Israel-Iran conflict unleashes wave of AI disinformation
A wave of disinformation has been unleashed online since Israel began strikes on Iran last week, with dozens of posts reviewed by BBC Verify seeking to amplify the effectiveness of Tehran’s response.
Our analysis found a number of videos – created using artificial intelligence – boasting of Iran’s military capabilities, alongside fake clips showing the aftermath of strikes on Israeli targets. The three most viewed fake videos BBC Verify found have collectively amassed over 100 million views across multiple platforms.
Pro-Israeli accounts have also shared disinformation online, mainly by recirculating old clips of protests and gatherings in Iran, falsely claiming that they show mounting dissent against the government and support among Iranians for Israel’s military campaign.
Israel launched strikes in Iran on 13 June, leading to several rounds of Iranian missile and drone attacks on Israel.
One organisation that analyses open-source imagery described the volume of disinformation online as “astonishing” and accused some “engagement farmers” of seeking to profit from the conflict by sharing misleading content designed to attract attention online.
“We are seeing everything from unrelated footage from Pakistan, to recycled videos from the October 2024 strikes—some of which have amassed over 20 million views—as well as game clips and AI-generated content being passed off as real events,” Geoconfirmed, the online verification group, wrote on X.
Certain accounts have become “super-spreaders” of disinformation, being rewarded with significant growth in their follower count. One pro-Iranian account with no obvious ties to authorities in Tehran – Daily Iran Military – has seen its followers on X grow from just over 700,000 on 13 June to 1.4m by 19 June, a 100% increase in under a week.
It is one many obscure accounts that have appeared in people’s feeds recently. All have blue ticks, are prolific in messaging and have repeatedly posted disinformation. Because some use seemingly official names, some people have assumed they are authentic accounts, but it is unclear who is actually running the profiles.
The torrent of disinformation marked “the first time we’ve seen generative AI be used at scale during a conflict,” Emmanuelle Saliba, Chief Investigative Officer with the analyst group Get Real, told BBC Verify.
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Accounts reviewed by BBC Verify frequently shared AI-generated images that appear to be seeking to exaggerate the success of Iran’s response to Israel’s strikes. One image, which has 27m views, depicted dozens of missiles falling on the city of Tel Aviv.
Another video purported to show a missile strike on a building in the Israeli city late at night. Ms Saliba said the clips often depict night-time attacks, making them especially difficult to verify.
AI fakes have also focussed on claims of destruction of Israeli F-35 fighter jets, a state-of-the art US-made plane capable of striking ground and air targets. If the barrage of clips were real Iran would have destroyed 15% of Israel’s fleet of the fighters, Lisa Kaplan, CEO of the Alethea analyst group, told BBC Verify. We have yet to authenticate any footage of F-35s being shot down.
One widely shared post claimed to show a jet damaged after being shot down in the Iranian desert. However, signs of AI manipulation were evident: civilians around the jet were the same size as nearby vehicles, and the sand showed no signs of impact.
Another video with 21.1 million views on TikTok claimed to show an Israeli F-35 being shot down by air defences, but the footage actually came from a flight simulator video game. TikTok removed the footage after being approached by BBC Verify.
Ms Kaplan said that some of the focus on F-35s was being driven by a network of accounts that Alethea has previously linked to Russian influence operations.
She noted that Russian influence operations have recently shifted course from trying to undermine support for the war in Ukraine to sowing doubts about the capability of Western – especially American – weaponry.
“Russia doesn’t really have a response to the F-35. So what it can it do? It can seek to undermine support for it within certain countries,” Ms Kaplan said.
Disinformation is also being spread by well-known accounts that have previously weighed in on the Israel-Gaza war and other conflicts.
Their motivations vary, but experts said some may be attempting to monetise the conflict, with some major social media platforms offering pay-outs to accounts achieving large numbers of views.
By contrast, pro-Israeli posts have largely focussed on suggestions that the Iranian government is facing mounting dissent as the strikes continuer
Among them is a widely shared AI-generated video falsely purporting to show Iranians chant “we love Israel” on the streets of Tehran.
However, in recent days – and as speculation about US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites grows – some accounts have started to post AI-generated images of B-2 bombers over Tehran. The B-2 has attracted close attention since Israel’s strikes on Iran started, because it is the only aircraft capable of effectively carrying out an attack on Iran’s subterranean nuclear sites.
Official sources in Iran and Israel have shared some of the fake images. State media in Tehran has shared fake footage of strikes and an AI-generated image of a downed F-35 jet, while a post shared by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) received a community note on X for using old, unrelated footage of missile barrages.
A lot of the Disinformation reviewed by BBC Verify has been shared on X, with users frequently turning to the platform’s AI chatbot – Grok – to establish posts’ veracity.
However, in some cases Grok insisted that the AI videos were real. One such video showed an endless stream of trucks carrying ballistic missiles emerging from a mountainside complex. Tell-tale signs of AI content included rocks in the video moving of their own accord, Ms Saliba said.
But in response to X users, Grok insisted repeatedly that the video was real and cited reports by media outlets including Newsweek and Reuters. “Check trusted news for clarity,” the chatbot concluded in several messages.
X did not respond to a request from BBC Verify for comment on the Chatbot’s actions.
Many videos have also appeared on TikTok and Instagram. In a statement to BBC Verify, TikTok said it proactively enforces community guidelines “which prohibit inaccurate, misleading, or false content” and that it works with independent fact checkers to “verify misleading content”.
Instagram owner Meta did not respond to a request for comment.
While the motivations of those creating online fakes vary, many are shared by ordinary social media users.
Matthew Facciani, a researcher at the University of Notre Dame, suggested that disinformation can spread more quickly online when people are faced with binary choices, such as those raised by conflict and politics.
“That speaks to the broader social and psychological issue of people wanting to re-share things if it aligns with their political identity, and also just in general, more sensationalist emotional content will spread more quickly online.”
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Armani to miss Milan Fashion Week for first time after hospital stay
Fashion legend Giorgio Armani will miss his two shows at Milan Fashion Week for the first time in his career.
The 90-year-old Italian designer is “currently recovering at home”, his company said in a statement. His recovery follows a brief hospital stay in Milan, Italian media reported.
He had “worked with usual dedication on the collections” and would follow the menswear shows on Saturday and Monday remotely, the company added.
It is thought to be the first time that Armani has missed one of his catwalk events, in a career that spans over five decades. Last year he said he could retire in coming years.
The shows next week will present the Spring-Summer 2026 collections of his self-titled luxury brand.
Armani’s long-time collaborator and head of menswear design, Leo Dell’Orco, is now set to give the closing bows.
Armani is said to be in good spirits and is expected to attend the brand’s upcoming shows in Paris at the end of June.
Founded in 1975, the brand celebrates its 50th anniversary next month – as Armani also celebrates his 91st birthday.
Armani, also known as ‘Re Giorgio’ – King Giorgio – has built an empire in the luxury fashion industry.
Born in the northern Italian town of Piacenza in 1934, he studied medicine before embarking on a career in fashion and eventually launching his label with his late partner, Sergio Galeotti.
His fashion house has several different lines which have also expanded into haute couture, ready-to-wear fashion, accessories, beauty products and make-up, jewellery, interior design and luxury hotels in cities such as Milan, Paris, New York, Tokyo, Seoul and Shanghai.
Panama declares emergency over banana region unrest
Panama has declared an emergency in its main banana-producing region, after shops were looted and buildings vandalised in ongoing protests over a pension reform.
The government says constitutional rights will be suspended for the next five days in the north-western Bocas del Toro province.
The measure restricts freedom of movement and allows the police to make arrests without a warrant.
Troubles in the region began a month ago, when the local banana workers union joined a nationwide protest against proposed pension cuts and declared a strike.
“In the face of the disruption of order and acts of systematic violence, the state will enforce its constitutional mandate to guarantee peace,” said Juan Carlos Orillac, minister of the presidency.
The measure, he added, would allow to “rescue the province” from radicals.
Protests across the Latin American nation erupted back in March over the pension reform.
In Bocas del Toro, the unrest has been largely led by workers at a Chiquita Brands banana plantation.
The confrontation escalated last month after the company sacked thousands of striking employees.
Protesters have been setting up roadblocks in the province, often clashing with police.
Earlier this week, crowds damaged one of Chiquita Brands’ facilities as well as a local airport.
Tulsi Gabbard now says Iran could produce nuclear weapon ‘within weeks’
Tulsi Gabbard says Iran could produce nuclear weapons “within weeks”, months after she testified before Congress that the country was not building them.
The US Director of National Intelligence said her March testimony – in which she said Iran had a stock of materials but was not building these weapons – had been taken out of context by “dishonest media”.
Her change of position came after Donald Trump said she was “wrong” and that intelligence showed Iran had a “tremendous amount of material” and could have a nuclear weapon “within months”.
Iran has always said that its nuclear programme is entirely peaceful and that it has never sought to develop a nuclear weapon.
On Thursday Trump said he was giving Tehran the “maximum” of two weeks to reach a deal on its nuclear activities with Washington. He said he would soon decide whether the US should join Israel’s strikes on Iran.
Disagreement has been building within Trump’s “America First” movement over whether the US should enter the conflict.
On Saturday morning, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said his country was “absolutely ready for a negotiated solution” on their nuclear programme but that Iran “cannot go through negotiations with the US when our people are under bombardment”.
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In her post on social media, Gabbard said US intelligence showed Iran is “at the point that it can produce a nuclear weapon within weeks to months”.
“President Trump has been clear that can’t happen, and I agree,” she added.
Gabbard shared a video of her full testimony before Congress in March, where she said US intelligence agencies had concluded Iran was not building nuclear weapons.
Experts also determined Iran had not resumed its suspended 2003 nuclear weapons programme, she added in the clip, even as the nation’s stockpile of enriched uranium – a component of such weapons – was at an all-time high.
In her testimony, she said Iran’s stock was “unprecedented for a state without nuclear weapons”.
Earlier this month, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) – the global nuclear watchdog – expressed concern about Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium, which can be used to make reactor fuel but also nuclear weapons.
Gabbard’s March testimony has been previously criticised by Trump, who earlier told reporters he did not “care what she said”.
The US president said he believes Iran were “very close to having a weapon” and his country would not allow that to happen.
In 2015, Iran agreed a long-term deal on its nuclear programme with a group of world powers after years of tension over the country’s alleged efforts to develop a nuclear weapon.
Iran had been engaging in talks with the US this year over its nuclear programme and was scheduled to hold a further round when Israel launched strikes on Iran on 13 June, which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said targeted “the heart” of Iran’s nuclear programme.
“If not stopped, Iran could produce a nuclear weapon in a very short time,” Netanyahu claimed.
Israeli air strikes have destroyed Iranian military facilities and weapons, and killed senior military commanders and nuclear scientists.
Iran’s health ministry said on Saturday that at least 430 people had been killed, while a human rights group, the Human Rights Activists News Agency, put the unofficial death toll at 657 on Friday.
Iran has retaliated with missile and drone strikes against Israel, killing 25 people including one who suffered a heart attack.
Prince William celebrates birthday with puppy photo
A photo of the Prince of Wales with another generation – this time of puppies – has been posted on social media by Kensington Palace to mark his 43rd birthday.
The picture, taken by the Princess of Wales, shows Prince William with their family’s Cocker spaniel, Orla, and three of her four recently-arrived puppies.
The message for Prince William was signed online “with love”, with the initials of Catherine and their children, George, Charlotte, Louis, and “the puppies”, plus a paw print emoji.
The picture was taken in Windsor earlier this month.
There was also a message online for Prince William from the official account of the Royal Family, saying “Happy Birthday to The Prince of Wales!”, plus some celebratory emojis.
An accompanying picture, of the prince sitting on a stone wall, was taken while he visited farmers and food producers on the Duchy of Cornwall – a parcel of land William now owns – in May.
Orla was given to the royal couple by Catherine’s brother, James Middleton, in 2020, shortly after the death of their previous dog Lupo.
The dog – seen walking behind William in the picture – gave birth to four puppies in May.
Spaniels are well known for their affectionate behaviour and the picture shows the puppies clambering around the prince.
In the puppy picture, the prince looks relaxed in a pair of jeans and trainers – an informal moment after recent showcase occasions, including Trooping the Colour and the Order of the Garter procession.
He also visited a project linked to his Earthshot environmental prize which creates a type of sustainable dye that can reduce the fashion industry’s use of harmful chemicals – so colours can really be green.
Catherine did not appear at Royal Ascot earlier this week, with royal aides saying she had to find a balance in how she returned to public events. In January, the princess revealed she was in remission after her cancer diagnosis last year.
On Friday, she sent out a message about her support for children’s hospices – saying they helped families who were “heartbroken, fearful of the future and often desperately isolated”.
And now her photo has marked her husband’s birthday.
While Prince William was born in mid-summer on the longest day of the year, his father King Charles has been praising those in Antarctica experiencing the shortest day of the year.
He recorded a special message for the BBC’s Antarctic Midwinter Broadcast, which sends a morale-raising message to scientists working in remote research stations in the depths of their winter.
The King praised the work of researchers tracking climate change.
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Published
Uzbekistan’s Oksana Chusovitina marked her 50th birthday with a silver medal in the vault at the Gymnastics World Challenge Cup – 33 years after she became an Olympic champion.
Chusovitina was part of a Unified Team of athletes from post-Soviet nations that won the team all-around gold at the 1992 Barcelona Games, and has competed at eight Olympics in total.
Three decades later the Uzbek, who is also a three-time world champion, is still winning medals in a sport in which most retire in their twenties.
Competing in her native country at the International Gymnastics Federation’s World Challenge Cup in Tashkent one day after her birthday, Chusovitina took vault silver behind Bulgaria’s Valentina Georgieva – who, at 18, is 32 years her junior.
Until Paris 2024, Chusovitina had competed at every summer Olympic Games since 1992.
She was looking to equal the record – set by Georgian shooter Nino Salukvadze, who is the only Olympian to have competed in nine consecutive Games – for most Olympic appearances in a row last year in Paris.
However, injury ruled her out of the Asian Championships, meaning she was unable to qualify.
Tashkent always a focus with birthday in mind
Chusovitina was inducted into the International Gymnastics Hall of Fame in 2017, and eight years later she remains the only member to still be competing after their induction.
She explained before the Tokyo Games why she had not yet retired: “I could have stopped at 25, 19, or 30, but I didn’t. I realised with age I didn’t get worse, I only got better, like fine wine.”
She had made it clear in February that she was targeting her home event.
“In June, on my 50th birthday, we will have a competition here in Tashkent. It will be a World Challenge Cup, and I really want to compete there so I’m keeping my fingers crossed,” she said.
Earlier this month she withdrew from the Asian Championships during the final of the vault in order to ensure she could compete in Tashkent.
‘Why should I leave the sport if it brings me joy?’
After her team gold in Barcelona, she represented Uzbekistan at the next three Games but, after moving to Germany when her son was diagnosed with leukaemia, she gained citizenship and switched allegiances.
Her second Olympic medal was a silver in the vault while representing Germany at the 2008 Beijing Games.
She represented Germany at the 2012 Games in London then switched back to Uzbekistan for the 2016 Rio Olympics – and qualified for the delayed Games in Tokyo in 2021.
Chusovitina did briefly retire after the Tokyo Games, but returned to the sport just 67 days later.
Speaking about the decision in 2023, she said: “I just realised, I felt that I can do this. Why should I leave the sport if it brings me joy?”.
Previously this season she had won gold at the Baku World Cup and bronze at the Cottbus World Cup.
By the time athletes head out to the United States for the 2028 Games in Los Angeles, Chusovitina will be 53 years of age, but she has not ruled out a ninth trip to the Olympics.
“My number one goal is to get to Los Angeles,” she said before this week’s competition.
