in hip-hop may be willing to work with Combs. Kanye West last week released a song called Diddy Free – although Kanye himself is ostracised by large parts of the industry for making antisemitic and Nazi statements.
Supporters’ delight
Anoushka Mutanda-Dougherty, host of the BBC’s Diddy on Trial podcast, has seen the support outside court and suggests there may be a way back.
“We’ll see what happens with his career after this,” she told the BBC’s Newscast.
“I feel like he will be able to reclaim a top spot in hip-hop just because of the sheer amount of support we’ve seen online and here at the courthouse from his fans, and from people who feel he was being unjustly targeted by the federal government.
“He won’t be the first musician to be a convicted criminal who carries on having a music career, especially in hip-hop.”
For many, the details of the case will be hard to shake from the memory, though.
Angela Star, one of the content creators outside court on Wednesday, told BBC News that “his image is tainted, and when you think of Diddy now, you think of…” before finishing her point by holding up a bottle of baby oil.
What have tariffs really done to the US economy?
Soon after Donald Trump returned to the White House in January, he began raising tariffs, brushing off warnings from economists and businesses about the risks of economic damage.
He started with Mexico, Canada and China, then targeted steel, aluminium and cars, and finally in April, on what he called “Liberation Day”, unleashed a blitz of new taxes on goods from countries around the world.
The plans hit trade and roiled financial markets. But as worries mounted, Trump quickly suspended his most aggressive plans to allow for 90 days of talks.
As that 9 July deadline approaches and the president crafts his approach, he will have one eye on the US economy.
So what has the impact really been?
The stock market has rebounded
Trump’s plans included tariffs of 20% on goods from the European Union, punishing tariffs on items from China of 145%, and a 46% levy on imports from Vietnam, though on Wednesday he announced a deal that will see the US charge tariffs of 20% on Vietnam.
The US stock market suffered the most immediate hit, starting to slide in February and finally tanking in April after Trump unveiled the full scope of his plans, on so-called “Liberation Day”.
The S&P 500, which tracks 500 of the biggest companies in the US, dropped about 12% over the course of a week.
But shares bounced back after Trump rolled back his plans, abandoning steep tariffs in favour of a more easily swallowed 10% rate instead.
Now, the S&P 500 index is up about 6% for the year. In the UK and Europe, shares have also rebounded.
But shares of tariff-vulnerable firms, such as retailers and car companies are still hurting – and there is more risk ahead, as the talks deadline approaches.
The White House has left its options open, saying both that the deadline is “not critical” and that the president may simply present other countries “with a deal” on that date.
Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab, said the rebound suggested “a lot of complacency” among investors, who risk being spooked again should Trump revive higher tariffs than they expect.
Trade – at a crossroads
Trump’s tariffs precipitated a rush of goods to the US in the early part of the year, followed by a sharp drop in April and May.
But zoom out a bit, and US goods imports in the first five months of the year were up 17% compared with the same period last year.
What happens in the months ahead will depend on whether Trump extends his pause – or revives his more aggressive plans, said Ben Hackett of Hackett Associates, which tracks port traffic for the National Retail Federation.
“At this point it’s anybody’s guess,” Mr Hackett said, noting that for now the situation was “in a holding pattern”.
“If the tariff freeze disappears and the high tariffs are reimposed then almost certainly we’re going to have a short recession,” he added.
Prices – too soon to say
In the US, imported goods are estimated to account for only about 11% of consumer spending.
Trump and his allies have argued that fears that tariffs – which, on average, are now roughly six times higher than they were at the start of the year – will drive up the cost of living for Americans are overblown.
They have pointed in part to recent inflation data, which showed consumer prices stepping up just 0.1% from April to May.
But certain items, such as toys, saw far bigger jumps and many goods facing higher duties have not yet made it to shelves.
Firms, especially those cushioned by strong profits, could opt to pass the increases on gradually, rather than alienate customers with an abrupt jump.
Despite pressure from the president to “eat the tariffs”, economists still widely expect customers to pay for them eventually.
“If you’re not digging more into the data you would think, ‘nothing to see here’ from an inflation standpoint,” says Ms Sonders. “But it’s premature at this point to hang the victory banner.”
Consumer spending is slowing
Economic sentiment in the US started falling earlier this year, as Trump began to set out his tariff plans.
But political views play a big role in shaping opinions on the economy, so whether the worries would actually lead households to clamp down on spending over the long term remained a matter of debate.
We are now starting to see signs of pullback: retail sales dropped 0.9% from April to May, the second month in a row of decline. It was the first back-to-back fall since the end of 2023.
Overall consumer spending grew at the slowest rate since 2020 in the first three months of the year, and slipped unexpectedly in May, the most recent month for which data is available.
But while growth is still expected to slow significantly compared with last year, most analysts say the economy should be able to escape a recession – so long as the job market continues to hold up.
Though layoff notices have been pacing higher, for now, unemployment remains low, at 4.2%. Job creation last month continued at a pace similar to the average over the last 12 months.
“We’re sort of in this stall mode right now in the economy, a kind of wait-and-see mode, that is driven by pretty grave uncertainty and the instability in policy,” Ms Sonders said, noting that many firms were responding with a self-imposed “time-out” on hiring and investment.
The economy is unlikely to escape unscathed, she warned.
“It’s hard to lay out a scenario of a pickup in growth from here,” she said. “The question is more, will it just be a softening of the economy or a bigger slide.”
The curious case of the British jet stuck in India
A state-of-the-art British fighter jet stuck at an airport in India for nearly three weeks now has sparked curiosity and raised questions about how such a modern aircraft could get stranded for days in a foreign country.
The F-35B landed at Thiruvananthapuram airport in the southern state of Kerala on 14 June.
The aircraft was diverted there after it ran into bad weather during a sortie in the Indian ocean and was unable to return to HMS Prince of Wales, the Royal Navy’s flagship carrier.
It landed safely but it has since developed a technical snag and is unable to return to the carrier.
Since the jet’s landing, engineers from HMS Prince of Wales have assessed the aircraft, but the visiting teams have been unable to fix it so far.
On Thursday, the British High Commission said in a statement to the BBC: “The UK has accepted an offer to move the aircraft to the Maintenance Repair and Overhaul facility at the airport. It will be moved to the hangar once UK engineering teams arrive with specialist equipment, thereby ensuring there is minimal disruption to scheduled maintenance of other aircraft.
“The aircraft will return to active service once repairs and safety checks have been completed,” it added. “Ground teams continue to work closely with Indian authorities to ensure safety and security precautions are observed.”
Authorities at Thiruvananthapuram airport told the BBC they were expecting technicians from the UK to arrive on Saturday.
The $110m (£80m) jet is being guarded around the clock by six officers from the RAF.
Dr Sameer Patil, director of the Centre for Security, Strategy and Technology at the Observer Research Foundation in Mumbai, told the BBC the Royal Navy had only two options: “They can repair it and make it fly-worthy or they can fly it out in a bigger cargo plane such as a C-17 Globemaster transport aircraft.”
The case of the stranded jet has also been raised in the House of Commons.
On Monday, opposition Conservative MP Ben Obese-Jecty asked the government to clarify what was being done to secure it and return it to operational service, the UK Defence Journal reported.
“What steps are the government taking to recover the plane, how much longer will that take, and how will the government ensure the security of protected technologies on the jet while it is in the hangar and out of view?” he was quoted as saying.
The British armed forces minister, Luke Pollard, confirmed the aircraft remained under close UK control.
“We continue to work with our Indian friends who provided first-class support when the F-35B was unable to return to the carrier,” he said. “I am certain that the security of the jet is in good hands because Royal Air Force crew are with it at all times.”
F-35Bs are highly advanced stealth jets, built by Lockheed Martin, and are prized for their short take-off and vertical landing capability.
So images of the “lonely F-35B”, parked on the tarmac and soaked by the Kerala monsoon rains, have spawned memes on social media.
One viral post joked that the jet had been put up for sale at an online site at a hugely competitive price of $4m. The listing claimed the jet included features like “automatic parking, brand-new tyres, a new battery and an automatic gun to destroy traffic violators”.
One user on X said the jet deserved Indian citizenship as it had been in the country long enough, while another suggested that India should start charging rent and that the Kohinoor diamond would be the most appropriate payment.
On Wednesday, Kerala government’s tourism department also joined in the fun with a post on X that said “Kerala, the destination you’ll never want to leave.”
The post included an AI-generated photograph of an F-35B standing on the runway with coconut palm trees in the background. The text suggested that, like most visitors to the state described in tourism brochures as “God’s own country” for its scenic beauty, the jet too was finding it hard to leave.
Dr Patil says that each passing day that the jet remains stranded, “it adversely affects the image of the F-35Bs and the Royal Navy”.
“The jokes and memes and rumours and conspiracy theories are affecting the image and credibility of the British Royal Navy. The longer the jet stays stranded, the more disinformation will come out.”
The engineering issues “seem of a much more serious nature” than it was originally thought, he says.
But most militaries, he adds, prepare for “a worst-case scenario” – and it is one since a jet is stranded on foreign soil.
“Most militaries would have a standard operating procedure [SOP] on how to respond when something like this happens. So does the Royal Navy not have an SOP?”
The optics of this, he says, are really bad.
“If such a thing had happened in enemy territory, would they have taken this much time? This makes for very bad PR for a professional navy.”
Roadblocks replace rallies as Serbian protesters demand new elections
As Serbia’s anti-corruption protests enter their ninth month, they show no sign of abating – and are instead changing in their leadership, composition and tactics.
At the climax of last weekend’s 140,000-strong protest in Belgrade’s Slavija Square the students who led the protests since November declared that they would no longer spearhead the rallies.
They had set a deadline of Saturday for the government to call for fresh elections.
When that was not met, they invited other groups to take on the protest mantle – and called for a campaign of “civil disobedience” from anyone opposed to the leadership of President Aleksandar Vucic and his long-governing Progressive Party (SNS).
Since then roadblocks have been popping up in cities across Serbia this week and people have been deploying dustbins, chairs and other improvised barriers to block junctions in major cities including Belgrade, Novi Sad and Nis. Local residents’ associations – known as “citizens’ assemblies” – have been heavily involved.
As soon as the police dismantle one blockade, another one pops up somewhere else.
Police crackdown triggers backlash
In recent days there have been dozens of arrests – along with complaints of excessive police force. A number of students were treated in hospital – one with a broken collarbone – after Gendarmerie members entered Belgrade University’s Law Faculty on Wednesday.
Officers also arrested high school students, triggering a protest by parents in front of a central Belgrade police station until their children were released.
A striking range of voices have condemned the police conduct. Complaints by the journalists’ association and the opposition Centre Party were matched by statements from the Bar Association and even Serbian Orthodox Church Archbishop Grigorije Duric. The EU, for its part, decried the “acts of hatred and violence” and called for calm.
