The Guardian 2024-07-15 20:14:14


Welcome to our rolling coverage of US politics, which is dominated by the aftermath of the attempted assasination of former president and presumptive Republican nominee for this year’s election, Donald Trump. Here is the latest …

  • Trump gave an interview, his first since the shooting, to the conservative newspaper the Washington Examiner, saying that he has rewritten his RNC speech. “The speech I was going to give on Thursday was going to be a humdinger,” he said, and that it “would’ve been one of the most incredible speeches”. Its focus was Biden’s policies while in office, Trump said. “This is a chance to bring the whole country, even the whole world, together. The speech will be a lot different, a lot different than it would’ve been two days ago,” he said

  • Trump said that the reason he wasn’t killed was that he looked away from the crowd and to a screen with speech notes. “I rarely look away from the crowd. Had I not done that in that moment, well, we would not be talking today, would we?”. Trump arrived in Milwaukee on Sunday night for the Republican National Convention, which is expected to continue as scheduled

  • Two other rally attendees were also shot and survived. One man, Corey Comperatore, 50, died in the shooting, and has been hailed as a hero from trying to protect his daughters from the bullets

  • CNN and the ABC reported that Trump underwent a precautionary CT scan after he was grazed by a bullet at a rally on Saturday. The ABC cited unnamed sources who said the scan came back clear

  • FBI officials said on Sunday they were assessing the shooting as a possible domestic terrorism attack and assassination attempt. The suspected shooter is dead. He was named as 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks of Bethel Park, Pennsylvania

  • Early details shed little light on why Crooks might have wanted to carry out an attack on Trump or his supporters. Public records showed he was a registered Republican, though he had once donated $15 to a progressive PAC.

  • Early attempts to identify social media posts or other writings that would explain the shooting were not successful. FBI officials said on Sunday afternoon that they did not “currently have an identified motive” and that “at present, we have not identified an ideology associated with the subject”

  • Joe Biden gave an address to the nation, calling for unity and a rejection of political violence. His campaign was reportedly planning to tone down verbal attacks and television attack ads against Trump in the wake of the shooting, while still continuing to tout Biden’s political message about why voters should elect him in November

Trump touches down in Milwaukee as Republican national convention begins

Activists, media and politicians descend on Wisconsin city for convention, where Trump will be formally nominated

  • Trump at Republican national convention – live updates

A rush of activists, politicians and media bound for the Republican national convention have descended on Milwaukee, less than 48 hours after a gunman fired shots at Donald Trump during a Pennsylvania rally, with a bullet grazing the former president and rocking the country.

The failed assassination attempt, which left several rally-goers injured and two dead, including the shooting suspect, casts a pall of anxiety over the RNC. It raises tensions – already felt between the diverse, working-class and heavily Democratic city and the Republican party – which will be on display from the start of the convention on Monday, when a rally held by the Coalition to March on the RNC will protest against the event.

Inside the convention, held at the home stadium of the Milwaukee Bucks, Trump will announce his running mate and the party will formally nominate the former president to lead the GOP ticket. Vying for the vice-presidential candidacy are Doug Burgum, the wealthy governor of North Dakota, the Florida senator Marco Rubio, and JD Vance, a populist senator from Ohio whose embrace of the Maga right has propelled him into Republican superstardom. Trump’s son, Donald Trump Jr, is scheduled to introduce the vice-presidential candidate on Wednesday.

The RNC will feature a lineup of conservative speakers whose remarks will highlight key issues for the Republican party and Trump campaign, including immigration, the economy and abortion.

It comes amid uncertainty in Joe Biden’s campaign after a devastating debate performance raised questions within the Democratic party over the president’s fitness and ability to campaign and govern. In the wake of the shooting, the Biden campaign announced it would be pulling television ads and “pausing all outbound communications”.

The event will offer Trump an opportunity to set the tone for the Republican party following the shooting in Pennsylvania on Saturday.

Shortly after the rally, Trump appeared resolute, writing online: “I was going to delay my trip to Wisconsin, and the Republican national convention, by two days, but have just decided that I cannot allow a ‘shooter’, or potential assassin, to force change to scheduling, or anything else.”

An internal campaign memo struck a similar tone, stating: “It is our fervent hope that this horrendous act will bring our team, and indeed the nation together in unity and we must renew our commitment to safety and peace for our country” and reiterating that the “RNC convention will continue as planned in Milwaukee”.

Trump is due to accept his party’s formal nomination with a speech on Thursday. He pumped his fist in the air several times as he descended the stairs from his plane after arriving in Milwaukee on Sunday evening.

“This is a chance to bring the whole country, even the whole world, together. The speech will be a lot different, a lot different than it would’ve been two days ago,” he told the Washington Examiner.

Speaking to the New York Post while en route to the city, Trump said he was “supposed to be dead”, adding: “The doctor at the hospital said he never saw anything like this, he called it a miracle.”

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Donald Trump shooting: authorities attempt to determine motive as suspect’s devices seized

FBI says no evidence suspected gunman Thomas Matthew Crooks was operating as part of a larger group but motive remains unclear

  • US politics – live updates

FBI officials said on Sunday they were assessing the shooting of Donald Trump at a campaign rally on Saturday as a possible domestic terrorism attack and assassination attempt, as federal investigators executed a flurry of warrants in trying to determine a motive.

The officials said there was no evidence that the 20-year-old suspected gunman, identified as Thomas Matthew Crooks from Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, was operating as part of a larger group. But his reasons for scaling the roof of a building overlooking the rally to shoot at Trump remained unclear.

By Sunday evening, dozens of federal investigators with the FBI, the ATF and all three US attorney’s offices in Pennsylvania were involved in an expanding investigation that had seized several of Crooks’ devices and started to piece together some of his communications before the rally.