“But there is so much time before then, so I’m not thinking that far ahead. I go step by step, from one competition to the next. If it happens, it happens. If not, then no. But I will try, and I will give it everything I’ve got.”
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‘Not just smut’ – Why it’s happily ever after for romance books
Inside London’s first romance-only bookshop, Sarah Maxwell stands in the “smut hut” – a section dedicated to her store’s more erotic titles.
Surrounded by shelves stacked with brightly coloured paperbacks – with titles including Just For the Summer, Swept Away and The Friendship Fling – young women are milling around, chatting and flicking through books.
Sarah says she wants to challenge the critics of romance fiction – often men – who diminish what she describes as “really high-quality writing” by saying “it’s just smut”.
“A lot of these books have strong world-building, amazing character development and a really good plot,” Sarah says.
A surge in romance and fantasy sales last year pushed UK fiction revenue above £1bn for the first time, according to a report released last week.
As its popularity grows, some readers and industry experts say attitudes towards romance are changing for the better, but others believe sexism keeps the genre from the mainstream.
Romance fiction spans a dizzying range of sub-genres and moods, all centred around heady love stories with a guaranteed happily ever after – or HEA to fans – lending the books a comforting, cosy atmosphere.
Romantasy – a blend of romance and fantasy – has become a reliable fixture on best-seller lists, largely due to the cult-like following it has gained among TikTok’s reading community, BookTok.
Major series like Fourth Wing and A Court of Thorns and Roses see female protagonists enter high-stakes relationships set against magical, fantastic worlds.
Many readers pick what to read based on tropes such as “enemies to lovers” and “second-chance romance”, with books marketed under these banners.
A book’s “spice level” – or how much sex can be found between the covers – is also a major factor, often focused on female pleasure, power and emotional connection.
‘Some people turn their nose up’
“I’m into cowboys at the moment,” says Sky, 23 from London – a reference to “cowboy romances”, a growing sub-genre whose books take place in a western setting – often the American frontier.
Sky and another fan, Chantelle, 24 describe themselves as “very proud romance readers”. They trace their love of the genre to reading fanfiction under their desks at school, and now get their recommendations through BookTok.
But Sky and Chantelle admit not everyone reacts positively when they talk about their favourite books.
“Some people do turn their nose up, roll their eyes sometimes,” says Chantelle, “but I just don’t really care”.
Caroline, 29, admits she “sneered a bit” at romance in her early twenties.
“I used to read romances when I was a teenager,” she recalls, “but I got away from it and started reading stuff I thought was really smart.”
Then last year, Caroline picked up Emily Henry’s bestseller Book Lovers – an “enemies to lovers” story about a literary agent and a book editor, set in a picturesque small town.
“I realised I hadn’t consumed something guilt-free in my reading for a really long time,” Caroline says, “and it was just really fun”.
She’s since devoured the entire series of A Court of Thorns and Roses, a stalwart of bestseller lists and many readers’ first taste of romantasy.
“It’s nice to feel all the feelings with something that’s just going to really entertain you,” Caroline says.
Victoria, 31, has long read both romance and fantasy for much-needed escapism: “Sometimes I think we all need a little bit of a happily ever after in life.”
She says “chick-lit” stigma is still strong, but thinks attitudes are starting to change as people speak openly about their love of the genre online.
“We’re talking about it in a different way,” Victoria says. “Guilty pleasures? Do I need to feel guilty for loving something?”
‘These are the Swifties’
Both romance and fantasy saw record sales last year, according to data gathered from more than 7,000 UK booksellers.
Romance & Sagas, as they are officially categorised, increased from £62m in 2023 to £69m in 2024, while Science Fiction & Fantasy saw an even bigger bump – from £59m to £83m.
Both categories have seen these numbers skyrocket since the pandemic, growing year-on-year – back in 2019, romance’s sales sat at £24m, and fantasy at £29m.
Women under 35 years old make up more than half of romantasy purchases, figures show.
Literary agent Rebeka Finch, 28, says the “voracious” appetite among this demographic, largely driven by BookTok, reflects broader consumer habits.
She likens romance readers to Swifties – Taylor Swift fans – known for owning multiple copies of the same album and wanting to feel a tangible connection to their favourite artist.
“They are the people that are so obsessive about books that they will buy a Kindle edition, they will have a hard back edition, they will have a paperback edition.
“They will have so many different volumes of the same book because they love it so much.”
Bookshop owner Sarah Maxwell says the demographic gave her the confidence to open Saucy Books in the middle of a high street downturn that has seen many independent bookshops suffer.
“People have this perception that’s it’s not good business,” Sarah says, but the community is “strong” and the authors prolific, providing plenty of stock.
“Millennial women have the most disposable income,” she adds. “Romance is serious business.”
Despite this commercial growth, Rebeka says broader attitudes remain derisive – particularly when it comes to “spicy” titles.
“‘That’s fairy porn’ – the amount of times that I have heard that!” Rebeka exclaims.
“Part of me wants to be like, ‘So what?’ This industry has been made for the male gaze for so long.
“It’s such a small percentage of the book and actually… it’s largely portraying fairly healthy sexual relationships.”
‘It boils down to money’
Within the publishing industry, attitudes are changing but mainly for commercial reasons, according to Katie Fraser, who writes for publishing magazine, The Bookseller.
Romance has been a “maligned genre” within the industry that “some people just didn’t want to be associated with,” she says. But as romance readers become an “economic force,” publishers have had to take it more seriously and invest.
“Publishing is an industry, so that’s what it ultimately boils down to,” Katie says.
Author Bea Fitzgerald, 28, says she benefitted from this commercial shift, selling her young adult fantasy rom-com Girl Goddess Queen at the peak of the romance boom.
“That sort of space opening up is what allowed me to move into the market,” she says.
Bea previously worked in publishing, and recalls seeing “a lot of books that could have been published as romance [instead] published in other literary genres because they think that it will not appeal to a certain type of audience”.
The genre is nothing new, she quips, having long been “championed” by publishers such as Mills & Boon. The difference now is that young people “like things really unapologetically”.
“They won’t just read a romance, they’ll go shout about it online, and then they’ll go to a romance convention, and they’ll talk to their friends about it.”
While the community has grown, Bea thinks critical appraisal of the genre is still lacking.
“Do we see broadsheets reviewing romance books? No. And they are just as important, literary books.”
Bea believes this is both because “the good majority” of the readers are women, and simply because the stories are happy.
“It goes in line with this sort of academic elitism that for something to be serious, it has to be a Shakespearean tragedy,” she says. “Whereas if it’s happy, it’s not serious, it hasn’t got literary merit. It obviously does – of course it does.”
Girl’s message in a bottle gets reply 31 years later
A Scottish schoolgirl’s message in a bottle has finally received a reply more than 30 years later – after being discovered in Norway.
Alaina Beresford, from Portknockie in Moray, sent the message in 1994 when she was 12 as part of a school project.
It washed up across the North Sea where it was found by a volunteer cleaning up a Norwegian island – who then dispatched a postcard to the delighted sender to let her know.
Alaina told BBC Scotland News she could not believe her original letter was in such good condition after three decades.
Her handwritten letter had been sent in an empty bottle of Moray Cup, a fizzy drink produced in the north east of Scotland.
It said: “Dear finder. My name is Alaina Stephen and I am 12 years of age. I come from Portknockie and I am doing a project on water so I decided to send a message in a bottle.
“My teacher’s husband took them and dropped them in the middle of the ocean.
“When you find this message, please write back with your name, hobbies, where you found the message, when, and if you could, a little information about your area. Yours sincerely, Alaina Stephen. PS I come from Scotland.”
Now, 31 years on, Alaina has received a postcard from Pia Brodtmann, telling her the good news, with pictures of the find.
It said: “My name is Pia and I am from Germany. Today I found your message in a bottle on Lisshelløya, a tiny island around Vega in Norway.
“I am here for beach cleaning as a volunteer for four months and today we cleaned Lisshelløya. On the front of the postcard you can see our workboat Nemo and our sailboat Fonn, where we live. You can also see the area around Vega. I wonder when and where your teacher’s husband threw your bottle in the ocean?”
It added: “PS I am 27 years old and I like rock climbing and sailing a lot!”
Alaina, now 42, said she was stunned when she picked up the post and noticed the postcard addressed to herself.
“I’m at the same address,” she said.
“I did live in Buckie, and another house in Portknockie for a while, but moved back in with my parents.
“I couldn’t believe it, as I had sent it when I was 12 years old, 31 years ago.”
Alaina was able to find Pia via social media, and messaged her asking to send a photo of her letter.
“I was shocked when she did, I couldn’t believe how legible it was,” she said.
“I can’t remember actually writing the message, but I do remember it was a Moray Cup bottle, and that my teacher’s husband had dropped it into the sea when he was a fisherman.
“According to my message, I had done it as part of a project on water. It was when I was in P7.”
She added: “Pia and I have been keeping in touch and hopefully we will continue to do so.”
Columbia activist Mahmoud Khalil freed from detention
Columbia University graduate and activist Mahmoud Khalil said the Trump administration “chose the wrong person” to target in its crackdown on student protesters as he was released on bail after more than three months in detention.
A federal judge ruled on Friday that the Palestinian was not a flight risk or threat to his community and could be released as his immigration proceedings continue.
Mr Khalil was a prominent voice in Columbia’s pro-Palestinian protests last year, and his 8 March arrest sparked demonstrations in New York and Washington DC.
The government has argued his activism impedes on US foreign policy and moved to have him deported.
Speaking to journalists before heading to New York from Louisiana, where he was held, he said he was most eager to see his wife and his son, who was born during his 104 days in detention.
“The only time I spent [with] my son was a specified one-hour limit that the government had imposed on us,” he said.
“So that means that now I can actually hug him and Noor, my wife, without looking at the clock.”
He also criticised the Trump administration for targeting him for protesting against Israel’s military actions in Gaza: “There’s no right person that should be detained for actually protesting a genocide.”
He did not specifically mention Israel, which emphatically denies accusations of genocide in Gaza, or Jewish people.
In a statement, White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson accused Mr Khalil of engaging in “fraud and misrepresentation” and “conduct detrimental to American foreign policy interests”.
The White House maintains that Judge Michael Farbiarz did not have jurisdiction to order Mr Khalil’s release.
“We expect to be vindicated on appeal, and look forward to removing Khalil from the United States,” Ms Jackson said.
Khalil was held by ICE under two charges
Mr Khalil, a permanent resident, graduated from Columbia while he was in detention. His wife took his place during the ceremony and accepted his diploma on his behalf.
The government has not accused Mr Khalil of a specific crime.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio invoked a rarely used portion of the Immigration and Nationality Act to argue Mr Khalil’s presence in the US could pose “potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences”.
Last week, Judge Farbiarz ruled Rubio’s justification for detaining Mr Khalil was probably unconstitutional and said the US government could not detain or deport the 30-year-old legal US resident under that reasoning.
Attorneys for the Trump administration then said Mr Khalil was being held for a different charge, failing to disclose information when he applied for lawful permanent residency in 2024.
Mr Khalil’s attorneys had argued that the government violated their client’s free speech rights and the administration targeted him because of his role in protests. They also asked a New Jersey federal court to free him on bail or transfer him closer to his wife and baby.
Throughout Friday’s nearly two-hour hearing, Judge Farbiarz, who presides in the District of New Jersey, expressed scepticism about the government’s requests to hold Mr Khalil while his case moved forward.
He also said Mr Khalil’s arrest and detention on the second charge were “highly unusual”.
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“It’s overwhelmingly unlikely that a lawful permanent resident would be held on the remaining charge here,” Judge Farbiarz said, according to CBS News.
He added that there had been an “effort to use the immigration charge here to punish the petitioner” for his protests.
Under the conditions of his release, Mr Khalil will not have to wear electronic monitoring, and will be given certified copies of his passport and green card so he can return home.
The government will retain his physical passport. The court barred Mr Khalil from international travel, but he will be permitted some domestic travel to New York and Michigan, as well as New Jersey and Louisiana for court appearances and attorney visits. He will also be permitted to travel to Washington for lobbying and legislative purposes.
“No one should fear being jailed for speaking out in this country,” said Alina Das, co-director of the Immigrant Rights Clinic at New York University School of Law, who appeared in court to argue for his release on Friday.
“We are overjoyed that Mr Khalil will finally be reunited with his family while we continue to fight his case in court.”
“After more than three months, we can finally breathe a sigh of relief and know that Mahmoud is on his way home to me and Deen, who never should have been separated from his father,” said Mr Khalil’s wife, Dr Noor Abdalla, in a statement released by the American Civil Liberties Union.
China has millions of single men – could dating camp help them find love?
To say China’s women are outnumbered would be an understatement.
With a staggering 30 million more men than women, one of the world’s most populous countries has a deluge of unattached males.
The odds are heavily stacked against them finding a date, let alone a wife – something many feel pressured to do.
To make matters worse, it’s even harder if you’re from a lower social class, according to Chinese dating coach Hao, who has over 3,000 clients.
“Most of them are working class – they’re the least likely to find wives,” he says.
We see this first-hand in Violet Du Feng’s documentary, The Dating Game, where we watch Hao and three of his clients throughout his week-long dating camp.
All of them, including Hao, have come from poor, rural backgrounds, and were part of the generation growing up after the 90s in China, when many parents left their toddlers with other family members, to go and work in the cities.
That generation are now adults, and are going to the cities themselves to try to find a wife and boost their status.
Du Feng, who is based in the US, wants her film to highlight what life is like for younger generations in her home country.
“In a time when gender divide is so extreme, particularly in China, it’s about how we can bridge a gap and create dialogue,” she tells the BBC.
Hao’s three clients – Li, 24, Wu, 27 and Zhou, 36 – are battling the aftermath of China’s one-child policy.
Set up by the government in 1980 when the population approached one billion, the policy was introduced amid fears that having too many people would affect the country’s economic growth.
But a traditional preference for male children led to large numbers of girls being abandoned, placed in orphanages, sex-selective abortions or even cases of female infanticide. The result is today’s huge gender imbalance.
China is now so concerned about its plummeting birth rate and ageing population that it ended the policy in 2016, and holds regular matchmaking events.
Wu, Li and Zhou want Hao to help them find a girlfriend at the very least.
He is someone they can aspire to be, having already succeeded in finding a wife, Wen, who is also a dating coach.
The men let Hao give them makeovers and haircuts, while he tells them his questionable “techniques” for attracting women – both online and in person.
But while everyone tries their best, not everything goes to plan.
Hao constructs an online image for each man, but he stretches a few boundaries in how he describes them, and Zhou thinks it feels “fake”.
“I feel guilty deceiving others,” he says, clearly uncomfortable with being portrayed as someone he can’t match in reality.
Du Feng thinks this is a wider problem.
“It’s a unique China story, but also it’s a universal story of how in this digital landscape, we’re all struggling and wrestling with the price of being fake in the digital world, and then the cost that we have to pay to be authentic and honest,” she says.
Hao may be one of China’s “most popular dating coaches”, but we see his wife question some of his methods.
Undeterred, he sends his proteges out to meet women, spraying their armpits with deodorant, declaring: “It’s showtime!”
The men have to approach potential dates in a busy night-time shopping centre in Chongqing, one of the world’s biggest cities.
It’s almost painful to watch as they ask women to link up via the messaging app WeChat.
But it does teach them to dig into their inner confidence, which, up until now, has been hidden from view.
Dr Zheng Mu, from the National University of Singapore’s sociology department, tells the BBC how pressure to marry can impact single men.
“In China, marriage or the ability, financially and socially, to get married as the primary breadwinner, is still largely expected from men,” she says.
“As a result, the difficulty of being considered marriageable can be a social stigma, indicating they’re not capable and deserving of the role, which leads to great pressures and mental strains.”
Zhou is despondent about how much dates cost him, including paying for matchmakers, dinner and new clothes.