Meanwhile, in Belgrade, the pop-up roadblocks continue – and so does the ensuing travel chaos for commuters.
One resident, while ruefully noting that she had to walk 5km (3 miles) to and from work, described the mood as more like a series of street parties than a protest.
But many observers doubt whether this approach will be any more effective than the months of rallies, faculty blockades and half-hearted general strikes.
The 2024 Novi Sad railway disaster
The protest movement started with a relatively simple purpose: to ensure accountability for last November’s disaster at Novi Sad railway station, when a concrete canopy at the recently renovated facility in Serbia’s second city collapsed, killing 16 people who were standing beneath it.
The outpouring of grief was instant – and the outrage swiftly followed.
Much of it has been directed at President Vucic.
A large section of Serbians have long been uneasy with his “strongman” style of leadership, since he came to power in 2012. But others have accepted his party’s firm grip on state institutions and much of the media as a trade-off for strong economic growth and improvements in infrastructure.
- Fury over Serbia station tragedy prompts first arrests
- Serbia’s largest-ever rally sees 325,000 protest against government
The station disaster shattered that tacit agreement.
“We are all under the canopy” was one slogan frequently seen on banners in the early days of the protests. Others included “blood on your hands” and “corruption kills”.
University students took leadership of the movement, demanding full transparency about the railway station project and the prosecution of those responsible for the disaster.
Months of protests eventually forced the resignation of Milos Vucevic as prime minister. But he was simply replaced by another Vucic appointee, Djuro Macut – and the protest movement has otherwise achieved little in terms of concrete results.
No end in sight for protest movement
Still, the protests have now brought hundreds of thousands out into the streets and are galvanising large sections of society.
One opposition leader, Srdjan Milivojevic of the centre-left Democratic Party, compared the moment to the early 2000s, when the student-led protests against the notorious President Slobodan Milosevic “became a people’s movement”.
Then, a coalition of interest groups stood firm against Milosevic’s attempts to manipulate the result of the September 2000 presidential election. Mass protests forced the president’s resignation the following month and ushered in democracy in Serbia for the first time.
But despite efforts to invoke the “spirit of 5 October”, the current situation is different. President Vucic and his party remain in a relatively comfortable position, with polls indicating that the SNS remains the most popular party.
In the aftermath of the last, big student-led rally, Mr Vucic declared that “Serbia won” in the face of an attempt to “overthrow the state”.
The people blocking the roads in Serbia’s cities view it differently. They are asking for change through the ballot box – even if it is far from clear who would run against the SNS. And the president insists there will be no elections before December next year.
So now it is perhaps a question of which side blinks first. And with temperatures already pushing towards 40C, it could be a simmering summer in more ways than one.
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“It’s not about where we come from, but where we’re going to.”
The sentence can be found at the entrance of the Gondomar SC academy followed by a picture of its illustrious son Diogo Jota wearing the colours of the club he played for between the ages of nine and 17.
Right next to it, there’s another one of him with the Portugal national team shirt too.
That’s how far Jota went.
Since 2022, it has been renamed as the Diogo Jota academy.
Those words, said by the forward himself after scoring twice in a 3-0 win against Sweden in the Nations League in 2020, illustrate exactly who he was.
The 28-year-old, who died along with his brother Andre Silva on Thursday following a car accident in Spain, spent almost all his formative years in his hometown with a third-tier team, paying around 20 euros each month to play for them while being overlooked by the big sides because of his size.
Despite the odds, he never gave up.
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Diogo Jota: A Tribute
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He kept believing and went from Gondomar to Pacos de Ferreira, then to Porto, Wolverhampton and finally Liverpool.
Jota became a symbol of hope and inspiration back home. He proved to an entire country that it’s possible to reach the top even if the path isn’t a straight line.
The talent had always been there.
So much so that in his early days, when he was starting to draw some attention with Pacos, one of his former coaches, Jorge Simao, made a big claim by saying Jota would be Cristiano Ronaldo’s successor.
The player was obviously surprised to hear that, but immediately thought to himself, ‘If he believes in that, why can’t I do that?’
Jota was a rare case of an elite Portuguese footballer who never spent time at any of the big three academies – Benfica, Sporting and Porto.
“What set him apart from everyone else was really the mental aspect, the way he overcame any situation – and he realised that very quickly,” former Pacos’ youth football coordinator Gilberto Andrade told BBC Sport.
“I think there are moments when, whether you’re a coach, a coordinator, or a director, there are words, things said, that have a great impact on players. At the time, perhaps they don’t fully understand it, but later it reflects in their behaviour, in how they train, in how they live day to day.
“And Jota, I think, to some extent with us, understood what it meant to be a professional player, what it meant to be a good athlete, a good person. He was an example in that regard. An example, because often success leads many players to have a somewhat winding path due to the money they make.
“But that wasn’t the case with him. He was always very disciplined, very intelligent, very humble. He invested wisely, knew what he was doing, helped those he could. So I think this is the image that must remain of him.”
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Diogo Jota: A Tribute
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Remembering Diogo Jota
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Jota took the long road, but always had it clear where he was going.
That became obvious to Andrade the day he came to him with an unusual request. “I want to learn a foreign language. Someday, I might play abroad and I’ve got to be ready,” said Jota.
The Gondomar boy was still young but had spent long enough outside the radar of the Portuguese powerhouses to realise his future could be far away from his home country.
“He knew very well where he was going,” recalled Andrade, who has also worked in Italy, Belgium and Saudi Arabia.
“Back then, I had those audio language courses, so I handed some of them to him. Soon, however, he realised they weren’t enough – he actually needed a teacher. For him, it was evident that he was going to need it later in his career. He was this different.”
For a brief moment, Jota feared his career would be at risk following a heart problem diagnosed during medical tests ahead of the 2014-15 season.
He was not allowed to train for almost a month.
“Do not put the cart before the horse,” he used to reply to anyone who came to him worried about the situation at the time.
That was how he lived his life – taking it day by day.
Jota quickly established himself as one of the rising talents of the Portuguese league after that, but didn’t change a bit.
The number of teams interested in his services kept rising and yet he chose to remain living in the club’s dormitory with other academy graduates and trialists that came and went until his very last day at Pacos. He was the only first-team player living there.
“He wouldn’t leave his room. He was solely focused on his work, there was no time for distractions when it came to him,” added Andrade.
Jota always knew where he was heading and, throughout his life, he proved time and again the journey mattered more than the starting point.
His voyage to becoming a Portuguese hero was a beautiful one.
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I had a tough day, says Rachel Reeves after Commons tears
Rachel Reeves has said she had had “a tough day” and had been “clearly upset”, as she gave her first interview since crying in the House of Commons on Wednesday.
She did not go into details behind the incident saying she had been dealing with “a personal issue” adding: “Today’s a new day and I’m just cracking on with the job.”
The chancellor was speaking after making a surprise appearance alongside Sir Keir Starmer to unveil the government’s 10-year plan for the NHS.
Government borrowing costs rose following Reeves’ tearful appearance at Prime Minister’s Questions, when Sir Keir initially failed to guarantee that the chancellor would keep her job.
The rise was partially reversed after Sir Keir insisted he was “in lockstep” with his chancellor, who he said would be in her job “for a very long time to come”.
One analyst told the BBC the initial rise reflected concern in the financial markets that if Reeves left her job then control over the government’s finances would weaken.
Will Walker Arnott, head of private clients at the bank Charles Stanley, told the BBC’s Today programme: “It looks to me like this is a rare example of financial markets actually enhancing the career prospects of a politician.”
In a bid to put on a united front, the chancellor unexpectedly joined Sir Keir and Health Secretary Wes Streeting at a hospital in East London to set out details of new neighbourhood health centres.
As she addressed staff, Reeves was smiling broadly and later shared a hug with the prime minister.
Speaking to broadcasters after the event, Reeves was asked about her tears in Parliament. She said: “My job as chancellor at 12 o’clock on a Wednesday is to be at PMQs next to the prime minister, supporting the government and that’s what I tried to do.”
“I think all your viewers have had tough days, for personal reasons, for whatever reasons. I happened to be on the camera when I had a tough day.”
She said she was “totally” up for the job of chancellor and asked if she was surprised the prime minister had not unequivocally backed her in Parliament replied: “People can see that Keir and me are a team.”
“We fought the election together, we changed the Labour Party together so that we could be in the position to return to power and over the past year we’ve worked in lockstep together.”
During the event, Sir Keir praised his chancellor telling the audience: “I think it’s just fantastic that she is here.”
He said decisions made by Reeves had allowed the government to “invest record amounts in the NHS”.
Asked if he had been aware that his chancellor had been crying next to him in the House of Commons, Sir Keir said he “hadn’t appreciated what was happening” as he was “literally up and down” answering questions.
“No prime minister ever has had side conversations in PMQs. It does happen in other debates when there is a bit more time, but in PMQs it is bang, bang, bang, bang.
“I was probably the last to appreciate anything else going on in the chamber.”
He said the incident was due to “a personal issue and I am certainly not going to say anything more about that”.
Speculation about Reeves’ future had been growing after Labour rebels forced the government to give up some of its benefits changes and in so doing put a £5bn hole in the chancellor’s spending plans.
In order to meet her self-imposed borrowing rules, she is now likely to have to consider cutting public spending or raising taxes at the Budget in autumn.
Asked if taxes would be going up, Reeves said she would not “speculate” but added: “Of course there is a cost to the welfare changes that Parliament voted through this week and that will be reflected in the Budget.”
In a sign that she would not be changing her own restrictions on borrowing, the chancellor said “the stability that we’ve been able to return to the economy… is only possible because of the fiscal discipline which is underpinned by the fiscal rules”.
Reeves’s two main rules are not to borrow to fund day-to-day public spending; and to get debt falling as a share of the UK economic output by 2029/30.
In her speech, she also said the boost to NHS spending would not “have been possible” without the measures she took in last year’s Budget.
Speaking to BBC Breakfast on Thursday, shadow chancellor Mel Stride said he “felt for” Reeves, and the incident showed politicians “are all human beings”.
But he accused the government of making “serious mistakes” and “bungling and chaos”, which he predicted would lead to tax rises in the autumn.
Rachael Maskell, one of the Labour MPs who led efforts to block the government’s benefits bill, told the BBC on Wednesday that when trying to find money, the government should “look at those with the broadest shoulders”.
“We do need to look at things like a wealth tax or equalisation of capital gains tax,” she said.
On Thursday, the government announced that its Universal Credit and Personal Independence Bill would be renamed the Universal Credit Bill, after the legislation was gutted of significant measures relating to the personal independence payment.
Ethiopia has finished building mega-dam on Nile, PM says
Ethiopia says it has completed building a mega-dam on the Blue Nile that has long been a source of tension with Egypt and Sudan.
Launched in 2011 with a $4bn (£2.9bn) budget, the dam is Africa’s biggest hydro-electric plant, and a major source of pride for Ethiopians.