The other major development was the discovery of potential explosive devices in Crooks’ car. Former prosecutors suggested that those could indicate Crooks expected to survive the shooting.

The devices and the AR-15-style rifle, which officials said was bought legally, were sent to the bureau’s lab in Quantico, Virginia.

The ATF identified the owner of the gun through its national tracing center and using business records from a gun dealer. The results of the trace were provided to the FBI within 30 minutes, the agency’s spokesperson Katrina Mastropasqua said.

The shooting at the campaign rally has raised the stakes and the significance of Trump’s appearance at the Republican national convention starting Monday in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where he will formally accept the GOP nomination for president and will unveil his running-mate.

It also cast the 2024 presidential race into uncertainty. The campaigns for both Trump and Joe Biden pulled back on political functions over the weekend, as they moved to grapple with the immediate fallout of the situation.

In Washington, Biden spoke with Trump on a call described by a source familiar as “brief and very respectful” before receiving a briefing from top US officials including the attorney general, Merrick Garland, the FBI director Christopher Wray, the Secretary for Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas.

In brief remarks to the nation from the White House, Biden called the assassination attempt “contrary to everything we stand for us as a nation, everything. It’s not who we are as a nation. It’s not American. And we cannot allow this to happen”.

Biden said he had demanded a national security review that he would share publicly, and that he had directed the US secret service to review security arrangements for the Republican convention.

Later, in a primetime address, the president called for unity. The shooting “calls on all of us to take a step back,” Biden said. “We stand for an America of decency and grace … politics must never be a killing field.”

Trump, for his part, huddled with senior advisers at his Bedminster club in New Jersey, keeping to his planned schedule as he prepared for the Republican convention, The Guardian previously reported. Trump’s next appearance is tentatively scheduled for Tuesday in Milwaukee, where he arrived on Sunday evening.

“Based on yesterday’s terrible events, I was going to delay my trip to Wisconsin, and The Republican National Convention, by two days, but have just decided that I cannot allow a ‘shooter,’ or a potential assassin, to force change to scheduling, or anything else,” Trump wrote.

The assassination attempt placed the secret service under intense scrutiny, with lawmakers from both parties moving to open investigations into the security arrangements and calling for the agency’s director, Kimberly Cheatle, to account for the decisions.

At issue remains how a single man with a semi-automatic rifle managed to access a roof 140 yards away from the stage where Trump was speaking at his campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

The House homeland security committee ordered the secret service’s parent agency, the Department of Homeland Security, to produce documents and communications related to the security apparatus for the rally and whether any requests for more resources had been rebuffed.

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Biden urges US to reject ‘extremism and fury’ after Trump assassination attempt

In Oval Office TV address, president forcefully condemns political violence and says country must strive for unity

Joe Biden on Sunday forcefully condemned political violence and appealed to a nation still reeling from the attempted assassination of Donald Trump to reject “extremism and fury”.

In a primetime address from the Oval Office, Biden said Americans must strive for “national unity,” warning that the political rhetoric in the US had gotten “too heated” as passions rise in the final months before the November presidential election.

“There is no place in America for this kind of violence – for any violence. Ever. Period. No exception,” the president said. “We can’t allow this violence to be normalized.”

Biden’s plea for Americans to “cool it down” came as Trump said that he would use his speech at the Republican national convention to bring “the whole country, even the whole world, together.”

“The speech will be a lot different than it would’ve been two days ago,” Trump told the Washington Examiner, adding that the reality of what had happened was “just setting in.”

Biden ordered an independent review into how a gunman was able to get on to a roof overlooking a Trump campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania on Saturday, and fire multiple shots at the former president from an “elevated position” outside of the venue. The FBI warned on Sunday that online threats of political violence, already heightened, had spiked since the shooting.

The attack, which is being investigated as an attempted assassination and a potential act of domestic terrorism, left Trump injured at the ear, but it killed a spectator, identified as a former fire chief, and critically injured two others.

“We cannot, we must not go down this road in America,” Biden added, citing a rising tide of political violence that included the assault on the US Capitol, the attack on the husband of the former House speaker Nancy Pelosi, and a kidnapping plot against Gretchen Whitmer, the governor of Michigan.

Biden also praised Corey Comperatore, the 50-year-old former fire chief who was killed as he dove to shield his wife and daughter. Comperatore, Biden said, was a “hero” and extended his “deepest condolences” to his family.

Investigators were still searching for the motive of the 20-year-old suspect, identified as Thomas Matthew Crooks, of Bethel Park, Pennsylvania.

More than 24 hours after the attack, the investigation into how Crooks managed to open fire, reportedly using a AR-15 bought legally by his father, at the rally remained fluid. Investigators have seized several of Crooks’s devices and are starting to piece together his communications before the event. Authorities said they had discovered potential explosive devices in Crooks’s car.

Meanwhile, details have begun to emerge about the suspect, who was shot and killed by Secret Service counter-snipers.

As a junior in high school, Crooks donated $15 to the Progressive Turnout Project, a political action committee aligned with the Democratic party, but eight months later he registered to vote as a member of the Republican party.

Former classmates described the man as a smart, and quiet student. One former classmate told Reuters that Crooks had not shown a particular interest in politics in high school, and would rather would discuss computers and games.

“He was super smart. That’s what really kind of threw me off was, this was, like, a really, really smart kid, like he excelled,” the classmate told Reuters. “Nothing crazy ever came up in any conversation.”

Another young man who described himself as a former classmate of Crooks at Bethel Park high school spoke with reporters on Sunday, recalling how his ex-companion “was bullied almost every day” on campus.

The president, who was at church in Delaware during the time of the shooting, cut short his weekend and returned to Washington to confront the situation, arriving at the White House after midnight. He and Trump spoke late on Saturday.