“I only make $600 (£440) a month,” he says, noting a date costs about $300.
“In the end our fate is determined by society,” he adds, deciding that he needs to “build up my status”.
Du Feng explains: “This is a generation in which a lot of these surplus men are defined as failures because of their economic status.
“They’re seen as the bottom of society, the working class, and so somehow getting married is another indicator that they can succeed.”
We learn that one way for men in China to “break social class” is to join the army, and see a big recruitment drive taking place in the film.
The film notably does not explore what life is like for gay men in China.
Du Feng agrees that Chines society is less accepting of gay men, while Dr Mu adds: “In China, heteronormativity largely rules.
“Therefore, men are expected to marry women to fulfill the norms… to support the nuclear family and develop it into bigger families by becoming parents.”
Technology also features in the documentary, which explores the increasing popularity of virtual boyfriends, saying that over 10 million women in China play online dating games.
We even get to see a virtual boyfriend in action – he’s understanding, undemanding and undeniably handsome.
One woman says real-life dating costs “time, money, emotional energy – it’s so exhausting”.
She adds that “virtual men are different – they have great temperaments, they’re just perfect”.
Dr Mu sees this trend as “indicative of social problems” in China, citing “long work hours, greedy work culture and competitive environment, along with entrenched gender role expectations”.
“Virtual boyfriends, who can behave better aligned with women’s expected ideals, may be a way for them to fulfil their romantic imaginations.”
Du Feng adds: “The thing universally that’s been mentioned is that the women with virtual boyfriends felt men in China are not emotionally stable.”
Her film digs into the men’s backgrounds, including their often fractured relationships with their parents and families.
“These men are coming from this, and there’s so much negative pressure on them – how could you expect them to be stable emotionally?”
Reuters reported last year that “long-term single lifestyles are gradually becoming more widespread in China”.
“I’m worried about how we connect with each other nowadays, especially the younger generation,” Du Feng says.
“Dating is just a device for us to talk about this. But I am really worried.
“My film is about how we live in this epidemic of loneliness, with all of us trying to find connections with each other.”
So by the end of the documentary, which has many comical moments, we see it has been something of a realistic journey of self-discovery for all of the men, including Hao.
“I think that it’s about the warmth as they find each other, knowing that it’s a collective crisis that they’re all facing, and how they still find hope,” Du Feng says.
“For them, it’s more about finding themselves and finding someone to pat their shoulders, saying, ‘I see you, and there’s a way you can make it’.”
Screen Daily’s Allan Hunter says the film is “sustained by the humanity that Du Feng finds in each of the individuals we come to know and understand a little better”, adding it “ultimately salutes the virtue of being true to yourself”.
Hao concludes: “Once you like yourself, it’s easier to get girls to like you.”
MPs back assisted dying bill in historic Commons vote
In a historic vote, MPs have approved a bill which would pave the way for huge social change by giving terminally ill adults in England and Wales the right to end their own lives.
The Terminally Ill Adults Bill, which was backed by 314 votes to 291, will now go to the House of Lords for further scrutiny.
The bill was approved with a majority of 23 MPs, representing a drop from the first time it was debated in November, when it passed by a margin of 55.
The vote came after an emotionally charged debate which saw MPs recount personal stories of seeing friends and relatives die.
It is likely, although not guaranteed, that the House of Lords will approve the bill later this year.
If that happens, ministers would have a maximum of four years to implement the measures, meaning it could be 2029 before assisted dying becomes available.
MPs were allowed a free vote on the bill, meaning they did not have to follow a party policy.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer backed the measure, while Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch and Health Secretary Wes Streeting voted against.
Labour MP Kim Leadbeater has shepherded the bill through the Commons and speaking to the BBC after the vote she said she was “over the moon”.
“I know what this means for terminally ill people and their loved ones.”
She added it had been a “particularly emotional week” because it marked nine years since the murder of her sister Jo Cox, who had been a Labour MP at the time.
“Jo used to say if good people don’t step forward and come into politics then what do we end up with?
“And even though some of us feel quite out of place in this place at times we are here to make a difference and we’re here to make positive change that society has asked us to do.”
Critics have argued the bill risks people being coerced into seeking an assisted death but Leadbeater said she was “100% confident” sufficient safeguards were in place.
Conservative MP Danny Kruger, who has been a prominent opponent of the bill, said the majority had been cut in half adding: “It is clear support for this bill is ebbing away fast.”
He said he hoped the House of Lords would either reject the proposed legislation or “substantially strengthen it”.
He argued it would not be unconstitutional for peers to block a bill approved by the democratically elected House of Commons, pointing out that the proposal had not appeared in Labour’s election manifesto.
However, supporters of the bill have said that they are confident that, although the Lords are likely to amend the bill, it will not be rejected outright.
Any changes made in the House of Lords would have to be approved by MPs, before the bill could become law.
Dame Esther Rantzen, a broadcaster and prominent supporter of the bill, said: “This will make a huge positive difference, protecting millions of terminally ill patients and their families from the agony and loss of dignity created by a bad death.
“Thank you, Parliament.”
On the other side, Baroness and former Paralympian Tanni Grey-Thompson said she had heard from “disabled people [who] are absolutely terrified” about the bill.
Grey-Thompson, who will get a vote on the bill in the Lords, said she would put forward amendments to make it “as tight as possible” to ensure people could not be coerced.
Jan Noble, head of the hospice charity St Christopher’s, said it was now “vital” the government ensured “high-quality end-of-life care was available for everyone”.
“For that we need a better funding model for hospices,” she said.
Hundreds of campaigners gathered outside Parliament in the blazing heat to make sure their voices were heard as MPs made up their minds.
Those in favour of the bill had united under the Dignity in Dying campaign, wearing flamingo pink t-shirts, and there were smiles and tears as they shared hugs following the vote.
Pamela Fisher, a lay preacher from the Church of England who supports assisted dying, welcomed the narrow vote in favour, saying she believed the vote was “a major step forward to the creation of a more compassionate society”.
The family of Keith Fenton had been standing on Parliament Square with a placard of the former Squadron Major in his Royal Engineers regalia all morning and were “absolutely delighted” with the result.
Earlier, his widow Sara had explained she told Keith she didn’t want him to go to a Dignitas clinic in Switzerland when he became very ill with Huntington’s disease – but realised she was “being selfish” after Keith tried to take his life.
Reflecting the split among MPs on this issue of conscience, there were also large numbers of people campaigning against the Bill, many with concerns over how to protect vulnerable people.
Sister Doreen Cunningham had been sitting by Westminster Abbey alongside other nuns from the Sisters of Nazareth mission, and said she hoped the Lords would be able to introduce stronger safeguards.
“The MPs did talk about safeguards but they’re far from what we would call safeguards,” she added, as fellow disappointed campaigners consoled themselves by singing quiet hymns.
George Fielding from the secular Not Dead Yet campaign said the vote was “incredibly disappointing” as he believes it will “endanger, foreshorten and I would say kill the most vulnerable people in our society”.
As someone with cerebral palsy, he believes the bill is “ableist” and many of those who end their own lives when they become disabled are experiencing “unprocessed hurt and trauma”.
Sitting by a mock graveside in his wheelchair, George said: “We must ask the Lords to scrutinise this bill line by line to promote other alternatives – palliative care, social care, a better benefits system — to ensure everyone has the right to live a joyful life.”
Before the vote, the House of Commons spent more than three hours debating the general principles of the bill.
Conservative MP James Cleverly said he was struck by the number of medical professional bodies who were neutral on the principle of assisted dying but were opposed to the specific measures in the bill.
“When the people upon whom we rely to deliver this say we are not ready… we should listen,” he said.
Speaking in favour, Labour MP Peter Prinsley said: “There is an absolute sanctity of human life, but we are not dealing with life or death – we are dealing with death or death.
“For there is also a sanctity of human dignity and fundamental to that is surely choice – who are we to deny that to the dying?”
At the start of the day, MPs voted on a series of amendments that had been debated last week.
These included a measure to close the so-called “anorexia loophole” which would stop people qualifying for assisted dying on the basis of life-threatening malnutrition.
MPs backed that amendment as well as one requiring the government to publish a review of palliative care services within a year of the bill passing.
An attempt to block access to assisted dying for people suffering mental health problems or because they feel “burdensome” was defeated by a majority of 53.
BTS is back – but K-pop has changed
“I missed them so much,” says Stephanie Prado, a die-hard BTS fan who has been desperately waiting for the group to reunite after a two-and-a-half-year hiatus.
Her love for the boy band inspired her to move from Brazil to South Korea – so it was no surprise that she turned up last Friday for “BTS Festa”, a big party held every year near Seoul on the group’s anniversary.
The time she has spent waiting has moved “both slowly and really quickly”, Stephanie says, waving an ARMY bomb, the official lightstick used by BTS fans, who call themselves the ARMY.
Behind her is a huge sculpture of the lightstick, a must-have in the K-pop world.
This year’s event is special because a reunion is finally around the corner. The countdown peaked last week, when four of the seven members, RM, V, Jimin and Jung Kook, completed their military service. And the wait ends on Saturday when the last of them, Suga, is discharged.
“I hope they rest now,” Stephanie says, before adding, “but of course I also want albums, concerts, everything”.
The 18 months in the military that are mandatory for all South Korean men forced the world’s most successful boy band in recent years to hit pause in 2022. Now they are returning, some say, to a K-pop industry that is quite different to the one they knew: faced with stalled album sales, shaken by scandals and increasingly scrutinised over the excessive pressure it puts on stars.
The absence of a leading band, industry watchers say, was deeply felt.
“Without BTS, a core pillar was missing,” says Kim Young-dae, music critic and author of BTS: The Review.
“There have been concerns recently that K-pop is losing momentum. True or not, BTS could change that perception.”
The ARMY awaits
There are no plans yet for all seven members to appear together, but that didn’t stop the ARMY from gathering early on a humid morning in Goyang.
The long, restless queue stretched to the subway station an hour before the gates for the BTS Festa opened. The snippets of English, Chinese, Japanese and Spanish alongside Korean threw off a local walking past who asked, “Why are there so many foreigners here?”
Inside were more queues – some people were hopping with excitement and others were sobbing after entering the “voice zone”, a phone booth where you could listen to BTS members’ messages. About half of the fans the BBC spoke to teared up talking about how much they missed BTS.
“It felt like the 18 months lasted forever,” said Vuyo Matiwane, a South African who had been visiting BTS-themed venues in Seoul, like their favourite restaurant. “I was crying at every location – it was so emotional.”
And then she watched the livestream of them being discharged, which was “overwhelming”.
Being surrounded by all things BTS made a trip halfway across the world worth it, says Fara Ala, who travelled from the Netherlands: “Breathing the same air, drinking the same water, eating the same food as BTS – that’s enough for ARMY. If you ask other ARMY, they’d say the same.”
South Korean military service is a major test for male celebrities, many of whom have to enlist at the peak of their success. In the past, it has proved fatal for some careers.
BTS is believed to have staggered it so that all seven members were missing from action for no more than six months. J-Hope, who was discharged last October, has since wrapped up a solo world tour. But the so-called curse can be hard to break.
For one, the loyalty of fans could wane as new groups debut almost every week, competing for their attention. Returning idols also face a tough transition because a military stint and a touch of maturity could dampen the essence of K-pop appeal: youthful energy.
But if anyone can break the curse, it’s BTS, Mr Kim says.
Each of them announced solo projects in the past two and half years, he explains, without hurting their popularity as a group: “It feels like their military hiatus passed by naturally. Their return feels smooth.”
The shift in K-pop
Still, the industry beyond the ARMY can pose a challenge.
While BTS was on a break, the other K-pop sensation, Blackpink, has not dropped an album since September 2022, opting instead for solo releases. These were the leaders of K-pop’s third generation.
But they have been succeeded by fourth and fifth generations that have brought fresh style to the genre. The newer acts – which debuted after 2018 – lack a standout name like BTS because K-pop has become more diverse than ever. The result is a range of very popular and experimental groups.
“Most people my age like fourth generation idols these days,” says a 13-year-old fan of girl group IVE.
“Some still like third generation groups, but for teens, BTS kind of feels like they belong to an older generation. A lot of new idols debuted while BTS was away, and they have become popular.”
But the biggest challenge to BTS’ superstar status is what some see as a slowdown in K-pop.
Revenue from concerts remains strong, but album sales – a key market metric – have been declining since a peak in 2023. The slump coincides with when BTS and Blackpink were not releasing albums.
South Korean pop culture critic Park Hee Ah agrees that K-pop went through “some difficult times” while BTS was away.
There have also been several controversies, such as the headline-making dispute between hit girl group NewJeans and their agency, allegations of mistreatment by all-powerful agencies and harassment of stars by fans and trolls.
“Album sales started to drop, and some problems – like questions about companies doing the right thing – came up,” Ms Park said. Because of all of this, she adds, we did see more “deeper problems in the K-pop industry”.
That’s also why so many are looking forward to BTS’ return, hoping it will bring renewed energy – and maybe even a path forward for the industry.
“Their return will help people focus on Korea’s music scene again,” Ms Park says, adding that a BTS reunion is great not just for their fans but also for Korean soft power.
All eyes are now on the band’s next song.
“I will quickly make an album and return to the stage,” RM, the group’s leader, said on the day he was discharged.
But a new group album may not come until early next year because J-Hope still has domestic concerts scheduled, and Jin is set to hold concerts for fans across the world over the next few months. It’s also possible Suga, who landed in controversy after he was caught drunk-driving a scooter last year, may want to lie low for a little while.
For millions of fans like Stephanie though, simply knowing BTS is back together is enough – for now.
“It’ll feel like nothing ever changed. The kings are back.”
32 nations but only one man matters – Nato’s summit is all about Trump
Nato summits tend to be “pre-cooked”, not least to present a united front.
Secretary General Mark Rutte has already settled on the menu for their meeting at The Hague: one that will avoid a row with Nato’s most powerful member, the US.
A commitment to increase defence spending by European allies is the dish that President Donald Trump wants served – and that’s exactly what he’ll be getting. Though there will inevitably be the added ingredients of compromise and fudge.
Nor will the summit be able to paper over the cracks between Trump and many of his European allies on trade, Russia and the escalating conflict in the Middle East.
The US president, whose mantra is America First, is not a huge fan of multinational organisations.
He has been highly critical of Nato too – even questioning its very foundation of collective defence. In Trump’s first term, at his first Nato summit, he berated European allies for not spending enough and owing the US “massive amounts of money”.
On that message he has at least been consistent.
Mark Rutte, who has a good relationship with the US president, has worked hard to give him a win.
The summit takes place at the World Forum in The Hague over two days, on Tuesday and Wednesday next week.
Now the main discussions will last just three hours and the summit statement is being reduced to five paragraphs, reportedly because of the US president’s demands.
Trump is one of 32 leaders from the Western defensive alliance who are coming, along with the heads of more than a dozen partner countries.
Dutch police have mounted their biggest ever security operation for the most expensive Nato summit so far, at a cost of €183.4m (£155m; $210m).
Some have suggested the brevity of the summit is in part to cater to the US president’s attention span and dislike of long meetings. But a shorter summit with fewer subjects discussed will, more importantly, help hide divisions.
Ed Arnold, of the defence think tank Rusi, says Trump likes to be the star of the show and predicts he’ll be able to claim that he’s forced European nations to act.
In truth he’s not the first US president to criticise allies’ defence spending. But he’s had more success than most. Kurt Volker, a former US ambassador to Nato, admits that some European governments do not like the way Trump’s gone about it – demanding that allies spend 5% of their GDP on defence.
Europe still only accounts for 30% of Nato’s total military spending. Volker says many Europeans now admit they that “we needed to do this, even if it’s unfortunate that it took such a kick in the pants”.