Ethiopia sees the dam as vital to meeting its energy needs but Egypt and Sudan see it as threatening their water supply from the Nile.
In a statement announcing the completion of the project, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed sought to reassure his neighbours. “To our neighbours downstream – Egypt and Sudan – our message is clear: the Renaissance Dam is not a threat, but a shared opportunity,” he said.
US President Donald Trump said in 2020 that Egypt had threatened to “blow up” the dam – officially known as the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (Gerd).
In a conciliatory move, Abiy said that both Egypt and Sudan would be invited to its official inauguration in September.
“We believe in shared progress, shared energy, and shared water,” he said.
Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Sudan’s military chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan met earlier this week and “stressed their rejection of any unilateral measures in the Blue Nile Basin”, AFP news agency reports.
More than a mile long and 145m high, the dam is on the Blue Nile tributary in the northern Ethiopia highlands, from where 85% of the Nile’s waters flow.
Ethiopia wants the dam to produce desperately needed electricity, as the majority of its population – about 60% – have no supply.
Egypt relies on the River Nile for nearly all of its fresh water, and fears that the flow of water could be disrupted.
It has argued that just a 2% reduction in the amount of water it gets from the Nile could result in the loss of 200,000 acres of irrigated land.
Sudan is also heavily reliant on water from the Nile, and shares Egypt’s concerns.
Abiy said Ethiopia was “willing to engage constructively” with the two countries.
However, previous talks have failed to resolve differences.
More about the Ethiopian dam from the BBC:
- Why is Egypt worried about Ethiopia’s dam on the Nile?
- Nile Dam row: Egypt and Ethiopia generate heat but no power
- River Nile dam: Why Ethiopia can’t stop it being filled
US Supreme Court to review bans on trans athletes in female sports
The US Supreme Court has agreed to review whether state laws can ban transgender athletes from competing in women’s and girls’ sports.
The case concerns laws in Idaho and West Virginia, where two transgender students won injunctions from lower courts allowing them to continue competing.
How the top court rules could have significant implications across the country.
It comes two weeks after the conservative majority court upheld a Tennessee law that bans gender transition care for young people – a ruling that some advocates say delivered a major blow to transgender rights in the US.
The Supreme Court will review the cases of Becky Pepper-Jackson, 15, and Lindsay Hecox, 24, who successfully challenged state bans in West Virginia and Idaho by arguing they were discriminatory.
Idaho was the first state to pass a law prohibiting transgender athletes from competing in women and girls’ sports. Two dozen other states have since followed.
Ms Hecox, a long distance runner, lodged a legal challenge against the Idaho law in 2020 shortly after it was enacted. She was later granted an injunction by both a district court and an appeals court.
State lawmaker Barbara Ehardt, who introduced the law, said at the time of its passing that it would ensure “boys and men will not be able to take the place of girls and women in sports because it’s not fair”.
But in the appeals ruling, a panel of three judges found that the Idaho law violated constitutional rights, and that the state had “failed” to provide evidence that the law protects “sex equality and opportunity for women athletes.”
West Virginia Attorney General John McCuskey backed the top court’s intervention.
“The people of West Virginia know that it’s unfair to let male athletes compete against women; that’s why we passed this common sense law preserving women’s sports for women,” he said.
Joshua Block of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which is representing the athletes, insisted lower courts were correct to block the “discriminatory laws”.
“Categorically excluding kids from school sports just because they are transgender will only make our schools less safe and more hurtful places for all youth,” he said.
How the Supreme Court decides to rule on the issue will likely impact other states that have similar bans in place.
At the federal level, President Donald Trump signed an executive order earlier this year that aimed to ban transgender women and girls from competing on female sports teams.
The Supreme Court will hear the challenges during its next term, which begins in October. A hearing date has not yet been set.
Austria to change two streets named after Nazi supporters
Two streets in Adolf Hitler’s hometown in Austria are to be renamed following longstanding complaints that they commemorate Nazis, officials say.
The council of Braunau am Inn made the decision on Wednesday after a “secret vote”, according to local media. It followed a report, commissioned by the local government, which concluded that keeping the names was unconstitutional.
The streets are named after composer Josef Reiter and entertainer Franz Resl, both of whom were members of the Nazi party.
About 200 households will get a new address after the names are changed.
The Austrian government has long been criticised by historians for the way it has acknowledged its part in World War Two, and in particular for positioning itself as a victim rather than a participant.
The move to rename the streets has been welcomed as a “decision with symbolic significance” by the Mauthausen Committee. At least 90,000 prisoners were killed by the Nazis at Mauthausen concentration camp in northern Austria between 1938–1945.
Committee chairman Willi Mernyi told local media that they had “worked hard for this”, and thanked all who supported them.
Robert Eiter, a committee member, added that they had suggested the names be changed to honour Austrians who actively opposed the Nazis – former deputy mayor Lea Olczak, whose father died in Mauthausen, and Maria Stromberger, who joined the resistance while working as the head nurse at Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland.
Many streets in Austria have already been renamed due to their Nazi associations, including one honouring Ferdinand Porsche, founder of the luxury car company, in the city of Linz – but 80 years on since the end of the war, others still remain.
Around 65,000 Austrian Jews were killed in the Holocaust during World War Two, when the Nazi party, led by Adolf Hitler, worked to eradicate Europe’s Jewish population, as well as the Slavic and Roma population.
During the war, the Nazi regime systematically murdered more than six million Jewish people.
Bear kills motorcyclist in Romanian mountains
A man has died after he was attacked by a bear in one of Romania’s most scenic mountain regions.
The victim, who had been riding a motorcycle, stopped at a popular tourist area on the Transfagarasan road on Tuesday morning, authorities said.
The bear dragged him down a steep ravine with an elevation drop of around 80 metres (262ft), they added.
“Unfortunately, he was already dead when we arrived,” Ion Sanduloiu, head of the Arges County Mountain Rescue Service, told the BBC.
“The injuries were extremely severe. Even though he was wearing a helmet and full protective gear, it wasn’t enough.”
Sanduloiu said the victim had parked his bike next to a sign that warned not to feed the bears.
“My advice is simple: do not stop, do not feed them, and keep your distance,” he added.
The animal has not yet been euthanised, officials said. An investigation into the incident is ongoing.
Romania is home to the largest brown bear population in the European Union.
Human-bear encounters have increased in recent years, with several fatal incidents prompting calls for clearer regulations and investment into prevention strategies.
Recent genetic population studies conducted by Romania’s environment ministry estimated the country’s brown bear population to be between 10,400 and 12,800 – significantly higher than previous counts.
Former environment minister Mircea Fechet considered the optimal sustainable population to be around 4,000 bears – roughly one-third of the current estimate.
Fechet has proposed simplifying laws to allow local authorities to take more immediate action, including the ability to euthanise bears that enter residential areas.
The ministry also plans to introduce risk zone maps to better manage bear populations, balancing conservation efforts with public safety.
Conservationists say the death reflects deeper structural problems in Romania’s wildlife management.
Gabriel Paun, founder of the environmental NGO Agent Green, which campaigns for wildlife protection and against illegal logging, said the issue was mismanagement, not overpopulation.
“The recurring tragedies on the Transfagarasan road are the result of multiple failures: tourists stopping to interact with wild animals, local authorities not doing enough to drive bears back into the forest, and the national government – particularly the environmental ministry – failing to properly implement the national plan for coexistence between wildlife and humans,” he said.
Paun said the bear population was threatened by “climate change, habitat destruction and human persecution”, adding that Romania has become a “key destination” for international trophy hunters.
Sanduloiu believes stronger deterrents are needed to prevent further loss of life.
“The solution is simple, in my opinion: higher fines and even prison sentences for those who stop to feed the bears,” he said.
UN expert calls for companies to stop doing business with Israel
A United Nations expert has called on dozens of multinational companies to stop doing business with Israel, warning them they risk being complicit in war crimes in Gaza and the occupied West Bank.
Francesca Albanese, presenting her report to the UN human rights council, described what she called “an economy of genocide” in which the conflict with Hamas provided a testing ground – with no accountability or oversight – for new weapons and technology.
Israel has rejected her report as “groundless”, saying it would “join the dustbin of history”.
UN experts, or special rapporteurs, are independent of the UN, but appointed by it to advise on human rights matters.
Ms Albanese is an international lawyer from Italy, and she is known for her bluntness; in previous reports she has suggested that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.
On Thursday she repeated that claim, accusing Israel of “committing one of the cruellest genocides in modern history”.
In this report Ms Albanese names companies she says are profiting from, and therefore complicit in, war crimes in Gaza.
Her list includes arms manufacturer Lockheed Martin for selling weapons, and tech firms Alphabet, IBM, Microsoft and Amazon for providing technology which allows Israel to track and target Palestinians.
She also lists Caterpillar, Hyundai, and Volvo, which her report claims have supplied vehicles used for demolishing homes and flattening bombed communities.
Financial institutions are included too – Ms Albanese claims banks BNP Paribas and Barclays have been underwriting Israeli treasury bonds throughout the conflict.
The BBC has approached the companies named above for comment.
Lockheed Martin said foreign military sales were government-to-government transactions, and discussions were best addressed by the US government.
Volvo said it did not share Ms Albanese’s criticism which it believes was based on “insufficient and partly incorrect information”. It added that it is committed to respecting human rights and constantly works to strengthen its due diligence. But it said that since its products have a long life and change hands often “there is unfortunately a limit to how much control or influence we can have on how and where our products are used during their lifetime”.
For the companies named, the business is lucrative, the report says, and helps Israel to continue the war. Ms Albanese says all the companies should stop dealing with Israel immediately.
But how likely is that? UN reports like this one have no legal power, but they do attract attention.
Ms Albanese is, in targeting economic ties, trying to remind multinationals, and governments, of what happened with apartheid South Africa.
For a while many businesses made good money trading with South Africa, but the injustice of apartheid attracted global condemnation and UN sanctions which forced disinvestment and, eventually, helped to end the apartheid regime.
By listing companies which are household names, Ms Albanese is probably also hoping to provide millions of consumers worldwide with information they can use when choosing whether or not to buy something, as they did with South Africa.
But the suggestion they are complicit in possible genocide is the one the multinationals themselves may take most seriously. The law on genocide is strict, it needs to be determined by a court of law, and in fact the International Court of Justice is currently considering a case against Israel on this very question, brought by South Africa.
Complicity is defined as a person or entity having engaged in actions whose foreseeable results may have contributed to genocide, but without having personally intended to commit genocide.
This is an accusation that Ms Albanese suggests could be levelled against businesses selling anything that might contribute to Israel’s war effort. It is known that international lawyers have privately advised European governments that continued arms sales to Israel may lead to charges of complicity.
