Whole pod of 77 whales die in ‘biggest mass stranding in decades’
A pod of 77 pilot whales has died after washing ashore on a beach in Orkney in what could be the biggest mass stranding for decades.
The British Divers Marine Life Rescue (BDMLR) had established 12 of the animals at Tresness Beach on the island of Sanday were still alive when they came out of the water.
However the decision was taken to euthanise them after refloating efforts failed.
The pod included male whales up to seven metres (22ft) long as well as females, calves and juveniles.
Experts say it is too early to know what has caused the stranding, but it is likely one of the whales got into trouble and the rest of the pod tried to help.
Members of the public are being asked to stay away from the area post mortem examinations are carried out.
It is thought to be the largest stranding event in Scotland since at least 1995, when the Scottish Marine Animal Stranding Scheme (SMASS) was founded – though strandings of a similar scale have been seen in recent years.
Last year an entire pod of 55 pilot whales died following a stranding on Lewis.
Only 15 of whales were alive when they were washed ashore. One was successfully re-floated while the rest had to be euthanised.
Between 60-70 of the animals came into shallow waters in Sutherland in 2011.
According to the Natural History Museum, the largest UK stranding took place in 1927 when 126 out of more than 130 false killer whales died in the Dornoch Firth in the Highlands.
Experts from the BDMLR, the Scottish SPCA and marine vets from the Scottish mainland travelled to Sanday to assess whether any of the whales could be saved.
The area was cut off by the high tide and the sand on the beach where they were stranded proved too soft to allow the mammals to be righted.
The whales needed to be moved back into an upright position as quickly as possible if there is to be any chance of saving them.
But the soft sand meant the whales fell back over when the rescuers attempted to right them.
Emma Neave-Webb from the BDMLR said early on that while these experiences are difficult, the thinking had to be “realistic”.
‘Hugely emotional’
BDMLR medics were brought in from mainland Orkney and Inverness to help with the rescue attempt, but Ms Neave-Webb said it appeared they whales had been stranded for “quite some time”.
She described the scene as “really quite horrible” and “hugely emotional”.
Rescuers attempted to keep the whales alive by pouring sea water over them, but the decision was later taken to euthanise them.
A spokesperson for Orkney Islands Council said discussions were taking place with community representatives on how best to dispose of the bodies.
They said: “In previous circumstances where whales have beached on our shores and subsequently died, the approach from our Environmental Health team around disposing of the body has been to allow nature to take its course – with the public advised to stay away from the area.
“Our assessment in this case, given the scale and the likely public health implications, is that more definite action will need to be taken, for example burying them where they are or removing the bodies to a large grave site elsewhere.”
Andrew Brownlow of the Scottish Marine Animal Stranding Scheme said mass strandings of this scale are becoming more common in Scotland.
He told BBC News: “It used to be quite unusual to have a mass stranding event, certainly of this size.
“But over the last ten years or so we have seen an increase both in the number of mass stranding events around Scotland and also the size of the mass and the number of animals that it involves.
“So that is slightly concerning and that might be because there are just more animals out there, or it could be that there are more hazards that these animals are exposed to.”
The Shining actress Shelley Duvall dies at 75
US actress Shelley Duvall, known for films like The Shining, Annie Hall and Nashville, has died at the age of 75.
Her partner Dan Gilroy confirmed the news to The Hollywood Reporter.
“My dear, sweet, wonderful life partner and friend left us. Too much suffering lately, now she’s free. Fly away, beautiful Shelley,” he said, according to the outlet.
She died in her sleep of complications from diabetes at her home in Texas, Gilroy said.
Duvall’s other credits included 1977 drama 3 Women, directed by Robert Altman, for which she won the Cannes Film Festival’s best actress award and was nominated for a Bafta.
Three years later, she starred as Olive Oyl opposite Robin Williams in Altman’s musical version of Popeye.
But Duvall fell out of favour in Hollywood and was off screens for two decades, before making her comeback in 2023’s The Forest Hills.
With her large brown eyes and offbeat charisma, Duvall was a distinctive and compelling presence.
She began her career, and her association with Altman, in 1970 dark comedy Brewster McCloud, and the pair reunited for McCabe and Mrs Miller in 1971.
After filming her performance as a woman who falls for a 1930s bank robber in their next movie, Thieves Like Us, Altman told her: “I knew you were good, but I didn’t know you were great.”
She said that remark was “the reason I stuck with it and became an actress”.
The director stuck with her, once saying she “was able to swing all sides of the pendulum: charming, silly, sophisticated, pathetic, even beautiful”.
Altman cast her again in 1975’s Nashville, his satire of US society, politics and country music.
Their next collaboration, 3 Women, saw Duvall play a talkative, trend-following health spa attendant. The Guardian’s Anne Billson ranked it as her best role, and “quite simply one of the greatest performances of the 1970s”.
Meanwhile, also in 1977, Duvall memorably played Pam, a Rolling Stone reporter who went on a date with Woody Allen’s Alvy in Annie Hall.
Her best-known role was perhaps Wendy, the wife of Jack Nicholson’s terrifying hotel caretaker in Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 horror classic The Shining.
Filming was an ordeal. “I had to cry 12 hours a day, all day long, the last nine months straight, five or six days a week,” she once recalled.
After that, Duvall’s film roles included Terry Gilliam’s Time Bandits and Roxanne with Steve Martin.
She also set up her own production companies, and made and hosted beloved 1980s children’s TV show Faerie Tale Theatre.
Her acting roles diminished in the 1990s, with Jane Campion’s The Portrait of a Lady the pick of the crop, and she dropped off the radar in 2002.
The New York Times attributed her apparent disappearance to the impact of a 1994 earthquake that damaged her Los Angeles home, and the stress of her brother having cancer.
Discussing her prolonged absence from the screen, she told the paper in May she had been the victim of a fickle film industry. “I was a star. I had leading roles. People think it’s just ageing, but it’s not. It’s violence,” she said.
Asked to explain, she said: “How would you feel if people were really nice, and then, suddenly, on a dime they turn on you?
“You would never believe it unless it happens to you. That’s why you get hurt, because you can’t really believe it’s true.”
‘Ultimate film star’
Concerns about her health were raised when she appeared on the TV talk show Dr Phil in 2016 and told him: “I’m very sick. I need help.”
She also talked about receiving messages from a “shapeshifting” Robin Williams following his death, and talked about malevolent forces who were out to do her harm, the paper said.
Speaking about that period, Gilroy told the New York Times she had become “paranoid and just kind of delusional”.
Asked by the paper why she had agreed to return to the screen in The Forest Hills, she replied: “I wanted to act again. And then this guy kept calling, and so I wound up doing it.”
Novelist Nicole Flattery wrote in the Financial Times in 2023 that her return showed her magic had remained intact.
In an article dubbing her the “ultimate film star”, Flattery summed up her talent, writing: “She’s a master at playing characters who act happy when they’re sad, their daffiness masking depth.”
Australian soldier charged with spying for Russia
An Australian soldier and her husband have been arrested and each charged with spying for Russia.
Investigators say the couple – both Russian-born Australian citizens – obtained Australian Defence Force (ADF) material to share with Moscow.
However, Australian police say “no significant compromise” of Australian secrets has been identified.
It is the first time stricter foreign interference laws – introduced by Australia in 2018 – have been used to lay espionage charges.
The 40-year-old woman, an army private, and her 62-year-old husband will face court in Brisbane later on Friday, each on one count of preparing for an espionage offence.
Australian Federal Police Commissioner Reece Kershaw said the woman had been an information systems technicians in the army for several years, and had obtained a security clearance.
He alleged she secretly travelled to Russia while on leave from the ADF, then instructed her husband on how to access her work account and send sensitive material so that she could forward it on to Russian authorities.
An investigation in to whether any of the material was ever delivered to them is still underway, Mr Kershaw said, and the charges could be upgraded.
India tycoon’s son to marry after months of festivities
After months of lavish celebrations spread across the world, the wedding ceremony of the son of Asia’s richest man is set to take place on Friday.
Anant Ambani, son of Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani, will tie the knot with Radhika Merchant, daughter of pharma tycoons Viren and Shaila Merchant.
The four-day wedding extravaganza in Mumbai city is the final stop in a string of lavish parties the family has hosted since March.
The events, which have already featured performances by popstars like Rihanna and Justin Bieber, have captured the world’s attention.
But it has also led to backlash – city dwellers have complained of traffic snarls, while others have questioned the ostentatious display of wealth at the seemingly never-ending celebrations.
- The marathon Indian wedding turning heads around the world
Mukesh Ambani, 66, is at present the world’s 10th richest man with a net worth of $115bn, according to Forbes. Reliance Industries, founded by his father in 1966, is a massive conglomerate that operates in sectors ranging from petroleum and retail, to financial services and telecoms.
Anant Ambani is the youngest of his three children, all of whom are on the board of Reliance Industries. The 29-year-old is involved in Reliance’s energy businesses and is on the board of Reliance Foundation.
On Friday, the couple will get married in a traditional Hindu ceremony at the Jio World Convention Centre.
Reports say the family will host a grand reception through the weekend, before a final reception for their household staff on Monday.
Rumours on the internet suggest that Adele could be performing at the wedding, but the family has not confirmed this.
Mumbai police have labelled the wedding a “public event” since it would be attended by several international and Indian VIPs, reports Reuters news agency.
The city police has also imposed traffic restrictions around the venue.
From Friday to Monday, roads around the convention centre will be open only for “event vehicles” between 13:00 India time (07:30 GMT) to midnight, it said.
Rajan Mehra, CEO of air charter company Club One Air, told Reuters that the family had rented three Falcon-2000 jets to ferry wedding guests to the event.
“The guests are coming from all over and each aircraft will make multiple trips across the country,” he said.
The restrictions have sparked anger among the city residents who say they are already struggling with traffic jams and monsoon flooding.
The wedding festivities began in March when the family held a three-day pre-wedding party in their home state of Gujarat.
Among the 1,200 guests to attend the celebration were international celebrities, politicians, and members of the business world – including Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg and Microsoft’s Bill Gates.
- World’s rich in India for tycoon son’s pre-wedding gala
The party started with a performance by Rihanna on the first night. Diljit Dosanjh, the first Punjabi singer to perform at Coachella, took the stage on the second night, while rapper Akon closed the show on the final day of celebrations.
In June, the Ambanis organised another pre-wedding celebration, this time, a luxury cruise from Italy to France. The Backstreet Boys, Katy Perry and Pitbull performed for the 800 guests, which included Bollywood stars and cricketers.
Then came the final round of celebrations, which began earlier this week when Bieber landed in Mumbai.
Social media has been flooded with photos and videos of him singing in front of an ecstatic audience.
Money was also lavished on constructing 14 temples inside a sprawling complex in Jamnagar to showcase India’s cultural heritage and provide a backdrop for the wedding. As part of the celebrations, the Ambanis hosted a mass wedding for 50 underprivileged couples too.
On Wednesday, the family hosted a bhandara – a community feast for underprivileged people.
The Ambanis have not revealed how much this wedding is costing them but wedding planners estimate they’ve already spent anywhere between 11bn and 13bn rupees [$132m-$156m]. It was rumoured Rihanna had been paid $7m (£5.5m) for her performance, while the figure suggested for Bieber is $10m.
Why both businesses and scammers love India’s payment system
Every day, for the last seven years, Arun Kumar has set up his fruit stall on a busy Mumbai street.
It’s not an easy way to make a living.
“Being a street vendor is a challenge. There’s the fear of being robbed or, as I am not a licensed vendor, the local body can come and dismantle my store anytime,” he says.
But over the past four years at least one aspect of his work has become easier.
“Prior to Covid everything was in cash. But now everyone pays with UPI. Scan the code and the payment is done within seconds.
“No issues of handling cash, giving change to customers. It has made my life and business smooth,” he says.
UPI, or to give it its full name the Unified Payments Interface, was launched in 2016 in a collaboration between India’s central bank and the nation’s banking industry.
It’s an app-based instant payment system, which allows users to send and receive money, pay bills and authorise payments in a single step – no need to enter bank details or any other personal information. And, perhaps most importantly, it’s free.
It has become so popular that India is now the biggest real-time payments market.
In May, UPI recorded 14 billion transactions, up from nine billion the year before.
But the popularity and ease of use has made it a rich feeding ground for scammers.
“While digital payments are convenient, they do come with vulnerabilities,” says Shashank Shekhar, founder of the Delhi-based Future Crime Research Foundation.
Mr Shekhar says that scammers use a variety of ways to trick people, including persuading them to share their UPI pin number, which is needed to authorise payments.
Some scammers have also created fake UPI apps, that are clones of legitimate banking apps, and then steal login details or other valuable information.
“The pace at which digital transformation took place in the country means unfortunately digital literacy and safe internet practice could not catch up,” says Mr Shekhar.
He says that between January 2020 and June 2023 almost half of all financial fraud involved the use of the UPI system.
According to government figures there were more than 95,000 cases of fraud involving UPI in the financial year ending April 2023, up from 77,000 in the previous year.
Shivkali was one such victim. She had always wanted to own a scooter, but they were beyond her budget.
However, earlier in the year the 22-year-old, who lives in Bihar state in northeastern India, spotted one for sale on Facebook that looked like a great deal.
“I grabbed the opportunity without thinking,” she says.
A couple of clicks later and she was talking to the owner, who said that for $23 he would send over the vehicle papers.
That went smoothly, so Shivkali continued to send the owner money, via instant transfers. She eventually ended up paying $200, but the scooter (also commonly called a Scooty in India), was never delivered.
Shivkali realised she had been scammed.
“I did not think I could be cheated, as I have some education background and know what is happing in the world. But scammers are smart. They have an art of speaking to convince the opposite person,” she says.
The government and the central bank are looking at ways to protect UPI users from scammers.
But at the moment, if a victim wants compensation, they have to approach their bank.
“The problem is deep rooted,” says Dr Durgesh Pandey, an expert in financial crime.
“Most of the onus lies with banks and telecom companies. They are lax in making identity checks, that’s why the fraudster can’t be traced.
“But the challenge for banks particularly is that they have to balance between inclusivity, ease of business and enforcement of identity checks. If they are too rigid, the vulnerable section of society will remain without banking facilities.”
But Dr Pandey argues that in most cases of fraud, the bank is not totally to blame.
“It’s a complex question because the problem lies with banks, but it’s the victim who is giving his credentials in most case. I would say both victim and bank should bear the loss.”
Despite those problems, UPI is being promoted in rural areas where access to banking services can be difficult.
Poonam Untwal from Rajasthan runs a guidance centre which helps people use the internet and digital banking.
“Most of us are not that educated, nor know the proper use of smartphones. I teach them that phones are no longer a device just to talk to people but banks at their fingertips,” she says.
She believes that UPI will help develop the local economy.
“Many women like me have a small business that we run from our home. Now we can receive and send money with UPI. People who don’t have smart phones come to my centre to get their transactions done,” she says.
As well as making inroads into rural areas, UPI is spreading overseas.
Retailers in Bhutan, Mauritius, Nepal, Singapore, Sri Lanka and UAE will take UPI payments.
And this year, France become the first European country to accept UPI payments, starting with tickets to the Eiffel Tower.
Back in Mumbai, Mr Kumar is happy that he no longer has to use cash, but remains wary.
If he can’t get a good internet connection then customers can, by accident or design, make off without paying.
“For a small vendor like me it [UPI] made receiving money very easy. But I am always scared of fraud. I keep hearing in the news how the UPI frauds are increasing. Hopefully some mechanisms are invented so a small vendor like me doesn’t face losses.”
Israeli army ‘failed in mission’ to protect kibbutz from Hamas attack
Israel’s defence minister has called for a state inquiry into what led to the Hamas attacks on 7 October, as the military admitted it failed in its duty to protect a small community were 101 people were killed.
Yoav Gallant made his comments after the first in a series of official Israeli military reports laid bare how the army operated in Kibbutz Be’eri, which is near the Gaza perimeter fence.
More residents died at the kibbutz than any other Israeli community on 7 October, after gunmen crossed from Gaza and rampaged through their homes.
Mr Gallant said an independent national inquiry was needed to examine the actions of all those in power, including Prime Minster Benjamin Netanyahu, in relation to how Hamas had grown in strength and capability over the past decade.
Around 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken back to Gaza as hostages in the unprecedented assault last autumn.