Biden spoke briefly from the White House earlier on Sunday, delivering a similar message from the Roosevelt room after receiving a briefing on the investigation in the Situation Room.

In those comments, Biden asked the public not to “make assumptions” about the shooter’s motives or affiliations, as conspiracy theories and misinformation swirl online.

The Republican national convention will begin on Monday in Milwaukee, where Trump is expected to receive a hero’s welcome by the party’s rank and file, rattled but defiant. Trump, who arrived in Milwaukee on Sunday evening, is not scheduled to address the convention until Thursday evening, after he is formally nominated as the party’s nominee.

Speaking to the New York Post while en route to Milwaukee, Trump said he was “supposed to be dead”, adding: “The doctor at the hospital said he never saw anything like this, he called it a miracle.”

Biden’s remarks came at a fragile moment in the election, a re-match between the president and Trump already defined by exceptional tumult and deep political polarization.

For weeks, the president has been fighting calls from elected officials in his own party to abandon his re-election campaign after a disastrous debate performance last month that underscored concerns about his age and fitness for office. The 81-year-old Biden has insisted he will not be pushed out as the party’s nominee, but has done little to quell the swirl of doubt that he is the best candidate to defeat Trump in November.

Trump earlier this year became the first former president to be convicted of felonies, and faces several more legal challenges related to his role in the 6 January Capitol attack and efforts to overturn the results of a lost election. At least one Republican senator, Mike Lee of Utah, has called for the criminal cases against Trump to be dropped in light of the assassination attempt.

In his remarks on Sunday evening, Biden was realistic about the challenge of heeding his words, accepting that national unity was “the most elusive of goals” in an America deeply divided into camps. Already, Republicans were blaming the violence on the president, arguing that Biden’s attempts to portray Trump as a threat to American democracy helped fuel a toxic political environment.

Yet the attack has drawn condemnation from Republican and Democratic officials across the country as well as world leaders.

“We need to turn the temperature down,” House speaker Mike Johnson said on Sunday, in an interview on CNN.

The president acknowledged that he and Trump offer drastically competing visions, and that their supporters diverged sharply. In Milwaukee, Republicans would offer sustained critiques of Biden’s record, the president said, while he planned to travel on Monday to Nevada, where he would rally supporters around his agenda. Because of the attack, he postponed a trip to Texas, where he was scheduled to speak at the 60th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act at the Lyndon B Johnson presidential library.

“We debate and disagree. We compare and contrast the character of the candidates, the records, the issues, the agenda, the vision for America,” he said, arguing that the contest should be settled at the “ballot box” and “not with bullets”.

After the attack on Saturday night, the Biden campaign reportedly moved to pull down its television ads “as quickly as possible” and pause all “outbound communications”.

“Politics must never be a literal battlefield or, god forbid, a literal killing field,” Biden emphasized in his address on Sunday night. He urged Americans to “get out of our silos” and echo chambers where misinformation is rampant.

“Remember: though we may disagree,” he said, “we are not enemies.”

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Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s continuing coverage of Israel’s war on Gaza and the wider crisis in the Middle East.

Israeli bombing across Gaza over the weekend drew strong condemnation, with Egypt’s foreign ministry saying that Saturday’ strike on Khan Younis, which killed 90 people according to the territory’s emergency services, could not be “accepted under any justification whatsoever”.

That strike – which also left hundreds injured – was targeting Hamas military chief, Mohammed Deif, the mastermind of the 7 October attack. There was no confirmation about the fate of Deif, but on Saturday a senior Hamas official denied that Deif had been killed and the group said Israeli claims were aimed at justifying the attack.

On Sunday, at least 31 Palestinians were killed and more than 50 other people injured in fresh Israeli bombings across the Gaza Strip, according to rescuers and health officials.

Responding to the weekend’s violence, Turkish foreign minister Hakan Fidan said Israel does not intend to end the war and commits “new massacres each time there is a positive atmosphere” towards peace.

The government of Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on Sunday denounced Israeli strikes on southern Gaza, urging the world not to “remain silent in the face of this endless massacre”.

Here is a summary of the day’s other main events:

  • The civil defence agency in Gaza said that 15 people were killed in a strike on a school sheltering war displaced on Sunday. If confirmed, the strike on the UN-run Abu Araban site in central Gaza’s Nuseirat camp would be the fifth on a school turned shelter in eight days. The Abu Araban school was housing “thousands of displaced people,” civil defence agency spokesperson Mahmud Bassal told AFP.

  • Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, Unrwa, condemned Israel’s Saturday strike in Khan Younis, writing on social media that the “claim that people in Gaza can move to ‘safe’ or ‘humanitarian’ zones is false”. Scott Anderson, director of Unrwa affairs in the Gaza Strip, said that on a visit to Khan Younis’s Nasser hospital, where many of the casualties were taken, he had “witnessed some of the most horrific scenes I have seen” in the war.

  • Israeli police shot dead a driver who ran down four soldiers at a bus stop near a military base on Sunday, a police and army spokesperson said. Police called it a “suspected terrorist attack” and said the driver, a Palestinian from East Jerusalem, had been “neutralised” during the incident. A military statement said one officer and a soldier were “severely injured” in the incident and two others also hurt.

  • The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations said on Monday it had received a report of an incident 70 nautical miles southwest of Yemen’s Hodeidah. The agency said authorities were investigating the incident but didn’t provide any details.

Clearing Gaza of almost 40m tonnes of war rubble will take years, says UN

Assessment puts cost at $500m-$600m and underlines immense challenge of rebuilding after months of Israeli offensive

A fleet of more than one hundred lorries would take 15 years to clear Gaza of almost 40m tonnes of rubble in an operation costing between $500m (£394m) and $600m, a UN assessment has found.