Israel, which has long accused Ms Albanese of being extremely hostile to it, and even antisemitic, has rejected her latest report as “groundless, defamatory and a flagrant abuse of office”.
Israel denies genocide, claiming the right of self-defence against Hamas.
But when Ms Albanese presented her report to UN member states, she received primarily praise and support.
African, Asian, and Arab states backed her call for disinvestment, many agreed that genocide was taking place, and some also warned Israel against vilifying international lawyers like Ms Albanese for doing their job.
European states, traditionally more supportive of Israel, also condemned the denial of aid to Gaza, and said Israel had a legal responsibility, as the occupying power, to ensure Palestinians had the means to survive.
But Israel’s biggest ally, the United States, left the UN Human Rights Council when President Donald Trump took office in January. Washington’s response to the report has simply accused Ms Albanese, whose team contacted US companies for information about their dealings with Israel, of an “unacceptable campaign of political and economic warfare against the American and worldwide economy”.
It’s unlikely the US administration will pay much more attention to the words of one international lawyer. But the big US companies named in her report, listening to the condemnation from so many countries where they have financial interests, may start to question their ties with Israel.
Ryanair increases size limits for free cabin bags
Budget airline Ryanair is planning to increase its “personal bag” size by 20% as the EU brings in a new standard.
Passengers will be allowed to take an item such as a handbag or laptop bag measuring up to 40cm x 30cm x 20cm in the cabin without paying an extra fee. It should weigh less than 10kg, and fit “under the seat in front you.”
The new size represents a 20% increase in volume from the current maximum dimensions.
This will mean that Ryanair accepts free bags one third bigger than the new EU minimum size limit.
Ryanair said the new free bag size would come into effect in the coming weeks as its bag size measuring devices were adjusted to the new standard.
Its current maximum bag size is 40cm x 25cm x 20cm, which already has a greater volume than the new European standard of 40cm x 30cm x 15cm.
Ryanair declined to say why it was giving passengers a larger carry-on bag allowance.
The size is still less generous than rival budget airline Easyjet, which allows a free underseat bag of 45cm x 36cm x 20cm (including wheels and handles) weighing up to 10kg.
Wizz Air allows one cabin bag as big as Ryanair’s new limits – 40cm x 30cm x 20cm, with the same weight limit of 10kg.
BA has a slightly smaller limit for an under-seat laptop bag or handbag of 40cm x 30cm x 15cm, but passengers are allowed to take a larger cabin bag as well free of charge, subject to a maximum weight of 23kg.
The EU has been working with airlines to agree a minimum free bag size, so that frequent travellers can purchase one piece of luggage and be confident it would be accepted by multiple airlines.
The rule applies to airlines based in the EU – which includes Easyjet, Ryanair and Wizz Air – but airlines are of course free to accept larger bags if they choose.
Confusion about the different minimum sizes has caused problems for passengers, who have sometimes been faced with unexpected extra fees when airlines said their bags didn’t match the specified dimensions.
Last month the transport committee of the European parliament voted to give passengers the right to an extra piece of free hand luggage weighing up to 7kg. The proposed rule would still have to be passed by the wider European parliament.
Passengers should confirm baggage rules with their airlines directly.
Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom confirm split
Pop star Katy Perry and actor Orlando Bloom have officially confirmed they have split, US media outlets say, six years after getting engaged.
The couple have been romantically linked since 2016 and have a four-year-old daughter.
In a joint statement issued to US media outlets, representatives for the couple said the pair “have been shifting their relationship over the past many months to focus on co-parenting”.
“They will continue to be seen together as a family, as their shared priority is – and always will be – raising their daughter with love, stability and mutual respect.”
The statement was being released due to the “abundance of recent interest and conversation” surrounding their relationship, it added.
The pop star, 40, and the 48-year-old actor split in 2017 but got back together shortly afterwards. They got engaged on Valentine’s Day in 2019.
A year later Perry revealed she was pregnant in the music video for her single Never Worn White.
Their daughter Daisy Dove was born later that year, with Unicef announcing the news on its Instagram account. Both Perry and Bloom are goodwill ambassadors for the United Nations agency that helps children.
The couple’s split follows a tough year for Perry. Her most recent album, 143, and its lead single Woman’s World, were not as well received as her previous music.
The singer is currently on tour, but ticket sales have reportedly been slower than earlier in her career.
Perry and a group of other female celebrities also faced backlash after their Blue Origin space trip in in April, a reaction which Perry said left her feeling “battered and bruised”.
The US singer, who was previously married to Russell Brand, shot to fame in 2008 with the single I Kissed A Girl, which reached number one in the UK.
Her hits since then have included Roar, California Gurls, Firework and Never Really Over.
Bloom was previously married to Australian model Miranda Kerr, and they have a son, 14-year-old Flynn.
The British actor has starred in Pirates Of The Caribbean, The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit.
The curious case of the British jet stuck in India
A state-of-the-art British fighter jet stuck at an airport in India for nearly three weeks now has sparked curiosity and raised questions about how such a modern aircraft could get stranded for days in a foreign country.
The F-35B landed at Thiruvananthapuram airport in the southern state of Kerala on 14 June.
The aircraft was diverted there after it ran into bad weather during a sortie in the Indian ocean and was unable to return to HMS Prince of Wales, the Royal Navy’s flagship carrier.
It landed safely but it has since developed a technical snag and is unable to return to the carrier.
Since the jet’s landing, engineers from HMS Prince of Wales have assessed the aircraft, but the visiting teams have been unable to fix it so far.
On Thursday, the British High Commission said in a statement to the BBC: “The UK has accepted an offer to move the aircraft to the Maintenance Repair and Overhaul facility at the airport. It will be moved to the hangar once UK engineering teams arrive with specialist equipment, thereby ensuring there is minimal disruption to scheduled maintenance of other aircraft.
“The aircraft will return to active service once repairs and safety checks have been completed,” it added. “Ground teams continue to work closely with Indian authorities to ensure safety and security precautions are observed.”
Authorities at Thiruvananthapuram airport told the BBC they were expecting technicians from the UK to arrive on Saturday.
The $110m (£80m) jet is being guarded around the clock by six officers from the RAF.
Dr Sameer Patil, director of the Centre for Security, Strategy and Technology at the Observer Research Foundation in Mumbai, told the BBC the Royal Navy had only two options: “They can repair it and make it fly-worthy or they can fly it out in a bigger cargo plane such as a C-17 Globemaster transport aircraft.”
The case of the stranded jet has also been raised in the House of Commons.
On Monday, opposition Conservative MP Ben Obese-Jecty asked the government to clarify what was being done to secure it and return it to operational service, the UK Defence Journal reported.
“What steps are the government taking to recover the plane, how much longer will that take, and how will the government ensure the security of protected technologies on the jet while it is in the hangar and out of view?” he was quoted as saying.
The British armed forces minister, Luke Pollard, confirmed the aircraft remained under close UK control.
“We continue to work with our Indian friends who provided first-class support when the F-35B was unable to return to the carrier,” he said. “I am certain that the security of the jet is in good hands because Royal Air Force crew are with it at all times.”
F-35Bs are highly advanced stealth jets, built by Lockheed Martin, and are prized for their short take-off and vertical landing capability.
So images of the “lonely F-35B”, parked on the tarmac and soaked by the Kerala monsoon rains, have spawned memes on social media.
One viral post joked that the jet had been put up for sale at an online site at a hugely competitive price of $4m. The listing claimed the jet included features like “automatic parking, brand-new tyres, a new battery and an automatic gun to destroy traffic violators”.
One user on X said the jet deserved Indian citizenship as it had been in the country long enough, while another suggested that India should start charging rent and that the Kohinoor diamond would be the most appropriate payment.
On Wednesday, Kerala government’s tourism department also joined in the fun with a post on X that said “Kerala, the destination you’ll never want to leave.”
The post included an AI-generated photograph of an F-35B standing on the runway with coconut palm trees in the background. The text suggested that, like most visitors to the state described in tourism brochures as “God’s own country” for its scenic beauty, the jet too was finding it hard to leave.
Dr Patil says that each passing day that the jet remains stranded, “it adversely affects the image of the F-35Bs and the Royal Navy”.
“The jokes and memes and rumours and conspiracy theories are affecting the image and credibility of the British Royal Navy. The longer the jet stays stranded, the more disinformation will come out.”
The engineering issues “seem of a much more serious nature” than it was originally thought, he says.
But most militaries, he adds, prepare for “a worst-case scenario” – and it is one since a jet is stranded on foreign soil.
“Most militaries would have a standard operating procedure [SOP] on how to respond when something like this happens. So does the Royal Navy not have an SOP?”
The optics of this, he says, are really bad.
“If such a thing had happened in enemy territory, would they have taken this much time? This makes for very bad PR for a professional navy.”
Gaza aid contractor tells BBC he saw colleagues fire on hungry Palestinians
A former security contractor for Gaza’s controversial new Israel- and US-backed aid distribution sites has told the BBC that he witnessed colleagues opening fire several times on hungry Palestinians who had posed no threat, including with machine guns.
On one occasion, he said, a guard had opened fire from a watchtower with a machine gun because a group of women, children and elderly people was moving too slowly away from the site.
When asked to respond the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) said the allegations were categorically false.
They referred us to a statement saying that no civilians ever came under fire at the GHF distribution sites.
The GHF began its operations in Gaza at the end of May, distributing limited aid from several sites in southern and central Gaza. That followed an 11-week total blockade of Gaza by Israel during which no food entered the territory.
The system has been widely criticised for forcing vast numbers of people to walk through active combat zones to a handful of sites. Since the GHF started up, Israeli forces have killed more than 400 Palestinians trying to retrieve food aid from its sites, the UN and local doctors say. Israel says the new distribution system stops aid going to Hamas.
Continuing his description of the incident at one of the GHF sites – in which he said guards fired on a group of Palestinians – the former contractor said: “As that happened, another contractor on location, standing on the berm overlooking the exit, opened up with 15 to 20 shots of repetitive weapons fire at the crowd.
“A Palestinian man dropped to the ground motionless. And then the other contractor who was standing there was like, ‘damn, I think you got one’. And then they laughed about it.”
The contractor, who spoke to us on condition of anonymity, said GHF managers had brushed off his report as a coincidence, suggesting that the Palestinian man could have “tripped” or been “tired and passed out”.
The GHF claimed the man who made these allegations is a “disgruntled former contractor” who they had terminated for misconduct, which he denies. He showed us evidence that he left the post on good terms.
The man we spoke to, who said he had worked at all four of the GHF distribution sites, described a culture of impunity with few rules or controls.
He said contractors were given no clear rules of engagement or standard operating procedures, and were told by one team leader: “if you feel threatened, shoot – shoot to kill and ask questions later”.
The culture in the company, he said, felt like “we’re going into Gaza so it’s no rules. Do what you want.”