It led to the major Israeli military operation in Gaza which has killed more than 38,000 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
Members of the kibbutz said it was important the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) admitted it had failed to protect them and they too are demanding a national inquiry.
The report, carried out by a senior military officer, commended the bravery of security personal but said the IDF was not prepared for the extensive infiltration by Hamas and “for the first seven hours of combat, the kibbutz residents defended themselves”.
It said: “The inquiry team determined that the IDF failed in its mission to protect the residents of Kibbutz Be’eri.”
Other findings included:
- The IDF “struggled to create a clear and accurate situational assessment” of what was happening in the kibbutz until the afternoon of the attacks, which began at dawn
- There was a “lack of command and control, a lack of co-ordination, and a lack of order among the different forces and units”
- Confusion meant security forces grouped at the entrance to the kibbutz but waited to enter while Hamas were killing people
- That “heroism and supreme courage shown by the fighting forces, commanders, and security personnel” saved many residents
The report also focused on the command given to a tank to shell a house in which 13 hostages were being held.
No personal blame was attributed to Brigadier General Barak Hiram, commander of the 99th Infantry Division who was found to have acted professionally along with other senior officers in “complex and difficult circumstances.”
The report said: “The tank fire towards the area near the house was carried out professionally, with a joint decision made by commanders from all the security organisations after careful consideration and a situational assessment was made, with the intent to apply pressure to the terrorists and save the civilians held hostage inside.”
Brig-Gen Hiram is soon due to take command of the Gaza Division.
The report’s authors concluded that as far as they could assess, no civilians inside the house were harmed by tank-shell fire, except for what they called “an isolated incident outside the building where two civilians were injured by shrapnel”.
It said: “The team determined that most of the hostages were likely murdered by the terrorists, and further inquiries and reviews of additional findings are necessary.”
The IDF’s Chief of the General Staff accepted all the conclusions of the report and ordered they be integrated into future operational plans.
Hamas killed one in 10 of the 1,000 residents of Be’eri on 7 October in a rampage that started after dawn and lasted for hours.
Sharon Sharabi, whose two brothers Yossi and Eli were taken into Gaza as hostages, was briefed earlier on the report and said he had learned nothing new from the official findings.
“There was a command failure here. This is a difficult and bad picture,” he said.
Yossi, 53, has been declared dead [by Israeli authorities] and the fate of Eli, who would now be 52, is unknown.
Mr Sharabi said: “It cannot be beautified in any way. No investigation they may try to do can make it rosy. It’s impossible.”
A statement issued by Kibbutz Be’eri residents said it was of great importance to them that the IDF had asked for their forgiveness for not protecting them from what they called “an unparalleled attack of evil”.
“The failure of the army has been burned into our bodies and in our hearts for nine months,” their statement said.
Residents said they still had not received satisfactory answers to why the army did not enter the kibbutz, nor had any explanation been given yet for the intelligence failure that allowed Hamas to launch their mass assault undetected.
They also called for a national [state] inquiry, which prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been unwilling to initiate.
Thursday’s report is expected to be the first in a series of IDF probes into how the 7 October attacks were dealt with in various parts of southern Israel where Hamas attacked.
Hungary’s Viktor Orbán to meet Donald Trump
Donald Trump will meet Viktor Orbán in Florida on Thursday night, just weeks after the Hungarian prime minister met Russia’s Vladimir Putin.
His visit to Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach is the latest in a number of meetings between the two men.
Mr Orbán has publicly endorsed Trump’s re-election bid and recently said there was a “very, very high chance” that President Joe Biden would lose the election.
The Hungarian leader has been frequently criticised in Europe for his pro-Russian views but remains popular among Trump supporters and US conservatives.
He has also recently met China’s Xi Jinping and Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine in a self-described “peace” initiative.
On Wednesday, Russian newspaper Izvestia wrote such initiatives were futile, “but Viktor Orbán may pass information he has collected to Trump’s team”.
Mr Orbán told German media earlier this week that the former US president was a “self-made man” with a “different approach to everything”.
A Trump victory in the US election would be “good for the world politics”, he added.
“He [Trump] is a man of peace. Under his four-year term he did not initiate a single war, and he did a lot in order to create peace in old conflicts in very complicated areas of the world.”
Mr Orbán, whose country currently holds the presidency of the European Union, also criticised the Biden administration for failing to end the conflict in Ukraine.
“I think new leadership will provide new chances,” he said.
Mr Orbán was the first and only EU leader to back Trump’s bid for presidency in 2016, but had to wait until May 2019 for his first visit to the White House.
Trump has found more time for the Hungarian leader out of power. At the 2022 Conservative Political Action Conference in Dallas, he told cheering delegates: “The globalists can all go to hell… I have come to Texas.”
His creation of a similar group in his country, CPAC Hungary, has boosted his relationships further.
In March this year, after meeting Trump in Florida, Mr Orbán posted on X/Twitter: “We need leaders in the world who are respected and can bring peace. He is one of them! Come back and bring us peace, Mr President.”
In April this year, Trump sent a short video message to CPAC Hungary, saying he was “honoured to address so many patriots in Hungary… proudly fighting on the front lines of the battle to rescue western civilisation.
“Together we’re engaged in an epic struggle to liberate our nations from all of the sinister forces who want to destroy them.’
He referred to Mr Orbán in the same address as “a great man”.
Mr Orbán has boasted that he has created an “illiberal democracy” in Hungary, and claims “progressives” have unleashed a “virus” of “migration, gender, and the woke movement”.
Tori Towey ‘so relieved’ to be in Ireland after Dubai ordeal
A woman charged with criminal offences in Dubai after she was allegedly a victim of domestic violence has said she is “so relieved… thankful and grateful” to have returned to Ireland.
Tori Towey, 28, faced charges including attempted suicide and consuming alcohol and had her passport destroyed.
Her flight from Dubai landed in Dublin at 12:21 local time.
“I’m just so relieved, I just I can’t believe it,” Ms Towey told Irish broadcaster RTÉ.
Ms Towey added that the support of the Irish people and the media had been amazing.
And, now she plans to see her family and friends.
But first of all, Ms Towey said she is going to “go home and rest” after an ordeal she described as “tiring”.
‘Glad to be back’
Ms Towey, from County Roscommon, was working as a flight attendant with an airline based in Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), when she was charged with attempting suicide and consuming alcohol.
Her case prompted an intervention by Taoiseach (Irish prime minister) Simon Harris earlier this week after it was raised in the Dáil (Irish lower house of parliament).
Police in the UAE withdrew the charges against her on Wednesday and a travel ban was lifted.
Ms Towey said she was “so thankful and grateful to be back” and spoke of her fear of not being able to return to Ireland.
“Obviously when my mother came out to me it was a massive help, but it was just the unknown and just not knowing anything, not knowing what’s going to happen,” she said.
“It’s only kind of between yesterday and today that I kind of got clarity. I wasn’t getting any answers, but I’m just glad to be back.”
Ms Towey was speaking at the airport beside her mother, Caroline, and aunt Ann Flynn.
Caroline said it is “great to have her home” and described the ordeal as “a nightmare, a real nightmare”.
Ms Towey’s mother said the plan now is to “go home and get our heads together and move on”.
‘An Irish woman will not be treated this way’
Her case drew attention in Ireland when it was raised in the Dáil by Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald on Tuesday.
“She has been the victim of the most gross domestic violence,” Ms McDonald said.
“Her passport has been destroyed. There was a travel ban imposed on her.”
The Irish government should make it “absolutely plain to the authorities of Dubai that no woman should be treated in this way”, Ms McDonald told the Dáil, and that “an Irish citizen, an Irish woman, will not be treated in this way”.
The taoiseach thanked Ms McDonald for bringing the case to his attention and said he was ready to “intervene”.
Mr Harris said her treatment had been “utterly, utterly unacceptable”.
He went on to say Ms Towey had “been the victim of male violence”.
“What Tori has been through is, I think, unimaginable for so many people here in this country, that a woman who has been the victim of a brutal attack found herself waking up not in a hospital, but in a police station,” Mr Harris added.
On Wednesday, the taoiseach told the Dáil that a travel ban preventing Ms Towey from leaving the UAE had been lifted and Irish embassy staff would be escorting Ms Towey to the airport.
After her arrival in Dublin Airport on Thursday afternoon, Ms Towey thanked the taoiseach, Ms McDonald, Tánaiste (deputy prime minister) Micheál Martin and the Irish ambassador to the UAE.
She also thanked human rights advocate and lawyer Radha Stirling from Detained in Dubai, who assisted her case.
What happened up to this point?
- 28 June – After allegedly being assaulted, Ms Towey is charged with attempting suicide
- 9 July – Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald raises her situation in the Dáil and says her passport has been destroyed and she has been banned from travelling
- Taoiseach Simon Harris says the Irish government will do what it can to help Ms Towey
- 10 July – Mr Harris says he has spoken to Ms Towey and that she is increasingly positive about the situation
- The taoiseach later confirms the travel ban has been lifted and she is preparing to travel to the airport and home to Ireland
- The Dubai Public Prosecution confirms the case against Ms Towey has been dropped
- 11 July – Ms Towey and her mother return to their home in the Republic of Ireland
Baltimore bridge survivor describes horror of collapse
The sole survivor of the Baltimore bridge disaster has told how he watched friends and relatives fall from the structure and die as he fought for his own life.
“I relive it all the time, the minutes before the fall and when I’m falling,” Julio Cervantes Suarez told NBC News in his first interview since the 100,000-ton cargo ship, the Dali, crashed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge on 26 March.
Mr Cervantes Suarez, 37, was one of seven maintenance workers fixing potholes at the time of impact. The force threw the van he was in off the structure and into the the Patapsco river around 180ft (50m) below.
He said he prepared for death.
“I thanked God for the family he gave me. I asked him to take care of my wife and kids. And I asked for forgiveness,” he said in an interview in Spanish.
He struggled in vain to open the doors as water rose to his neck, then managed to force a window open – squeezing out just before the vehicle sank.
Unable to swim, he clung to a piece of wreckage and waited for rescue.
“That’s when I realised what happened. I looked at the bridge and it was no longer there,” he said.
Mr Cervantes Suarez said he saw co-workers – some of whom were family – as “the water covered them”.
“I started to call out to each by name,” he said. “But no one answered me.”
The first to fall was his nephew, Carlos Daniel Hernández, who was in a car when the Dali smashed into the bridge.
Mr Cervantes Suarez said he had told the 24-year-old, whom he considered a son, to take a break in the vehicle.
“If I had told him to come with me, maybe it would have been different,” he said. “Maybe he would be here with us.”
The other victims were:
- José Mynor López, 37
- Maynor Suazo Sandoval, 38
- Dorlian Ronial Castillo Cabrera, 26
- José Lopez, 35
- Alejandro Hernández Fuentes, 35.
The Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed after the Dali lost power, veered off course and smashed into the structure.
Rescuers searched the waters for days to recover the bodies of all the victims.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the National Transportation Safety Board are investigating the crash.
A lawyer for Mr Cervantes Suarez and other victims told NBC that he was considering legal action against the Dali’s Singapore-based owner, Grace Ocean.
Mr Cervantes Suarez said he wanted those responsible to “pay” for the damage, but said he knew that it would not bring back his loved ones and co-workers.
“I know that money is not going to buy a hug from a father or a son,” he said.
‘Relief’ as Canadian serial killer found guilty in death of 4 women
Tearful cheers erupted in a packed Canadian courtroom on Thursday as a judge found a serial killer guilty of first-degree murder in the deaths of four indigenous women.
But in the court gallery, Jeremy Contois’ reaction was reserved.
His younger sister, Rebecca, was one of the women killed in the city of Winnipeg, Manitoba two years ago.
“I feel a little sense of relief,” Mr Contois said, but will not get full closure until the killer, Jeremy Skibicki, is formally sentenced.
In his oral verdict, Manitoba Court of King’s Bench Chief Justice Glenn Joyal dismissed the argument by the defence at trial that the accused was not criminally responsible for the murders.
Lawyers for Skibicki, 37, said he was suffering from schizophrenia at the time of the killings.
Prosecutors argued that Skibicki deliberately killed Ms Contois and three other women in 2022 in crimes that were calculated and racially motivated.
The murders and the subsequent weeks-long trial sent shockwaves through Canada’s indigenous community, which has long grappled with cases of violence against their women.
Wearing a grey T-shirt and pants, Skibicki did not react as Judge Joyal read aloud the summary of his judgment.
One of Ms Contois’ family members held up a large photo of Rebecca in his direction as he left the courtroom.
“Why did I lift up her photo? Because we, as First Nations people, are not statistics,” Krista Fox said afterwards.
“Every single one of us has a name, and a family that misses us dearly.”
Skibicki’s victims are Morgan Harris, 39, Marcedes Myran, 26 and Ms Contois, who was 24. The fourth woman has yet to be identified, and has been given the name Mashkode Bizhiki’ikwe, meaning Buffalo Woman, by indigenous elders.
Throughout the trial, a buffalo head sat on a red cloth on a table near the prosecutors in tribute to the still unidentified victim.
In his verdict, Judge Joyal said the accused failed to demonstrate he was not criminally responsible for the murders, dismissing the testimony of a British psychiatrist, Dr Sohom Das, who said Skibicki was motivated by delusions when he committed the murders.
The judge added that the “mercilessly graphic” facts of the case “are largely uncontested”, given that the accused had admitted to the murders in police interviews and in court prior to the trial.
Skibicki had pleaded not guilty due to a mental disorder.
The 100-person courtroom was packed full with the four women’s families and friends for the verdict.
Judge Joyal said the case has had an “undeniable and profound impact on the entire Manitoba community, indigenous and non-indigenous”.
With Skibicki facing life behind bars, the focus is now shifting to finding the remains of two of his victims, Ms Myran and Ms Harris, which are believed to be in a Winnipeg landfill.
A formal search has been set for this autumn, after months of pressure from their families.
‘Intentional and purposeful’ murders
According to court documents, Skibicki killed the women between March and May of 2022, with Ms Contois believed to be the final victim.
He met at least two at local homeless shelters in Winnipeg, a city of 820,000 in the prairie province.
Judge Joyal agreed with prosecutors that he deliberately targeted and exploited “vulnerable” women.
Over the course of the trial, the court heard that Skibicki had assaulted the women, strangled or drowned them and then committed sex acts on them before dismembering their bodies and disposing of them in garbage bins.
The killings went undetected for months, until a man looking for scrap metal in a bin outside Skibicki’s apartment found partial human remains in May 2022 and called police.
“She’s obviously been murdered,” the man said in the 911 call, which was played in court.
Police were able to identify the remains as those of Ms Contois.
More of her remains were discovered at a city-run landfill the following month.
In police interviews shortly after his arrest, Skibicki surprised officers by admitting to killing Ms Contois as well as three others.
At that point, police had no knowledge of the other deaths.
Speaking outside court, Ms Fox said she believes that it was only because Ms Contois’ remains were found that the other families were able to get justice.
Skibicki’s lawyers tried to argue that he was not aware of the severity of his actions due to delusions driven by schizophrenia. They argued he was hearing voices that told him to commit the crimes as part of a mission from god.
Prosecutors argued that Skibicki was fully aware of his actions, saying they were “intentional, purposeful and racially motivated”.
They demonstrated this through a mix of DNA forensic evidence, surveillance footage showing Skibicki with the women in their final days, as well as testimony from his ex-wife, who detailed a history of physical abuse.
Had Skibicki been found not criminally responsible for the four murders, it would have been a relative rarity in Canadian law.
According to data from Canada’s statistics agency and reported by the Globe and Mail newspaper, between 2000 and 2022, of 8,883,749 criminal cases prosecuted across the country, only 5,178 – or 0.06% – had such verdicts.
The case unearthed deep wounds for Canada’s indigenous community, which has long grappled with a high number of cases of their women going missing or being murdered.
According to an investigation by the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, Winnipeg – a city near numerous indigenous communities – had the highest number of missing and murdered indigenous women in Canada between 2018 and 2022.
Across Canada, indigenous women are 12 times more likely to be murdered or go missing than other women, according to a 2019 inquiry.
Some indigenous women in the city remain missing, sparking fears from family members that Skibicki had more victims.
The Crown, however, said they do not believe he murdered more women.
Even with the relief of a guilty verdict, Mr Contois, Rebecca’s brother, said he still wonders why his sister – who is also a mother to a young daughter – was so brutally murdered.