Some European nations are already boosting their defence spending to 5% of their GDP. Most are the countries living in close proximity to Russia – such as Poland, Estonia and Lithuania.
It’s not just Trump who’s been piling on the pressure. Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is forcing a response.
But in reality many Nato members will struggle to meet the new target. A few haven’t met the goal of 2%, set more than a decade ago.
Rutte’s compromise formula is for allies to increase their core defence spending to 3.5% of GDP, with an additional 1.5% towards defence-related expenditure.
But the definition of defence-related expenditure appears to be so vague that it might be rendered meaningless. Rutte says it could include the cost of industry of infrastructure – building bridges, roads and railways. Ed Arnold, of Rusi, says it’ll inevitably lead to more “creative accounting”.
Even if, as expected, the new spending target is approved, some nations may have little intent of reaching it – by 2032 or 2035. The timescale’s still unclear. Spain’s prime minister has already called it unreasonable and counterproductive. Sir Keir Starmer hasn’t even been able to say when the UK will spend 3% of its GDP of defence. The UK prime minister only said that it was an ambition some time in the next parliament. However, given the UK government’s stated policy of putting Nato at the heart of the UK’s defence policy, Sir Keir will have to back the new plan.
The real danger is to interpret the demand for an increase in defence spending as arbitrary, a symbolic gesture – or just bowing to US pressure. It’s also driven by Nato’s own defence plans on how it would respond to an attack by Russia. Rutte himself has said that Russia could attack a Nato country within five years.
Those defence plans remain secret. But Rutte’s already set out what the Alliance is lacking. In a speech earlier this month he said Nato needed a 400% increase in its air and missile defences: thousands more armoured vehicles and tanks, and millions more artillery shells.
Most member states, including the UK, do not yet meet their Nato capability commitments. It’s why Sweden plans to double the size of its army and Germany is looking to boost its troop numbers by 60,000.
The plans go into granular detail as to how the Alliance will defend its Eastern flank should Russia invade. In a recent speech, the head of the US Army in Europe, General Christopher Donahue, highlighted the need to defend Polish and Lithuanian territory near the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad. He said the Alliance had looked at its existing capabilities and “realised very quickly they are not sufficient”.
Yet, strangely, specific discussions about Russia and the war in Ukraine will be muted. It’s the one big issue that now divides Europe and America. Kurt Volker says, under Trump, the US “does not see Ukrainian security as essential to European security but our European allies do”.
Trump has already shattered Nato’s united front by talking to Putin and withholding military support to Ukraine.
Ed Arnold says contentious issues have been stripped from the summit. Not least to avoid a schism with Trump. Leaders were supposed to discuss a new Russia strategy, but it’s not on the agenda.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has been invited to the summit dinner, but he won’t be taking part in the main discussions of the North Atlantic Council.
Rutte will be hoping that his first summit as secretary general will be short and sweet. But with Trump at odds with most of his allies on Russia, the greatest threat facing the Alliance, there’s no guarantee it’ll go according to plan.
The presidential feud that even death couldn’t end
The personal has become very political in Zambia.
Mourning and the build-up to a funeral is never an easy time, but throw in the fallout from a long-standing feud between the country’s two top politicians – President Hakainde Hichilema and his now-late predecessor Edgar Lungu – and you have an explosive mix.
The animosity was such that Lungu’s family said one of his dying wishes was that Hichilema should not go anywhere near his body.
The row has scuppered government plans to honour the former head of state, created a distressing rift in the country and left people wondering how things got this bad.
Sunday was supposed to see the state funeral for the 68-year-old who governed for six years from 2015. But there will be no visiting dignitaries and the venue – a huge conference centre in the heart of the capital, Lusaka – will lie empty.
There was already a hint of possible trouble ahead immediately after Lungu’s death on 5 June, in the video message shared by his daughter on Facebook.
Dressed in a thick, black jacket and holding back tears, Tasila Lungu said that her father had died in a hospital in South Africa where he was being treated with “dignity and privacy”.
She rounded off the one-minute announcement saying that “in this moment of grief, we invoke the spirit of ‘One Zambia, One Nation’ – the timeless creed that guided President Lungu’s service to our country”.
To highlight the need for unity at a time when tradition suggested that the nation should naturally come together was a clue that all was not well.
And there was another issue: where was the president’s announcement?
Ms Lungu’s statement confirmed social media rumours of her father’s death, condolence messages were already being sent, including from Kenya’s president, but there was no word from Hichilema.
While independent outlets were reporting the news, the national broadcaster, ZNBC, remained silent.
Then, three hours after the daughter’s post, Zambia’s head of state shared his thoughts in a text post on Facebook. He made his own appeal for unity, asking people to “uphold the values of peace, dignity and togetherness that define us as Zambians”.
Information Minister Cornelius Mweetwa dismissed concerns about the delay in Hichilema talking about the death. He told the the BBC that based on precedent it was not the head of state’s role to be the first to announce the passing of a predecessor.
Nevertheless, Lungu’s supporters felt that Hichilema’s message of “togetherness” rang hollow.
Hichilema finally became president at his sixth attempt after soundly beating Lungu at the polls in 2021. It was their third electoral match-up but the enmity went beyond ballot-box rivalry.
The key to understanding this was the more than 100 days that Hichilema, opposition leader at the time, spent in detention in 2017, awaiting trial on treason charges.
He was accused of endangering the life of then-President Lungu after his motorcade allegedly refused to give way to the one transporting the head of state.
The charges were only dropped after the intervention of the secretary general of the Commonwealth.
Later that year, Hichilema told the BBC that he had been held in solitary confinement for the first eight days in degrading and inhumane conditions “without electricity, without water, without a toilet”. He blamed Lungu personally for his imprisonment.
This was only one of 17 occasions that Hichilema was arrested. Supporters of his United Party for National Development were also harassed by supporters of the governing Patriotic Front (PF).
The 2021 election could have drawn a line under things.
Lungu, who had been rejected by a margin of almost a million votes by an electorate fed up with corruption allegations and concerns about apparent anti-democratic behaviour, went into political retirement.
But as disillusionment with the Hichilema presidency grew because of continued economic hardships, Lungu sensed an opportunity and announced in October 2023 that he was returning to frontline politics.
Soon after that announcement, Lungu was stripped of his retirement benefits and privileges by the state as he had returned to active politics.
This decision rankled with the former president and his family.
Lungu also complained of police harassment. At one point last year he said he was “virtually under house arrest”.
In 2023, the police warned him against jogging in public, describing his weekly workouts as “political activism”.
“I cannot move out of my house without being accosted and challenged by the police and driving me back home,” Lungu told the BBC in May 2024.
In that interview, he also alleged that he had been barred from attending a conference overseas and from travelling abroad for medical treatment.
The information minister vehemently denied that there was ever a travel ban and described the idea that his movement was restricted in Zambia as a “fiction and a figment of the imagination of politically charged mindsets”.
Mweetwa added that despite Hichilema’s treatment when he was in opposition, he was determined not to do the same to Lungu.
There are also accusations that the president’s anti-corruption crusade targeted those close to the former governing PF, including Lungu’s family.
His widow, who continues to be investigated, has been taken to court and lost properties. Some of his children, including Tasila, have also faced similar treatment – they all deny wrongdoing.
Then at the end of last year the Constitutional Court barred him from running for president again, ruling that he had already served the maximum two terms allowed by law.
The former head of state was angry about the way he felt he had been treated.
“There was no love between the two men and [Lungu] was of the view that: ‘I don’t want people to pretend in my death that they cared about me when in fact, not’,” the family’s lawyer Makebi Zulu said.
Lungu eventually managed to get to South Africa in January, but Mr Zulu said that he was told by his doctors, after a series of tests, that had he gone for a check-up earlier, the treatment would have had a greater chance of success.
It was not disclosed what he was suffering from.
It was, in part, in light of this that Lungu said he “wouldn’t want the current president to attend his funeral”.
The government has rejected the idea that Lungu was stopped from going to see his doctors in South Africa.
Following his death, the family wanted to be in charge of the funeral arrangements, but the Zambian authorities sought to take control.
Despite the ill-feeling, last weekend it looked like a compromise had been reached and plans were made for a state funeral.
But relations once again broke down as the family said the government had reneged on the agreement after releasing a programme showing more involvement by Hichilema than had been planned.
In a message on Thursday, the president thanked Zambians for their “resilience, patience, solidarity and calmness during this time” but after doing “everything possible to engage the family… we have reached a point where a clear decision has to be made”.
With that, the funeral arrangements in Zambia were put on hold and the national period of mourning was abruptly cut short.
The burial is now set to take place in South Africa and it seems unlikely that Hichilema will attend.
Zambians had been hoping for both Hichilema and Lungu to bury their differences, but this death and the events that followed, have denied people the closure and reconciliation they desperately wanted to see between the two.
Those differences have also denied many millions of Zambians the opportunity to mourn and pay their last respects to a man who once ruled them.
More BBC stories from Zambia:
- ‘My son is a drug addict, please help’ – the actor breaking a Zambian taboo
- An ancient writing system confounding myths about Africa
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Shorts at work: Can men now get their legs out in the office?
When I call Tony Hardy, it’s a sunny day. As he often does during the summer months, he’s wearing a pair of shorts in the office.
“We wear shorts all the time,” he says.
Tony runs a branding agency in Northumberland, with nine employees. His company, Canny Creative, doesn’t have a dress code. Instead he encourages staff to dress professionally but comfortably – especially because the air conditioning in their office has recently broken.
“Imagine sweating buckets all day and being really uncomfortable and then expecting them to also turn out great work,” Tony says.
What the stylists say
With summer upon us, and much of Britain set to be basking in a heatwave this week and next, keeping cool in the office and during the commute can be a challenge. Take one look at TikTok, and you’ll see that the topic of whether or not shorts are ever appropriate for the office remains highly contentious.
And in a 2022 YouGov poll, 66% of Britons said that it was acceptable for men to wear shorts in the office, up from 37% in 2016 – though the 2022 poll was conducted on the UK’s hottest-ever day.
What people wear to the office has “just gone so casual” in the past few years, with more people wearing jeans and trainers to work, says personal stylist Karina Taylor. She attributes that largely to the Covid pandemic, when people could dress much more casually to work from home.
This included people wearing shorts as they worked from their kitchens or home offices, says Carmen Bellot, style editor at Esquire magazine – they no longer had to think about the bottom half of their outfits while on video-call meetings.
But wearing shorts to the office is still “very much a grey area”, Karina says, describing them as “the ultimate casual piece of clothing”.
Stylists agree that whether or not you can wear shorts to the office is overwhelmingly based on context – and they’re often too casual for client-facing roles such as law and finance.
The professionals advise that if your company has no explicit dress code, you should monitor what your colleagues are wearing and decide whether shorts would look out of place.
Otherwise “you may be pushing the boundaries,” warns Nick Hems, a personal stylist in London.
What the companies say
The BBC contacted a range of companies to ask if they had a formal dress code and whether shorts would be acceptable to wear to the office, if styled professionally.
Many companies, including consultancy Accenture and British American Tobacco, told the BBC they don’t have explicit dress codes but expect staff to dress both comfortably and professionally, and to take extra care to dress appropriately when meeting clients or attending events.
Accounting giant PwC says it trusts staff to make “appropriate decisions” about what to wear to work. “We don’t list items that people can and can’t wear,” a spokesperson said.
Santander says both casual and business dress is acceptable for staff who aren’t required to wear a uniform, but noted “anything that could be beachwear isn’t okay for the office”.
The type of shorts
So if your company does allow you to wear shorts to the office, what sort of shorts should you go for?
There’s a clear consensus among the experts: keep it formal – ideally tailored – and don’t go too short. Beach, sports, cargo and denim shorts are generally all no-gos.
But this isn’t the case for all companies.
At social media marketing agency We Are Social, some employees have even worn hot pants to work, according to managing director, Lucy Doubleday.
“You can wear what you want,” she says, with the company seeing clothing as an expression of creativity.
It’s a similar story for CEO Tony and his team, who even wear shorts to client meetings, including when they visited London to meet staff at a major bank’s headquarters in Canary Wharf.
“We did get really strange looks,” Tony says. “Everybody there was in suits and it was boiling hot. But we’re a creative agency and we went as we would go to our regular meetings.”
He argues that if another company has a problem with how his staff dress, they probably aren’t the right fit to work together.
What’s right for you?
Shorts might be perceived differently on men and women, stylists suggest. Carmen says that even outside the office, shorts can be “quite divisive among men,” she says.
“When I speak to men about their opinions on shorts, they tend to say that they don’t feel comfortable wearing them when not on holiday,” Carmen says. “I don’t think there’s this type of sentiment in womenswear.”
Some men embrace the opportunity to get out of long trousers, though – including 46-year-old primary school headteacher, Dave McPartlin.
At his school in Lancashire he spends most of the final weeks of term before the summer holidays wearing shorts.
Dave thinks it’s “ridiculous” people are still discussing whether it’s appropriate to wear shorts for work – and the students don’t treat him any differently based on what he wears, he says. “I don’t think they could care less.”
Diane Brander wears shorts to work sometimes, too. She says her performance in her account administration job “would probably suffer” if she was too hot in the office and unable to wear shorts, and says she finds them more comfortable than skirts and dresses.
So what should you do? Karina’s best advice is to only wear shorts to work if you’re confident about your company’s dress code and how to style them.
“If in doubt, probably avoid,” Karina says, “because it will cause you far too much stress to get the look right and you maybe won’t feel confident about pulling it off.”
‘Everyone is scared’: Iranians head to Armenia to escape conflict with Israel
It’s hot, dusty and feels like a desert at the Agarak border crossing between Armenia and Iran.
There are dry, rocky mountains surrounding the area – no trees, no shade. It’s not the most welcoming terrain, especially for those who have travelled long hours to reach Armenia.
A woman with a fashionable haircut, with the lower half of her head shaven, is holding her baby, while her husband negotiates a price with taxi drivers. There’s another family of three with a little boy travelling back to their country of residence, Austria.
Most of those crossing into Armenia appeared to have residency or citizenship in other countries. Many were leaving because of the conflict between Israel and Iran, now in its eighth day.
“Today I saw one site where the bombing happened,” said a father standing with a small child near the minivan that they just hired. They had travelled from the north-western town of Tabriz.
“All the people are scared, every place is dangerous, it’s not normal,” he added.
- Live updates
The conflict began on 13 June, when Israel attacked nuclear and military sites as well as some populated areas.
The Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) – a Washington-based human rights organisation that has long tracked Iran – says 657 people have so far been killed. Iran has retaliated with missile attacks on Israel, killing at least 24 people.
Israel says it has established air superiority over Tehran and has told people to leave some of its districts. In recent days, heavy traffic jams have formed on roads out of the city as some of its 10 million residents seek safety elsewhere.
Those who drove to Armenia from Tehran said the journey had taken at least 12 hours. Several told us that they did not see the Israeli strikes – but heard the sound of explosions they caused.
“It was troubling there. Every night, attacks from Israel. I just escaped from there by very hard way. There were no flights, not any other ways come from there,” said a young Afghan man with a single suitcase, who did not want to be named.
He described the situation in Tehran as “very bad”.
“People who have somewhere to go, they are leaving. Every night is like attacking, people cannot sleep, because of the sounds of explosions, the situation is not good at all,” he said.
A young woman with white headscarf and thick fake lashes said she was heading back to her country of residence, Australia.
“I saw something that is very hard, I don’t want to talk about it,” she said as she boarded a car with several others for the onward journey to the Armenian capital Yerevan.
“Someone comes and attacks your country, would you feel normal?”
Some Israeli ministers have talked up the possibility that the conflict could lead to regime collapse in Iran.
But Javad – who had been visiting the north-eastern city of Sabzevar for the summer holidays and was heading back to Germany – said he thought this was unlikely.