The conclusions will underline the immense challenge of rebuilding the Palestinian territory after months of a grinding Israeli offensive that has led to massive destruction of homes and infrastructure.

According to the assessment, which was published last month by the UN Environment Programme, 137,297 buildings had been damaged in Gaza, more than half of the total. Of these, just over a quarter were destroyed, about a 10th severely damaged and a third moderately damaged.

Massive landfill sites covering between 250 and 500 hectares (618 to 1,235 acres) would be necessary to dump the rubble, depending on how much could be recycled, the assessment found.

In May, the UN Development Programme (UNDP) said rebuilding homes in Gaza destroyed during the war could take until 2040 in the most optimistic scenario, with total reconstruction across the territory costing as much as $40bn. That assessment, which was published as part of a push to raise funds for early planning for the rehabilitation of Gaza, also found the conflict could reduce levels of health, education and wealth in the territory to those of 1980, wiping out 44 years of development.

“The damage to infrastructure is insane … In [the southern Gaza City] Khan Younis, there is not one building untouched,” one UN official based in Gaza told the Guardian last week.

“The actual topography has changed. There are hills where there were none. The 2,000lbs [907kg] bombs dropped [by Israel] are actually altering the landscape.”

Schools, health facilities, roads, sewers and all other critical infrastructure have all suffered massive damage.

Humanitarian officials welcomed a move by Israel to increase the capacity of a key desalination plant that serves Gaza but pointed out that with most pipes damaged, distribution of water within the territory remained extremely difficult.

The UNDP said the possible price tag of reconstruction of Gaza is now twice estimates made by UN and Palestinian officials in January and was rising every day.

The mountains of rubble are full of unexploded ordnance that leads to “more than 10 explosions every week”, causing more deaths and loss of limbs, Gaza’s Civil Defence agency has said.

In April, Pehr Lodhammar, a former United Nationals Mine Action Service chief for Iraq, said that on average about 10% of weapons failed to detonate when they were fired and had to be removed by demining teams.

Sixty-five per cent of the buildings destroyed in Gaza were residential, Lodhammar said, adding that clearing and rebuilding them would be slow and dangerous work because of the threat from shells, missiles or other weapons buried in collapsed or damaged buildings.

The war began when Hamas launched a surprise attack into southern Israel in October, killing 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting 250 others. More than 38,000 people have now been killed in Israel’s offensive in Gaza, according to Palestinian officials in the territory.

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Paul Kagame expected to be re-elected president as Rwanda goes to polls

Incumbent since 2000 is seeking fourth term after winning more than 90% of votes in last three ballots

People in Rwanda are going to the polls for elections in which Paul Kagame is widely expected to extend his rule of the central African country.

This is the fourth presidential ballot since more than 800,000 people, mostly members of the Tutsi ethnic minority, were killed in a genocide in the country 30 years ago.

Kagame, who led the Rwandan Patriotic Front rebel group to defeat Hutu extremist forces and end the genocide, was elected president by parliament in 2000 after the resignation of Pasteur Bizimungu.

He has won more than 90% of the vote in the three previous elections since then – in 2003, 2010 and 2017.

Running on the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) ticket, Kagame is seeking a fourth term after a constitutional amendment in 2015 extended presidential term limits.

Kagame is credited with transforming Rwanda from ethnic division to being a united country and regional business hub. But critics accuse his administration of censorship and curtailing human rights in the country of 13 million people, more than 9 million of whom are eligible to vote in Monday’s ballot.

In this election, he faces the same opponents as in 2017: Frank Habineza, of the Democratic Green party of Rwanda, and Philippe Mpayimana, an independent candidate.

Rwanda’s national electoral commission disqualified six others, including vocal Kagame critics Victoire Ingabire, Diane Rwigara and Bernard Ntaganda, for various reasons.

Long lines of voters formed as early as 5am at the polling station at the Remera Catholic primary school in the capital, Kigali, one of five polling stations visited by the Guardian. Voting was taking place peacefully at all the sites. Observers from the African Union were present.

“Kagame has ruled us well and I am going to vote for him again,” said Frank Munyaneza, a driver. “He has brought development and we have security under his rule.”

Kagame’s campaign priorities have included security, stability, unity and economic development.

“We chose to rebuild ourselves and our country, which was destroyed by bad politics and irresponsible leaders,” he said at a rally in the northern Gakenke district on Thursday.

“As for you, you have rebuilt yourselves, you have built your skills, and you have competent leaders at all levels. Therefore, you must do everything possible to ensure that Rwanda continues its path towards sustainable progress.”

Habineza, a former RPF member, is advocating for changes to tax and land policies and for modernisation of agriculture.

Mpayimana, a senior expert in the ministry of national unity and civic engagement and a former journalist, is pushing to downsize parliament, increase agricultural productivity, and improve education and student welfare.

In the last election, Habineza and Mpayimana each got less than 1% of votes. Analysts say they continue to lack sufficient name recognition, financial resources and organisational ability to significantly challenge Kagame.

RPF has been the ruling party since 1994, and its members occupy 75% of the seats in parliament.

David Kiwuwa, an associate professor of international studies at the University of Nottingham, said: “On the whole, Rwanda is a dominant party system, with RPF occupying a supersized political space and as such in the foreseeable future has no challenger.”

Rachel Nicholson, Rwanda researcher at Amnesty International, said the election could be an “opportune time for political leadership to choose to recommit to human rights” and investigate enforced disappearances, killings and other human rights cases to ensure that victims get justice.

“Regardless of whether leadership changes or not, it’s a moment of change,” she said. “It’s a moment that leaders can choose if they want to.”

Rwandans are also voting on Monday for members of the lower house of parliament.