“Why did he have to do it?” he said. “I wish I knew that.”
US says Gaza’s floating aid pier to shut down soon
The US says the floating pier designed to increase the amount of aid getting into the Gaza Strip will “soon cease operations”, less than two months after it was installed.
The announcement came after the US military were unable to re-anchor the pier this week because of “technical and weather-related issues”. It had to be removed on 28 June because of bad weather.
A Pentagon spokesman said more than 8,000 tonnes of humanitarian aid had been delivered from the pier while it was in operation.
He also stressed that it had always been intended as a temporary solution.
US officials suggested it would remain in place until August or September, when changing sea states in the Mediterranean might make it impossible to maintain.
In fact, the weather proved challenging almost as soon after it started operating on 17 May.
For a flagship scheme first announced by President Joe Biden in his State of the Union address in March, the JLOTS (Joint Logistics Over-the-Shore) has had a brief, chequered history.
Following stormy weather in late May, four small landing craft involved in the operation broke loose and were washed ashore.
Days later, parts of the pier were removed and taken to the Israeli port of Ashdod for repairs.
In mid-June, the whole structure, built by US engineers at a cost of $230m (£178m), was taken to Ashdod, again because of the weather.
“Temporarily relocating the pier will prevent structural damage caused by the heightened sea state,” the Pentagon said at the time.
The pier was re-anchored on 19 June, but operations paused again, less than a week later, “for scheduled maintenance activities”.
The scheme was also buffeted by heavy political weather.
When Israeli commandos rescued four hostages from the nearby Nuseirat refugee camp on 8 June, a video showing an Israeli helicopter taking off near the pier triggered speculation on social media that US forces were involved in the rescue.
There was no evidence of American involvement, but the Pentagon was forced to issue a strongly worded denial.
“The temporary pier on the coast of Gaza was put in place for one purpose only,” it said. “To help move additional, urgently needed lifesaving assistance into Gaza.”
America’s role as Israel’s chief military and diplomatic backer meant that the pier was always likely to be the focus of Palestinian suspicions, however unfounded.
“When the pier has worked as intended, it supplied Gaza with much needed aid,” one Gaza-based aid worker said.
“However… its involvement in perceptions of partiality reduced its sustainability.”
For a scheme designed to improve the provision of humanitarian aid, at a time when Israel’s military campaign had left many Gazans on the brink of starvation, what difference did it make?
Joe Biden said the pier would “enable a massive increase in the amount of humanitarian assistance getting into Gaza every day”.
At the end of June, US Central Command (Centcom) said more than 8,831 tonnes of aid had been delivered, with more than half of that arriving over the course of the previous week.
But it also announced yet another setback, saying that “due to anticipated adverse weather”, the pier had to be moved back to Ashdod once more.
It was due to be reinstalled this week to deal with a backlog of aid that has accumulated in Cyprus and on a floating dock moored off the Gaza coastline.
But on Thursday, Pentagon spokesman Maj Gen Pat Ryder announced that Centcom personnel were unable to re-anchor the pier to the shore.
“The pier and support vessels and equipment are returning to Ashdod where they will remain until further notice. A re-anchoring date has not been set,” he said.
He added: “As highlighted in the initial deployment announcement, the pier has always been intended as a temporary solution to enable the additional flow of aid into Gaza during a period of dire humanitarian need, with limited access, supplementing land and air channels of delivery.”
“The pier will soon cease operations, with more details on that process and timing available in the coming days.”
The total delivered so far represents a tiny fraction of what is needed.
According to the UN, about 500 aid trucks entered Gaza every day before the start of the war between Israel and Hamas last October.
The comparisons are imprecise, but over the course of two months, the US pier has delivered roughly the equivalent of one day’s pre-war aid delivery.
And getting the aid ashore has only been part of the challenge. Delivering it, safely, to the people who need it is extremely hazardous.
With Israeli troops this week mounting a fresh ground operation into nearby Gaza City, ensuring safety for aid workers remains as challenging as ever.
The breakdown of law and order throughout the Gaza Strip as a result of Israel’s relentless targeting of anyone associated with Hamas, including police officers, means that looting – whether organised or opportunistic – is still rife.
Aid that has made it ashore has often remained stuck in the Israeli-controlled marshalling yard, with aid agencies reluctant to collect and distribute it in such an insecure environment.
Can Biden be replaced as nominee? Not so easily
Knives are out for Joe Biden after his poorly received performance in the first 2024 presidential debate against Donald Trump.
With November’s election bearing down, a growing number of Democrats are calling on the president to step aside due to concerns about his mental fitness.
Around a dozen Democrats have publicly broken ranks and called for Mr Biden to step aside to be replaced by someone younger from his party.
Mr Biden has defiantly vowed to stay in the race, including during public events and in interviews with ABC News and MSNBC.
Unless he agrees to stand aside, it will get ugly.
Let’s run through the scenarios.
Can Joe Biden withdraw?
Yes, if – and it’s a big if – Mr Biden decides to step down as the Democratic Party’s standard bearer, it would be relatively straightforward to find another candidate.
The party’s nominee will officially be chosen at the Democratic National Convention (DNC) in Chicago from 19-22 August.
The Democrats are reportedly planning to nominate Mr Biden and Vice-President Kamala Harris virtually ahead of that gathering.
There, a candidate must win support from the majority of “delegates” – party officials who formally choose the nominee. Delegates are assigned to candidates proportionally based on the results of each state’s primary election.
This year, Mr Biden won almost 99% of the nearly 4,000 delegates.
According to DNC rules, those delegates are “pledged” to support the incumbent president.
If Mr Biden willingly drops out, it could turn into a free-for-all.
Democrats would be left with an open convention where they would suggest potential nominees and continue voting until one receives the majority of delegate votes.
That could spark a frantic contest among Democrats vying for a shot at the nomination.
Mr Biden has so far given no indication that he would consider stepping aside.
But if he decides to do so, “that opens up an entirely different can of worms”, political historian Leah Wright Rigueur told BBC News.
“I think that if he were to get replaced, part of the negotiation for him stepping down would be that he would get the final say in who replaces him,” she said.
Could he be forced out?
If he doesn’t want to go, this is where the process gets really tricky.
In the modern political era, a major national party has never tried a hostile takeover of the nomination.
However, DNC regulations do have some loopholes that could, in theory, make it possible to push Mr Biden out.
The rules allow delegates to “in all good conscience reflect the sentiments of those who elected them”, meaning they could look to someone else.
“It could be an incredibly ugly scenario,” Ms Wright Rigueur said.
Experts told BBC News they doubt there would be a revolt among party delegates.
But the DNC can alter party rules at any point.
Ms Wright Rigueur pointed to 1968, when President Lyndon B Johnson decided not to run for re-election.
The party shifted from an open convention process, in which delegates could cast ballots for whomever they chose, to a bound process, where a delegate was attached to a candidate based on primary results.
Even if Mr Biden were suddenly to exit the race, conservative groups have vowed to file lawsuits challenging the legality of any replacement Democrat’s eligibility for the ballot.
More on the election
Will Kamala Harris replace Biden?
Vice-President Kamala Harris would automatically take Mr Biden’s place if he were to step down during his presidential term.
But the same rules do not apply if Mr Biden pulls out as a candidate for November’s election race, and there is no mechanism in place that would give the vice-president an upper hand at an open convention.
Instead, Ms Harris would have to win the majority of delegates, just like any other candidate.
It may be that Mr Biden backs her to replace him if he steps aside.
As she is already on the Democratic ticket, Ms Harris would have access to all the campaign funds currently available to the president. And she has a national profile.
But her relatively low popularity among the American public might dull that advantage.
Could the 25th Amendment be invoked?
The 25th Amendment of the Constitution allows the US vice-president and the majority of the cabinet to declare the president unable to perform the duties of office.
If invoked, power is transferred to the vice-president to serve as acting president.
This has never happened before.
But following the debate, senior congressional Republicans called on Mr Biden’s cabinet to consider invoking this clause.
After the US Capitol riot in 2021, the Democratic-controlled House approved a resolution urging then-Vice President Mike Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment to oust Trump, but the move went nowhere.
Who could replace Biden as Democratic nominee?
A slew of Democratic lawmakers are calling on President Joe Biden to end his re-election campaign after his botched debate against Republican challenger Donald Trump.
On Wednesday, Peter Welch of Vermont became the first Democratic senator to call for the president to end his campaign.
Hollywood actor George Clooney, a major party donor, also joined the growing chorus.
A series of opinion polls since the debate suggest Trump may be edging ahead in key states.
President Biden has continued to insist he’s staying in the race. But recent events have raised questions about how he could be replaced – and who would replace him.
How could Biden be replaced?
Various scenarios could play out over the coming days and weeks, but there’s two main ways Mr Biden’s campaign could end: he could pull out willingly, or be forced to step aside by his own party.
The first option is more straightforward.
Mr Biden has won the support nearly all of the Democratic delegates who will vote at the party’s convention in Chicago in August. If he steps down, they would be released to vote for another candidate. Whoever is able to win a majority of delegates at the convention would be the new nominee.
The second option would be much messier.
Democrats could change the rules and turn the convention into a free-for-all against the president’s wishes.
If President Biden did voluntarily suspend his campaign, he might at the same time throw his support behind a possible successor.
Who would be the leading contenders?
Vice-President Kamala Harris
Vice-President Kamala Harris, who is already on the ticket, is an obvious and increasingly popular choice within the party to replace Mr Biden.
As his deputy, she has become the face of the administration’s campaign to protect reproductive rights after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade.
Ms Harris has proved to be a loyal ally to the president and fiercely defended his debate performance. After the event, she admitted the president had a “slow start” but argued he went on to provide more substantive answers than Trump.
Days after the debate, as concern grew about the president’s ability to stay atop the ticket, Ms Harris reiterated her support for Mr Biden.
“Look, Joe Biden is our nominee. We beat Trump once and we’re going to beat him again, period,” she said Tuesday.
“I am proud to be Joe Biden’s running mate.”
Ms Harris has the strong name recognition that comes from the job of vice- president, but has struggled with low approval ratings throughout her tenure.
Fifty-one percent of Americans disapprove of Ms Harris, while 37% approve, according to polling averages tracked by FiveThirtyEight.
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer
Gretchen Whitmer, the two-term governor of Michigan, is an increasingly popular Midwest Democrat who many pundits speculate will run for president in 2028.
She has campaigned for Mr Biden in the past and has not been shy about her political aspirations.
She told the New York Times she wants to see a Generation X president in 2028, but stopped short of suggesting that she might fill that role.
In 2022, she led a campaign that left Michigan Democrats in control of the state’s legislature and the governor’s mansion.
That political control allowed her to enact a number of progressive policies including protecting Michigan abortion access and the passage of gun safety measures.
California Governor Gavin Newsom
California Governor Gavin Newsom is one of the Biden administration’s fiercest surrogates. He frequently appears on cable news networks praising Mr Biden.
But Mr Newsom has political ambitions of his own.
He is often listed as a possible 2028 candidate, but many Democratic pundits now say he could be a stand-in for Mr Biden.
Mr Newsom raised his national profile in recent years by being a key party messenger on conservative media, and via a debate against Florida Governor Ron DeSantis last year.
He was a top surrogate at Mr Biden’s disastrous debate in Atlanta in June, and dodged several questions in the spin room about whether he would replace Mr Biden.
For now, he is publicly standing by the president. He travelled to Washington to attend a Wednesday meeting with Mr Biden and other top Democratic governors, and headlined a Biden campaign event in Michigan on the 4th of July holiday.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg
It is no secret that Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg has presidential aspirations.
He ran for president in 2020 and is often touted as one of the Biden administration’s best communicators.
Mr Buttigieg has managed a number of public crises during his time as transportation secretary.
He helped to oversee the government response to the East Palestine train derailment in Ohio, the Baltimore Bridge collapse and Southwest Airlines’ scheduling crisis in 2022.
Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro
Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro has seen high approval ratings since he was elected in 2022 in a swing state Mr Trump narrowly carried in 2016.
The governor, who previously served as the state’s attorney general, has worked across party lines during his tenure.
He made national headlines last year after quickly rebuilding a collapsed bridge on a crucial Philadelphia highway – a major political victory for a first-term governor.
The speedy repair was hailed by many as the perfect infrastructure talking point for a potential 2028 presidential candidate.
Illinois Governor JB Pritzker
JB Pritzker, the governor of Illinois, has raised his profile in recent years by going after Trump and defending Mr Biden.
The billionaire businessman – heir to the Hyatt hotel chain – is quick to post criticism of Trump on social media.
After the debate he called Trump a “liar” and said he is a “34-count convicted felon who cares only about himself”.
Like Ms Whitmer, Mr Pritzker has a track record of completing agenda items on progressive Democrats’ to-do lists on issues like abortion rights and gun control.
Other possible candidates?
The list of potential nominees stretches beyond these Democrats, as the party has developed a deep bench of possible future presidential candidates.
Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear, a two-term Democratic governor in a very conservative state, has earned growing national attention since his re-election last year.
Maryland Governor Wes Moore found himself in the spotlight in recent months following the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore.
Senators Amy Klobuchar and Cory Booker have run for president in the past and have some name recognition among Democrats.
Georgia Senator Raphael Warnock, who won a closely contested Senate race in a swing state, also has been mentioned as a potential replacement for Mr Biden.
A Reuters IPSOS poll released Tuesday found the only person who could beat Trump in November was Michelle Obama. But the former first lady has repeatedly said she does not have presidential aspirations.
NBA star to become first black Greek Olympic flagbearer
Greek basketball star Giannis Antetokounmpo is to become the first black athlete to bear the flag for Greece at the Olympics.
The two-time NBA MVP will carry the flag alongside race walker Antigoni Ntrismpioti in Paris on 26 July.
The Greek men’s basketball team qualified for its first Olympic Games since 2008, after beating Croatia in front of a home crowd in Piraeus on Sunday.
The 29-year-old, who was drafted by Milwaukee Bucks in 2013 and led them to the 2021 NBA title, was in tears after the game.
“It’s an incredible feeling,” he said after qualification. “Since I was a kid I always wanted to play in the Olympic Games.”
His journey to become Greece’s Olympic flagbearer hasn’t been an easy one.
Antetokounmpo’s parents emigrated to Greece from Nigeria. For the first 18 years of his life, Antetokounmpo could not travel outside Greece and was effectively stateless, having no papers either from Greece or Nigeria. He was eventually issued Greek citizenship in May 2013, less than two months before the NBA draft.
Antetokounmpo spoke about his childhood in a recent interview with ESPN.
“I used to sell things since I can remember myself, since I was six or seven years old.
“I was always out of home trying as much as I could to help my mom and dad by selling watches, glasses, CDs, DVDs, and everything I could find. I was doing that until I turned 17 because I had to. I had no other choice. When I was selling all those things, I was the best seller.”
But even after becoming a star in the US, Antetokounmpo encountered racism at home.
In a TNT documentary in 2020, he said: “Greece is a country of white people, life can be difficult for someone with the colour of my skin. Or of another nationality. You go to a lot of neighbourhoods, and you face a lot of racism.”
There was a backlash to his comments from some in Greece, including Konstantinos Kalemis, then-coordinator for refugee education in the Malakasa camp north of Athens, who used a range of racial slurs against Antetokounmpo and was fired as a result.
He has also faced discrimination from government officials.
In 2018, Adonis Georgiadis, the current health minister, repeatedly mispronounced his name and falsely claimed he had been born in Africa instead of Greece.
Antetokounmpo will be one of the first athletes to open the Games, as Greece – the birthplace of the Olympics – traditionally leads the parade.
Spyros Kapralos, president of the Greek Olympic Committee, said there was “unanimity” in the decision for Antetokounmpo to carry the flag in Paris. He added that both flagbearers will “lift our country high”.
Antetokounmpo hasn’t publicly commented yet, but simply posted a video to X showing highlights from the qualifying campaign with the word “Greece”.
Will K-pop’s AI experiment pay off?
There’s an issue dividing K-pop fans right now – artificial intelligence.
Several of the genre’s biggest stars have now used the technology to create music videos and write lyrics, including boy band Seventeen.
Last year the South Korean group sold around 16 million albums, making them one of the most successful K-pop acts in history. But it’s their most recent album and single, Maestro, that’s got people talking.