“If a Palestinian is walking away from the site and not demonstrating any hostile intent, and we’re shooting warning shots at them regardless, we are wrong, we are criminally negligent,” he told me.
He told us that each site had CCTV monitoring the activity in the area, and GHF insistence that no one there had been hurt or shot at was “an absolute bare-faced lie”.
GHF said that gunfire heard in footage shared with the BBC was coming from Israeli forces.
Team leaders referred to Gazans as “zombie hordes”, the former contractor said, “insinuating that these people have no value.”
The man also said Palestinians were coming to harm in other ways at GHF sites, for example by being hit by debris from stun grenades, being sprayed with mace or being pushed by the crowds into razor wire.
He said he had witnessed several occasions in which Palestinians appeared to have been seriously hurt, including one man who had a full can of pepper spray in his face, and a woman who he said was hit with the metal part of a stun grenade, improperly fired into a crowd.
“This metal piece hit her directly in the head and she dropped to the ground, not moving,” he said. “I don’t know if she was dead. I know for a fact she was unconscious and completely limp.”
Earlier this week more than 170 charities and other NGOs called for the GHF to be shut down. The organisations, including Oxfam and Save the Children, say Israeli forces and armed groups “routinely” open fire on Palestinians seeking aid.
Israel denies its soldiers deliberately shoot at aid recipients and says the GHF’s system provides direct assistance to people who need it, bypassing Hamas interference.
The GHF says it had delivered more than 52 million meals in five weeks and that other organisations “stand by helplessly as their aid is looted”.
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.
At least 57,130 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.
Oasis ‘sounding huge’ as comeback tour launches
It’s the gig that fans have been waiting 5,795 days for, as Oasis kick off their reunion tour at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium on Friday night.
The venue has been hosting soundchecks and rehearsals all week, with passersby treated to snatches of songs such as Cigarettes & Alcohol, Wonderwall and Champagne Supernnova.
“It’s sounding huge,” Noel Gallagher told talkSPORT radio. “This is it, there’s no going back now.”
The Oasis Live ’25 tour was the biggest concert launch ever seen in the UK and Ireland, with more than 10 million fans from 158 countries queuing to buy tickets last summer.
- Cardiff gets Oasis fever as tour launches at Principality Stadium
Around 900,000 tickets were sold, but many fans complained when standard standing tickets advertised at £135 plus fees were re-labelled “in demand” and changed on Ticketmaster to £355 plus fees.
The sale prompted an investigation from the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), which said Ticketmaster may have breached consumer protection law by selling “platinum” tickets for almost 2.5 times the standard price, without explaining they came with no additional benefits.
The CMA ordered Ticketmaster to change the way it labels tickets and reveals prices to fans in the future. Ticketmaster said it “welcomed” the advice.
Still, the debacle has done nothing to dampen the excitement in Cardiff, where fans have arrived from Spain, Peru, Japan, America and elsewhere for the opening night.
“For me, Oasis represents an overwhelming optimism about being young and loving music,” says Jeff Gachini, a fan from Kenya who’s making his first visit to the UK for the show.
“To write simple music that relays the simple truth of life is very difficult. For me, they do that better than anyone.”
Brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher will be joined on stage by Gem Archer, Paul “Bonehead” Arthurs and Andy Bell, all former members of Oasis, alongside drummer Joey Waronker, who has previously recorded with Beck and REM; and toured with Liam.
The band will also be augmented by a brass section, and backing singer Jess Greenfield, who is part of Noel’s side project the High Flying Birds.
Meanwhile, rumours about the setlist have been swirling all week, as Oasis songs echoed around the Principality Stadium.
One purported running order that was leaked to Reddit suggested the band would open with Hello and finish with Champagne Supernova, with other highlights including Acquiesece, Roll With It, Live Forever and Supersonic.
Noel is also expected to take lead vocals twice during the show, on short sets including songs such as Half The World Away and The Masterplan.
Britain’s biggest band
Oasis were the biggest band in Britain from 1994 to 1997, selling tens of millions of copies of their first three albums Definitely Maybe, (What’s The Story) Morning Glory and Be Here Now.
Liam’s sneering vocals and Noel’s distorted guitars brought a rock and roll swagger back to the charts, revitalising British guitar music after an influx of self-serious Seattle grunge.
Born and raised in Manchester, they formed the band to escape the dead-end mundanity of their working class backgrounds.
“In Manchester you either became a musician, a footballer, a drugs dealer or work in a factory. And there aren’t a lot of factories left, you know?” Noel Gallagher once said.
“We didn’t start in university or anything like this. We’re not a collection of friends that kind of come together and discuss things musically.
“We started the group… because we were all on the dole and we were unemployed and we rehearsed and we thought we were pretty good.”
Oasis was originally Liam’s band, performing under the name The Rain. But after watching them live, Noel offered to join – on the condition that he became chief songwriter and de facto leader.
That fait accompli brought them worldwide fame, culminating in two open-air gigs at Knebworth House in summer 1996.
Nearly five per cent of the UK population applied for tickets, with a then-record 125,000 people watching the band top a line-up that also included The Prodigy, Manic Street Preachers, Ocean Colour Scene, The Chemical Brothers, The Charlatans and a Beatles tribute.
But festering tension between the Gallagher brothers often spilled over into verbal and physical violence.
Backstage at a gig in Barcelona in 2000, for example, Noel attacked Liam after he questioned the legitimacy of his eldest daughter. The guitarist walked out for the rest of the European tour, leaving the band to continue with a stand-in.
Although they repaired the relationship, the insults and in-fighting continued until 28 August, 2009, when Oasis split up minutes before they took the stage at the Rock en Seine festival in Paris.
“People will write and say what they like, but I simply could not go on working with Liam a day longer,” Noel wrote in a statement at the time.
He would later recount a backstage argument in which his younger brother grabbed his guitar and started “wielding it like an axe”, adding, “he nearly took my face off with it”.
Since then, they’ve pursued successful solo careers, while constantly fielding questions about an Oasis reunion.
Liam called the idea “inevitable” in 2020, and said the band should reform to support NHS workers during the Covid-19 pandemic. However, he said his brother had spurned the idea, despite a lucrative offer from promoters.
“There was a lot of money knocking about,” he told ITV’s Jonathan Ross Show. “It was £100 million to do a tour.
“But [Noel] isn’t into it. He’s after a knighthood, isn’t he?”
The reconciliation took another five years and, with neither of the Gallaghers consenting to an interview, it’s hard to know what informed their decision to get back together.
Tabloid newspapers suggested that Noel’s divorce from Sara McDonald in 2022 led to a thaw in relations. Others have suggested the brothers simply wanted the Oasis story to have a more satisfactory conclusion than a dressing room bust-up.
“I’ve heard everything is honky dory and they’re getting on great,” says Tim Abbott, former managing director of Oasis’s record label, Creation.
“I’ve worked with bands in the past that had separate limos, separate walkways onto the stage. I don’t think they’ll get to that. They’re grown men.”
Whatever sparked the reunion, the sold-out tour will see the band play 41 shows between July and November, spanning the UK & Ireland, North America, Oceania and South America.
“Probably the biggest and most pleasing surprise of the reunion announcement is how huge it was internationally,” said Oasis’s co-manager Alec McKinlay in an interview with Music Week.
“Honestly, we knew it would be big here, and that doesn’t take much intuition. But looking outside the UK, we knew they had a strong fanbase, we did all the stats.
“We were quite cautious about what that would mean when it came to people actually buying tickets but we were just bowled over by how huge it was.”
McKinlay added that the band had no plans for new music, and described the tour as their “last time around”.
They take to the stage for the first time in 16 years at 20:15 UK time on Friday night.
Shunning the usual rock and roll trappings, Noel Gallagher was spotted arriving for the show by train.
American teen pilot detained on small island in Antarctica
An American teenager has been detained on an Antarctic island, creating a major delay in his attempt to fly his small plane to every continent that is being followed online by more than a million people.
Chilean authorities stopped Ethan Guo, 19, after he submitted a false flight plan, according to the BBC’s US partner CBS News.
His deviation from that plan in the air had “activated alert protocols”, Chile’s General Directorate of Civil Aeronautics said in a statement.
Mr Guo was taken into custody after landing on King George Island, home to a number of international research stations and their staffs, where July temperatures typically stay well below freezing.
Mr Guo’s small Cessna 182 aircraft took off from the city of Punta Arenas, near the southernmost point of Chile, and flew to the island off the Atlantic coast, which is claimed by Chile. It is named after England’s King George III.
He was detained at Teniente R. Marsh airport.
Mr Guo had allegedly submitted a plan to fly over Punta Arenas, but not beyond that, according to regional prosecutor Cristian Cristoso Rifo, as cited by CBS.
He has been charged for violating two articles of the country’s aeronautical code, including one that could lead to short-term imprisonment.
In the statement, Chile’s General Directorate of Civil Aeronautics said Mr Guo had also allegedly violated the Antarctic Treaty, which regulates international relations with respect to the uninhabited continent.
Mr Guo posted an update on X on Wednesday, saying: “I’m alive everyone, I’ll make an update soon.”
Ethan Guo has flown his Cessna aircraft to all the other six continents in his journey spanning more than 140 days, according to his social media feed.
He is hoping to become the first pilot to complete solo flights across all seven continents in the Cessna aircraft, and simultaneously aims to raise $1m (£ 731,000) for cancer research at the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.
Congress passes Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ cutting taxes and spending
The US Congress has passed Donald Trump’s sprawling tax and spending bill in a significant and hard-fought victory for the president and his domestic agenda.
After a gruelling session on Capitol Hill, the House of Representatives passed the bill by a vote of 218 to 214 on Thursday afternoon. It was approved in the Senate on Tuesday by one vote.
Trump had given the Republican-controlled Congress a deadline of 4 July to send him a final version of the bill to sign into law.
The Congressional Budget Office estimates the bill could add $3.3tn (£2.4tn) to federal deficits over the next 10 years and leave millions without health coverage – a forecast that the White House disputes.
- ANALYSIS: Trump gets major win – but debate over his mega-bill is just beginning
- EXPLAINER: What’s in Trump’s budget bill?
Speaking to reporters on Thursday evening, Trump said the bill would “turn this country into a rocket ship”.
“This is going to be a great bill for the country,” he said.
He is expected to sign it into law at a ceremony on the 4 July national holiday at 17:00 EDT (22:00 BST).
A triumphant Republican Speaker Mike Johnson emerged from the House after the vote and told reporters “belief” was key to rallying support within his party.
“I believed in the people that are standing here behind me… Some of them are more fun to deal with,” he said. “I mean that with the greatest level of respect.”
Among those he had to convince was Representative Chip Roy, a Texas Republican who was a firm “no” just days ago when the Senate passed its version of the bill. He called the Senate version a “travesty”, but changed his mind by the time voting had begun.
“I feel like we got to a good result on key things,” Roy said, although the House did not make any changes to the Senate bill.