The results of the elections are expected this week.

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Martínez inspires Argentina to historic Copa América title in chaotic final

A dramatic extra-time winner from substitute Lautaro Martínez ensured Argentina retained their Copa América title, edging out Colombia 1-0 in a thrilling game in Miami.

The Golden Boot winner’s cool 112th-minute strike settled a scintillating game, which had simply lacked a finishing touch until his arrival on 97 minutes. Martínez latched on to Giovani Lo Celso’s pass to dispatch the ball past a gallant Camilo Vargas in the Colombia goal.

It was the striker’s fifth goal of the tournament, in a game that also saw Lionel Messi forced off injured midway through the second period. Messi, in tears upon leaving the field, returned to lift the trophy for the third major tournament in a row, after a long drought that had threatened to define his international legacy.

The win gives Argentina a record-breaking 16th triumph at the Copa América, moving one clear of Uruguay. The scenes of joy on the pitch were marred, however, by harrowing scenes of organizational chaos outside Hard Rock Stadium, as police and stadium security struggled to cope with crowds massed outside, causing kick-off to be delayed by well over an hour.

The game scheduled for 8pm local time eventually began at 9:22pm and both teams were keen to compensate for lost time. Argentina’s Julián Álvarez, quizzically preferred to start ahead of Martínez in attack, scuffed a volley wide within 45 seconds. Colombia too showed an attacking intent that never yielded, with Jhon Córdoba’s smart chest and volley clipping the upright on six minutes.

The game was billed as a battle between veteran stars Messi and James Rodríguez, but it was Liverpool’s Alexis Mac Allister who expertly knitted together the holders’ play, while clubmate Luis Diaz’s powerful running drove an incisive Colombia forward. The ascendancy often teetered but the first period was edged by the underdogs, via some superb passing football. A searing 25-yard Jefferson Lerma drive forced Emi Martínez into a full-stretch save to tip the ball on to the post.

Messi looked certain to score on 20 minutes, but a swept effort from Ángel Di María’s pullback hit Álvarez on its way to goal. But Messi’s troubles began on 36 minutes when a challenge from Santiago Arias left him writhing on the ground clutching his right ankle. Seemingly, he was unable to shake off the injury.

As half chances continued to arrive for both sides in the second half – including a left foot strike from Di María, which forced a great save from Vargas – Messi stumbled to the ground on 65 minutes, without a challenge. The captain’s armband went to Di María, 36, playing his 145th and last game in an Argentina career spanning six Copa América tournaments. He too would leave the field in tears, albeit for different reasons, on 115 minutes.

Colombia had a strong appeal for a penalty rejected on 72 minutes as Córdoba and Mac Allister went for the same ball, before Argentina had the ball in the net through Messi’s replacement Nicolás González. The overlapping Nicolás Tagliafico was offside in the buildup.

González, who was more impactful than Messi, then rose high to head a Di María cross back across goal, but Álvarez failed to gamble on what would have been a tap-in as the 90 minutes ended. In extra-time, González forced a huge save after poking Rodrigo De Paul’s cutback goalwards. Vargas covered ground quickly to smother the ball on the goalline.

Even with the hot and humid conditions, it was an end-to-end and energetic extra-time period, where neither side seemed inclined to settle for penalty kicks. It felt as if a winner would arrive and before the end and Martínez duly delivered. Colombia contributed magnificently to the final, but are left to rue the absence of such a clinical finisher.

However, the scenes outside the stadium on Sunday evening threaten to overshadow the occasion completely. Organizational concerns have plagued the tournament, but the worst was saved for the final. A swell of thousands of fans remained crammed outside the stadium in scorching temperatures and humidity. Videos posted to social media showed some fans storming through security, others were trapped at the gates as children were lifted out of the chaos. Many fans looked visibly distressed by the ordeal. Videos showed people attempting to enter the stadium through vents or climb external fencing.

Stadium officials closed the gates to entry and moved to blame “thousands of fans without tickets attempted to forcibly enter the stadium, putting other fans, security and law enforcement officers at extreme risk”.

Tickets had changed hands for up to $2,000 on the secondary market on Sunday. But there was no proper stadium perimeter and no ticket pre-checks. As organizers pleaded with ticketless fans to leave the stadium, Fox Sports reported Argentina players’ families were among those caught in the chaos.

Between 8:15pm and 8:30pm the gates re-opened and the stadium rapidly filled. It had become too dangerous to keep the gates closed any longer. It’s not clear whether ticket checks happened but, but given how quickly seats were eventually filled, it seems in some areas of the stadium they did not.

The tournament was hosted by Conmebol with little input from officials on the ground in the US. But with the World Cup to be co-hosted by the United States in two summers’ time, important reviews will need to take place to make sure the scenes are not repeated under Fifa’s watch.

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Lionel Messi leaves Copa América final in tears with apparent leg injury

  • Argentina captain suffered non-contact injury
  • Messi denies it will be his last international appearance

Argentina won their second straight Copa América championship, overcoming Lionel Messi’s second-half leg injury to beat Colombia 1-0 on Sunday in extra-time.

Messi’s night ended early when he emotionally exited the field in the 64th minute with an apparent leg injury on Sunday night, and cameras showed him later on the bench with a badly swollen right ankle.

The 37-year-old appeared to suffer a non-contact injury while running at full speed with the game at 0-0. Messi immediately looked toward the Argentina bench as he went to the ground and remained down for several minutes as he waited on the trainers to come out. He was helped to his feet and immediately took his shoe off his right foot.

As he walked off the field, the eight-time Ballon d’Or winner took off his captains armband and threw his shoe to the ground in frustration. An emotional Messi was then shown covering his face, sobbing in his seat.