The music video features an AI-generated scene, and the record might well include AI-generated lyrics too. At the launch of the album in Seoul, one of the band members, Woozi, told reporters he was “experimenting” with AI when songwriting.
“We practised making songs with AI, as we want to develop along with technology rather than complain about it,” he said.
“This is a technological development that we have to leverage, not just be dissatisfied with. I practised using AI and tried to look for the pros and cons.”
On K-pop discussion pages, fans were torn, with some saying more regulations need to be in place before the technology becomes normalised.
Others were more open to it, including super fan Ashley Peralta. “If AI can help an artist overcome creative blocks, then that’s OK with me,” says the 26-year-old.
Her worry though, is that a whole album of AI generated lyrics means fans will lose touch with their favourite musicians.
“I love it when music is a reflection of an artist and their emotions,” she says. “K-pop artists are much more respected when they’re hands on with choreographing, lyric writing and composing, because you get a piece of their thoughts and feelings.
“AI can take away that crucial component that connects fans to the artists.”
Ashley presents Spill the Soju, a K-pop fan podcast, with her best friend Chelsea Toledo. Chelsea admires Seventeen for being a self-producing group, which means they write their own songs and choreograph them too, but she’s worried about AI having an impact on that reputation.
“If they were to put out an album that’s full of lyrics they hadn’t personally written, I don’t know if it would feel like Seventeen any more and fans want music that is authentically them”.
For those working in K-Pop production, it’s no surprise that artists are embracing new technologies.
Chris Nairn is a producer, composer and songwriter working under the name Azodi. Over the past 12 years he’s written songs for K-pop artists including Kim Woojin and leading agency SM Entertainment.
Working with K-pop stars means Chris, who lives in Brighton, has spent a lot of time in South Korea, whose music industry he describes as progressive.
“What I’ve learned by hanging out in Seoul is that Koreans are big on innovation, and they’re very big on ‘what’s the next thing?’, and asking, ‘how can we be one step ahead?’ It really hit me when I was there,” he says.
“So, to me, it’s no surprise that they’re implementing AI in lyric writing, it’s about keeping up with technology.”
Is AI the future of K-pop? Chris isn’t so sure. As someone who experiments with AI lyric generators, he doesn’t feel the lyrics are strong enough for top artists.
“AI is putting out fairly good quality stuff, but when you’re at the top tier of the songwriting game, generally, people who do best have innovated and created something brand new. AI works by taking what’s already been uploaded and therefore can’t innovate by itself.”
If anything, Chris predicts AI in K-pop will increase the demand for more personal songs.
“There’s going to be pressure from fans to hear lyrics that are from the artist’s heart, and therefore sound different to any songs made using AI”.
Seventeen aren’t the only K-pop band experimenting with AI. Girl group Aespa, who have several AI members as well as human ones, also used the technology in their latest music video. Supernova features generated scenes where the faces of band members remain still as only their mouths move.
Podcaster and super-fan Chelsea says it “triggered” a lot of people.
“K-pop is known for amazing production and editing, so having whole scenes made of AI takes away the charm,” she adds.
Chelsea also worries about artists not getting the right credit. “With AI in videos it’s harder to know if someone’s original artwork has been stolen, it’s a really touchy subject”.
Arpita Adhya is a music journalist and self-titled K-pop superfan. She believes the use of AI in the industry is demonstrative of the pressure artists are under to create new content.
“Most recording artists will put out an album every two years, but K-pop groups are pushing out albums every six to eight months, because there’s so much hype around them.”
She also believes AI has been normalised in the industry, with the introduction of AI covers which have exploded on YouTube. The cover tracks are created by fans and use technology to mimic another artist’s voice.
It’s this kind of trend that Arpita would like to see regulated, something western artists are calling for too.
Just last month megastars including Billie Eilish and Nicki Minaj wrote an open letter calling for the “predatory” use of AI in the music industry to be stopped.
They called on tech firms to pledge not to develop AI music-generation tools “that undermine or replace the human artistry of songwriters and artists, or deny us fair compensation for our work”.
For Arpita, a lack of regulations means fans feel an obligation to regulate what is and isn’t OK.
“Whilst there are no clear guidelines on how much artists can and can’t use AI, we have the struggle of making boundaries ourselves, and always asking ‘what is right and wrong?’”
Thankfully she feels K-pop artists are aware of public opinion and hopes there will be change.
“The fans are the biggest part and they have a lot of influence over artists. Groups are always keen to learn and listen, and if Seventeen and Aespa realise they are hurting their fans, they will hopefully address that.”
Japan wants to make it easier to shoot bears as attacks rise
Facing an alarming rise in bear attacks, Japan wants to make it easier to shoot the animals in residential areas – but hunters say it is too risky.
In the year to April, there were a record 219 bear attacks in the country – six of them fatal, according to official data.
Deadly attacks have continued to occur in recent months, as bears increasingly venture into populated areas. Some are now even thought to see humans as prey.
Bear numbers have revived as Japan’s human population ages and shrinks, especially outside cities. The consequences have been dangerous, although usually resulting in injury not death.
Under the current law, licensed hunters can fire their guns only after the approval of a police officer.
The government plans to revise the law at its next parliamentary session so the weapons can be used more freely. For instance, hunters will be allowed to shoot if there is a risk of human injury, such as when a bear enters a building.
But hunters are wary. “It is scary and quite dangerous to encounter a bear. It is never guaranteed that we can kill a bear by shooting,” said Satoshi Saito, executive director of the Hokkaido Hunters’ Association.
“If we miss the vital point to stop the bear from moving… it will run away and may attack other people,” he added. “If it then attacks a person, who will be responsible for that?”
Hokkaido has come to exemplify Japan’s growing bear problem.
The country’s northernmost major island is sparsely populated – but its bear population has more than doubled since 1990, according to government data. It now has around 12,000 brown bears, which are known to be more aggressive than black bears, of which there are around 10,000 in Japan by experts’ estimates.
Local governments have tried different strategies to keep bears away.
Some have turned to odd guardians – robot wolves, complete with red eyes and spooky howls, while elsewhere in the country they are testing an artificial intelligence warning system.
The town of Naie in Hokkaido has been trying to hire hunters for 10,300 yen ($64; £50) a day to patrol the streets, lay traps and kill the animals if necessary.
But there are few takers – it’s a high-risk job, the pay is not attractive enough and many of the hunters are elderly.
“It is not worth the trouble because confronting a bear will put our lives on the line,” a 72-year-old hunter from the area told The Asahi Shimbun newspaper, likening an encounter with a brown bear to “fighting a US military commando”.
In May, two police officers in northern Akita prefecture were seriously injured by a bear while trying to retrieve a body from the woods after a suspected fatal bear attack.
“The bears know humans are present and attack people for their food, or recognise people themselves as food,” local government official Mami Kondo said.
“There is a high risk that the same bear will cause a series of incidents.”
As bear numbers have grown, more of them have moved from the mountains into flatlands closer to human populations. Over time, they have become used to the sights and sounds of humans, and less afraid of them.
There are also fewer humans around as young people move to big cities, leaving whole towns nearly empty. When bears do encounter humans, it can turn violent.
“Bears that enter urban areas tend to panic, increasing the risk of injury or death to people,” said Junpei Tanaka from the Picchio Wildlife Research Center in Japan.
Bear sightings and incidents usually happen around April when they awake from hibernation in search of food, and then again in September and October when they eat to store fat for the winter months.
But their movements have become more unpredictable as yields of acorn – the biggest food source for bears – fall because of climate change.
“This amendment to the law is unavoidable, but it is only a stopgap measure in an emergency,” Mr Tanaka said.
Capturing and killing the animals is not the way forward, he adds. Rather, the government needs to protect the bears’ habitat so they are not compelled to venture too far.
“In the long-term, it is necessary to implement national policy to change the forest environment, to create forests with high biodiversity.”
He added that the government also needs to clarify who should take responsibility for bears that wander into residential zones – local officials or hunters.
“Ideally, there should be fully trained shooters like government hunters who respond to emergencies, but at present there are no such jobs in Japan.”
Residential areas are a vastly different terrain for hunters, who are used to killing bears in unpopulated regions, Mr Saito said.
“If we don’t shoot, people will criticise us and say ‘Why didn’t you shoot when you have a shotgun?’ And if we shoot, I am sure people will be angry and say it might hit someone.
“I think it is unreasonable to ask hunters who are probably just ordinary salarymen to make such a decision.”
From rough sleeping to advising Prince William
Sabrina Cohen-Hatton has gone from rough sleeping as a teenager to visiting the Prince of Wales in Windsor Castle to give him advice on tackling homelessness.
She was able to give her own story to Prince William as proof that homeless people should not be “written off”.
“I sit in front of you now with a job, a home, a family and a PhD,” said Sabrina, who works as a fire service chief.
Prince William marked the first year of his Homewards project with a visit to Lambeth in south London where he pleged: “It is possible to end homelessness.”
The prince delivered the message that there is nothing inevitable about homelessness and that it shouldn’t be normalised.
Meeting Homewards representatives in Brixton he said: “Homelessness is a complex societal issue, and one that touches the lives of far too many people in our society. However, I truly believe that it can be ended.”
He spoke of the importance of “shifting perspectives” about homeless people and the need to “focus on prevention, rather than simply managing the crisis”.
Homewards is a five-year project based around six areas around the UK.
That includes Newport in South Wales – and as a 15- and 16-year-old that was where Sabrina was sleeping rough, after the death of a parent and problems at home.
Her way out was selling the Big Issue – “I credit them with saving my life” – and once she had secure accommodation she was able to get a job in the fire service, which became her career.
She used this “lived experience” to tell Prince William and the Homewards project about what was needed.
“There were lots of closed doors in my face,” she said. Even when support was meant to be available, she said in practice it could be hard for homeless people to have the confidence to access it.
Or there can be practical barriers. She said she relied on her dog, called Menace, but many hostels wouldn’t let people stay with pets.
Sabrina also warned of how homelessness was linked to the “pernicious” long-term impact of poverty.
She went on to become chief fire officer of West Sussex and has spoken widely about her own journey, including this latest role as an advocate for Homewards.
Sabrina said Prince William showed a lot of “empathy” towards the issue of homelessness, which she suggested reflected some of the “trauma” in his early life.
At the event in Brixton, Sabrina spoke alongside Chris Lynam, who recalled the intense “loneliness” that accompanied his own homelessness and drug addiction.
“It’s a very isolating experience… society is quite hostile to homeless people,” said Chris, who is now supporting Homewards’ work in Sheffield.
Prince William described it as an “honour” to hear Chris talk about his experiences.
The homelessness project, operating in Aberdeen, Bournemouth, Lambeth, Newport, Sheffield and Northern Ireland, wants to find successful approaches that can be replicated elsewhere.
There are links with employers about helping people into work. A partnership with Homebase provides starter packs of furniture to help those moving from homelessness into accommodation.
There are efforts to identify sofa-surfing and addressing links between relationship breakdown and homelessness.
Putting housing officers in schools has been tried to identify young people who might be at risk.
Through the Duchy of Cornwall there are 24 homes being built with “wrap-around support” for people leaving homelessness – and Prince William is now involved in developing further plans.
There is a push to change attitudes towards homelessness – and Sabrina talked about the need to get rid of the stigma. She said that for 20 years she hadn’t told anyone about her own experiences, before becoming such a public speaker about homelessness.
Matt Downie, chief executive of Crisis, says the Homewards project can challenge the “cynicism and fatalism” that says homelessness is inevitable.
He says that even though the big picture has seen homelessness getting worse, the evidence exists to prevent it.
Finland is given as an example of a sustained drive to end homelessness, with the claim that there are now only about 150 homeless families. In contrast in the UK, there are more than 100,000 households categorised as homeless.
There have also been questions about whether a wealthy royal should be pronouncing on homelessness.
The anti-monarchy group Republic has previously described it as “crass and hypocritical”.
But George Anderson, a Big Issue seller and medical researcher in London, welcomes that Prince William has used his high public profile to talk about homelessness.
“He encourages people who are distant from homelessness to feel empathy and care,” says George.
“Given the pomp and ceremony around his official role, it is easy for people to question as to what he really knows about homelessness,” says George.
“I am sure that he is aware of that whilst also knowing he is in a position, like his mother, to highlight the plight of homelessness to the media.
“His mother would have experienced similar, being photographed in a tiara at a ball one day, whilst serving soup in a homeless kitchen the next,” says George, who sees the prince’s interest as being linked to Princess Diana bringing her sons to homelessness charities when they were children.
Should I stay or should I go? The dilemma for young Nigerians
Nigerian graduate Olotu Olanrewaju is facing a choice between remaining in the country he loves and the possibility of a better life elsewhere.
He adores the culture, food, music and family mentality at home, especially how people look out for each other and share common goals.
But the 24-year-old electrical engineer feels he is being held back professionally.
“I’m looking for greener pastures and better opportunities, rather than getting stuck here in Nigeria,” he tells the BBC’s What in the World podcast, adding that he thinks his degree would be “more appreciated” abroad.
There is also the feeling that the lack of reliable basic infrastructure – causing things like power cuts – as well as security concerns, corruption and poor governance, all create unnecessary barriers to getting on with life.
Mr Olanrewaju is one of tens of thousands of young, disenchanted Nigerians contemplating the move to join many others overseas. It’s a trend known by the Yoruba word “japa” meaning “to escape”.
The BBC contacted several government officials for a response to what he and other young Nigerians told us but has not received a reply.
- LISTEN: What in the World japa episode
- The UK taxi driver still being paid as a Nigerian civil servant
The idea of emigrating from Nigeria is not new.
Since the 1980s, many middle-class Nigerians have sought economic opportunities abroad, but the scale and urgency now feels different and japa is becoming increasingly popular with Gen Z and millennials.
An African Polling Institute survey from 2022 found that 69% of Nigerians aged 18-35 would relocate given the opportunity – despite a slight fall from 2021. In 2019 the figure was just 39%.
On social media, young Nigerians have taken to posting about their japa experiences.
While some describe how they miss home, others show off the appeal of relocating, and encourage their peers to do the same.
But leaving is a pricey venture.
The rising cost of living, and the depreciation of the currency, the naira, has made an expensive process even harder – but also pushed more people to try to leave.
German lessons
It is far easier for professionals and university graduates who have the skills and qualifications needed to secure well-paying jobs and visas in the West, as well as the finances to start a new life in a country where the cost of living is far higher than at home.
As well as those seeking legal routes, many Nigerians try to move abroad without visas, by crossing the Sahara Desert or the Mediterranean Sea. Thousands of people die each year on the journey and those who make it often struggle to find work or somewhere decent to live.
For years, Mr Olanrewaju and his parents have been saving up. He hopes to move to Germany or Spain and has signed up to German classes to improve his chances.
He is not the first in his family to tread this path.
Two years ago, his brother Daniel, now 27, managed to swap Nigeria’s sticky heat for the cooler shores of the Scottish city of Aberdeen.
He works there as a photographer and social worker, and although he finds it a bit expensive, he tells his brother about the benefits of Scotland’s infrastructure – including the fact that people can rely on the electricity, water and transport systems working.
We are highly talented, we want to be recognised, we want our voice to be heard and we want to be respected”
Social worker Oluwatobi Abodunrin, 29, moved to London last year and also feels positive about her move. She says Nigeria is filled with “passionate, active youths” who want something more from their careers.
“I decided to leave Nigeria because I wasn’t getting what I want,” she says.
“We are highly talented, we want to be recognised, we want our voice to be heard and we want to be respected.”
She also acknowledges the difficulty of leaving friends and family behind.
“It was a tough decision to leave home. To leave people who are sweet, kind, generous and passionate. But I’m happy I made the decision and it’s going well.”
There are more than 270,000 Nigerians like Ms Abodunrin living in the UK, according to government statistics.
It is one of the most popular destinations for japa, with the number of Nigerians granted UK work visas quadrupling since 2019 as a result of post-Brexit immigration rule changes.
However, the UK has responded to this increase by tightening the rules for those seeking work visas.
The US and Canada are also highly desirable.
Canada has seen a surge in migration, with the number of Nigerians seeking residency there tripling since 2015, a phenomenon known as the “Canada Rush”.
Back in Nigeria, zoology student Elizabeth Ademuyi Anuoluwapo recognises the difficulties in leaving, but feels it is the only way to get the financial stability she needs.
“I’d miss my people, my food, my friends, my family. The vibe here is very cosy,” she says. “Maybe I’d go for a few years and then come back.”