While some Republicans, like Roy, had resisted the Senate version, only two lawmakers from Trump’s own party voted “nay” on Thursday: Thomas Massie and Brian Fitzpatrick.
After Johnson announced that the legislation had passed the chamber by four votes, dozens of Republican lawmakers gathered on the House floor chanting “USA! USA!”
The bill’s passage on Thursday was delayed by Democratic House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, who delivered the longest speech in the chamber’s history.
His “magic minute” address, which is a custom that allows party leaders to speak for as long as they like, ran for eight hours and 45 minutes.
Jeffries pledged to take his “sweet time on behalf of the American people”, decrying the bill’s impact on poor Americans.
The legislation makes savings through making cuts to food benefits and health care and rolling back tax breaks for clean energy projects.
It also delivers on two of Trump’s major campaign promises – making his 2017 tax cuts permanent and lifting taxes on tips, overtime and Social Security recipients – at a cost of $4.5tn over 10 years.
About $150bn (£110bn) will be spent on border security, detention centres and immigration enforcement officers. Another $150bn is allocated for military expenditures, including the president’s “gold dome” missile defence programme.
Democrats, who had used procedural manoeuvres to stall the House vote, were roundly critical of the final bill.
They portrayed it as taking health care and food subsidies away from millions of Americans while giving tax cuts to the rich.
California’s Nancy Pelosi, the former speaker, said “today ushers in a dark and harrowing time”, and called the bill a “dangerous checklist of extreme Republican priorities”.
North Carolina’s Deborah Ross said: “Shame on those who voted to hurt so many in the service of so few.”
While Arizona’s Yassamin Ansari said she was “feeling really sad right now”, while Marc Veasey of Texas labelled the Republican Party the party of “cowards, chaos and corruption”.
The fate of the so-called ‘big, beautiful bill’ hung in the balance for much of Wednesday as Republican rebels with concerns about the impact on national debt held firm – prompting a furious missive from Trump.
“What are the Republicans waiting for??? What are you trying to prove??? MAGA IS NOT HAPPY, AND IT’S COSTING YOU VOTES!!!,” he wrote on Truth Social just after midnight local time on Thursday.
Both chambers of Congress are controlled by Trump’s Republican Party, but within the party several factions were at odds over key policies in the lengthy legislation.
In the early hours of Thursday, Republican leadership grew more confident, and a procedural vote on the bill passed just after 03:00 EDT (07:00 GMT).
The final vote on the bill would come almost 12 hours later, at 14:30 EDT (19:30 GMT).
Trump gets major win now – but it comes with risks down the road
Donald Trump has his first major legislative victory of his second presidential term.
The “big, beautiful bill”, as he calls it, is a sprawling package that includes many key pieces of his agenda – delivering on promises he made on the campaign trail.
It also, however, contains the seeds of political peril for the president and his party.
That Trump and his team were able to shepherd the legislation through Congress despite narrow majorities in both the House of Representatives and the Senate is no small achievement.
His success required him and his allies to win over budget hawks within his Republican Party who were intent on slashing government spending, as well as centrists who were wary of cuts to social programmes.
When this congressional session started in January, there were doubts about whether House Republicans could even agree to return Congressman Mike Johnson to the speaker’s chair, let alone agree on major pieces of legislation.
Agree they did, however – as did Republicans in the Senate, a notoriously unwieldy chamber.
- Congress passes Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’
- A look at the key items in the legislation
- BBC Verify: Fact-checking three claims about the bill
The spending package approved by lawmakers directs about $150bn (£110bn) in new spending for border security, detention centres and immigration enforcement officers. Another $150bn is allocated for military expenditures, including the president’s “gold dome” missile defence programme.
The really big numbers, however, are in the tax cuts in this legislation. They amount to more than $4.5tn over 10 years.
Some of these are cuts that were first enacted in Trump’s first term, and were set to expire before the bill makes them permanent. Others, like ending taxes on tips and overtime, where 2024 campaign promises that are implemented by will end in 2028.
All this adds up to massive new debt for the US. The White House contends that the tax cuts will spur economic growth that will generate sufficient new revenue, when taken alongside tariff collections.
But outside projections suggest that this legislation will add more than $3tn in new US debt.
As critics like Republican Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky have pointed out, the legislation raises the amount of new debt the federal government can issue by $5tn – a step that would not be necessary if the White House truly believed their budget projections.
Paul and others like tech multibillionaire Elon Musk have warned that this massive amount of debt will be growing burden on the federal government, as interest payments crowd out other spending and drive up interest rates. A fiscal reckoning is coming, they warn.
Another senator who voted against the legislation, Thom Tillis of North Carolina, had a different warning for Trump and his party. In a fiery speech on the floor of the chamber, he accused the president of breaking a promise to those who supported him – citing the bill’s cuts worth approximately $1tn to Medicaid, a government-run health insurance programme for low-income Americans.
“Republicans are about to make a mistake on healthcare and betray a promise,” he said, declaring that more than 660,000 people in North Carolina would be “pushed off” Medicaid.
A year after Trump made inroads with working-class Americans, including minority voters who traditionally have supported opposing Democrats, his legislation will cause nearly 12 million Americans to lose Medicaid coverage in the next 10 years, according to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office.
Democrats are already preparing an onslaught of attacks against Republicans for what they say is legislation that cuts social service in order to provide tax cuts to wealthier Americans.
Although those cuts won’t come into effect until after next year’s congressional midterm elections, Democrats will try to remind American voters of the consequences the decisions Republicans made over the past few weeks.
Trump is preparing what should be a celebratory bill signing ceremony on 4 July – American Independence Day – and will tout his ability to govern not just through executive order, but also through enacting new law.
But the fight to define the benefits – and consequences – of this bill is just beginning.
Ryanair increases size limits for free cabin bags
Budget airline Ryanair is planning to increase its “personal bag” size by 20% as the EU brings in a new standard.
Passengers will be allowed to take an item such as a handbag or laptop bag measuring up to 40cm x 30cm x 20cm in the cabin without paying an extra fee. It should weigh less than 10kg, and fit “under the seat in front you.”
The new size represents a 20% increase in volume from the current maximum dimensions.
This will mean that Ryanair accepts free bags one third bigger than the new EU minimum size limit.
Ryanair said the new free bag size would come into effect in the coming weeks as its bag size measuring devices were adjusted to the new standard.
Its current maximum bag size is 40cm x 25cm x 20cm, which already has a greater volume than the new European standard of 40cm x 30cm x 15cm.
Ryanair declined to say why it was giving passengers a larger carry-on bag allowance.
The size is still less generous than rival budget airline Easyjet, which allows a free underseat bag of 45cm x 36cm x 20cm (including wheels and handles) weighing up to 10kg.
Wizz Air allows one cabin bag as big as Ryanair’s new limits – 40cm x 30cm x 20cm, with the same weight limit of 10kg.
BA has a slightly smaller limit for an under-seat laptop bag or handbag of 40cm x 30cm x 15cm, but passengers are allowed to take a larger cabin bag as well free of charge, subject to a maximum weight of 23kg.
The EU has been working with airlines to agree a minimum free bag size, so that frequent travellers can purchase one piece of luggage and be confident it would be accepted by multiple airlines.
The rule applies to airlines based in the EU – which includes Easyjet, Ryanair and Wizz Air – but airlines are of course free to accept larger bags if they choose.
Confusion about the different minimum sizes has caused problems for passengers, who have sometimes been faced with unexpected extra fees when airlines said their bags didn’t match the specified dimensions.
Last month the transport committee of the European parliament voted to give passengers the right to an extra piece of free hand luggage weighing up to 7kg. The proposed rule would still have to be passed by the wider European parliament.
Passengers should confirm baggage rules with their airlines directly.
Boxer Julio Cesar Chavez Jr arrested by US immigration
US immigration agents have arrested famed Mexican boxer Julio Cesar Chavez Jr, 39, and plan to deport him to Mexico where he has “an active arrest warrant… for his involvement in organised crime”, US officials announced on Thursday.
Less than a week before his arrest, the former middleweight world champion was defeated by influencer-turned-boxer Jake Paul at a match in California.
US officials say he is affiliated with the notorious Mexican Sinaloa drug cartel. His lawyer denied the claims.
“Under President Trump, no one is above the law – including world-famous athletes,” a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said in a statement following his arrest.
Chavez Jr was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers in Studio City, Los Angeles, on Thursday.
His fight against Paul was in nearby Anaheim on Saturday. Chavez Jr is the son of former boxing champion Julio Cesar Chavez Sr, who is considered to be the best boxer in Mexico’s history.
The DHS statement said that the “prominent Mexican boxer and criminal illegal alien” is being processed for “expedited removal” .
“Chavez is a Mexican citizen who has an active arrest warrant in Mexico for his involvement in organized crime and trafficking firearms, ammunition, and explosives,” the statement said.
It added that officials believe that he may be affiliated with the Sinaloa Cartel, which President Donald Trump designated as a terrorist organisation on his first day back in office in January.
Describing the alleged connection, the statement says he applied for US permanent residency last year due to his marriage to a US citizen “who is connected to the Sinaloa Cartel through a prior relationship with the now-deceased son of the infamous cartel leader Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman”.
According to US officials, Chavez Jr has been arrested and jailed for several offences in the US, many involving weapons.
In January 2024, he was arrested and later convicted for illegal possession of an assault weapon, officials said.
In 2023, a local judge in the US issued an arrest warrant against him for allegedly trafficking weapons for a criminal organisation. Nearly a decade earlier, in 2012, he was arrested for driving without a licence under the influence drugs or alcohol.
He also allegedly made multiple fraudulent statements to US immigration authorities in his attempts to gain permanent residency and over-stayed a tourist visa that expired last February.
A lawyer for Chavez Jr called his arrest “nothing more than another headline to terrorise the Latin community”.
Asked about the allegations of a cartel connection, lawyer Michael Goldstein told NBC: “This is the first we’ve ever heard of these outrageous allegations.”
Two weeks before the bout against Paul, Chavez Jr held a public workout in LA where he spoke to the LA Times about the massive uptick in immigration raids that have swept the city in the past month.
He said that his own trainer was afraid to come to work, due to fear of deportation.
“I was even scared, to tell you the truth. It’s very ugly,” he said, accusing US immigration agents of “giving the community an example of violence”.
“I’m from Sinaloa, where things are really ugly, and to come here, to such a beautiful country with everything… and see Trump attacking immigrants, Latinos, for no reason. Not being with God makes you think you know everything. Trump made a bad decision.”
He added: “After everything that’s happened, I wouldn’t want to be deported.”
Reservoir Dogs actor Michael Madsen dies aged 67
Hollywood actor Michael Madsen died in his California home on Thursday morning, US media reported. He was 67.
He was found unresponsive by authorities responding to a 911 call at his Malibu home and pronounced dead at 08:25 local time (15:25 GMT), according to The Hollywood Reporter.