Messi went down in the first half after landing awkwardly when chasing a ball out of bounds. He rolled over several times as he grabbed at his lower right leg. Trainers worked on the area for a few minutes before helping him to his feet. He walked slowly toward the sideline before returning to the game.

Messi had been dealing with a leg injury and discomfort through much of the tournament and missed Argentina’s group stage finale. He had one shot attempt in the first half Sunday.

There had been speculation during the tournament that it would be Messi’s last competition in an Argentina shirt. But Messi said before the final that he intends to continue beyond this summer.

“As I’ve said before, I intend to continue,” Messi said after Argentina’s semi-final win. “I intend to keep living day by day without thinking about what will come in the future or whether I’ll continue or not. It’s something I just live each day. I’m 37 years and only God knows when the end will be.”

The final did mark the end of Ángel Di María’s international career, who announced his retirement at 36 years old.

“We’ve enjoyed him so much,” Messi said. “He’s always given his all and the best of himself and that he will retire in a final is something he simply deserves.”

South American World Cup qualifying resumes in September, with each team scheduled to play 12 more matches. Messi was expected to return to MLS action for Inter Miami against the Chicago Fire on 21 July. Miami are second in the Eastern Conference, but their form has been erratic while Messi has been away on international duty. They will now nervously wait on the status of their star.

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The Estonian prime minister, Kaja Kallas, submitted her resignation today, ERR reported.

Kallas has been nominated to serve as the EU’s next high representative for foreign affairs, succeeding Josep Borrell.

She will formally remain prime minister until a new government is sworn in.

Alar Karis, the Estonian president, said he accepted her resignation.

“I thanked her for her work and wish her the best of luck! I will begin talks with representatives of all political parties in the Riigikogu to form a new government,” he said.

The Estonian prime minister, Kaja Kallas, submitted her resignation today, ERR reported.

Kallas has been nominated to serve as the EU’s next high representative for foreign affairs, succeeding Josep Borrell.

She will formally remain prime minister until a new government is sworn in.

Alar Karis, the Estonian president, said he accepted her resignation.

“I thanked her for her work and wish her the best of luck! I will begin talks with representatives of all political parties in the Riigikogu to form a new government,” he said.

First Asian elephant vaccinated in fight against deadly herpes virus

Tess, a 40-year-old female at Houston zoo, has been given a trial mRNA vaccine to help combat the virus, a leading killer of calves in captivity

An Asian elephant at Houston zoo in the US has received the first mRNA vaccine against herpes, which is the leading killer of Asian elephants calves in captivity.

Tess, a 40-year-old Asian elephant, was injected with the trial vaccine at the Texas zoo in June, after a spate of deaths in juveniles in zoos around the world from the elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus (EEHV).

Dr Paul Ling, who researches herpes in humans at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, developed the elephant mRNA vaccine, which is designed to boost the immunity of young elephants.

“When elephants are born, they have a tremendous amount of antibodies that they get from their mother,” he said. “When the female elephant gives birth, she’s probably already had this virus so she gives protective antibodies to her baby, and they last for a certain period of time. Our vaccine is designed to give these young elephants enough immunity that they’ve lost over time.”

The mRNA vaccine is similar in design to the Covid-19 vaccines used in humans during the recent pandemic, and aims to prevent serious illness and death from EEHV in young Asian elephants.

The virus can cause a lethal hemorrhagic disease in Asian elephants, similar to the effects Ebola has on humans. Researchers believe it is passed among Asian elephants through their trunks. First discovered in 1990 and scientifically described in 1999, the virus is a major driver of Asian elephant deaths in captivity.

This month, two juveniles died from the virus at Dublin zoo. Zoos in Chester, Melbourne and Zurich are among those that have lost several baby Asian elephants to the disease. In symptomatic elephants, it has a mortality rate of about 70%.

While the virus has been recorded in wild populations and fatalities have been recorded, experts are unsure how much impact it is having on wild Asian elephants or whether a vaccination programme would be practical. There are fewer than 50,000 of the species in the wild and they are threatened with extinction. Habitat loss, poaching and genetic isolation are all considered bigger threats to their survival.

A Chester zoo spokesperson said they thought the elephant herpes virus was a threat to the long-term survival of the Asian elephant, adding that reports of fatalities in India, Nepal, Myanmar and Thailand were on the rise.

“The only long-term solution to beating EEHV is to find a safe and effective vaccine, which is most likely to be achieved through zoo-led research,” the spokesperson said.

“While the global conservation community has made significant steps towards finding a viable vaccine, further work and time is needed before we have the answer we’re all so desperately searching for – scientific confirmation that the vaccine is effective in preventing EEHV.”

Researchers are monitoring the health of Tess, and Houston zoo plans to inoculate more Asian elephants later this year if no side effects are recorded. The mRNA was developed in a partnership between Houston zoo, Baylor College of Medicine and the Dallas-based “de-extinction” company Colossal.

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversity reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on X for all the latest news and features

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Mikel Oyarzabal’s late winner for Spain crushes England’s Euro 2024 dream

If football is going home, it is only because it belongs to Spain. A record fourth European Championship title was their reward for ­beautiful ­passing, outstanding wing play and ruthless finishing, even though there was a brief spell when it seemed another illogical escape act from England was on the cards in Berlin.

For Gareth Southgate, whose 102nd game in charge of England could be his last, the reality is that anything other than a 27th consecutive win for a Spanish team in a men’s final would have been a travesty. It was a ­drubbing in all but scoreline. Spain had threatened to run riot after going 1-0 up when their lightning-quick wingers combined, Lamine Yamal setting up Nico ­Williams, and their response to Cole Palmer’s ­equaliser – more passing, more imagination – meant it was no surprise when the substitute Mikel Oyarzabal turned in Marc Cucurella’s cross in the 86th minute.