Japa has hit the medical profession especially hard.
The Nigerian Medical Association said, in 2022, at least 50 doctors were leaving the country every single week.
This has left an already overloaded healthcare system struggling.
The government has said it will train more people to fill these gaps and backed a new bill that would require medical graduates to work in Nigeria for a minimum of five years after completing their training. It was fiercely opposed by doctors’ unions.
A similar directive has also been issued for nurses, to get them to work in the country for at least two years before trying to leave.
Reasons for staying
Some like Dr Vongdip Nankpah, from the University of Abuja teaching hospital, think it is important to stay.
He believes that career goals are about more than an individual’s interest – they should involve the community and the value that a person can contribute to society.
“If I’m going to maximise my medical practice, I’d rather remain in Nigeria to see if we can better the country and the region,” he says.
“These are the things that are still driving my reasons for remaining in the country.”
But despite the emotional attachment, Mr Olanrewaju does not feel he owes anything to Nigeria and would not feel guilty for leaving.
“Most of my personal growth and gains, I worked for them myself,” he says.
Instead, he would see himself as a representative of Nigerians abroad, standing for those who might not have the same opportunities to move overseas.
For those who can afford it, japa is the ultimate choice.
It promises a future of adventure, ambition and wealth, but also risks breaking ties with the past.
Like many Nigerian students, Mr Olanrewaju is now measuring those benefits against the cost of what he is leaving behind.
More BBC stories about Nigeria:
- Nigeria cost-of-living crisis sparks exodus of doctors
- Nigerian star’s drowning forces Nollywood to look at safety
- Celebrating 50 years of marriage in Nigeria’s ‘divorce capital’
Drizzle at sunset results in spectacular ‘pink rainbows’
BBC Weather Watchers in Scotland have been captivated by the sight of rainbows at sunset over the past few days.
For some parts they brought some much-needed colour to dreich summer days.
‘Beginning of two legends’: Photos of Messi and baby Lamine Yamal resurface
In 2007, a young Lionel Messi posed for photos with a baby in the dressing room of the Camp Nou in Barcelona for a charity calendar photoshoot.
Messi, who was 20, was already making a name for himself and would go on to become arguably the greatest of all time.
But little did the photographer know that the baby would also make waves in international football less than 17 years later.
Messi was bathing Lamine Yamal – the 16-year-old who is taking the European Championships by storm.
His goal against France in the semi-final on Tuesday is one that will be talked about for decades.
At 16 years and 362 days, the strike also made him the youngest man to score in the tournament’s history.
The long-forgotten photo of Messi and Yamal resurfaced after Yamal’s father posted it on Instagram last week with the text: “The beginning of two legends.”
The photos were taken by Joan Monfort, who works as a freelance photographer for the Associated Press.
The shoot came about after Unicef did a raffle in the town of Mataró where Lamine’s family lived, he said.
“They signed up for the raffle to have their picture taken at the Camp Nou with a Barça player. And they won the raffle,” Mr Monfort told the Associated Press.
The assignment wasn’t a straightforward one, the photographer said.
“Messi is a pretty introverted guy, he’s shy,” he said.
“He was coming out of the locker room and suddenly he finds himself in another locker room with a plastic tub full of water and a baby in it. It was complicated. He didn’t even know how to hold him at first.”
Like Messi, Yamal went on to play for Barcelona, where he became the club’s youngest ever starter and goalscorer, as well as the youngest scorer in the Spanish league.
Mr Monfort said it was only when the photo started going viral online last week that he realised that the baby was Yamal.
“It’s very exciting to be associated with something that has caused such a sensation,” he said.
“To tell you the truth it’s a very nice feeling.”
We don’t have to repay UK for axed deal – Rwanda
Rwanda has said it is not required to refund the UK after a multi-million pound migrant deal between the two countries was scrapped.
New UK Prime Minister and Labour Party leader Keir Starmer announced at the weekend that the plan to deport some asylum seekers to Rwanda was “dead and buried”.
The scheme was forged by the previous Conservative government, which since revealing the plan in 2022 has paid Rwanda £240m ($310m).
Legal challenges meant the scheme never took off and the UK expressed hope on Monday that some money from the deal could be recouped.
The following day, a spokesperson for Rwanda’s government told the country’s state television: “Let this be clear, paying back the money was never part of the agreement.”
Alain Mukuralinda said the agreement “did not stipulate” money should be refunded and that the UK had approached Rwanda and requested a partnership, which was “discussed extensively”.
In January, after 21 months of the scheme being stalled, Rwandan President Paul Kagame suggested some money could be returned if no asylum seekers were sent to the country.
But Rwanda’s government later specified there was “no obligation” to refund the UK.
In Rwanda’s capital, Kigali, workers hired months ago to build housing for the asylum seekers expressed concern about Mr Starmer’s decision.
The scheme’s death could “badly affect our lives”, a worker at the Gahanga site told the BBC.
Employees on the site get paid between £1.80 and £6 per day – relatively good wages for construction workers in Rwanda.
Resident Mariya Nyirahabimana said the value of houses in her neighbourhood had increased significantly since construction started, but she feared that “poverty could come back” to Gahanga.
Since his party won last week’s election in a landslide, Mr Starmer has labelled the Rwanda scheme an expensive “gimmick” and pledged to instead focus on launching a new Border Security Command to tackle people-smuggling gangs.
Opposition to the bill has also came from other quarters over the past two years – the UK’s Supreme Court ruled the plan unlawful, human rights organisations branded it cruel and draconian, while dissenters within the Conservative Party pushed for amendments that would better protect the scheme from legal challenges.
The previous government said the scheme was aimed at deterring people from crossing the English Channel in small boats.
Illegal migration is one of the major challenges facing the UK government.
So far this year, more than 13,000 people have crossed the Channel in small boats.
The figure is higher than numbers for the same period last year, although in 2023 as a whole there was a drop compared to 2022.
Denmark had been mulling a similar deal with Rwanda, but it put the discussions on hold in January last year.
It said it wanted a more unified approach within Europe to tackle illegal migration.
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Carla Bruni-Sarkozy charged with witness tampering
France’s former first lady, Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, has been charged over an election funding scandal dating back to 2007 involving cash from the then Libyan dictator, Col Muammar Gaddafi.
According to French media, Ms Bruni-Sarkozy, 56, was charged with hiding evidence and associating with wrongdoers to commit fraud.
She was placed under judicial control and barred from being in contact with all those accused except her husband, Nicolas Sarkozy.
Ms Bruni-Sarkozy is also suspected of concealment of witness tampering and involvement in an attempt to bribe Lebanese judicial personnel, among other violations.
Her lawyers told AFP that Ms Bruni-Sarkozy was determined to assert her rights and challenge the “unfounded decision”.
Mr Sarkozy, who was the president of France from 2007 to 2012, is due to go on trial next year over allegations he took money from Gaddafi to finance his successful election bid.
He is accused of corruption, illegal campaign financing, benefiting from embezzled public funds and membership in a criminal conspiracy. He has always denied all the charges.
The investigation into the allegations was opened in 2013, two years after Saif al-Islam, son of the then leader Gaddafi, first accused Mr Sarkozy of taking millions of his father’s money for campaign funding.
The following year, Lebanese businessman Ziad Takieddine, who for a long time acted as a middleman between France and the Middle East, supported the claims.
He told judges he had written proof that Mr Sarkozy’s campaign bid was “abundantly” financed by Tripoli, and that the €50m (£43m) worth of payments continued after he became president.
Years later, Mr Takieddine told French media that in 2006-07 he had personally handed over suitcases stuffed with banknotes to Mr Sarkozy and his chief of staff, Claude Guéant, who later denied this.
But in 2020, Mr Takieddine suddenly retracted his statement about handing over large amounts of money.
This raised suspicions that Mr Sarkozy and his allies – including his wife – might have paid him to change his mind.
In June, Ms Bruni-Sarkozy was found to have deleted messages exchanged with a French businesswoman who was questioned by police over accusations of witness tampering.
Since losing his re-election bid to socialist François Hollande in 2012, Mr Sarkozy has been targeted by several criminal investigations.
In 2023, he was given a suspended prison sentence for trying to bribe a judge, and earlier this year, he was found guilty of illegally funding his 2012 re-election campaign.
He and Ms Bruni-Sarkozy, an Italian-born former supermodel and singer, married in 2008. They had a daughter, Giulia, in 2011.
Whole pod of 77 whales die in ‘biggest mass stranding in decades’
A pod of 77 pilot whales has died after washing ashore on a beach in Orkney in what could be the biggest mass stranding for decades.
The British Divers Marine Life Rescue (BDMLR) had established 12 of the animals at Tresness Beach on the island of Sanday were still alive when they came out of the water.
However the decision was taken to euthanise them after refloating efforts failed.
The pod included male whales up to seven metres (22ft) long as well as females, calves and juveniles.
Experts say it is too early to know what has caused the stranding, but it is likely one of the whales got into trouble and the rest of the pod tried to help.
Members of the public are being asked to stay away from the area post mortem examinations are carried out.
It is thought to be the largest stranding event in Scotland since at least 1995, when the Scottish Marine Animal Stranding Scheme (SMASS) was founded – though strandings of a similar scale have been seen in recent years.
Last year an entire pod of 55 pilot whales died following a stranding on Lewis.
Only 15 of whales were alive when they were washed ashore. One was successfully re-floated while the rest had to be euthanised.
Between 60-70 of the animals came into shallow waters in Sutherland in 2011.
According to the Natural History Museum, the largest UK stranding took place in 1927 when 126 out of more than 130 false killer whales died in the Dornoch Firth in the Highlands.
Experts from the BDMLR, the Scottish SPCA and marine vets from the Scottish mainland travelled to Sanday to assess whether any of the whales could be saved.
The area was cut off by the high tide and the sand on the beach where they were stranded proved too soft to allow the mammals to be righted.
The whales needed to be moved back into an upright position as quickly as possible if there is to be any chance of saving them.
But the soft sand meant the whales fell back over when the rescuers attempted to right them.
Emma Neave-Webb from the BDMLR said early on that while these experiences are difficult, the thinking had to be “realistic”.
‘Hugely emotional’
BDMLR medics were brought in from mainland Orkney and Inverness to help with the rescue attempt, but Ms Neave-Webb said it appeared they whales had been stranded for “quite some time”.
She described the scene as “really quite horrible” and “hugely emotional”.
Rescuers attempted to keep the whales alive by pouring sea water over them, but the decision was later taken to euthanise them.
A spokesperson for Orkney Islands Council said discussions were taking place with community representatives on how best to dispose of the bodies.
They said: “In previous circumstances where whales have beached on our shores and subsequently died, the approach from our Environmental Health team around disposing of the body has been to allow nature to take its course – with the public advised to stay away from the area.
“Our assessment in this case, given the scale and the likely public health implications, is that more definite action will need to be taken, for example burying them where they are or removing the bodies to a large grave site elsewhere.”
Andrew Brownlow of the Scottish Marine Animal Stranding Scheme said mass strandings of this scale are becoming more common in Scotland.
He told BBC News: “It used to be quite unusual to have a mass stranding event, certainly of this size.
“But over the last ten years or so we have seen an increase both in the number of mass stranding events around Scotland and also the size of the mass and the number of animals that it involves.
“So that is slightly concerning and that might be because there are just more animals out there, or it could be that there are more hazards that these animals are exposed to.”
The Shining actress Shelley Duvall dies at 75
US actress Shelley Duvall, known for films like The Shining, Annie Hall and Nashville, has died at the age of 75.
Her partner Dan Gilroy confirmed the news to The Hollywood Reporter.
“My dear, sweet, wonderful life partner and friend left us. Too much suffering lately, now she’s free. Fly away, beautiful Shelley,” he said, according to the outlet.
She died in her sleep of complications from diabetes at her home in Texas, Gilroy said.
Duvall’s other credits included 1977 drama 3 Women, directed by Robert Altman, for which she won the Cannes Film Festival’s best actress award and was nominated for a Bafta.
Three years later, she starred as Olive Oyl opposite Robin Williams in Altman’s musical version of Popeye.
But Duvall fell out of favour in Hollywood and was off screens for two decades, before making her comeback in 2023’s The Forest Hills.
With her large brown eyes and offbeat charisma, Duvall was a distinctive and compelling presence.
She began her career, and her association with Altman, in 1970 dark comedy Brewster McCloud, and the pair reunited for McCabe and Mrs Miller in 1971.
After filming her performance as a woman who falls for a 1930s bank robber in their next movie, Thieves Like Us, Altman told her: “I knew you were good, but I didn’t know you were great.”
She said that remark was “the reason I stuck with it and became an actress”.
The director stuck with her, once saying she “was able to swing all sides of the pendulum: charming, silly, sophisticated, pathetic, even beautiful”.
Altman cast her again in 1975’s Nashville, his satire of US society, politics and country music.
Their next collaboration, 3 Women, saw Duvall play a talkative, trend-following health spa attendant. The Guardian’s Anne Billson ranked it as her best role, and “quite simply one of the greatest performances of the 1970s”.
Meanwhile, also in 1977, Duvall memorably played Pam, a Rolling Stone reporter who went on a date with Woody Allen’s Alvy in Annie Hall.
Her best-known role was perhaps Wendy, the wife of Jack Nicholson’s terrifying hotel caretaker in Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 horror classic The Shining.
Filming was an ordeal. “I had to cry 12 hours a day, all day long, the last nine months straight, five or six days a week,” she once recalled.
After that, Duvall’s film roles included Terry Gilliam’s Time Bandits and Roxanne with Steve Martin.
She also set up her own production companies, and made and hosted beloved 1980s children’s TV show Faerie Tale Theatre.
Her acting roles diminished in the 1990s, with Jane Campion’s The Portrait of a Lady the pick of the crop, and she dropped off the radar in 2002.
The New York Times attributed her apparent disappearance to the impact of a 1994 earthquake that damaged her Los Angeles home, and the stress of her brother having cancer.
Discussing her prolonged absence from the screen, she told the paper in May she had been the victim of a fickle film industry. “I was a star. I had leading roles. People think it’s just ageing, but it’s not. It’s violence,” she said.
Asked to explain, she said: “How would you feel if people were really nice, and then, suddenly, on a dime they turn on you?
“You would never believe it unless it happens to you. That’s why you get hurt, because you can’t really believe it’s true.”
‘Ultimate film star’
Concerns about her health were raised when she appeared on the TV talk show Dr Phil in 2016 and told him: “I’m very sick. I need help.”
She also talked about receiving messages from a “shapeshifting” Robin Williams following his death, and talked about malevolent forces who were out to do her harm, the paper said.
Speaking about that period, Gilroy told the New York Times she had become “paranoid and just kind of delusional”.
Asked by the paper why she had agreed to return to the screen in The Forest Hills, she replied: “I wanted to act again. And then this guy kept calling, and so I wound up doing it.”
Novelist Nicole Flattery wrote in the Financial Times in 2023 that her return showed her magic had remained intact.
In an article dubbing her the “ultimate film star”, Flattery summed up her talent, writing: “She’s a master at playing characters who act happy when they’re sad, their daffiness masking depth.”
‘Relief’ as Canadian serial killer found guilty in death of 4 women
Tearful cheers erupted in a packed Canadian courtroom on Thursday as a judge found a serial killer guilty of first-degree murder in the deaths of four indigenous women.
But in the court gallery, Jeremy Contois’ reaction was reserved.
His younger sister, Rebecca, was one of the women killed in the city of Winnipeg, Manitoba two years ago.
“I feel a little sense of relief,” Mr Contois said, but will not get full closure until the killer, Jeremy Skibicki, is formally sentenced.
In his oral verdict, Manitoba Court of King’s Bench Chief Justice Glenn Joyal dismissed the argument by the defence at trial that the accused was not criminally responsible for the murders.
Lawyers for Skibicki, 37, said he was suffering from schizophrenia at the time of the killings.
Prosecutors argued that Skibicki deliberately killed Ms Contois and three other women in 2022 in crimes that were calculated and racially motivated.
The murders and the subsequent weeks-long trial sent shockwaves through Canada’s indigenous community, which has long grappled with cases of violence against their women.
Wearing a grey T-shirt and pants, Skibicki did not react as Judge Joyal read aloud the summary of his judgment.
One of Ms Contois’ family members held up a large photo of Rebecca in his direction as he left the courtroom.