He is believed to have died of cardiac arrest, according to a representative.
Madsen was a prolific actor, best known for his roles in the Quentin Tarantino movies Reservoir Dogs, Kill Bill: Vol. 2, The Hateful Eight and Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.
In Reservoir Dogs, one of the seminal movies of the 1990s, he played the thief Mr Blonde, described by fellow characters as “psycho”, and shocked audiences in a scene where he cut off a policeman’s ear.
During a career spanning four decades, Madsen also took on a number of tv roles.
In both TV and film, he often portrayed the law enforcers like sheriffs and detectives, as well as the law breakers, such as a washed-out hitman in the Kill Bill franchise.
In recent years, he lent his voices to video games, including Grand Theft Auto III and the Dishonored series.
Madsen was born in Chicago in September 1957. His father was a Navy veteran of World War Two who later became a firefighter, and his mother was a film-maker.
He was the brother of Virginia Madsen, who is known for several movies including Sideways, for which she was nominated for an Oscar and Golden Globe.
He was married three times, and is survived by four children, including actor Christian Madsen.
Madsen divorced his wife of 28 years, DeAnna, in 2024, over the death of their son Hudson, according to People magazine.
“My brother Michael has left the stage,” Virginia wrote in a statement to Variety.
“He was thunder and velvet. Mischief wrapped in tenderness. A poet disguised as an outlaw. A father, a son, a brother – etched in contradiction, tempered by love that left its mark.”
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Published
The death of Liverpool and Portugal forward Diogo Jota in a car crash aged 28 has left the football world in shock.
Jota and his brother, Andre Silva, both died after the Lamborghini they were travelling in crashed in the Spanish province of Zamora.
BBC Sport has been told the 28-year-old Jota was on his way back to Liverpool for pre-season training, making the trip by car and ferry because he had undergone minor surgery so doctors advised him against flying.
Jota married his long-term partner Rute Cardoso, with whom he had three children, just 11 days before the fatal crash.
Liverpool said Jota’s death is a “tragedy that transcends” the club, while fans gathered outside Anfield to lay tributes.
Reds manager Arne Slot said Jota was “the essence of what a Liverpool player should be”.
BBC Sport understands a wake for Jota and his brother will take place on Friday afternoon before their funeral on Saturday in Porto, Portugal.
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Liverpool forward Jota dies in car crash
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Diogo Jota: A Tribute
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AttributioniPlayer
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‘A symbol of hope & inspiration – Jota was a Portuguese hero’
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What happened?
Jota and 25-year-old Silva, also a professional footballer for Portuguese second-tier club Penafiel, were killed after their car left the road because of a tyre blowout that occurred while overtaking another vehicle.
The Guardia Civil told BBC Sport both men died at about 00:30 local time on Thursday.
With Jota intending to return to Liverpool by boat, this is understood to mean he was travelling by car from Porto to take a ferry from Santander in northern Spain.
There are ferry routes from Santander to Plymouth and Portsmouth in the south of England.
Zamora, close to the Portuguese border, is about 190 miles from Porto and a similar distance from the port.
It is understood Jota had also travelled by road and sea to get to Porto for his wedding.
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Remembering Diogo Jota
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Jota was on way to ferry when he died
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Liverpool and Ronaldo lead tributes
Liverpool led the tributes to Jota, saying the club was “devastated” by such an “unimaginable loss”.
He scored 65 goals in 182 appearances for Liverpool, helping them win the FA Cup and League Cup in 2022 and the Premier League title last season.
The club put out further statements later on Thursday, with boss Slot paying tribute to a player who had become “a loved one to all” at the club.
The Dutchman added: “Someone who made others feel good about themselves just by being with them. A person who cared deeply for his family.”
Slot said he last spoke to Jota to congratulate him on Portugal winning the Nations League and wish him luck for his wedding.
“In many ways, it was a dream summer for Diogo and his family, which makes it all the more heartbreaking that it should end like this,” he added.
Slot said Liverpool and their supporters are “all with” Jota’s family and the “the same can be said of the wider family of football”.
Reds captain Virgil van Dijk said it was a “privilege” to have played alongside Jota and been his friend off the pitch.
“We will miss you beyond words and never forget you,” added the Dutchman. “Your legacy will live on, we will make sure of it.”
Left-back Andy Robertson said Jota was “the most British foreign player” he had met.
In an Instagram post, the Scotland international added: “The last time I saw him was the happiest day of his life – his wedding day. I want to remember his never-ceasing smile from that magical day. How much he was bursting with love for his wife and family.”
A statement from the club’s owners and leadership group, Billy Hogan, John Henry, Tom Werner and Mike Gordon, said they have been left “numb with grief” as they offered condolences to Jota’s family.
They added: “Beyond the player that we all knew was a wonderfully humble human being, he was sincere, intelligent, funny, tough and created connections with people everywhere he went. He had a zest for life that was utterly contagious.”
Liverpool sporting director Richard Hughes and Fenway Sports Group chief executive of football Michael Edwards said in a statement: “This is a tragedy that transcends Liverpool football club.”
They added the club will look to honour Jota with the “respect and affection” he deserves in the coming days, but for now “express a love that is filled with deep sorrow and pain” after losing someone “truly irreplaceable”.
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Liverpool and Ronaldo lead tributes to Jota
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Adored & admired – Jota memories ‘will live on forever’
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‘A natural finisher who was always feared by defences’
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Jota had previously played for Pacos de Ferreira, Atletico Madrid, Porto and Wolves – for whom he netted 44 goals in 131 games – before joining Liverpool in 2020.
His final match was for Portugal in their Uefa Nations League final win against Spain. He scored 14 goals in 49 internationals.
Portugal captain Cristiano Ronaldo wrote on social media: “It doesn’t make sense. Just now we were together in the national team, you had just got married.”
Five-time Ballon d’Or winner Ronaldo sent his condolences to Jota’s family, wife and children, and added: “I know you will always be with them. Rest in Peace, Diogo e Andre. We will miss you.”
Jurgen Klopp, the former Liverpool manager who signed Jota for the Reds, said he was “heartbroken”.
“Diogo was not only a fantastic player, but also a great friend, a loving and caring husband and father,” the German posted on Instagram.
“We will miss you so much.”
Fans gather at Anfield
Thousands of football fans gathered at Liverpool’s home ground Anfield on Thursday to pay their respects.
They laid tributes at the club’s Hillsborough disaster memorial, with a sea of flowers, football shirts, scarves, balloons and flags outside the stadium.
Lifelong fan John Barlow from Leyland in Lancashire, a survivor of the Hillsborough disaster in 1989, said he was “absolutely devastated” when the news broke and had to stop what he was doing at work to travel to Anfield.
Jota was a fan favourite, respected as a tenacious player but also known to supporters as a laid-back and outgoing character off the pitch.
“The success that he has helped bring to this city will never be forgotten”, said Steve Rotheram, metro mayor of the Liverpool City Region.
Liverpool have opened physical and digital books of condolence and supporters and members of the public can sign the physical book at Anfield , externalfrom Thursday until Sunday.
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Diogo Jota’s death: Experiencing grief and how to process your emotions
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Tears as fans mourn Liverpool’s Jota at Anfield
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Published26 July 2022
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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.
Seven-time champion Novak Djokovic outclassed Dan Evans in what could be the British veteran’s final appearance at Wimbledon.
Evans, now ranked 154th in the world and given a wildcard to play at the All England Club, lost 6-3 6-2 6-0 in their second-round match.
Serb great Djokovic, 38, produced a serving masterclass which even left Evans shaking his head in disbelief at several points.
The 35-year-old home favourite, who was willed on by an encouraging Centre Court crowd, won just nine of his 58 receiving points (16%) in the match.
Djokovic, seeded sixth this year, also demonstrated why he is still one of the best returners in the men’s game by converting six of his 16 break points.
It was an impressive display from the 24-time Grand Slam champion, who is aiming to equal his rival Roger Federer’s record tally of Wimbledon men’s singles titles.
Djokovic is also trying to finally land a standalone record 25th major, having not claimed one of the sport’s most prestigious prizes since the 2023 US Open.
“Everyone knew it was going to be a special atmosphere today – a Brit in Britain is never easy to face,” said Djokovic, who earned his 99th match win at Wimbledon.
“He’s a good quality player who possesses a lot of great talent, a great touch and, with the ball staying low with the slice, it can cause trouble if you’re not at the top of your game.
“But I think was. I executed perfectly. Sometimes you have these days where everything flows.”
Djokovic’s win teed up an all-Serb contest against Miomir Kecmanovic in the third round, with a place in the last 16 on the line.
With Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal having retired, Djokovic is the last of the ‘Big Three’ still playing.
Eyeing a record 25th Grand Slam title, Djokovic said he has no time to think about joining his former rivals in retirement.
“I don’t pause to reflect, to be honest. I don’t have time,” he said.
“I think that’s going to come probably when I set the racquet aside and then sip margaritas on the beach with Federer and Nadal and just reflect on our rivalry and everything.
“If I play like today, I feel like I have a very good chance against anybody, really, on the Centre Court of Wimbledon, a place where I maybe feel the most comfortable on any court.”
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Was this Evans’ last Wimbledon?
Stepping out again on Centre Court, this time to face arguably the greatest men’s player of all time, was a rich reward for Evans.
A loss of form and injuries over the past couple of seasons led to a brief exile outside the top 200 earlier this year.
The strain of the ageing process and an inescapable feeling of “letting down” his family and supporters have been particularly difficult to deal with.
It led to Evans becoming overcome with emotion in his pre-tournament news conference at Wimbledon when he opened up about his feelings.
The enthusiasm with which the former world number 21 celebrated beating fellow British wildcard Jay Clarke in the first round illustrated his delight at earning another priceless victory at Wimbledon.
While Evans has indicated he has no plans yet to retire, he also knows there is not much mileage left on the clock of his career.
Asked if this could be his final Wimbledon, he said: “I don’t know. See what this year brings.
“I have to decide at the end of the year. There will definitely be some sort of chat at the end of the year [about] what I want to do.
“It’s not getting any easier, that’s for sure. Waking up after playing matches is hard now.”
Evans, whose victory over Clarke was his first at the All England Club since 2021, knew there would be no better place to create a shock than beating Djokovic on Centre Court.
But it quickly became clear the gulf in class between the pair was too much.
Evans hung tough in the first set before finally buckling on the 10th break point he faced at 4-3, with Djokovic going on to win 13 of the next 15 games to secure a straightforward victory.
The majority of the 15,000 crowd waited patiently for Evans to pack his racquet bag, so they could send him off the most famous court in the sport with a passionate ovation.
“I believed I could win the match. I felt confident going into the match,” Evans said.
“I understand the occasion and what a moment it was for myself. Of course, it’s disappointing, but I’ll look back with a proud happiness.”