“Israel has no chance. Israel is not a friend for us, it’s an enemy,” he said. “Israel cannot come to our home to help us. Israel needs to change something for itself not for us.”
Some Iranians at the border however were crossing were travelling in the other direction. The previous evening, Ali Ansaye, who had been holidaying in Armenia with his family, was heading back to Tehran.
“I have no concerns, and I am not scared at all. If I am supposed to die, I will die in my country,” he said.
He said Israel was “harassing the entire world – Gaza, Lebanon and other countries”.
“How can such a small country have nuclear weapons?” he asked. “Based on which law can this country have a bomb, and Iran, which has only focused on peaceful nuclear energy and not a bomb, cannot?”
Israel is widely believed to have nuclear weapons, although it neither confirms nor denies this.
Serpents to saints: The fascinating journey of India’s spiritual art
A new exhibition at the British Museum in London showcases the rich journey of India’s spiritual art. Titled Ancient India: Living Traditions, it brings together 189 remarkable objects spanning centuries.
Visitors can explore everything from 2,000-year-old sculptures and paintings to intricate narrative panels and manuscripts, revealing the stunning evolution of spiritual expression in India.
Art from the Indian subcontinent underwent a profound transformation between 200BC and AD600. The imagery which depicted gods, goddesses, supreme preachers and enlightened souls of three ancient religions – Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism – was reimagined from symbolic to more recognisably deriving from human form.
While the three religions shared common cultural roots – worshipping ancient nature spirits such as potent serpents or the feisty peafowl – they negotiated dramatic shifts in religious iconography during this pivotal period which continues to have contemporary relevance two millennia apart.
“Today we can’t imagine the veneration of Hindu, Jain or Buddhist divine spirits or deities without a human form, can we? Which is what makes this transition so interesting,” says Dr Sushma Jansari, the exhibition’s curator.
The exhibition explores both the continuity and change in India’s sacred art through five sections, starting with the nature spirits, followed by sub-sections dedicated to each of the three religions, and concluding with the spread of the faiths and their art beyond India to other parts of the world like Cambodia and China.
The centrepiece of the Buddhist section of the exhibition – a striking two-sided sandstone panel that shows the evolution of the Buddha – is perhaps the most distinguishable in depicting this great transition.
One side, carved in about AD250, reveals the Buddha in human form with intricate embellishments, while on the other – carved earlier in about 50-1BC – he’s represented symbolically through a tree, an empty throne and footprints.
The sculpture – from a sacred shrine in Amaravati (in India’s south-east) – was once part of the decorative circular base of a stupa, or a Buddhist monument.
To have this transformation showcased on “one single panel from one single shrine is quite extraordinary”, says Dr Jansari.
In the Hindu section, another early bronze statue reflects the gradual evolution of sacred visual imagery through the depiction of goddesses.
The figure resembles a yakshi – a powerful primordial nature spirit that can bestow both “abundance and fertility, as well as death and disease” – recognisable through her floral headdress, jewellery and full figure.
But it also incorporates multiple arms holding specific sacred objects which became characteristic of how Hindu female deities were represented in later centuries.
On display also are captivating examples of Jain religious art, which largely focus on its 24 enlightened teachers called tirthankaras.
The earliest such representations were found on a mottled pink sandstone dating back about 2,000 years and began to be recognised through the sacred symbol of an endless knot on the teachers’ chest.
The sculptures commissioned across these religions were often made in common workshops in the ancient city of Mathura which the curators say explains why there are marked similarities between them.
Unlike other shows on South Asia, the exhibition is unique because it is the “first ever” look at the origins of all three religious artistic traditions together, rather than separately, says Dr Jansari.
In addition, it carefully calls attention to the provenance of every object on display, with brief explanations on the object’s journey through various hands, its acquisition by museums and so on.
The show highlights intriguing detail such as the fact that many of the donors of Buddhist art in particular were women. But it fails to answer why the material transformation in the visual language took place.
“That remains a million-dollar question. Scholars are still debating this,” says Dr Jansari. “Unless more evidence comes through, we aren’t going to know. But the extraordinary flourishing of figurative art tells us that people really took to the idea of imagining the divine as human.”
The show is a multi-sensory experience – with scents, drapes, nature sounds, and vibrant colours designed to evoke the atmospherics of active Hindu, Buddhist and Jain religious shrines.
“There’s so much going on in these sacred spaces, and yet there’s an innate calm and serenity. I wanted to bring that out,” says Dr Jansari, who collaborated with several designers, artists and community partners to put it together.
Punctuating the displays are screens displaying short films of practising worshipers from each of the religions in Britain. These underscore the point that this isn’t just about “ancient art but also living tradition” that’s continuously relevant to millions of people in the UK and other parts of the globe, far beyond modern India’s borders.
The exhibition draws from the British Museum’s South Asian collection with 37 loans from private lenders and national and international museums and libraries in the UK, Europe and India.
Grow a Garden: The surprise Roblox gaming hit
Shooting, chasing, exploring – hit video games tend to have themes that set the pulse racing.
One of the world’s most popular new titles, however, is about something considerably more sedate – gardening.
Grow a Garden involves players slowly developing a little patch of virtual land. It’s something that, earlier this month, more than 16m people – many of them children – chose to spend their weekend doing.
That smashed a record for concurrent players set by the somewhat more adrenalin-filled Fortnite.
What is it about this plant-growing simulation that has got so many people hooked – and could it persuade more people into real-life gardens?
How your garden grows
Players of Grow a Garden, which features on the online gaming platform, Roblox, do exactly what the title suggests.
When I gave the game a go, I was presented with my own little brown patch of land.
To the sounds of some relaxing music, I bought seeds from the local shop, and watched them as they grew, something that continues even when you are offline.
Once your garden produces a harvest, you can sell your items. You can also steal from the gardens of others.
“It’s a really fun game,” says eight-year-old Eric Watson Teire, from Edinburgh. He and his 10-year-old brother, Owen, are massive fans.
Eric said “a lot” of his friends at school are playing it too.
“We can do competitions with each other – like, who’s got the most Sheckles [the in-game currency], who’s got the best plant.”
They are not the only ones. According to Roblox, the game has had about 9bn visits since it was created in March. It says 35% of the Garden’s players up until now have been aged 13 and under.
It’s fair to say the premise does not appeal to everyone – there are online forums puzzling at the popularity of a game which its detractors say is “the equivalent of watching paint dry.”
Eric says the slowness of the game has an appeal. “There’s a bit of patience to it,” he explains.
Owen told the BBC he enjoyed the competitive element of it – but its virtual produce also caught his attention.
“Could there be a sugar apple – which is the best plant you can get? Or will there be a carrot, which is the worst?”
The gameplay can be sped up if you use Robux, the Roblox currency, which is paid for with real money.
Some players are very willing to do that. On eBay, it is possible to buy some of the most sought-after items – such as a mutated candy blossom tree or a dragonfly – for hundreds of pounds.
US-based Roblox is one of the world’s largest games platforms. In the early months of this year, it had 97.8m daily users.
Its vast empire includes some 40 million user-generated games and experiences, and Roblox is the most popular site in the UK for gamers aged eight to 12.
While many love the platform, there have also been reports of young people being groomed on it and becoming addicted.
Roblox told the BBC earlier this year it was confident in its safety tools, and took the approach that “even one bad incident is one too many”.
‘A seed of an idea’
If people discover they love virtual gardening, might they be encouraged to take up the real thing?
Andrew K. Przybylski, a professor of human behaviour and technology at the University of Oxford, said it was possible the game could “plant a seed” that could lead to a passion for plants. But, overall, he’s sceptical.
“It is unlikely that a game like this will encourage real world gardening any more than Super Mario Wonder encourages plumbing,” he told the BBC.
Prof Sarah Mills of Loughborough University has carried out research into the experience of young people and gaming. She highlights a key appeal of Grow a Graden is it is free to play, but the in-game currency is important.
“This wider landscape of paid reward systems in digital games can impact children and young people’s experiences of gaming and financial literacy,” she said.
“It can also cause challenges for many families to navigate, changing the nature of pocket money.”
Gardening podcaster and BBC presenter Thordis Fridriksson, meanwhile, is hopeful that any interest in gardening is a good thing.
“Obviously the whole process is pretty different to real life, but it taps into the same thing which makes gardening so addictive, and that’s planting seeds and watching your garden grow.
“Fingers crossed some of the people who love the game will try growing something at home.”
Outside the living room in Edinburgh where they play the game is Owen and Eric’s actual garden, which both boys help in.
“I like gardening – and gardening in Grow a Garden,” says Owen.
But asked which one he prefers, he’s emphatic: “Grow a Garden!”
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Jihadists on 200 motorbikes storm Niger army base
More than 200 gunmen on motorbikes have attacked a Niger army base near the border with Mali, leaving at least 34 soldiers dead, the country’s defence ministry said.
The attackers – described by the ministry as “mercenaries” – raided the base in the western town of Banibangou on Thursday, injuring 14 other soldiers.
The ministry said that its forces killed “dozens of terrorists” in the battle.
Niger’s military is under pressure for failing to curb militant attacks, one of its justifications for deposing democratically elected President Mohamed Bazoum in 2023.
“This Thursday, June 19, a cowardly and barbaric attack was carried out against [the town of] Banibangou by a horde of several hundred mercenaries aboard eight vehicles and more than 200 motorbikes,” the ministry said in a statement read out on state TV.
It added that the troops were conducting search operations in Banibangou to track down the attackers.
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The town, which lies close to the three-way border between Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso, is prone to jihadist attacks from Islamist groups.
Niger’s ruling junta has expelled French and US forces that had been heavily involved in the fight against jihadists.
West African neighbours Niger, Burkina Faso and Mali are facing an insurgency from different jihadist groups which operate across the Sahel region.
The three countries have formed an alliance to fight the jihadists and scaled back ties with the West, turning to Russia and Turkey instead for their security needs.
But the violence has continued.
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Retired University of Alberta professor killed in Banff rockfall
Two people are dead after a rockfall struck several hikers in Banff National Park in the Canadian Rockies.
One has been identified by the University of Alberta as retired professor Jutta Hinrichs, who was found on Thursday. The second was recovered on Friday, according to Parks Canada and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP).
Another three people were injured and treated at a hospital, a spokesman for Parks Canada said. Officials believe everyone else in the area is accounted for and have called off rescue efforts.
The Bow Glacier Falls hiking trail is six miles (9 km) long and runs along Bow Lake. It is classified as a moderate hiking challenge.
The rockfall happened on Thursday afternoon north of Lake Louise, a tourist town 124 miles (200 km) northwest of Calgary, Alberta.
In a statement, the University of Alberta said Henrichs was a “dedicated leader and educator” who worked in the Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine’s Department of Occupational Therapy.
“As an educator, Jutta nurtured many students, preceptors and clinicians to flourish and grow. That her work continues to enrich the tapestry of occupational therapy in Alberta is her legacy,” the statement continued.
Corporal Gina Slaney with RCMP said that information about the second victim will be released after their family is notified.
Videos of the incident shared online show a large rock falling down a mountainside and large clouds of dust rising up.
Francois Masse, the Parks Canada Superintendent of the Lake Louise, Yoho, and Kootenay Field Unit, said the rockfall was an “extremely rare event” that was “neither predictable nor preventable”.
Rockfalls are fairly common in the Rockies, he said, but “what was exceptional was the size of the slab that detached” from the mountain.
The trail to Bow Glacier Falls has been closed for the foreseeable future, he added.
Niclas Brundell witnessed the incident as he was hiking in the area with his wife.
“We heard this like ‘chunk’ noise and the whole roof of the wall came loose,” he told CBC News. “And we just started sprinting down. I was yelling at my wife, ‘Go, go, go! We need to run as fast as we can.
“We just kept sprinting and I couldn’t see the people behind us anymore because they were all in that cloud of rock. And I saw rocks coming tumbling out of that. So it was big. It was, like, the full mountainside.”
Ron Hallman, president and CEO of Parks Canada, expressed heartbreak over the incident. “My thoughts are with the families and friends of those who are affected,” he said.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney also offered his condolences.
“I want to address the tragedy at Bow Glacier Falls, and offer my condolences to the loved ones of those who have lost their lives in this tragic accident. And wish a full recovery to all those injured,” he told reporters in Ottawa during a news conference on Friday.
Dua Lipa brings out Jamiroquai at emotional Wembley debut
Dua Lipa treated fans to a surprise appearance by Jamiroquai, as she played her first ever show at Wembley Stadium.
Bringing out the band’s frontman Jay Kay for a one-off performance of his 1996 hit Virtual Insanity, the star said he was “a massive trailblazer for British music”.
Their performance came half-way through a stunning two-hour show, that saw Lipa tear through hits like Physical, One Kiss, New Rules and Levitating.
”This is such a massive, massive milestone for me,” she told her 70,000 fans. “I’ve had a lump in my throat from the moment this show started.”
Some dedicated fans had camped out since Thursday to see the singer’s UK stadium debut, braving temperatures that exceeded 31C.
“It means the absolute world to me that you’re here tonight,” she told them during the show. “It feels like I’ve waited my whole life for this moment.”
Reflecting on her ascent to the top tier of pop music, the 29-year-old added: ”It’s been 10 years since our first ever London show, which happened to be about 350 people, and I dreamt of a night like this.“
“To be in front of 70,000 people. I’m so, so blown away.”
She then introduced one of her earliest singles, Hotter Than Hell, telling fans it was the track that had earned her a recording contract.
Since then, she has stockpiled an enviable selection of armour-plated hits, most of which got an airing on Friday night.
The show began with a new-agey wash of ocean sounds, that segued seamlessly into her 2024 single, Training Season.
Lipa sang the first verse slowly, over a sultry orchestral backing. But before long, the band kicked into gear, and the disco pulse barely let up for the next two hours.
In many respects, the set played like an extended remix of her triumphant Glastonbury performance last year – full of pin-sharp choreography and fiercely futuristic pop.
Her voice remains a strong point – resonant and flexible, with a hint of the rasp she inherited from her father, Albanian rock singer Dukajin Lipa.
It was particularly effective on the cascading vocal runs of Falling Forever, and the Flamenco-flavoured Maria.
Somehow, Lipa managed not to lose her breath, despite demanding, body-rolling dance routines that only occasionally recalled Jane Fonda’s 1980s keep fit videos. She leaned into the schtick with an interlude instructing her fans to “move those hips” over the intro to Physical.
Jay Kay arrived to a scream of recognition from older members of the audience, suited up in a tasseled white cowboy jacket and pink jeans.
“What a privilege and an honour to be on stage with you,” said the singer, before launching into Virtual Insanity – a song that became a hit when Dua was just one year old.
Between songs, the star spent time getting personal with fans in the front row – borrowing their phones to pose for selfies, signing records (side note: who on earth brings a vinyl record to the front row of a stadium concert?) and even appropriating one person’s scarf to accentuate her own stage outfit.
It was a simple, but personal, touch that helped to illustrate why the star has become only the second British female solo artist after Adele to headline Wembley Stadium.
Watched from the stands by her family, including fiancé Callum Turner, she wrapped up the show with a flawless four-song encore that included some of her biggest hits: New Rules, Don’t Start Now and Dance The Night.
Lipa finished with the psychedelic pop smash Houdini, ratcheting up the tension with a flurry of fireworks as she head-banged to a shredding guitar solo. Then the music suddenly stopped and she vanished in a cloud of smoke.
A powerhouse performance from a star at the top of their game, it was proof that you don’t need giant mechanical props or cutting edge video technology to pull off a compelling stadium show.
Sometimes, the right songs, the right choreography and a generous helping of feel-good energy are enough.
As an added bonus, that keeps the tickets affordable: The most expensive seats cost £155, compared to some stadium shows this summer, where prices have topped £900.