While England fought, Declan Rice and Marc Guéhi almost ­making it 2-2, they had been outplayed by the ­tournament’s outstanding team. There was no misfortune to ­Southgate’s latest heartache.

What could he have done ­differently? Being critical, England’s manager could have been bolder. The focus was on containment but ­England were careless when they had the ball and Southgate’s attack did not fire. Jude Bellingham was frustrated before creating Palmer’s goal and as for Harry Kane, who was hauled off in the 61st minute after a leaden display, this was another bad night for the captain on the big stage.

But give Spain, who followed their successes in 1964, 2008 and 2012 with this refined triumph, their due. At 17 years and one day old, Lamine Yamal was the youngest player to feature in a men’s international final, breaking the record set by Pelé in the 1958 World Cup final. Williams, a little older at 22, confirmed his exceptional talent by tormenting Kyle Walker. There was joy for Basques in seeing Williams and Oyarzabal score the goals.

The unfancied Luis de la Fuente has done a wonderful job with this team. How they responded to adversity. Rodri going off injured at half-time made no ­difference, with Martin Zubimendi a fine replacement for the midfield linchpin, and Spain did not shrink after the shock of Palmer’s goal.

That made it a step too far for ­England, who have laboured through this tournament, resilience, isolated bursts of inspiration and clever substitutions carrying them this far. Next will come searching questions for Southgate, who has struggled to find the right balance in midfield and on the left. Spain represented a far superior test to Italy’s in the Euro 2020 final, so this is not as great a missed opportunity, but there will be anger at England’s lack of ambition in the first half. With Kane looking unfit and Bellingham helping Luke Shaw contain Lamine Yamal, the counterattacking was minimal.

There was also the problem with taking on high-calibre opposition with a midfield that still feels improvised. Fabián Ruiz, Dani Olmo and, until he went off, Rodri were always in control against the disappointing Declan Rice and Kobbie Mainoo. It is the age-old weakness for England and one that Southgate has not solved. At least Mainoo, who looked every inch an inexperienced 19-year-old when he faded in the second half, should mature after shining in his previous outings.

England, who lined up in a compact 4-4-1-1, had at least limited Spain during the first half. John Stones stopped Williams and Guéhi shut down the wily Álvaro Morata. Shaw, starting for the first time in 148 days, tried to contain Lamine Yamal.

There was occasional ­aggression from England, who wanted Bukayo Saka running at Cucurella. Rodri blocked a drive from Rice and injured himself denying Kane after ­Bellingham robbed Dani Carvajal. Phil Foden shot at Unai Simón. Inspiration was low.

Spain, having been lured into a series of aimless crosses, upped the intensity after half-time and ­punished England in the 47th ­minute. The pressing from Kane and Foden disintegrated, enabling Zubimendi to slip through midfield. Suddenly everything was a yard off, Shaw failing to track Lamine Yamal’s dart inside. Carvajal found the winger and his pass was perfectly weighted, ­allowing Williams to run on to it, open up his left foot and beat Pickford with a low shot before Walker could intervene.

Cowed by such a classy goal, ­England almost unravelled. They were pulled apart but ­somehow hung on, Olmo shooting wide and Stones clearing off the line from Morata. Williams and Lamine Yamal went close. Stones and Rice kept losing possession. Southgate finally made the ­brutal call of replacing Kane with Ollie Watkins. Palmer soon came on for Mainoo.

Who said Southgate can’t make substitutions? There was ­disbelief when England ­countered, Saka ­finding ­Bellingham, who fell and teed up Palmer to caress a low shot past Simón with typical nonchalance from 20 yards.

Yet Spain, who leave Germany with seven wins from seven, stayed cool. Lamine Yamal, who tested Pickford again, was ­tormenting a weary Shaw. ­England were too open; Southgate was ­preparing to bring on Kieran ­Trippier and Conor Gallagher moments before the winner arrived.

It was another super goal, Cucurella driving a low cross past Walker, Oyarzabal escaping Guéhi and converting from close range.

There was no offside flag. ­England kept going, Simón repelling Rice’s header, Olmo clearing off the line from Guéhi. The hurt stands at 58 years and Southgate may not be around by the time the 2026 World Cup arrives.

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China’s economic growth slows amid weak retail spending

Retail sales growth is the weakest since the country emerged from Covid-19 lockdowns

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Pressure on Beijing to take steps to improve Chinese consumer confidence has intensified after news that weak retail spending dragged down the growth rate of the world’s second biggest economy.

With falling house prices still acting as a drag on activity, official figures showed the Chinese economy expanding at an annual rate of 4.7% in the second quarter – much weaker than the 5.1% expected by the financial markets.

Annual retail sales growth slowed from 3.2% to 2% in the three months ending in June – the weakest in 18 months – and fell slightly in June alone.

Lynn Song, the chief China economist at ING bank, said retail sales growth was the lowest since the country emerged from Covid-19 lockdowns and showed the depressed state of consumer confidence remained a big headwind to the economic recovery.

“A negative wealth effect from falling property and stock prices, as well as low wage growth amid various industries’ cost cutting is dragging consumption and causing a pivot from big-ticket purchases toward a basic ‘eat, drink and play’ theme,” Song said.

The government in Beijing has set a growth target for 2024 of 5% – something analysts consider to be a stretch in the absence of tax cuts, spending increases and measures to help the property market.

On a quarterly basis, the economy expanded by 0.7% in the three months to June, compared with a downwardly revised 1.5% in the first quarter, the National Bureau of Statistics said.

To counter soft domestic demand and its property crisis, China has increased infrastructure investment and ploughed funds into hi-tech manufacturing.