British duo Pinnington Jones and Fery knocked out
Evans was one of three British singles players to exit Wimbledon on Thursday, with wildcards Jack Pinnington Jones and Arthur Fery being beaten by Italian opponents.
Pinnington Jones, who made his debut at the Championships this year, lost 6-1 7-6 (8-6) 6-2 to Flavio Cobolli.
Fery, meanwhile, trailed Luciano Darderi by two sets when play was suspended on Tuesday and he was unable to stage a comeback once the match resumed, losing 6-4 6-3 6-3.
A record 36 seeds have exited Wimbledon after two rounds – 19 men and 17 women.
British world number four Jack Draper, American Tommy Paul, Czech player Tomas Machac and Canada’s Felix Auger-Aliassime became the latest seeded players to exit the men’s draw on Thursday.
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Published31 January
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Published
Let’s not get carried away just yet.
On Wednesday, Emma Raducanu produced one of her best performances “in a long time” to beat 2023 champion Marketa Vondrousova and move into the Wimbledon third round.
But backing up that victory to reach the last 16 will probably require an even better display from the British number one on Friday.
Standing in her way is Aryna Sabalenka, the world number one and overwhelming favourite for the women’s singles title.
Raducanu has made sound progress to climb back into the world’s top 40 this season, but the evidence has shown there is still a clear gulf between the 22-year-old and the leading stars.
Both of her Grand Slam appearances this season were ended in ruthless fashion by five-time major champion Iga Swiatek – Raducanu winning only one game at the Australian Open and three at the French Open in a pair of demoralising defeats.
Coco Gauff, who went on to win the Roland Garros title, also proved too much of a step up in class for Raducanu on the Rome clay.
The challenge for Raducanu is discovering how she can test the very best.
“I think I need more weapons. I think I need to be able to hit the ball with better quality more often,” Raducanu, the 2021 US Open champion, told BBC Sport before facing Sabalenka.
“I think I need to serve better. I think I need to hit better on the move. There are a lot of things I need to do better.
“Beating a top player like Marketa, who has won this tournament, was obviously a really positive thing for me and a really good marker.
“But I need to bridge the gap to the very, very top.”
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Playing passively could spell danger
With her powerful serve and lights-out baseline game, Sabalenka has become the dominant player on the WTA Tour over the past 18 months.
The blistering nature of her shots translates to any surface and is why she has reached at least the quarter-finals in each of the past 10 Grand Slams she has played.
At Wimbledon, where Sabalenka has reached the semi-finals on her most recent two appearances, the faster courts suit her first-strike tennis.
This means she uses her serve and return of serve to quickly get on top of her opponents in the points.
Wimbledon’s statistical insight tool calculates 39% of Sabalenka’s shots are attacking, compared to an average of 24% in the women’s draw.
“The last few years she’s just been so consistent and solid,” said Raducanu, who made the fourth round at the All England Club in 2021 and 2024.
“I just have to try to control my side as best as possible and, I guess, be smart.
“But, at the same time, I need to take my chances if I have any because I can’t play passive against her.
“She can take the racquet out of your hand and just dominate if you give her that chance.”
But patience is also required
After being outclassed by Swiatek and Gauff on hard and clay courts, Raducanu feels the Wimbledon grass represents her best chance of pushing Sabalenka.
Since teaming up with coach Mark Petchey earlier this year, Raducanu has also looked to use her serve and forehand more aggressively.
The statistical analysis also shows she is more attacking than average in the women’s draw – with 27% of her shots classed that way by TennisViz.
But she knows she cannot be “overly aggressive” and needs to use craft too.
Raducanu’s return also needs to be on point against one of the best servers in the game.
The sliced backhand will be an important tool to take the pace out of Sabalenka’s groundstrokes.
Her athleticism can also help Raducanu be more of a counter-puncher against the Belarusian and potentially draw mistakes.
“Raducanu’s defence against Vondrousova was outstanding, albeit Vondrousova doesn’t attack as much or with the same firepower as Sabalenka,” said TennisViz’s Phil Newbury.
“The slice could be key here. Sabalenka’s ‘steal score’ – which calculates how often a player has won the point when they are defending during it – was just below the draw average in her second round.
“It suggests if Raducanu can force her way into Sabalenka’s defence, there could be positive rewards for her.”
Home comforts could help
Raducanu feels she has a better chance of beating one of the leading players at Wimbledon than at the other majors.
As well as being comfortable on the grass, feeling “at home” is helping her play with more freedom.
Having a tight-knit and trusted group around her is a key factor in the progress she has made this season.
Petchey is a trusted ally who used to coach her as a teenager, while long-time confidante Jane O’Donoghue continues to provide support while on a career break from her finance job.
Raducanu has also been able to hang out with friends at Wimbledon and was seen taking selfies with them on the All England Club balcony after beating Vondrousova.
“I had the same sort of routine last year. I just really cherish these moments because we know how hard it is week to week playing on the tour,” she said.
“When we’re here in this sort of environment feeling at home, it’s so special.”
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Published31 January
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Second Rothesay Test, Edgbaston (day two of five)
India 587: Gill 269, Jadeja 89; Bashir 3-167
England 77-3: Brook 30*; Deep 2-36
Scorecard
England’s top order was blown away after Shubman Gill’s mammoth 269 for India to leave the hosts requiring their most unlikely turnaround yet under captain Ben Stokes after two days of the second Test at Edgbaston.
Gill’s epic helped India pile up 587 and, after five sessions in the field, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope and Zak Crawley all fell to leave England 77-3 at the close.
Duckett and Pope, England’s centurions from their comeback win in the first Test, were caught in the slips off consecutive deliveries in seamer Akash Deep’s second over.
Crawley wafted at Mohammed Siraj to offer another edge on 19 as India, who faced huge questions coming into this Test, took total control.
Harry Brook was skittish in making 30 not out – he finished alongside Joe Root who has 18 – and could easily have deepened England’s woes.
Gill had earlier effortlessly compiled the highest score by an India batter in England and the highest score by an Indian skipper anywhere in the world.
After resuming on 114, Gill extended his partnership with Ravindra Jadeja to 203 to steer India away from early danger and when Jadeja fell for 89, he put on 144 with Washington Sundar to drive home the advantage.
India were guilty of letting a winning position slip in Leeds but now hold all of the cards as they bid to level the series.
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England face mammoth task
England have made a habit of pulling off the improbable under Stokes but this was already their toughest task before India’s triple strike.
They have conceded 500 three times under this regime and won on each occasion.
None of those three previous totals were as large as India’s here, however. In fact, only once has a team conceded so many and won – New Zealand, who countered Bangladesh’s 595-8 declared to win in 2017.
Although the pitch remains largely good for batting, India’s bowlers found more movement and zip than England’s managed all day.
They did not miss Jasprit Bumrah with Deep stepping up to replace the world’s leading bowler who is resting.
Looking forward, intrigue is added by Stokes’ previous insistence that his side will not play for draws.
Other teams would already be considering that scenario, especially given they hold a series lead, but not England if Stokes is to stay true to his word.
India strike Deep blow
Such is cricket, Duckett followed his 149 last week with a five-ball duck in the Midlands.
Where his wish to play every ball outside off stump had helped him in England’s chase there, here it resulted in a thick edge to third slip where Gill took a tumbling catch.
Dropped catches were a major factor in India’s inability to close out a win in Leeds but on this occasion they caught every chance.
KL Rahul juggled Pope’s edge at first slip before clinging on and first slip Karun Nair snaffled Crawley, who had begun the innings with two crunching drives.
While Deep’s skiddy nature found seam movement, the 1.1 degrees of swing India found with the new ball was almost double what England had managed.
If any England fans expected Brook to be defensive, they would have been disappointed.
After being beaten twice by Siraj in his opening deliveries and surviving an umpire’s call lbw review to the same bowler, he stepped away to slap the seamer for four and charged him to loft a six.
Later he was almost bowled as he stepped to leg again, and in the final over he had to deflect the ball away with his shoulder as he almost played onto his stumps.
Gill carries India to huge total
Having shown the utmost control on day one, Gill increased his intent after his resumption but there was no real increase in jeopardy as India carried on from 310-5.
He edged Chris Woakes through the slips in the second over of the day but that was to a delivery that was a front-foot no-ball anyway. Otherwise he was untroubled as he played a series of glorious drives, pulls and cuts.
England went through their plans. They tried the bouncer ploy with six fielders on the leg side and Brook bowled five overs of his unattractive medium pace which cost 31.
Brook’s introduction allowed Gill to go from 200 to 250 in just 37 deliveries, in the process passing Sunil Gavaskar’s 221 in 1979 to become the highest scoring Indian in an innings in England.
His 200th run had taken India beyond the 471 they made in defeat at Headingley and brought him his first Test double century to go with one in one-day internationals.
England struggled to extract anything from the surface. Josh Tongue found a bit of lift to bounce out Jadeja before lunch and Root a hint of turn to bowl Sundar in the afternoon.
Gill was finally out pulling Tongue to square leg but, with Brydon Carse struggling with an apparent foot injury and neither Stokes nor Woakes seen with the ball after their first spells, Shoaib Bashir was left to take the final two wickets – Deep caught on the long-on boundary and Prasidh Krishna stumped.
‘England can’t be a one-trick pony’ – what they said
Ex-England captain Michael Vaughan: “We’re having a summer that’s quite warm, a dry summer. The theory of England chasing, they have chased well and gone 1-0 up in the series, you’ve got to look at the bigger picture sometimes.
“Someone like Shoaib Bashir, he’s a young 21-year-old off-spinner and he keeps getting asked to bowl on day one with nothing there against some quality players and you can’t just be a one-trick pony team where you just think ‘well that’s the way that we play and that’s the way we go about our business’. Will they chase in Australia? I very much doubt it.”
England spin bowling coach Jeetan Patel: “We decided to bowl and we’ll stick by that. On the first day it showed enough for us and we created a lot of opportunities and it didn’t go our way.
“People are going to look at any scorecard and make a decision on what they’re going to think. I’m not really fussed and I don’t think any of us are fussed about what’s said outside of the group.”
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American Ben Shelton was furious when play in his second-round encounter with Rinky Hijikata at Wimbledon was suspended because of bad light as he was about to serve for the match.
After winning the first two sets 6-2 7-5, 10th seed Shelton was leading 5-4 in the third and potentially on course to wrap up his progress within a matter of minutes.
But with the time approaching 21:30 and the sunlight having faded, the umpire on court two announced that there would be no more play that evening, much to Shelton’s frustration.
The two-time Grand Slam semi-finalist, 22, angrily questioned officials about the decision, which means he has to return on Friday to play what could prove to be just one game, denying him a full day off.
Adding to Shelton’s annoyance was the fact he had lost three match points on Hijikata’s serve just before, and had also asked if play could be suspended before the start of the third set.
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