“Why did I lift up her photo? Because we, as First Nations people, are not statistics,” Krista Fox said afterwards.
“Every single one of us has a name, and a family that misses us dearly.”
Skibicki’s victims are Morgan Harris, 39, Marcedes Myran, 26 and Ms Contois, who was 24. The fourth woman has yet to be identified, and has been given the name Mashkode Bizhiki’ikwe, meaning Buffalo Woman, by indigenous elders.
Throughout the trial, a buffalo head sat on a red cloth on a table near the prosecutors in tribute to the still unidentified victim.
In his verdict, Judge Joyal said the accused failed to demonstrate he was not criminally responsible for the murders, dismissing the testimony of a British psychiatrist, Dr Sohom Das, who said Skibicki was motivated by delusions when he committed the murders.
The judge added that the “mercilessly graphic” facts of the case “are largely uncontested”, given that the accused had admitted to the murders in police interviews and in court prior to the trial.
Skibicki had pleaded not guilty due to a mental disorder.
The 100-person courtroom was packed full with the four women’s families and friends for the verdict.
Judge Joyal said the case has had an “undeniable and profound impact on the entire Manitoba community, indigenous and non-indigenous”.
With Skibicki facing life behind bars, the focus is now shifting to finding the remains of two of his victims, Ms Myran and Ms Harris, which are believed to be in a Winnipeg landfill.
A formal search has been set for this autumn, after months of pressure from their families.
‘Intentional and purposeful’ murders
According to court documents, Skibicki killed the women between March and May of 2022, with Ms Contois believed to be the final victim.
He met at least two at local homeless shelters in Winnipeg, a city of 820,000 in the prairie province.
Judge Joyal agreed with prosecutors that he deliberately targeted and exploited “vulnerable” women.
Over the course of the trial, the court heard that Skibicki had assaulted the women, strangled or drowned them and then committed sex acts on them before dismembering their bodies and disposing of them in garbage bins.
The killings went undetected for months, until a man looking for scrap metal in a bin outside Skibicki’s apartment found partial human remains in May 2022 and called police.
“She’s obviously been murdered,” the man said in the 911 call, which was played in court.
Police were able to identify the remains as those of Ms Contois.
More of her remains were discovered at a city-run landfill the following month.
In police interviews shortly after his arrest, Skibicki surprised officers by admitting to killing Ms Contois as well as three others.
At that point, police had no knowledge of the other deaths.
Speaking outside court, Ms Fox said she believes that it was only because Ms Contois’ remains were found that the other families were able to get justice.
Skibicki’s lawyers tried to argue that he was not aware of the severity of his actions due to delusions driven by schizophrenia. They argued he was hearing voices that told him to commit the crimes as part of a mission from god.
Prosecutors argued that Skibicki was fully aware of his actions, saying they were “intentional, purposeful and racially motivated”.
They demonstrated this through a mix of DNA forensic evidence, surveillance footage showing Skibicki with the women in their final days, as well as testimony from his ex-wife, who detailed a history of physical abuse.
Had Skibicki been found not criminally responsible for the four murders, it would have been a relative rarity in Canadian law.
According to data from Canada’s statistics agency and reported by the Globe and Mail newspaper, between 2000 and 2022, of 8,883,749 criminal cases prosecuted across the country, only 5,178 – or 0.06% – had such verdicts.
The case unearthed deep wounds for Canada’s indigenous community, which has long grappled with a high number of cases of their women going missing or being murdered.
According to an investigation by the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, Winnipeg – a city near numerous indigenous communities – had the highest number of missing and murdered indigenous women in Canada between 2018 and 2022.
Across Canada, indigenous women are 12 times more likely to be murdered or go missing than other women, according to a 2019 inquiry.
Some indigenous women in the city remain missing, sparking fears from family members that Skibicki had more victims.
The Crown, however, said they do not believe he murdered more women.
Even with the relief of a guilty verdict, Mr Contois, Rebecca’s brother, said he still wonders why his sister – who is also a mother to a young daughter – was so brutally murdered.
“Why did he have to do it?” he said. “I wish I knew that.”
India tycoon’s son to marry after months of festivities
After months of lavish celebrations spread across the world, the wedding ceremony of the son of Asia’s richest man is set to take place on Friday.
Anant Ambani, son of Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani, will tie the knot with Radhika Merchant, daughter of pharma tycoons Viren and Shaila Merchant.
The four-day wedding extravaganza in Mumbai city is the final stop in a string of lavish parties the family has hosted since March.
The events, which have already featured performances by popstars like Rihanna and Justin Bieber, have captured the world’s attention.
But it has also led to backlash – city dwellers have complained of traffic snarls, while others have questioned the ostentatious display of wealth at the seemingly never-ending celebrations.
- The marathon Indian wedding turning heads around the world
Mukesh Ambani, 66, is at present the world’s 10th richest man with a net worth of $115bn, according to Forbes. Reliance Industries, founded by his father in 1966, is a massive conglomerate that operates in sectors ranging from petroleum and retail, to financial services and telecoms.
Anant Ambani is the youngest of his three children, all of whom are on the board of Reliance Industries. The 29-year-old is involved in Reliance’s energy businesses and is on the board of Reliance Foundation.
On Friday, the couple will get married in a traditional Hindu ceremony at the Jio World Convention Centre.
Reports say the family will host a grand reception through the weekend, before a final reception for their household staff on Monday.
Rumours on the internet suggest that Adele could be performing at the wedding, but the family has not confirmed this.
Mumbai police have labelled the wedding a “public event” since it would be attended by several international and Indian VIPs, reports Reuters news agency.
The city police has also imposed traffic restrictions around the venue.
From Friday to Monday, roads around the convention centre will be open only for “event vehicles” between 13:00 India time (07:30 GMT) to midnight, it said.
Rajan Mehra, CEO of air charter company Club One Air, told Reuters that the family had rented three Falcon-2000 jets to ferry wedding guests to the event.
“The guests are coming from all over and each aircraft will make multiple trips across the country,” he said.
The restrictions have sparked anger among the city residents who say they are already struggling with traffic jams and monsoon flooding.
The wedding festivities began in March when the family held a three-day pre-wedding party in their home state of Gujarat.
Among the 1,200 guests to attend the celebration were international celebrities, politicians, and members of the business world – including Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg and Microsoft’s Bill Gates.
- World’s rich in India for tycoon son’s pre-wedding gala
The party started with a performance by Rihanna on the first night. Diljit Dosanjh, the first Punjabi singer to perform at Coachella, took the stage on the second night, while rapper Akon closed the show on the final day of celebrations.
In June, the Ambanis organised another pre-wedding celebration, this time, a luxury cruise from Italy to France. The Backstreet Boys, Katy Perry and Pitbull performed for the 800 guests, which included Bollywood stars and cricketers.
Then came the final round of celebrations, which began earlier this week when Bieber landed in Mumbai.
Social media has been flooded with photos and videos of him singing in front of an ecstatic audience.
Money was also lavished on constructing 14 temples inside a sprawling complex in Jamnagar to showcase India’s cultural heritage and provide a backdrop for the wedding. As part of the celebrations, the Ambanis hosted a mass wedding for 50 underprivileged couples too.
On Wednesday, the family hosted a bhandara – a community feast for underprivileged people.
The Ambanis have not revealed how much this wedding is costing them but wedding planners estimate they’ve already spent anywhere between 11bn and 13bn rupees [$132m-$156m]. It was rumoured Rihanna had been paid $7m (£5.5m) for her performance, while the figure suggested for Bieber is $10m.
From rough sleeping to advising Prince William
Sabrina Cohen-Hatton has gone from rough sleeping as a teenager to visiting the Prince of Wales in Windsor Castle to give him advice on tackling homelessness.
She was able to give her own story to Prince William as proof that homeless people should not be “written off”.
“I sit in front of you now with a job, a home, a family and a PhD,” said Sabrina, who works as a fire service chief.
Prince William marked the first year of his Homewards project with a visit to Lambeth in south London where he pleged: “It is possible to end homelessness.”
The prince delivered the message that there is nothing inevitable about homelessness and that it shouldn’t be normalised.
Meeting Homewards representatives in Brixton he said: “Homelessness is a complex societal issue, and one that touches the lives of far too many people in our society. However, I truly believe that it can be ended.”
He spoke of the importance of “shifting perspectives” about homeless people and the need to “focus on prevention, rather than simply managing the crisis”.
Homewards is a five-year project based around six areas around the UK.
That includes Newport in South Wales – and as a 15- and 16-year-old that was where Sabrina was sleeping rough, after the death of a parent and problems at home.
Her way out was selling the Big Issue – “I credit them with saving my life” – and once she had secure accommodation she was able to get a job in the fire service, which became her career.
She used this “lived experience” to tell Prince William and the Homewards project about what was needed.
“There were lots of closed doors in my face,” she said. Even when support was meant to be available, she said in practice it could be hard for homeless people to have the confidence to access it.
Or there can be practical barriers. She said she relied on her dog, called Menace, but many hostels wouldn’t let people stay with pets.
Sabrina also warned of how homelessness was linked to the “pernicious” long-term impact of poverty.
She went on to become chief fire officer of West Sussex and has spoken widely about her own journey, including this latest role as an advocate for Homewards.
Sabrina said Prince William showed a lot of “empathy” towards the issue of homelessness, which she suggested reflected some of the “trauma” in his early life.
At the event in Brixton, Sabrina spoke alongside Chris Lynam, who recalled the intense “loneliness” that accompanied his own homelessness and drug addiction.
“It’s a very isolating experience… society is quite hostile to homeless people,” said Chris, who is now supporting Homewards’ work in Sheffield.
Prince William described it as an “honour” to hear Chris talk about his experiences.
The homelessness project, operating in Aberdeen, Bournemouth, Lambeth, Newport, Sheffield and Northern Ireland, wants to find successful approaches that can be replicated elsewhere.
There are links with employers about helping people into work. A partnership with Homebase provides starter packs of furniture to help those moving from homelessness into accommodation.
There are efforts to identify sofa-surfing and addressing links between relationship breakdown and homelessness.
Putting housing officers in schools has been tried to identify young people who might be at risk.
Through the Duchy of Cornwall there are 24 homes being built with “wrap-around support” for people leaving homelessness – and Prince William is now involved in developing further plans.
There is a push to change attitudes towards homelessness – and Sabrina talked about the need to get rid of the stigma. She said that for 20 years she hadn’t told anyone about her own experiences, before becoming such a public speaker about homelessness.
Matt Downie, chief executive of Crisis, says the Homewards project can challenge the “cynicism and fatalism” that says homelessness is inevitable.
He says that even though the big picture has seen homelessness getting worse, the evidence exists to prevent it.
Finland is given as an example of a sustained drive to end homelessness, with the claim that there are now only about 150 homeless families. In contrast in the UK, there are more than 100,000 households categorised as homeless.
There have also been questions about whether a wealthy royal should be pronouncing on homelessness.
The anti-monarchy group Republic has previously described it as “crass and hypocritical”.
But George Anderson, a Big Issue seller and medical researcher in London, welcomes that Prince William has used his high public profile to talk about homelessness.
“He encourages people who are distant from homelessness to feel empathy and care,” says George.
“Given the pomp and ceremony around his official role, it is easy for people to question as to what he really knows about homelessness,” says George.
“I am sure that he is aware of that whilst also knowing he is in a position, like his mother, to highlight the plight of homelessness to the media.
“His mother would have experienced similar, being photographed in a tiara at a ball one day, whilst serving soup in a homeless kitchen the next,” says George, who sees the prince’s interest as being linked to Princess Diana bringing her sons to homelessness charities when they were children.
Why both businesses and scammers love India’s payment system
Every day, for the last seven years, Arun Kumar has set up his fruit stall on a busy Mumbai street.
It’s not an easy way to make a living.
“Being a street vendor is a challenge. There’s the fear of being robbed or, as I am not a licensed vendor, the local body can come and dismantle my store anytime,” he says.
But over the past four years at least one aspect of his work has become easier.
“Prior to Covid everything was in cash. But now everyone pays with UPI. Scan the code and the payment is done within seconds.
“No issues of handling cash, giving change to customers. It has made my life and business smooth,” he says.
UPI, or to give it its full name the Unified Payments Interface, was launched in 2016 in a collaboration between India’s central bank and the nation’s banking industry.
It’s an app-based instant payment system, which allows users to send and receive money, pay bills and authorise payments in a single step – no need to enter bank details or any other personal information. And, perhaps most importantly, it’s free.
It has become so popular that India is now the biggest real-time payments market.
In May, UPI recorded 14 billion transactions, up from nine billion the year before.
But the popularity and ease of use has made it a rich feeding ground for scammers.
“While digital payments are convenient, they do come with vulnerabilities,” says Shashank Shekhar, founder of the Delhi-based Future Crime Research Foundation.
Mr Shekhar says that scammers use a variety of ways to trick people, including persuading them to share their UPI pin number, which is needed to authorise payments.
Some scammers have also created fake UPI apps, that are clones of legitimate banking apps, and then steal login details or other valuable information.
“The pace at which digital transformation took place in the country means unfortunately digital literacy and safe internet practice could not catch up,” says Mr Shekhar.
He says that between January 2020 and June 2023 almost half of all financial fraud involved the use of the UPI system.
According to government figures there were more than 95,000 cases of fraud involving UPI in the financial year ending April 2023, up from 77,000 in the previous year.
Shivkali was one such victim. She had always wanted to own a scooter, but they were beyond her budget.
However, earlier in the year the 22-year-old, who lives in Bihar state in northeastern India, spotted one for sale on Facebook that looked like a great deal.
“I grabbed the opportunity without thinking,” she says.
A couple of clicks later and she was talking to the owner, who said that for $23 he would send over the vehicle papers.
That went smoothly, so Shivkali continued to send the owner money, via instant transfers. She eventually ended up paying $200, but the scooter (also commonly called a Scooty in India), was never delivered.
Shivkali realised she had been scammed.
“I did not think I could be cheated, as I have some education background and know what is happing in the world. But scammers are smart. They have an art of speaking to convince the opposite person,” she says.
The government and the central bank are looking at ways to protect UPI users from scammers.
But at the moment, if a victim wants compensation, they have to approach their bank.
“The problem is deep rooted,” says Dr Durgesh Pandey, an expert in financial crime.
“Most of the onus lies with banks and telecom companies. They are lax in making identity checks, that’s why the fraudster can’t be traced.
“But the challenge for banks particularly is that they have to balance between inclusivity, ease of business and enforcement of identity checks. If they are too rigid, the vulnerable section of society will remain without banking facilities.”
But Dr Pandey argues that in most cases of fraud, the bank is not totally to blame.
“It’s a complex question because the problem lies with banks, but it’s the victim who is giving his credentials in most case. I would say both victim and bank should bear the loss.”
Despite those problems, UPI is being promoted in rural areas where access to banking services can be difficult.
Poonam Untwal from Rajasthan runs a guidance centre which helps people use the internet and digital banking.
“Most of us are not that educated, nor know the proper use of smartphones. I teach them that phones are no longer a device just to talk to people but banks at their fingertips,” she says.
She believes that UPI will help develop the local economy.
“Many women like me have a small business that we run from our home. Now we can receive and send money with UPI. People who don’t have smart phones come to my centre to get their transactions done,” she says.
As well as making inroads into rural areas, UPI is spreading overseas.
Retailers in Bhutan, Mauritius, Nepal, Singapore, Sri Lanka and UAE will take UPI payments.
And this year, France become the first European country to accept UPI payments, starting with tickets to the Eiffel Tower.
Back in Mumbai, Mr Kumar is happy that he no longer has to use cash, but remains wary.
If he can’t get a good internet connection then customers can, by accident or design, make off without paying.
“For a small vendor like me it [UPI] made receiving money very easy. But I am always scared of fraud. I keep hearing in the news how the UPI frauds are increasing. Hopefully some mechanisms are invented so a small vendor like me doesn’t face losses.”
Australian soldier charged with spying for Russia
An Australian soldier and her husband have been arrested and each charged with spying for Russia.
Investigators say the couple – both Russian-born Australian citizens – obtained Australian Defence Force (ADF) material to share with Moscow.
However, Australian police say “no significant compromise” of Australian secrets has been identified.
It is the first time stricter foreign interference laws – introduced by Australia in 2018 – have been used to lay espionage charges.