Lipa continues her Radical Optimism tour with a second night at Wembley on Saturday, followed by dates in Liverpool and London before the North American leg kicks off in September.
Dua Lipa’s Wembley stadium setlist
- Training Season
- End of an Era
- Break My Heart
- One Kiss
- Whatcha Doing
- Levitating
- These Walls
- Hotter Than Hell
- Virtual Insanity (with Jamiroquai)
- Maria
- Physical
- Electricity
- Hallucinate
- Illusion
- Falling Forever
- Happy for You
- Love Again
- Anything For Love
- Be the One
- New Rules
- Dance the Night
- Don’t Start Now
- Houdini
Dodgers say immigration agents denied entry to Los Angeles stadium
The Los Angeles Dodgers say they blocked federal agents from entering their stadium on Thursday, as immigration enforcement continues in the city.
In a post on social media, the baseball team said “ICE agents came to Dodger Stadium and requested permission to access the parking lots”, and were subsequently turned away.
Los Angeles is among the cities where Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents have ramped up raids to find undocumented migrants, which has caused protests in the region and across the US.
ICE denied that its agents were at the stadium. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which oversees ICE, said other personnel were in the stadium parking lot “very briefly”.
Dozens of federal agents arrived near one of the main stadium entrances on Thursday morning. Several protesters arrived shortly after, according to local media reports.
When asked by the BBC whether their agents were at the scene, ICE responded saying: “False. ICE was never there.”
In a separate statement, the DHS said that vehicles belonging to a different agency that it oversees – Customs and Border Protection (CBP) – were at the stadium “unrelated to any operation or enforcement” and that the agents’ presence “had nothing to do with the Dodgers”.
BBC Verify examined the images of the agents and concluded that some appear to be wearing CBP badges. They note that some agents do not appear to be wearing badges or any identifying clothes. CBP officers have been involved in several of the immigration enforcement operations across the region, which many locals have called “Ice raids” no matter that agency is involved.
It is unclear exactly why the officials were at the stadium. The Dodgers hosted a game against the San Diego Padres, which went ahead as scheduled later on Thursday.
On Friday, the Dodgers announced $1m (£743,000) to help families of “immigrants impacted by recent events in the region” – marking the team’s first official response to the ongoing raids and protests in the city. The team said more community efforts would be announced in coming days.
The team has a large Latino fan base, and according to a 2023 Major League Baseball study, about 30% of players in the league have Hispanic heritage.
One of them, Dodgers player Kiké Hernández, took to Instagram to voice his criticism of the raids on Los Angeles, saying he is “saddened and infuriated by what’s happening in our country and our city”.
“This is my second home. And I cannot stand to see our community being violated, profiled, abused and ripped apart,” he said.
Recent intensified ICE activity in Los Angeles is part of President Donald Trump’s wider crackdown on immigration.
The move has sparked massive protests, prompting Trump to send 700 US Marines and 4,000 National Guard troops to the Los Angeles area to support the federal response to the unrest.
The raids in America’s second-biggest city are unfolding against the backdrop of an aggressive push to raise arrest and deportation numbers.
ICE made more than 66,000 arrests in the first 100 days of Trump’s second term, according agency statistics, but on the campaign trail Trump promised to deport millions of immigrants.
Meanwhile, White House border czar Tom Homan said on Thursday that the Trump administration will resume immigration raids at workplaces.
“The message is clear: we’re going to continue conducting worksite enforcement operations, including on farms and in hotels, but on a prioritised basis. Criminals come first,” Homan told reporters.
The statement comes days after DHS announced reversing recent guidance that called for a pause on operations at farms, restaurants and hotels, which employ large numbers of immigrant workers.
Tulsi Gabbard now says Iran could produce nuclear weapon ‘within weeks’
Tulsi Gabbard says Iran could produce nuclear weapons “within weeks”, months after she testified before Congress that the country was not building them.
The US Director of National Intelligence said her March testimony – in which she said Iran had a stock of materials but was not building these weapons – had been taken out of context by “dishonest media”.
Her change of position came after Donald Trump said she was “wrong” and that intelligence showed Iran had a “tremendous amount of material” and could have a nuclear weapon “within months”.
Iran has always said that its nuclear programme is entirely peaceful and that it has never sought to develop a nuclear weapon.
On Thursday Trump said he was giving Tehran the “maximum” of two weeks to reach a deal on its nuclear activities with Washington. He said he would soon decide whether the US should join Israel’s strikes on Iran.
Disagreement has been building within Trump’s “America First” movement over whether the US should enter the conflict.
On Saturday morning, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said his country was “absolutely ready for a negotiated solution” on their nuclear programme but that Iran “cannot go through negotiations with the US when our people are under bombardment”.
- Live updates
- Was Iran months away from producing a nuclear bomb?
In her post on social media, Gabbard said US intelligence showed Iran is “at the point that it can produce a nuclear weapon within weeks to months”.
“President Trump has been clear that can’t happen, and I agree,” she added.
Gabbard shared a video of her full testimony before Congress in March, where she said US intelligence agencies had concluded Iran was not building nuclear weapons.
Experts also determined Iran had not resumed its suspended 2003 nuclear weapons programme, she added in the clip, even as the nation’s stockpile of enriched uranium – a component of such weapons – was at an all-time high.
In her testimony, she said Iran’s stock was “unprecedented for a state without nuclear weapons”.
Earlier this month, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) – the global nuclear watchdog – expressed concern about Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium, which can be used to make reactor fuel but also nuclear weapons.
Gabbard’s March testimony has been previously criticised by Trump, who earlier told reporters he did not “care what she said”.
The US president said he believes Iran were “very close to having a weapon” and his country would not allow that to happen.
In 2015, Iran agreed a long-term deal on its nuclear programme with a group of world powers after years of tension over the country’s alleged efforts to develop a nuclear weapon.
Iran had been engaging in talks with the US this year over its nuclear programme and was scheduled to hold a further round when Israel launched strikes on Iran on 13 June, which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said targeted “the heart” of Iran’s nuclear programme.
“If not stopped, Iran could produce a nuclear weapon in a very short time,” Netanyahu claimed.
Israeli air strikes have destroyed Iranian military facilities and weapons, and killed senior military commanders and nuclear scientists.
Iran’s health ministry said on Saturday that at least 430 people had been killed, while a human rights group, the Human Rights Activists News Agency, put the unofficial death toll at 657 on Friday.
Iran has retaliated with missile and drone strikes against Israel, killing 25 people including one who suffered a heart attack.
Prince William celebrates birthday with puppy photo
A photo of the Prince of Wales with another generation – this time of puppies – has been posted on social media by Kensington Palace to mark his 43rd birthday.
The picture, taken by the Princess of Wales, shows Prince William with their family’s Cocker spaniel, Orla, and three of her four recently-arrived puppies.
The message for Prince William was signed online “with love”, with the initials of Catherine and their children, George, Charlotte, Louis, and “the puppies”, plus a paw print emoji.
The picture was taken in Windsor earlier this month.
There was also a message online for Prince William from the official account of the Royal Family, saying “Happy Birthday to The Prince of Wales!”, plus some celebratory emojis.
An accompanying picture, of the prince sitting on a stone wall, was taken while he visited farmers and food producers on the Duchy of Cornwall – a parcel of land William now owns – in May.
Orla was given to the royal couple by Catherine’s brother, James Middleton, in 2020, shortly after the death of their previous dog Lupo.
The dog – seen walking behind William in the picture – gave birth to four puppies in May.
Spaniels are well known for their affectionate behaviour and the picture shows the puppies clambering around the prince.
In the puppy picture, the prince looks relaxed in a pair of jeans and trainers – an informal moment after recent showcase occasions, including Trooping the Colour and the Order of the Garter procession.
He also visited a project linked to his Earthshot environmental prize which creates a type of sustainable dye that can reduce the fashion industry’s use of harmful chemicals – so colours can really be green.
Catherine did not appear at Royal Ascot earlier this week, with royal aides saying she had to find a balance in how she returned to public events. In January, the princess revealed she was in remission after her cancer diagnosis last year.
On Friday, she sent out a message about her support for children’s hospices – saying they helped families who were “heartbroken, fearful of the future and often desperately isolated”.
And now her photo has marked her husband’s birthday.
While Prince William was born in mid-summer on the longest day of the year, his father King Charles has been praising those in Antarctica experiencing the shortest day of the year.
He recorded a special message for the BBC’s Antarctic Midwinter Broadcast, which sends a morale-raising message to scientists working in remote research stations in the depths of their winter.
The King praised the work of researchers tracking climate change.
Israel-Iran conflict unleashes wave of AI disinformation
A wave of disinformation has been unleashed online since Israel began strikes on Iran last week, with dozens of posts reviewed by BBC Verify seeking to amplify the effectiveness of Tehran’s response.
Our analysis found a number of videos – created using artificial intelligence – boasting of Iran’s military capabilities, alongside fake clips showing the aftermath of strikes on Israeli targets. The three most viewed fake videos BBC Verify found have collectively amassed over 100 million views across multiple platforms.
Pro-Israeli accounts have also shared disinformation online, mainly by recirculating old clips of protests and gatherings in Iran, falsely claiming that they show mounting dissent against the government and support among Iranians for Israel’s military campaign.
Israel launched strikes in Iran on 13 June, leading to several rounds of Iranian missile and drone attacks on Israel.
One organisation that analyses open-source imagery described the volume of disinformation online as “astonishing” and accused some “engagement farmers” of seeking to profit from the conflict by sharing misleading content designed to attract attention online.
“We are seeing everything from unrelated footage from Pakistan, to recycled videos from the October 2024 strikes—some of which have amassed over 20 million views—as well as game clips and AI-generated content being passed off as real events,” Geoconfirmed, the online verification group, wrote on X.
Certain accounts have become “super-spreaders” of disinformation, being rewarded with significant growth in their follower count. One pro-Iranian account with no obvious ties to authorities in Tehran – Daily Iran Military – has seen its followers on X grow from just over 700,000 on 13 June to 1.4m by 19 June, a 100% increase in under a week.
It is one many obscure accounts that have appeared in people’s feeds recently. All have blue ticks, are prolific in messaging and have repeatedly posted disinformation. Because some use seemingly official names, some people have assumed they are authentic accounts, but it is unclear who is actually running the profiles.
The torrent of disinformation marked “the first time we’ve seen generative AI be used at scale during a conflict,” Emmanuelle Saliba, Chief Investigative Officer with the analyst group Get Real, told BBC Verify.
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Accounts reviewed by BBC Verify frequently shared AI-generated images that appear to be seeking to exaggerate the success of Iran’s response to Israel’s strikes. One image, which has 27m views, depicted dozens of missiles falling on the city of Tel Aviv.
Another video purported to show a missile strike on a building in the Israeli city late at night. Ms Saliba said the clips often depict night-time attacks, making them especially difficult to verify.
AI fakes have also focussed on claims of destruction of Israeli F-35 fighter jets, a state-of-the art US-made plane capable of striking ground and air targets. If the barrage of clips were real Iran would have destroyed 15% of Israel’s fleet of the fighters, Lisa Kaplan, CEO of the Alethea analyst group, told BBC Verify. We have yet to authenticate any footage of F-35s being shot down.
One widely shared post claimed to show a jet damaged after being shot down in the Iranian desert. However, signs of AI manipulation were evident: civilians around the jet were the same size as nearby vehicles, and the sand showed no signs of impact.
Another video with 21.1 million views on TikTok claimed to show an Israeli F-35 being shot down by air defences, but the footage actually came from a flight simulator video game. TikTok removed the footage after being approached by BBC Verify.
Ms Kaplan said that some of the focus on F-35s was being driven by a network of accounts that Alethea has previously linked to Russian influence operations.
She noted that Russian influence operations have recently shifted course from trying to undermine support for the war in Ukraine to sowing doubts about the capability of Western – especially American – weaponry.
“Russia doesn’t really have a response to the F-35. So what it can it do? It can seek to undermine support for it within certain countries,” Ms Kaplan said.
Disinformation is also being spread by well-known accounts that have previously weighed in on the Israel-Gaza war and other conflicts.
Their motivations vary, but experts said some may be attempting to monetise the conflict, with some major social media platforms offering pay-outs to accounts achieving large numbers of views.
By contrast, pro-Israeli posts have largely focussed on suggestions that the Iranian government is facing mounting dissent as the strikes continuer
Among them is a widely shared AI-generated video falsely purporting to show Iranians chant “we love Israel” on the streets of Tehran.
However, in recent days – and as speculation about US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites grows – some accounts have started to post AI-generated images of B-2 bombers over Tehran. The B-2 has attracted close attention since Israel’s strikes on Iran started, because it is the only aircraft capable of effectively carrying out an attack on Iran’s subterranean nuclear sites.
Official sources in Iran and Israel have shared some of the fake images. State media in Tehran has shared fake footage of strikes and an AI-generated image of a downed F-35 jet, while a post shared by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) received a community note on X for using old, unrelated footage of missile barrages.
A lot of the Disinformation reviewed by BBC Verify has been shared on X, with users frequently turning to the platform’s AI chatbot – Grok – to establish posts’ veracity.
However, in some cases Grok insisted that the AI videos were real. One such video showed an endless stream of trucks carrying ballistic missiles emerging from a mountainside complex. Tell-tale signs of AI content included rocks in the video moving of their own accord, Ms Saliba said.
But in response to X users, Grok insisted repeatedly that the video was real and cited reports by media outlets including Newsweek and Reuters. “Check trusted news for clarity,” the chatbot concluded in several messages.
X did not respond to a request from BBC Verify for comment on the Chatbot’s actions.
Many videos have also appeared on TikTok and Instagram. In a statement to BBC Verify, TikTok said it proactively enforces community guidelines “which prohibit inaccurate, misleading, or false content” and that it works with independent fact checkers to “verify misleading content”.
Instagram owner Meta did not respond to a request for comment.
While the motivations of those creating online fakes vary, many are shared by ordinary social media users.
Matthew Facciani, a researcher at the University of Notre Dame, suggested that disinformation can spread more quickly online when people are faced with binary choices, such as those raised by conflict and politics.
“That speaks to the broader social and psychological issue of people wanting to re-share things if it aligns with their political identity, and also just in general, more sensationalist emotional content will spread more quickly online.”
What do you want BBC Verify to investigate?
‘Not just smut’ – Why it’s happily ever after for romance books
Inside London’s first romance-only bookshop, Sarah Maxwell stands in the “smut hut” – a section dedicated to her store’s more erotic titles.
Surrounded by shelves stacked with brightly coloured paperbacks – with titles including Just For the Summer, Swept Away and The Friendship Fling – young women are milling around, chatting and flicking through books.
Sarah says she wants to challenge the critics of romance fiction – often men – who diminish what she describes as “really high-quality writing” by saying “it’s just smut”.
“A lot of these books have strong world-building, amazing character development and a really good plot,” Sarah says.
A surge in romance and fantasy sales last year pushed UK fiction revenue above £1bn for the first time, according to a report released last week.
As its popularity grows, some readers and industry experts say attitudes towards romance are changing for the better, but others believe sexism keeps the genre from the mainstream.
Romance fiction spans a dizzying range of sub-genres and moods, all centred around heady love stories with a guaranteed happily ever after – or HEA to fans – lending the books a comforting, cosy atmosphere.
Romantasy – a blend of romance and fantasy – has become a reliable fixture on best-seller lists, largely due to the cult-like following it has gained among TikTok’s reading community, BookTok.
Major series like Fourth Wing and A Court of Thorns and Roses see female protagonists enter high-stakes relationships set against magical, fantastic worlds.
Many readers pick what to read based on tropes such as “enemies to lovers” and “second-chance romance”, with books marketed under these banners.
A book’s “spice level” – or how much sex can be found between the covers – is also a major factor, often focused on female pleasure, power and emotional connection.