Strong export growth has partly compensated for the reluctance of consumers to spend. Figures released last week showed China’s exports in June were up 8.6% from a year earlier, while imports shrank by 2.3%.

Duncan Wrigley, the chief China+ economist at Pantheon Macro, said: “The property market is showing tentative signs of bottoming out. New home prices sank 0.67% month on month in June, a trivial improvement from the 0.71% drop in May. Preowned home prices dropped 0.85%, after the 1.00% dive in May. Residential sales value fell 12.2% year on year in June, partly thanks to base effects, after crashing 26.4% in May.”

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Police charge man after human remains found in Bristol

Yostin Andres Mosquera charged with murder over deaths of two men whose remains were found in suitcases on Clifton Suspension Bridge

A man has been charged with two counts of murder over the deaths of two men whose remains were found in suitcases in Bristol last week, the Metropolitan police said.

Yostin Andres Mosquera, 34, was charged on Monday morning, the Met said.

The men, whose remains were discovered in suitcases on Clifton Suspension Bridge, have been named by the Met as 62-year-old Albert Alfonso and Paul Longworth, 71, who had previously been in a relationship.

The pair lived together at a flat in Shepherd’s Bush, west London, and were known to the suspect, the Met said.

Mosquera, 34, was arrested in Bristol in the early hours of Saturday morning and has been charged with two counts of murder. He will appear in custody later on Monday at Wimbledon magistrates court.

Longworth was British, while Alfonso was originally from France but had obtained British citizenship, the force added.

The Met said Mosquera had been staying with the victims at a flat in Scotts Road for a “short period of time”.

Evidence in the investigation so far has not pointed to a homophobic motive, Scotland Yard added, but it has been classified as a hate crime under national guidelines.

Deputy assistant commissioner Andy Valentine said: “My thoughts are first and foremost with Albert and Paul’s loved ones who are coming to terms with this terrible news.

“While we do not believe either of them had any close family, we have identified other next of kin who have been informed and are being supported by specialist officers. We are continuing to try and identify any extended family members.

“I know that this awful incident will cause concern not just among residents in Shepherd’s Bush but in the wider LGBTQ+ community across London.

“I hope it will be of some reassurance that whilst inquiries are still ongoing and the investigation is at a relatively early stage, we are not currently looking for anyone else in connection with the two murders.”

Avon and Somerset police were called at 11.57pm last Wednesday after a man was reported to have been seen acting suspiciously on Clifton Suspension Bridge.

Officers arrived less than 10 minutes later and the man had left the scene, leaving behind one suitcase. A second suitcase was found nearby a short time later. Both were found to contain human remains.

Inquiries carried out by officers from Avon and Somerset police and the Met suggested a suspect had travelled to Bristol from London earlier the same day. As a result, the Met took over the investigation.

On Friday, police found further human remains in a flat in Scotts Road, Shepherd’s Bush, west London, with the two incidents believed to be connected.

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Copenhagen offers tourist rewards as other EU nations clamp down

The Danish capital hopes to lure climate-friendly and well-behaved travellers with perks such as free drinks and skiing

In Barcelona visitors have been sprayed with water pistols in an expression of local people’s anger about over-tourism. By contrast in Copenhagen, tourists are to be given financial and other incentives to come – as long as they act responsibly.

The Danish capital appears to be bucking the trend of other travel hotspots struggling under the burden of too many tourists, by attempting to lure only the well-behaved, socially and environmentally conscious traveller.

The national tourist board has introduced a programme to encourage climate-friendly, sustainable behaviour. From Monday, it will reward those who choose to ride a bike, take public transport or undergo a bit of work like gardening or rubbish collection at the harbour or in the city’s parks.

People who turn up with their own reusable coffee cups can expect to receive a free brew at selected venues, while other perks for good behaviour include a complimentary cocktail on a rooftop bar, or extra time spent on the city’s artificial ski slope complex.

“All our choices have an environmental impact, so why not make conscious decisions that benefit us all and be rewarded for them?” the organisers behind CopenPay suggest.

Mikkel Aarø-Hansen of the official tourist board Wonderful Copenhagen said he hoped the idea would act as an inspiration for other cities to adopt as they seek to find a workable way to create a more mutually beneficial and less onerous relationship between tourists and local people.

“We need to ensure that tourism rather than being a burden for the environment is transformed into a power for positive change,” he said. He added that by embracing elements of the so-called experience economy the programme would also encourage more positive encounters between tourists and local people.

“Our core goals are to make travelling more sustainable. We’ll only manage this though if we are able to overcome the big divide between the desire of visitors to behave in a sustainable way and their actual behaviour.” He added that the challenge was “more complicated than it sounds”.

“We want visitors to make more conscious, more climate-friendly decisions and in so doing to hopefully have a more rewarding travel experience,” Aarø-Hansen added.

The “warm welcome” offered by the city, as crooned by Danny Kaye in the eponymous song, should be a given, in contrast to the unwelcome scenes tourists have faced at other destinations that have failed to manage visitor supply and demand, the city’s leaders say.

Barcelona is not the only popular tourist destination to find itself overwhelmed, and with local people taking drastic measures in an attempt to curb or control the travel boom.

Day trippers to Venice now have to pay a new daily tax of €5, while tourists in the old port city of Dubrovnik were recently urged to avoid using rolling suitcases or lift them up, due to the cacophony they make when pulled along the cobbled streets. Mallorca, Ibiza and other Balearic islands meanwhile have introduced tight restrictions on alcohol consumption. Other destinations are experimenting with a range of methods, from entrance fees to restricted visitor zones to control the flow.

CopenPay, which will initially last until 11 August, is being viewed by authorities as something of a pilot project, which could be repeated and expanded if successful. This may in future involve rewarding visitors who take the train rather than the plane to get to Copenhagen.

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