The 40-year-old woman, an army private, and her 62-year-old husband will face court in Brisbane later on Friday, each on one count of preparing for an espionage offence.
Australian Federal Police Commissioner Reece Kershaw said the woman had been an information systems technicians in the army for several years, and had obtained a security clearance.
He alleged she secretly travelled to Russia while on leave from the ADF, then instructed her husband on how to access her work account and send sensitive material so that she could forward it on to Russian authorities.
An investigation in to whether any of the material was ever delivered to them is still underway, Mr Kershaw said, and the charges could be upgraded.
Israeli army ‘failed in mission’ to protect kibbutz from Hamas attack
Israel’s defence minister has called for a state inquiry into what led to the Hamas attacks on 7 October, as the military admitted it failed in its duty to protect a small community were 101 people were killed.
Yoav Gallant made his comments after the first in a series of official Israeli military reports laid bare how the army operated in Kibbutz Be’eri, which is near the Gaza perimeter fence.
More residents died at the kibbutz than any other Israeli community on 7 October, after gunmen crossed from Gaza and rampaged through their homes.
Mr Gallant said an independent national inquiry was needed to examine the actions of all those in power, including Prime Minster Benjamin Netanyahu, in relation to how Hamas had grown in strength and capability over the past decade.
Around 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken back to Gaza as hostages in the unprecedented assault last autumn.
It led to the major Israeli military operation in Gaza which has killed more than 38,000 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
Members of the kibbutz said it was important the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) admitted it had failed to protect them and they too are demanding a national inquiry.
The report, carried out by a senior military officer, commended the bravery of security personal but said the IDF was not prepared for the extensive infiltration by Hamas and “for the first seven hours of combat, the kibbutz residents defended themselves”.
It said: “The inquiry team determined that the IDF failed in its mission to protect the residents of Kibbutz Be’eri.”
Other findings included:
- The IDF “struggled to create a clear and accurate situational assessment” of what was happening in the kibbutz until the afternoon of the attacks, which began at dawn
- There was a “lack of command and control, a lack of co-ordination, and a lack of order among the different forces and units”
- Confusion meant security forces grouped at the entrance to the kibbutz but waited to enter while Hamas were killing people
- That “heroism and supreme courage shown by the fighting forces, commanders, and security personnel” saved many residents
The report also focused on the command given to a tank to shell a house in which 13 hostages were being held.
No personal blame was attributed to Brigadier General Barak Hiram, commander of the 99th Infantry Division who was found to have acted professionally along with other senior officers in “complex and difficult circumstances.”
The report said: “The tank fire towards the area near the house was carried out professionally, with a joint decision made by commanders from all the security organisations after careful consideration and a situational assessment was made, with the intent to apply pressure to the terrorists and save the civilians held hostage inside.”
Brig-Gen Hiram is soon due to take command of the Gaza Division.
The report’s authors concluded that as far as they could assess, no civilians inside the house were harmed by tank-shell fire, except for what they called “an isolated incident outside the building where two civilians were injured by shrapnel”.
It said: “The team determined that most of the hostages were likely murdered by the terrorists, and further inquiries and reviews of additional findings are necessary.”
The IDF’s Chief of the General Staff accepted all the conclusions of the report and ordered they be integrated into future operational plans.
Hamas killed one in 10 of the 1,000 residents of Be’eri on 7 October in a rampage that started after dawn and lasted for hours.
Sharon Sharabi, whose two brothers Yossi and Eli were taken into Gaza as hostages, was briefed earlier on the report and said he had learned nothing new from the official findings.
“There was a command failure here. This is a difficult and bad picture,” he said.
Yossi, 53, has been declared dead [by Israeli authorities] and the fate of Eli, who would now be 52, is unknown.
Mr Sharabi said: “It cannot be beautified in any way. No investigation they may try to do can make it rosy. It’s impossible.”
A statement issued by Kibbutz Be’eri residents said it was of great importance to them that the IDF had asked for their forgiveness for not protecting them from what they called “an unparalleled attack of evil”.
“The failure of the army has been burned into our bodies and in our hearts for nine months,” their statement said.
Residents said they still had not received satisfactory answers to why the army did not enter the kibbutz, nor had any explanation been given yet for the intelligence failure that allowed Hamas to launch their mass assault undetected.
They also called for a national [state] inquiry, which prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been unwilling to initiate.
Thursday’s report is expected to be the first in a series of IDF probes into how the 7 October attacks were dealt with in various parts of southern Israel where Hamas attacked.
Crossbow killing suspect ‘yet to speak with police’
A man suspected of killing three women in a crossbow attack remains in hospital in a serious condition, police say.
Carol Hunt, 61, Hannah Hunt, 28, and Louise Hunt, 25, died at their home in Bushey, Hertfordshire, on Tuesday evening.
Hertfordshire Police have recovered a crossbow but have not been able to question suspect Kyle Clifford, 26, after he was found injured at a cemetery on Wednesday.
Tributes to the family have flooded in, with the victims described as “wonderful, hard-working, kind women”.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer announced the government would look at the legislation around crossbows following “this awful incident”.
The victims were the wife and two daughters of BBC Racing commentator John Hunt, and Mr Clifford is the ex-boyfriend of Louise Hunt.
Emotional tributes have been paid to the family and a church vigil was held in Bushey on Thursday.
Hertfordshire Police said in a statement that Mr Clifford was still receiving medical treatment in a London hospital.
“At this stage, he is currently in a serious condition and is yet to speak with officers,” it said.
“A crossbow has been recovered as part of the investigation.”
Police previously confirmed “no shots were fired” by officers as they captured Mr Clifford at Lavender Hill Cemetery in Enfield.
The force said there were no reports of “prior police contact between Hertfordshire Constabulary, Kyle Clifford and the victims”.
‘Seeking justice’
Det Supt Rob Hall, from the Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Hertfordshire Major Crime Unit, said: “Our thoughts remain with the victims’ family and loved ones at this devastating and indescribable time. They are being supported by specially trained officers.
“This was an unprecedented attack and we are determined to understand the full circumstances of what happened that evening and the events leading up to it. We are wholly committed to seeking justice for the victims and their family.
“This investigation, as I’m sure people can imagine, will take time. I’d like to reiterate my sincere thanks to the members of public who contacted us yesterday and helped with our enquiries.”
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer commented on the case on Thursday evening.
He said: “First let me say how awful this was, and our condolences and thoughts are with all of the family and those affected.
“In relation to crossbows, the Home Secretary has announced she will look at the legislation, and we will.”
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper will look at the findings of a Home Office review into crossbows carried out earlier this year.
A Home Office spokeswoman said: “The Home Secretary will swiftly consider the findings to see if laws need to be tightened further.”
Tributes to the family have flooded in from friends, fellow broadcasters and from members of the sporting world.
In Bushey, more than 50 people attended a vigil at St James’s Church to pay their respects.
Sally Golding who knew Hannah Hunt as her beautician, said: “I felt I needed to come today.
“Hannah was just a really, really lovely bubbly person with a great personality. She was a sweet girl, a very happy little soul.”
Lea Holloway, a longstanding friend of Carol Hunt, was in tears as she left the church.
“I’ll miss Carol like crazy. There were four of us who were close friends, and we were pregnant at the same time,” she said.
“I can’t believe this has happened. It’s the thing nightmares are made of.
“I feel for their oldest daughter and John. I can’t imagine what it must feel like.”
Bouquets of flowers have been mounting at the family home in Ashlyn Close as friends and neighbours of the Hunt family left messages of condolence.
“I wish none of this were real,” reads one.
“Rest in peace Carol, Hannah and Louise,” one of the cards reads, and another, “This is heartbreaking”.
Luisa, 36, said she had been a client of Louise’s dog grooming business, Groom and Glow, for three years.
She added: “I hope they are remembered as wonderful, hardworking, kind women, rather than victims.”
Hannah Hunt’s colleagues at the Anti-Ageing Clinic in Radlett have expressed their “deep regret and sadness” over her death.
They said on social media that “she was a fantastic therapist and clients loved her”.
The post continued: “We send our condolences and prayers to her dad, sister and family.”
Tributes to the Hunt family and expressions of support from sports personalities and broadcasters have also been appearing on social media.
After Wednesday’s England victory in Euro24, the former England footballer Michael Owen posted on social media: “And while the country celebrates, spare a thought for John Hunt. I can’t remember feeling so utterly horrified in years.”
The football commentator Jacqui Oatley said: “I couldn’t/didn’t want to tweet about football yesterday due to the utter horror of hearing about John Hunt’s family.
“What a truly lovely, wonderful man he is. He has had so much support. He’ll need it.”
A minute’s silence was held at Newmarket Racecourse in Suffolk on Thursday afternoon in memory of the victims.
In a statement, the British Horseracing Authority said: “The thoughts of everyone at the BHA are with John Hunt, his family and friends at this shocking and tragic time.
“It is impossible to comprehend the horror that has been inflicted upon them by this dreadful event.”
Jockeys at Kempton Park Racecourse wore black armbands to show support on Wednesday.
The Sky commentator Mike Cattermole said it was “hard to comprehend and process the shock and disgust of what happened to John Hunt and his family”.
“John lived for his girls, they were the world to him.”
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England will have to be “tactically perfect” to beat Spain in Sunday’s Euro 2024 final, manager Gareth Southgate says.
England’s men booked their first appearance in a major final on foreign soil with a 2-1 victory over the Netherlands in their semi-final on Wednesday.
It’s the third time in the past four major competitions that Southgate has guided England to the semi-final stage of either the Euros or the World Cup.
Southgate says three-time winners Spain are the “favourites” for the final as England’s men bid to win their first Euros title.
“They would be rightly favourites for what they have done this tournament. They have been the best team,” said Southgate.
“They have got a day longer and in the past three finals, maybe more, it has been quite significant, so we have got to get our recovery spot on.
“Tactically we will have to be perfect as they are such a good side. But, you know, we are here.”
England have ‘unfinished business’
Arsenal midfielder Declan Rice says England’s defeat by Italy in the Euro 2020 final will serve as motivation on Sunday.
Italy beat England 3-2 on penalties at Wembley after a 1-1 draw over 120 minutes in London.
“Seeing Italy lift that trophy will haunt me forever,” said Rice.
“We are now presented with another opportunity where we can write our own history but we are up against another top side who we have to massively respect.
“Hopefully now we can do it. Not only for each other but also for the manager. I think he deserves it.”
Chelsea’s Cole Palmer said the side can “finish the job” and change their lives forever by winning in Berlin.
Palmer came off the bench to provide the assist for fellow substitute Ollie Watkins’ last-minute winner in Dortmund.
“Everyone’s buzzing,” the midfielder told the England YouTube channel.
“Last night on the bus, tunes were on, [in the] changing room, everyone was just enjoying it.
“But obviously it’s a short turnaround and it’s a massive, massive game to change our lives, our family’s lives, and to make everyone proud. That’s what we’re trying to do.
“I think if you’ve got to this final then you have to hopefully finish the job. It’s all good getting to the final, and you’ve got to enjoy it because you don’t get many moments to enjoy. But, no, everyone just wants to win so bad.”
Southgate’s side have shaken off a slow start to the tournament to reach a second Euros final in as many attempts.
Palmer, who won the European Championship at Under-21 level with England in 2023, feels the Three Lions have found their rhythm.
“In the first few games, we didn’t play the best that we could and everyone knew that,” added Palmer.
“But now I think as the tournament’s gone on, especially yesterday, I think we had our best game in the tournament, and that’s what you want going into the later stages.
“It’s huge. We played them last year in the Under-21s final, England versus Spain. Even that was a massive game, so I can’t imagine this one.”
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First Rothesay Test (day two of five), Lord’s:
West Indies 121 (Atkinson 7-45) & 79-6 (Anderson 2-11)
England 371 (Crawley 76, Smith 70, Root 68; Seales 4-77)
Scorecard
James Anderson took two wickets in his final innings as an international bowler to help put England on course for a huge win over West Indies in the first Test at Lord’s.
Anderson, opening the attack for the last time in his record-breaking England career, began the hosts’ hunt for an innings victory by bowling West Indies captain Kraigg Brathwaite and returned to have Alick Athanaze caught behind.
With captain Ben Stokes also taking two wickets and Gus Atkinson two of his own, including Jason Holder off the final ball of the day, West Indies were left 79-6, still 171 short of making England bat again.
The tourists had actually done well to bowl England out for 371, but are paying the price for being hustled out for 121 on the opening day.
Jamie Smith, England’s wicketkeeper on Test debut, showed why he has such a reputation as a batting talent with an assured 70.
Joe Root made a typically elegant 68 and Harry Brook 50, though none of the home top order could capitalise on some good batting conditions with a really big score.
Still, England will win this match on a Friday which promises to be an emotional farewell to the legendary Anderson.
England close in on low-key day
After an opening day of ceremony for Anderson and excitement surrounding the seven-wicket haul of Gus Atkinson, Thursday was relatively low key, with England not having to be at their best to take an iron grip on the contest.
Lord’s was splashed with red for the Ruth Strauss Foundation and the fireworks that shot into the sky before play were the only pyrotechnics on display until Smith opened his shoulders late in England’s innings.
England began on 189-3, leading by 68. West Indies had a poor first hour, but improved after Brook was dismissed to work through the home batting.
England actually lost their last seven wickets for 127 runs, the highlight of which was Mikyle Louis running out Shoaib Bashir with a direct hit from 40 yards, then setting off on a sprinting celebration that culminated with a hug with his brother Jeremiah, who is also in the West Indies squad.
West Indies began their second innings straight after tea and, at 37-4, there was a genuine prospect of the first two-day Test on this ground since 1888.
Athanaze, Holder and Joshua da Silva did just enough to drag the match into a third day, but surely nothing will prevent England going 1-0 up in the three-match series.
Smith shows his potential
Smith has taken over behind the stumps from his county team-mate Ben Foakes, who is Surrey’s first-choice keeper and arguably the best gloveman in the world.
England have seen Smith’s potential to bat in different gears, particularly attacking when left with the tail and, on the day before his 24th birthday, he hinted at vindicating their decision.
Brook played nicely before flapping at an Alzarri Joseph bouncer, not the first time he has been undone by short bowling, and Stokes registered his fifth successive single-figure score in Tests with a poor shot at a very good delivery from left-arm spinner Gudakesh Motie.
Smith found an even tempo with Root, who was also bowled by the impressive Motie, then after Chris Woakes and Atkinson fell in quick succession to the second new ball, he cut loose.
Favouring the mid-wicket region and keen to use his feet, Smith hit each of Shamar Joseph and Jayden Seales over the leg side for six, the latter an enormous blow on to the roof of the Tavern Stand. From having 30 off his first 47 balls, he took 40 off his next 42.
In all, England added 28 runs for the final two wickets, though only Smith scored any runs off the bat until he was well held at deep square leg by Kirk McKenzie to give Seales his fourth wicket.
Anderson begins his goodbye
Emerging at number 11, Anderson was given a standing ovation as he made his way to the middle, then even led the players off despite not facing a ball. His unbeaten nought was his 114th not-out in Test cricket, 53 more than anyone else has managed and another of his records that is unlikely to ever be broken.
Soon after he was into a typically brilliant opening spell from the Pavilion End, nipping the ball down the slope and through Brathwaite’s defence. Anderson’s first spell of five overs contained four maidens.
Woakes was down on pace and gave way to Stokes, who needed only three deliveries to pin McKenzie leg-before for his 200th Test wicket, a milestone that seemed unlikely during his long struggle with a left-knee injury.
It made the skipper only the third man in Test cricket, after all-time greats Sir Garfield Sobers and Jacques Kallis, to complete the double of 6,000 runs and 200 wickets, and he celebrated by having Louis caught behind.
Atkinson continued his fine game by having Kavem Hodge chop on. Athanaze was defying England in the gloom until he became yet another victim that Anderson has suckered into an edge.
Holder faced 59 deliveries for his 20 only to fend Atkinson to short leg from the last ball of the day, leaving Da Silva on eight and Anderson poised to say goodbye.
England ruthless but Windies ‘all over the place’ – analysis
Ex-England captain Michael Vaughan: “It’s been a ruthless display by England. There was all the build-up, all the emotion of Anderson but both debutants have delivered.
“Gus Atkinson yesterday, and Jamie Smith today did his job at the first time of asking. He has been picked to exploit those last few wickets for England and he did that perfectly.