‘Some people turn their nose up’
“I’m into cowboys at the moment,” says Sky, 23 from London – a reference to “cowboy romances”, a growing sub-genre whose books take place in a western setting – often the American frontier.
Sky and another fan, Chantelle, 24 describe themselves as “very proud romance readers”. They trace their love of the genre to reading fanfiction under their desks at school, and now get their recommendations through BookTok.
But Sky and Chantelle admit not everyone reacts positively when they talk about their favourite books.
“Some people do turn their nose up, roll their eyes sometimes,” says Chantelle, “but I just don’t really care”.
Caroline, 29, admits she “sneered a bit” at romance in her early twenties.
“I used to read romances when I was a teenager,” she recalls, “but I got away from it and started reading stuff I thought was really smart.”
Then last year, Caroline picked up Emily Henry’s bestseller Book Lovers – an “enemies to lovers” story about a literary agent and a book editor, set in a picturesque small town.
“I realised I hadn’t consumed something guilt-free in my reading for a really long time,” Caroline says, “and it was just really fun”.
She’s since devoured the entire series of A Court of Thorns and Roses, a stalwart of bestseller lists and many readers’ first taste of romantasy.
“It’s nice to feel all the feelings with something that’s just going to really entertain you,” Caroline says.
Victoria, 31, has long read both romance and fantasy for much-needed escapism: “Sometimes I think we all need a little bit of a happily ever after in life.”
She says “chick-lit” stigma is still strong, but thinks attitudes are starting to change as people speak openly about their love of the genre online.
“We’re talking about it in a different way,” Victoria says. “Guilty pleasures? Do I need to feel guilty for loving something?”
‘These are the Swifties’
Both romance and fantasy saw record sales last year, according to data gathered from more than 7,000 UK booksellers.
Romance & Sagas, as they are officially categorised, increased from £62m in 2023 to £69m in 2024, while Science Fiction & Fantasy saw an even bigger bump – from £59m to £83m.
Both categories have seen these numbers skyrocket since the pandemic, growing year-on-year – back in 2019, romance’s sales sat at £24m, and fantasy at £29m.
Women under 35 years old make up more than half of romantasy purchases, figures show.
Literary agent Rebeka Finch, 28, says the “voracious” appetite among this demographic, largely driven by BookTok, reflects broader consumer habits.
She likens romance readers to Swifties – Taylor Swift fans – known for owning multiple copies of the same album and wanting to feel a tangible connection to their favourite artist.
“They are the people that are so obsessive about books that they will buy a Kindle edition, they will have a hard back edition, they will have a paperback edition.
“They will have so many different volumes of the same book because they love it so much.”
Bookshop owner Sarah Maxwell says the demographic gave her the confidence to open Saucy Books in the middle of a high street downturn that has seen many independent bookshops suffer.
“People have this perception that’s it’s not good business,” Sarah says, but the community is “strong” and the authors prolific, providing plenty of stock.
“Millennial women have the most disposable income,” she adds. “Romance is serious business.”
Despite this commercial growth, Rebeka says broader attitudes remain derisive – particularly when it comes to “spicy” titles.
“‘That’s fairy porn’ – the amount of times that I have heard that!” Rebeka exclaims.
“Part of me wants to be like, ‘So what?’ This industry has been made for the male gaze for so long.
“It’s such a small percentage of the book and actually… it’s largely portraying fairly healthy sexual relationships.”
‘It boils down to money’
Within the publishing industry, attitudes are changing but mainly for commercial reasons, according to Katie Fraser, who writes for publishing magazine, The Bookseller.
Romance has been a “maligned genre” within the industry that “some people just didn’t want to be associated with,” she says. But as romance readers become an “economic force,” publishers have had to take it more seriously and invest.
“Publishing is an industry, so that’s what it ultimately boils down to,” Katie says.
Author Bea Fitzgerald, 28, says she benefitted from this commercial shift, selling her young adult fantasy rom-com Girl Goddess Queen at the peak of the romance boom.
“That sort of space opening up is what allowed me to move into the market,” she says.
Bea previously worked in publishing, and recalls seeing “a lot of books that could have been published as romance [instead] published in other literary genres because they think that it will not appeal to a certain type of audience”.
The genre is nothing new, she quips, having long been “championed” by publishers such as Mills & Boon. The difference now is that young people “like things really unapologetically”.
“They won’t just read a romance, they’ll go shout about it online, and then they’ll go to a romance convention, and they’ll talk to their friends about it.”
While the community has grown, Bea thinks critical appraisal of the genre is still lacking.
“Do we see broadsheets reviewing romance books? No. And they are just as important, literary books.”
Bea believes this is both because “the good majority” of the readers are women, and simply because the stories are happy.
“It goes in line with this sort of academic elitism that for something to be serious, it has to be a Shakespearean tragedy,” she says. “Whereas if it’s happy, it’s not serious, it hasn’t got literary merit. It obviously does – of course it does.”
Girl’s message in a bottle gets reply 31 years later
A Scottish schoolgirl’s message in a bottle has finally received a reply more than 30 years later – after being discovered in Norway.
Alaina Beresford, from Portknockie in Moray, sent the message in 1994 when she was 12 as part of a school project.
It washed up across the North Sea where it was found by a volunteer cleaning up a Norwegian island – who then dispatched a postcard to the delighted sender to let her know.
Alaina told BBC Scotland News she could not believe her original letter was in such good condition after three decades.
Her handwritten letter had been sent in an empty bottle of Moray Cup, a fizzy drink produced in the north east of Scotland.
It said: “Dear finder. My name is Alaina Stephen and I am 12 years of age. I come from Portknockie and I am doing a project on water so I decided to send a message in a bottle.
“My teacher’s husband took them and dropped them in the middle of the ocean.
“When you find this message, please write back with your name, hobbies, where you found the message, when, and if you could, a little information about your area. Yours sincerely, Alaina Stephen. PS I come from Scotland.”
Now, 31 years on, Alaina has received a postcard from Pia Brodtmann, telling her the good news, with pictures of the find.
It said: “My name is Pia and I am from Germany. Today I found your message in a bottle on Lisshelløya, a tiny island around Vega in Norway.
“I am here for beach cleaning as a volunteer for four months and today we cleaned Lisshelløya. On the front of the postcard you can see our workboat Nemo and our sailboat Fonn, where we live. You can also see the area around Vega. I wonder when and where your teacher’s husband threw your bottle in the ocean?”
It added: “PS I am 27 years old and I like rock climbing and sailing a lot!”
Alaina, now 42, said she was stunned when she picked up the post and noticed the postcard addressed to herself.
“I’m at the same address,” she said.
“I did live in Buckie, and another house in Portknockie for a while, but moved back in with my parents.
“I couldn’t believe it, as I had sent it when I was 12 years old, 31 years ago.”
Alaina was able to find Pia via social media, and messaged her asking to send a photo of her letter.
“I was shocked when she did, I couldn’t believe how legible it was,” she said.
“I can’t remember actually writing the message, but I do remember it was a Moray Cup bottle, and that my teacher’s husband had dropped it into the sea when he was a fisherman.
“According to my message, I had done it as part of a project on water. It was when I was in P7.”
She added: “Pia and I have been keeping in touch and hopefully we will continue to do so.”
BTS is back – but K-pop has changed
“I missed them so much,” says Stephanie Prado, a die-hard BTS fan who has been desperately waiting for the group to reunite after a two-and-a-half-year hiatus.
Her love for the boy band inspired her to move from Brazil to South Korea – so it was no surprise that she turned up last Friday for “BTS Festa”, a big party held every year near Seoul on the group’s anniversary.
The time she has spent waiting has moved “both slowly and really quickly”, Stephanie says, waving an ARMY bomb, the official lightstick used by BTS fans, who call themselves the ARMY.
Behind her is a huge sculpture of the lightstick, a must-have in the K-pop world.
This year’s event is special because a reunion is finally around the corner. The countdown peaked last week, when four of the seven members, RM, V, Jimin and Jung Kook, completed their military service. And the wait ends on Saturday when the last of them, Suga, is discharged.
“I hope they rest now,” Stephanie says, before adding, “but of course I also want albums, concerts, everything”.
The 18 months in the military that are mandatory for all South Korean men forced the world’s most successful boy band in recent years to hit pause in 2022. Now they are returning, some say, to a K-pop industry that is quite different to the one they knew: faced with stalled album sales, shaken by scandals and increasingly scrutinised over the excessive pressure it puts on stars.
The absence of a leading band, industry watchers say, was deeply felt.
“Without BTS, a core pillar was missing,” says Kim Young-dae, music critic and author of BTS: The Review.
“There have been concerns recently that K-pop is losing momentum. True or not, BTS could change that perception.”
The ARMY awaits
There are no plans yet for all seven members to appear together, but that didn’t stop the ARMY from gathering early on a humid morning in Goyang.
The long, restless queue stretched to the subway station an hour before the gates for the BTS Festa opened. The snippets of English, Chinese, Japanese and Spanish alongside Korean threw off a local walking past who asked, “Why are there so many foreigners here?”
Inside were more queues – some people were hopping with excitement and others were sobbing after entering the “voice zone”, a phone booth where you could listen to BTS members’ messages. About half of the fans the BBC spoke to teared up talking about how much they missed BTS.
“It felt like the 18 months lasted forever,” said Vuyo Matiwane, a South African who had been visiting BTS-themed venues in Seoul, like their favourite restaurant. “I was crying at every location – it was so emotional.”
And then she watched the livestream of them being discharged, which was “overwhelming”.
Being surrounded by all things BTS made a trip halfway across the world worth it, says Fara Ala, who travelled from the Netherlands: “Breathing the same air, drinking the same water, eating the same food as BTS – that’s enough for ARMY. If you ask other ARMY, they’d say the same.”
South Korean military service is a major test for male celebrities, many of whom have to enlist at the peak of their success. In the past, it has proved fatal for some careers.
BTS is believed to have staggered it so that all seven members were missing from action for no more than six months. J-Hope, who was discharged last October, has since wrapped up a solo world tour. But the so-called curse can be hard to break.
For one, the loyalty of fans could wane as new groups debut almost every week, competing for their attention. Returning idols also face a tough transition because a military stint and a touch of maturity could dampen the essence of K-pop appeal: youthful energy.
But if anyone can break the curse, it’s BTS, Mr Kim says.
Each of them announced solo projects in the past two and half years, he explains, without hurting their popularity as a group: “It feels like their military hiatus passed by naturally. Their return feels smooth.”
The shift in K-pop
Still, the industry beyond the ARMY can pose a challenge.
While BTS was on a break, the other K-pop sensation, Blackpink, has not dropped an album since September 2022, opting instead for solo releases. These were the leaders of K-pop’s third generation.
But they have been succeeded by fourth and fifth generations that have brought fresh style to the genre. The newer acts – which debuted after 2018 – lack a standout name like BTS because K-pop has become more diverse than ever. The result is a range of very popular and experimental groups.
“Most people my age like fourth generation idols these days,” says a 13-year-old fan of girl group IVE.
“Some still like third generation groups, but for teens, BTS kind of feels like they belong to an older generation. A lot of new idols debuted while BTS was away, and they have become popular.”
But the biggest challenge to BTS’ superstar status is what some see as a slowdown in K-pop.
Revenue from concerts remains strong, but album sales – a key market metric – have been declining since a peak in 2023. The slump coincides with when BTS and Blackpink were not releasing albums.
South Korean pop culture critic Park Hee Ah agrees that K-pop went through “some difficult times” while BTS was away.
There have also been several controversies, such as the headline-making dispute between hit girl group NewJeans and their agency, allegations of mistreatment by all-powerful agencies and harassment of stars by fans and trolls.
“Album sales started to drop, and some problems – like questions about companies doing the right thing – came up,” Ms Park said. Because of all of this, she adds, we did see more “deeper problems in the K-pop industry”.
That’s also why so many are looking forward to BTS’ return, hoping it will bring renewed energy – and maybe even a path forward for the industry.
“Their return will help people focus on Korea’s music scene again,” Ms Park says, adding that a BTS reunion is great not just for their fans but also for Korean soft power.
All eyes are now on the band’s next song.
“I will quickly make an album and return to the stage,” RM, the group’s leader, said on the day he was discharged.
But a new group album may not come until early next year because J-Hope still has domestic concerts scheduled, and Jin is set to hold concerts for fans across the world over the next few months. It’s also possible Suga, who landed in controversy after he was caught drunk-driving a scooter last year, may want to lie low for a little while.
For millions of fans like Stephanie though, simply knowing BTS is back together is enough – for now.
“It’ll feel like nothing ever changed. The kings are back.”
Telegram boss to leave fortune to over 100 children he has fathered
The founder of instant messaging app Telegram, Pavel Durov, says the more than 100 children he has fathered will share his estimated $13.9bn (£10.3bn) fortune.
“They are all my children and will all have the same rights! I don’t want them to tear each other apart after my death,” Mr Durov told French political magazine Le Point.
Mr Durov said he was the “official father” of six children by three different partners, but the clinic “where I started donating sperm fifteen years ago to help a friend, told me that more than 100 babies had been conceived this way in 12 countries.”
He also reiterated that he denied any wrongdoing in connection with serious criminal charges he faces in France.
The self-exiled Russian technology tycoon also told the magazine that his children would not have access to their inheritance for 30 years.
“I want them to live like normal people, to build themselves up alone, to learn to trust themselves, to be able to create, not to be dependent on a bank account,” he said.
The BBC has approached Mr Durov for comment.
The 40-year-old said he had written a will now because his job involved “risks – defending freedoms earns you many enemies, including within powerful states”.
His app, Telegram, known for its focus on privacy and encrypted messaging, has more than a billion monthly active users.
Mr Durov also addressed criminal charges he faces in France, where he was arrested last year after being accused of failing to properly moderate the app to reduce criminality.
He has denied failing to co-operate with law enforcement over drug trafficking, child sexual abuse content and fraud. Telegram has previously denied having insufficient moderation.
In the Le Point interview he described the charges as “totally absurd”.
“Just because criminals use our messaging service among many others doesn’t make those who run it criminals,” he added.
Russian-born Mr Durov now lives in Dubai, where Telegram is based. He holds dual citizenship of France and the United Arab Emirates.
The founder of VKontakte said in 2014 that he had been fired from the Russian social network after refusing requests from the Kremlin to censor posts.
He founded Telegram in 2013, and the app remains popular in Russia.
Telegram allows groups of up to 200,000 members, which critics have argued makes it easier for misinformation to spread, and for users to share conspiracist, neo-Nazi, paedophilic or terror-related content.
Earlier this year, Mr Durov defended Telegram’s record on tackling child abuse.
“Since 2018, Telegram has fought child abuse in many ways: content fingerprint bans, dedicated moderation teams, NGO hotlines, and daily transparency reports on banned content – all verifiable,” he wrote in a post on X.
“Falsely implying Telegram did nothing to remove child porn is a manipulation tactic.”
A Telegram spokesperson told BBC News that the app was “not effective for the spread of harmful content because it does not use algorithms that promote sensational materials like those used on other platforms”.
In the UK, the app was scrutinised for hosting far-right channels that were instrumental in organising the violent disorder in English cities last summer.
Telegram did remove some groups, but overall its system of moderating extremist and illegal content is significantly weaker than that of other social media companies and messenger apps, according to cybersecurity experts.
The app says it has “removed all channels found sharing calls for violence” and it denies that its system of moderation is weaker than others’. “This is false,” its spokesperson said. “Telegram’s moderation meets or exceeds all industry standards.”
“Telegram blocks tens of thousands of groups and channels daily and removes millions of pieces of content that violate its Terms of Service, including incitement to violence, sharing child abuse materials, and trading illegal goods,” the app says on its site.
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32 nations but only one man matters – Nato’s summit is all about Trump
Nato summits tend to be “pre-cooked”, not least to present a united front.