“But West Indies are all over the place. It is so sad to see a batting line-up that’s got nothing. They are up against a very good bowling attack including the greatest of all time but it upsets me. The pitch has done a little bit but it’s not a pitch you should lose 16 wickets on in the space of two days.”
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Former England striker Gary Lineker says Gareth Southgate’s side are on the “brink of history” after reaching the Euro 2024 final.
The Three Lions beat the Netherlands 2-1 in Dortmund on Wednesday night to book a spot in Sunday’s final against Spain.
It is the first time the men’s side have reached a final outside England after playing the 1966 World Cup final and 2021 Euro final at Wembley, while the women’s Euro victory in 2022 came on home soil.
England’s men have never won the European Championship, with their World Cup win in 1966 their only major silverware, while Spain are three-time European champions.
“I think it’s hugely significant for English football,” Lineker, who will present BBC One’s coverage of the final on Sunday, told BBC Sport.
“They were in a final, they were in the last final of the Euros, of course, and that was at Wembley, and that ended up in huge disappointment [losing to Italy on penalties].
“This is going to be tough, it’s going to be difficult, but they’re on the brink of history. No English team in football has ever won a major tournament abroad.”
The closest a senior England team have come to winning a major tournament outside of England was in 2023, when the Lionesses were beaten by Spain in the World Cup final in Australia.
Xavi Simons gave the Netherlands an early lead in Dortmund on Wednesday but Harry Kane equalised from the penalty spot midway through the first half before Ollie Watkins scored the winner in the 90th minute.
Watkins’ winner was England’s fourth goal of the tournament scored past the 80th minute, including extra time.
“They have got that kind of never-say-die attitude, which is something that is hugely important,” said Lineker, who scored 48 goals in 80 appearances for England.
“Even when they weren’t playing great, they were grinding out results. And it’s an old football cliche that if you can win when you play badly, then things are not that bad.”
Spain have been in the eyes of many observers the outstanding team in Germany this summer and are favourites heading into Sunday’s final.
After a slow start, England have found some rhythm in the knockout stages and the win against the Netherlands was their best display of the tournament so far.
“I don’t really think I’m surprised at how we have done it, because we’ve got the individuals, world-class footballers right across the pitch,” Lineker continued.
“Yes, they started slowly and something wasn’t quite right about things but they’ve worked it out and they’ve got gradually better as the tournament progressed. It’s much better that way round.”
So, is football coming home?
“I’m banning that statement,” said Lineker. “It’s been bad luck for so long.”
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Manchester United are close to completing a £33.7m deal to sign Dutch striker Joshua Zirkzee from Bologna.
United sources say the club are set to pay a slight premium on the £33.67m release clause in order to secure an extended payment period for the 23-year-old.
The Premier League club are determined to comply with Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR) regards loss limits and accept their present situation is tight and will require discipline in their transfer dealings.
Long-serving forward Anthony Martial left Old Trafford at the end of last season when his contract expired.
The Frenchman’s extended absence because of injury, in addition to Marcus Rashford’s drop in form, left new signing Rasmus Hojlund to shoulder the striking burden.
Hojlund ended up losing his place in Ten Hag’s starting line-up for the FA Cup final win over Manchester City as the manager used Bruno Fernandes in a false nine role.
Zirkzee joined Bayern Munich from Feyenoord in 2017 before moving to Bologna for about £7.15m five years later after loan spells with Parma and Anderlecht.
He scored 12 goals in 37 appearances last season as Bologna claimed a surprise spot in this season’s Champions League.
Zirkzee was named in Ronald Koeman’s Euro 2024 squad but made just two substitute appearances for the Netherlands, totalling four minutes, plus injury time.
He was introduced into Wednesday’s semi-final defeat by England immediately after Ollie Watkins’ winner.
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Third women’s T20 international, Canterbury
New Zealand 141-8 (20 overs): Devine 58* (42); Ecclestone 4-25
England 142-4 (19.2 overs): Capsey 67* (60); Jonas 2-23
Scorecard
Alice Capsey hit an unbeaten 67 as England clinched a tense six-wicket win over New Zealand in the third T20 international to take an unassailable 3-0 lead in the five-match series.
Sophie Ecclestone’s masterful 4-25 helped restrict the Kiwis to 141-8 while Lauren Filer (2-17) and Sarah Glenn (1-14) also bowled eye-catching spells.
New Zealand were indebted to skipper Sophie Devine who accelerated in the final few overs to finish unbeaten on 58 off 42 balls after opener Suzie Bates had made 38.
England lost in-form Maia Bouchier for a first-ball duck but Capsey and Sophia Dunkley (35) enjoyed a 66-run stand for the second wicket.
Nat Sciver-Brunt, skippering the side after Heather Knight was rested, also departed without scoring but 19-year-old Capsey batted with maturity to see England home.
With 28 runs required off 17 balls for victory Capsey whacked Amelia Kerr down the ground for a towering six to signal England’s charge.
Freya Kemp bludgeoned 16 off eight balls before Capsey hit the winning runs – albeit via a streaky shot and misfield – with four balls to spare.
The fourth game takes place at Kia Oval on Saturday from 18:30 BST.
Capsey keeps her cool
The margin of victory in the previous three one-day internationals and two T20s between the two sides had been so emphatic that England are heading into experimentation territory.
In this contest that stretched to Knight sitting out and giving Sciver-Brunt a whirl at skippering the side under the guise of ‘what if..?’ contingency planning for the T20 World Cup, which takes place in Bangladesh in October.
Should Knight come a cropper in the tournament in Bangladesh the experienced Sciver-Brunt would be a more than capable stand-in – although that was probably already obvious before this match.
England also gave opener Danni Wyatt the night off which afforded the talented Dunkley an opportunity at the top as she played her first T20 international since March and her breezy innings gave the hosts a positive start.
It was Capsey’s innings that will have pleased England the most, though.
The teenager is known for her attacking strokeplay but on occasions her aggressive intent can get the better of her.
So the manner in which she batted in Canterbury to get England within striking distance of the total before upping the ante shows a growing maturity to go with her fearless talent.
“I love batting number three it is the best place to bat in T20,” Capsey told Sky Sports.
“I feel like I have a good understanding of my game. I just want to perform for England so I’m happy to get a performance in today.”
It was Capsey’s top score in T20s for England – eclipsing knocks of 51 against Sri Lanka and Ireland in 2023.
That it came at a much slower strike-rate – 111.66 – compared to her other three T20 half-centuries does not matter a jot in the bigger picture.
‘Happy to keep the streak going’ – what they said
England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt: “With a bowling attack we have got and the people on the sidelines waiting to come in it is a pretty easy job to chuck the ball to different people, so I’m happy I could keep the winning streak going.
“The last few overs were pretty nervy but the calmness they showed was pretty special.
“We don’t want to do it all the time but putting ourselves under pressure like that and then come out the other side, if we can take to [the World Cup in] Bangladesh, that would be perfect.”
New Zealand skipper Sophie Devine: “We asked the group to be more competitive, have fight and ticker and we had that. I am really proud of the group – it has been a tough tour so far and to take them so close today was encouraging.
“Our batters showed intent and were clear on how they wanted to score. To see those learnings is something we’ve asked for and we’re starting to see with this group. I’ve still got a huge amount of belief in this group but we’re working towards the pinnacle event at the end of the year.”
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Jasmine Paolini edged out a tearful Donna Vekic in a thrilling semi-final to become the first Italian to reach a Wimbledon women’s singles final.
In one of the best matches of the tournament, Paolini missed two match points and was 8-7 behind in the 10-point tie-break before recovering to clinch an incredible victory.
The match lasted two hours 51 minutes, making it the longest women’s singles semi-final at Wimbledon, with the Italian winning 2-6 6-4 7-6 (10-8).
Seventh seed Paolini will now face Czech 31st seed Barbora Krejcikova after she claimed a remarkable 3-6 6-3 6-4 comeback victory against Elena Rybakina, the 2022 champion.
It means there will be a new name etched into the Venus Rosewater Dish following Saturday’s final.
Paolini, who had never won a match at this tournament before this year but who has gained huge popularity with her enthusiasm, bubbly personality and incredible shot-making skills, said: “I was serving really bad so I am so happy. This match I will remember forever.
“I was just trying to think about what to do on the court, point by point, because I was really in difficulty.”
Vekic, who was also struggling with an injury to her lower right arm, was seen in tears at the changeover before the tie-break as the match was slipping away from her.
“I thought I was going to die in the third set,” said a tearful Vekic in the post-match news conference. “I had so much pain in my arm, in my leg. It was not easy out there, but I will recover.
“I was more crying because I had so much pain, I didn’t know how I could keep playing. My team tells me I can be proud of myself.
“It’s tough right now. It’s really tough to be positive right now. It was so close.”
Paolini delights Wimbledon crowd with ‘dream’ win’
Paolini lost in the French Open final in May and is the first woman to reach back-to-back Roland Garros and Wimbledon finals since Serena Williams in 2016.
“I think these last months have been crazy for me,” added Paolini. “I don’t know, I am just trying to focus on what I have to do on court and enjoying what I am doing.
“I love playing tennis. It is a dream. I was watching finals when I was a kid at Wimbledon. I am just enjoying it and trying to live in the present.”
The 28-year-old Italian had lost all three of her matches here before this year, but has now created history – and has a chance of becoming the first Italian player, male or female, to win a Wimbledon singles title.
Paolini had never reached the second week of a Grand Slam until six weeks ago when she made the French Open final.
But she has quickly become a fans’ favourite, with every successful point won against Vekic gaining a huge reception, with the majority of supporters cheering on the Italian.
Paolini seemed to thrive on that support and the energy around Centre Court as Vekic struggled against her opponent and the crowd, which gave a deserved standing ovation to both players.
Heartbreak for beaten Vekic after career-saving run
Croat Vekic, also aiming to reach her first Grand Slam final, stormed through the first set and then led 4-3 with a break of serve in the deciding set, needing only two holds of serve for victory.
But amid sensational scenes on Centre Court, the hugely popular Paolini managed to instantly get the match back on serve.
She failed to convert a match-point chance in the 10th game and then another two games later as the encounter went to a 10-point tie-break.
Vekic led 8-7 in that, as the lead had constantly changed hands and was two points from victory, but Paolini, chasing down every ball and able to unleash wonderfully-accurate forehand shots, went ahead and then kept her nerve to seal the win.
Just a month ago, Vekic, 28, was on the verge of quitting tennis, having struggled with a run of injuries. But the world number 37 had found a golden run of form which could have rescued her career, with her set to move up 16 places in the rankings.
Vekic was aiming to become the second successive unseeded player winning the women’s tournament after Marketa Vondrousova of the Czech Republic became the first female player to ever do so when she lifted the trophy 12 months ago.
Vekic played a full part in a thrilling match that will live long in the memory, but Paolini was the one who was celebrating at the dramatic end.
Krejcikova fights back to stun favourite Rybakina
Rybakina had fast become the favourite for the women’s singles title at Wimbledon following a flurry of high-profile exits earlier in the tournament.
After Paolini and Vekic played out the longest women’s semi-final at Wimbledon, it looked like the 25-year-old would make quick work of Thursday’s second match on Centre Court when she raced to a 4-0 lead before snapping up the first set.
But Krejcikova struck back in the second and, with the crowd behind her, she needed just a single break of serve to take control of the decider.
The 31st seed shot her arms into the air in celebration when fourth seed Rybakina fired long on the first match point.
“I am so proud about my game and my fighting spirit today,” Krejcikova said.
Asked if she ever believed she would reach a Wimbledon singles final, she said “no, never” before paying tribute to 1998 Wimbledon champion Jana Novotna, who coached Krejcikova before she died in 2017 at the age of 49.
“I am fighting for every ball and I am sure that is what she would want me to do,” she added.
It is the first time Krejcikova – a doubles specialist – has reached a Wimbledon singles final, and her first at a Grand Slam since she triumphed at the French Open in 2021.
It marks a remarkable return to form for the 28-year-old, who had a far-from-perfect build-up to Wimbledon – winning just three matches in the five months before the Championships after struggling with a back injury and illness.
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History-maker Biniam Girmay sprinted to his third victory at this year’s Tour de France but overall contender Primoz Roglic lost significant time after a late crash on stage 12.
Eritrean Girmay became the first black African to win a Tour de France stage with his opening win on stage three and also triumphed on stage eight.
Intermarche-Wanty rider Girmay, 24, beat Wout van Aert in a frantic bunch sprint in Villeneuve-sur-Lot, with Mark Cavendish originally finishing fifth before being relegated.
Tadej Pogacar retained the leader’s yellow jersey and remains one minute six seconds ahead of Remco Evenepoel, with defending champion Jonas Vingegaard a further eight seconds behind.
But podium contender Roglic, who finished with a ripped jersey and bloodied shoulder, dropped from fourth to sixth in the general classification after he lost two minutes 27 seconds on the leaders after being caught up in a late crash.
Pogacar, of UAE Team Emirates, was also held up behind a crash in the peloton early in the stage, and required a bike change, but re-joined the main group without issue.
The 203.6km route from Aurillac to Villeneuve-sur-Lot offered one of the few remaining opportunities for a bunch sprint – assuming the sprinter’s teams could control any potential breakaway.
A four-man group featuring Groupama-FDJ riders Valentin Madouas and Quentin Pacher, Jonas Abrahamsen of Uno-X Mobility and Total Energies’ Anthony Turgis managed to open up a three-and-a-half-minute advantage over the peloton.
But that move was shut down with more than 40km remaining to set up a long-inevitable dash to the line, in which Girmay prevailed to further assert himself as the fastest sprinter at this year’s race.
In doing so he also extended his lead in the green jersey points battle, opening up a likely unassailable 111-point advantage over Jasper Philipsen.
“The green jersey gives me wings – I feel super fast. It’s in the head. I’ve had my ups and downs in recent seasons but I changed things this year and it’s working,” Girmay said.
A rare moment of calm in the peloton was interrupted with 12km remaining when Alexey Lutsenko crashed and took down Slovenian Roglic.
The Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe rider had been one minute 31 seconds adrift of the podium but that deficit now stands at three minutes 28 seconds.
Reacting to Roglic’s incident, race leader Pogacar said: “It is really devastating. He was in very good shape already and I could feel he was getting better with every stage.
“I’m pretty sure he would have been fighting for the GC in the next few days.”
Both Astana Qazaqstan rider Cavendish and Arnaud Demare, of Arkea-B&B Hotels, were relegated following illegal moves they made in the sprint.
Stage 13 on Friday is a relatively flat 165.3km route from Agen to Pau but, as the race enters the Pyrenees, hilly terrain approaching the finish could prove difficult for the sprinters.
That is one of only two expected remaining opportunities for the sprinters – including Cavendish, who claimed a record 35th Tour de France stage win last week – to take victories at this year’s race, along with stage 16 in Nimes.
Tour de France stage 12 results
1. Biniam Girmay (Eri/Intermarche-Wanty) 4hrs 17mins 15secs
2. Wout van Aert (Bel/Visma-Lease a Bike) same time
3. Pascal Ackermann (Ger/Israel Premier Tech) “
4. Jasper Philipsen (Bel/Alpecin-Deceuninck) “
5. Arnaud de Lie (Bel/Lotto-Dstny) “
6. Alexander Kristoff (Nor/Uno-X) “
7. Phil Bauhaus (Ger/Bahrain Victorious) “
8. Bryan Coquard (Fra/Cofidis) “
9. Dylan Groenewegen (Ned/Team Jayco-AlUla) “
10. Ryan Gibbons (SA/Lidl-Trek) “
Tour de France general classification
1. Tadej Pogacar (Slo/UAE Team Emirates) 49hrs 17mins 49secs
2. Remco Evenepoel (Bel/Soudal-Quick Step) +1min 06secs
3. Jonas Vingegaard (Den/Visma-Lease a Bike) +1min 14secs
4. Joao Almeida (Por/UAE Team Emirates) +4mins 20secs
5. Carlos Rodriguez (Spa/Ineos Grenadiers) +4mins 40secs
6. Primoz Roglic (Slo/Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) +4mins 42secs
7. Mikel Landa (Spa/Soudal-Quick Step) +5mins 38secs
8. Adam Yates (GB/UAE Team Emirates) +6mins 59secs
9. Juan Ayuso (Spa/UAE Team Emirates) +7mins 09secs
10. Giulio Ciccone (Ita/Lidl-Trek) +7mins 36secs