Secretary General Mark Rutte has already settled on the menu for their meeting at The Hague: one that will avoid a row with Nato’s most powerful member, the US.
A commitment to increase defence spending by European allies is the dish that President Donald Trump wants served – and that’s exactly what he’ll be getting. Though there will inevitably be the added ingredients of compromise and fudge.
Nor will the summit be able to paper over the cracks between Trump and many of his European allies on trade, Russia and the escalating conflict in the Middle East.
The US president, whose mantra is America First, is not a huge fan of multinational organisations.
He has been highly critical of Nato too – even questioning its very foundation of collective defence. In Trump’s first term, at his first Nato summit, he berated European allies for not spending enough and owing the US “massive amounts of money”.
On that message he has at least been consistent.
Mark Rutte, who has a good relationship with the US president, has worked hard to give him a win.
The summit takes place at the World Forum in The Hague over two days, on Tuesday and Wednesday next week.
Now the main discussions will last just three hours and the summit statement is being reduced to five paragraphs, reportedly because of the US president’s demands.
Trump is one of 32 leaders from the Western defensive alliance who are coming, along with the heads of more than a dozen partner countries.
Dutch police have mounted their biggest ever security operation for the most expensive Nato summit so far, at a cost of €183.4m (£155m; $210m).
Some have suggested the brevity of the summit is in part to cater to the US president’s attention span and dislike of long meetings. But a shorter summit with fewer subjects discussed will, more importantly, help hide divisions.
Ed Arnold, of the defence think tank Rusi, says Trump likes to be the star of the show and predicts he’ll be able to claim that he’s forced European nations to act.
In truth he’s not the first US president to criticise allies’ defence spending. But he’s had more success than most. Kurt Volker, a former US ambassador to Nato, admits that some European governments do not like the way Trump’s gone about it – demanding that allies spend 5% of their GDP on defence.
Europe still only accounts for 30% of Nato’s total military spending. Volker says many Europeans now admit they that “we needed to do this, even if it’s unfortunate that it took such a kick in the pants”.
Some European nations are already boosting their defence spending to 5% of their GDP. Most are the countries living in close proximity to Russia – such as Poland, Estonia and Lithuania.
It’s not just Trump who’s been piling on the pressure. Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is forcing a response.
But in reality many Nato members will struggle to meet the new target. A few haven’t met the goal of 2%, set more than a decade ago.
Rutte’s compromise formula is for allies to increase their core defence spending to 3.5% of GDP, with an additional 1.5% towards defence-related expenditure.
But the definition of defence-related expenditure appears to be so vague that it might be rendered meaningless. Rutte says it could include the cost of industry of infrastructure – building bridges, roads and railways. Ed Arnold, of Rusi, says it’ll inevitably lead to more “creative accounting”.
Even if, as expected, the new spending target is approved, some nations may have little intent of reaching it – by 2032 or 2035. The timescale’s still unclear. Spain’s prime minister has already called it unreasonable and counterproductive. Sir Keir Starmer hasn’t even been able to say when the UK will spend 3% of its GDP of defence. The UK prime minister only said that it was an ambition some time in the next parliament. However, given the UK government’s stated policy of putting Nato at the heart of the UK’s defence policy, Sir Keir will have to back the new plan.
The real danger is to interpret the demand for an increase in defence spending as arbitrary, a symbolic gesture – or just bowing to US pressure. It’s also driven by Nato’s own defence plans on how it would respond to an attack by Russia. Rutte himself has said that Russia could attack a Nato country within five years.
Those defence plans remain secret. But Rutte’s already set out what the Alliance is lacking. In a speech earlier this month he said Nato needed a 400% increase in its air and missile defences: thousands more armoured vehicles and tanks, and millions more artillery shells.
Most member states, including the UK, do not yet meet their Nato capability commitments. It’s why Sweden plans to double the size of its army and Germany is looking to boost its troop numbers by 60,000.
The plans go into granular detail as to how the Alliance will defend its Eastern flank should Russia invade. In a recent speech, the head of the US Army in Europe, General Christopher Donahue, highlighted the need to defend Polish and Lithuanian territory near the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad. He said the Alliance had looked at its existing capabilities and “realised very quickly they are not sufficient”.
Yet, strangely, specific discussions about Russia and the war in Ukraine will be muted. It’s the one big issue that now divides Europe and America. Kurt Volker says, under Trump, the US “does not see Ukrainian security as essential to European security but our European allies do”.
Trump has already shattered Nato’s united front by talking to Putin and withholding military support to Ukraine.
Ed Arnold says contentious issues have been stripped from the summit. Not least to avoid a schism with Trump. Leaders were supposed to discuss a new Russia strategy, but it’s not on the agenda.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has been invited to the summit dinner, but he won’t be taking part in the main discussions of the North Atlantic Council.
Rutte will be hoping that his first summit as secretary general will be short and sweet. But with Trump at odds with most of his allies on Russia, the greatest threat facing the Alliance, there’s no guarantee it’ll go according to plan.
Panama declares emergency over banana region unrest
Panama has declared an emergency in its main banana-producing region, after shops were looted and buildings vandalised in ongoing protests over a pension reform.
The government says constitutional rights will be suspended for the next five days in the north-western Bocas del Toro province.
The measure restricts freedom of movement and allows the police to make arrests without a warrant.
Troubles in the region began a month ago, when the local banana workers union joined a nationwide protest against proposed pension cuts and declared a strike.
“In the face of the disruption of order and acts of systematic violence, the state will enforce its constitutional mandate to guarantee peace,” said Juan Carlos Orillac, minister of the presidency.
The measure, he added, would allow to “rescue the province” from radicals.
Protests across the Latin American nation erupted back in March over the pension reform.
In Bocas del Toro, the unrest has been largely led by workers at a Chiquita Brands banana plantation.
The confrontation escalated last month after the company sacked thousands of striking employees.
Protesters have been setting up roadblocks in the province, often clashing with police.
Earlier this week, crowds damaged one of Chiquita Brands’ facilities as well as a local airport.
Dua Lipa brings out Jamiroquai at emotional Wembley debut
Dua Lipa treated fans to a surprise appearance by Jamiroquai, as she played her first ever show at Wembley Stadium.
Bringing out the band’s frontman Jay Kay for a one-off performance of his 1996 hit Virtual Insanity, the star said he was “a massive trailblazer for British music”.
Their performance came half-way through a stunning two-hour show, that saw Lipa tear through hits like Physical, One Kiss, New Rules and Levitating.
”This is such a massive, massive milestone for me,” she told her 70,000 fans. “I’ve had a lump in my throat from the moment this show started.”
Some dedicated fans had camped out since Thursday to see the singer’s UK stadium debut, braving temperatures that exceeded 31C.
“It means the absolute world to me that you’re here tonight,” she told them during the show. “It feels like I’ve waited my whole life for this moment.”
Reflecting on her ascent to the top tier of pop music, the 29-year-old added: ”It’s been 10 years since our first ever London show, which happened to be about 350 people, and I dreamt of a night like this.“
“To be in front of 70,000 people. I’m so, so blown away.”
She then introduced one of her earliest singles, Hotter Than Hell, telling fans it was the track that had earned her a recording contract.
Since then, she has stockpiled an enviable selection of armour-plated hits, most of which got an airing on Friday night.
The show began with a new-agey wash of ocean sounds, that segued seamlessly into her 2024 single, Training Season.
Lipa sang the first verse slowly, over a sultry orchestral backing. But before long, the band kicked into gear, and the disco pulse barely let up for the next two hours.
In many respects, the set played like an extended remix of her triumphant Glastonbury performance last year – full of pin-sharp choreography and fiercely futuristic pop.
Her voice remains a strong point – resonant and flexible, with a hint of the rasp she inherited from her father, Albanian rock singer Dukajin Lipa.
It was particularly effective on the cascading vocal runs of Falling Forever, and the Flamenco-flavoured Maria.
Somehow, Lipa managed not to lose her breath, despite demanding, body-rolling dance routines that only occasionally recalled Jane Fonda’s 1980s keep fit videos. She leaned into the schtick with an interlude instructing her fans to “move those hips” over the intro to Physical.
Jay Kay arrived to a scream of recognition from older members of the audience, suited up in a tasseled white cowboy jacket and pink jeans.
“What a privilege and an honour to be on stage with you,” said the singer, before launching into Virtual Insanity – a song that became a hit when Dua was just one year old.
Between songs, the star spent time getting personal with fans in the front row – borrowing their phones to pose for selfies, signing records (side note: who on earth brings a vinyl record to the front row of a stadium concert?) and even appropriating one person’s scarf to accentuate her own stage outfit.
It was a simple, but personal, touch that helped to illustrate why the star has become only the second British female solo artist after Adele to headline Wembley Stadium.
Watched from the stands by her family, including fiancé Callum Turner, she wrapped up the show with a flawless four-song encore that included some of her biggest hits: New Rules, Don’t Start Now and Dance The Night.
Lipa finished with the psychedelic pop smash Houdini, ratcheting up the tension with a flurry of fireworks as she head-banged to a shredding guitar solo. Then the music suddenly stopped and she vanished in a cloud of smoke.
A powerhouse performance from a star at the top of their game, it was proof that you don’t need giant mechanical props or cutting edge video technology to pull off a compelling stadium show.
Sometimes, the right songs, the right choreography and a generous helping of feel-good energy are enough.
As an added bonus, that keeps the tickets affordable: The most expensive seats cost £155, compared to some stadium shows this summer, where prices have topped £900.
Lipa continues her Radical Optimism tour with a second night at Wembley on Saturday, followed by dates in Liverpool and London before the North American leg kicks off in September.
Dua Lipa’s Wembley stadium setlist
- Training Season
- End of an Era
- Break My Heart
- One Kiss
- Whatcha Doing
- Levitating
- These Walls
- Hotter Than Hell
- Virtual Insanity (with Jamiroquai)
- Maria
- Physical
- Electricity
- Hallucinate
- Illusion
- Falling Forever
- Happy for You
- Love Again
- Anything For Love
- Be the One
- New Rules
- Dance the Night
- Don’t Start Now
- Houdini
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Published
Weather concerns continue to shape the Fifa Club World Cup after a fourth game was delayed because of thunderstorms – while a heatwave is expected next week.
The second half of Benfica’s Group C game against Auckland City kicked off over two hours late because of heavy rain and storms in Orlando.
The kick-off for Mamelodi Sundowns against Ulsan HD in the same city had been delayed for over an hour.
And there were long pauses in the second halves of Palmeiras v Al-Ahly in New Jersey (40 minutes) and Salzburg v Pachuca in Cincinnati (90 minutes).
Campaign group Fossil Free Football say 10 matches are due to be played in the next week with either a major or extreme heat risk, as temperatures could reach 41C.
This comes just a year out from the World Cup which is being co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico.
“Many of the players expecting to compete in 2026 are already getting a taste of what’s to come,” said Dr Chris Tyler, an environmental physiologist from the University of Roehampton and an authority on heat stress in elite sports.
“Such conditions will be commonplace with many of the fixtures scheduled for before 5pm to maximise TV audiences.
“Extreme heat could become the tournament’s most formidable opponent.”
A statement from the world governing body read: “Fifa will continue to monitor the weather conditions in coordination with the venue teams to ensure a safe and enjoyable experience for everyone involved.”
‘The dangers facing players’
Fossil Free Football say: “Particular concern is for the fixtures in the no-shade stadium in Charlotte where a heat index of 38C (Real Madrid v Pachuca) and 41C (Benfica v Bayern) is forecast for the next two matches.
“This underlines the dangers facing players and fans at this tournament and in 2026. Fifa have done very little to allay safety concerns.”
The game between New Zealand part-timers Auckland City and Boca Juniors is also due to take place in 41C in Nashville at a ground with limited cover.
Matches in Philadelphia, New York, Cincinnati and Washington DC will also be played in the anticipated heatwave.
After Atletico’s 4-0 defeat by Paris St-Germain in 32C in Pasadena, Marcos Llorente said it was “terribly hot” and added “my toes were sore, my nails were hurting… it’s incredible”.
Fans spoke of having to leave that game because of the heat – and complained about long queues and restrictions of water when arriving at the stadium.
A Fifa statement read: “Fifa’s top priority is the health of everyone involved in football, and Fifa’s medical experts have been in regular contact with the clubs participating to address heat management and acclimatisation.”
The governing body added there will continue to be cooling breaks in the 30th and 75th minute where needed – and that fans are allowed to bring empty clear bottles of up to one litre into stadiums.
Chelsea, who are one of two English teams competing along with Manchester City, beat Los Angeles FC in their opener but then lost 3-1 to Flamengo on Friday.
“It’s not easy because of the temperature,” said boss Enzo Maresca. “We’re going to try to rotate players.”
When it rains, it pours
As well as the danger posed by the heat to players, staff and supporters, from a scheduling point of view there will be concerns about the delays to games.
Four of the first 21 games faced waits ranging from 40 minutes to two-and-a-half hours for thunder and lightning storms and heavy rain.
Broadcasters will not be happy with the potential for overlapping matches at the 2026 World Cup.
Benfica v Auckland City was due to conclude an hour before Chelsea’s match against Flamengo started – but ended up finishing well after the final whistle had been blown in the Blues’ defeat.
“This is the longest game of my career,” said Benfica coach Bruno Lage. “A special thanks to our fans, who have been here for five hours supporting the team.
“We played as well as we could. The temperature made it very difficult.”
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On 11 January, David Moyes was appointed Everton manager for a second spell following the sacking of Sean Dyche, with the club one point above the relegation zone. They ended the campaign in 13th place, 23 points clear of the bottom three.
After recent years of points deductions and relegation battles, there is hope that the return of Moyes, new owners and the move to a new 52,888-seater stadium can lead to a brighter future for the Toffees.
With the feeling of a fresh new start across all aspects of the club, BBC Sport looks at the lessons that must be learned this summer as they prepare to begin life at Bramley-Moore Dock.
£200m worth of signings leave for free
Everton are currently navigating their first summer transfer window under the ownership of the Friedkin Group, who bought the club for in excess of £400m in December.
Football finance expert Kieran Maguire estimates that Everton will have between £50m-100m to spend in this summer transfer window – a dramatic increase in contrast to the past four seasons when the club has essentially spent nothing, totalling £85.5m of profit from player trading.
Such frugality has been a consequence of reckless financial planning that led to Profit and Sustainability Regulation (PSR) breaches, two points deductions and narrow escapes from relegation.
Everton must now learn from past mistakes in terms of getting value for money.
The near nine-year ownership of Farhad Moshiri, who bought a majority shareholding in 2016, was marred by a scattergun transfer policy and merry-go-round of seven permanent managers which saw Everton splurge money on inflated fees and huge contracts.
Abdoulaye Doucoure’s decision to reject a new deal in May means that eight players signed for at least £20m during Moshiri’s reign have now left for nothing, effectively writing off £188m in transfer fees.
Should out-of-contract defender Michael Keane, signed from Burnley for an initial £25m in 2017, also depart this summer, that figure will climb well past £200m.
Former Everton midfielder Leon Osman believes it’s something that “must improve” going forward.
“It’s not ideal when you’re paying for a player and getting no return,” he said.
“It’s been a difficult 10 years with regards to bringing players in and moving them on for a profit, but that’s an awful lot of money to spend on players to see them walk away.”
£25m for two Premier League starts
Of the big money signings who left for nothing, midfielder Doucoure was arguably the best value, making 149 Premier League appearances and scoring the goal that ensured Everton’s Premier League survival in 2023.
The other end of this particular spectrum is more congested, including the injury-plagued Jean-Philippe Gbamin, who made just two league starts after joining from Mainz for £25m before leaving for the French second tier four years later.
Yannick Bolasie, who cost £25m from Crystal Palace, scored two Premier League goals before being loaned out four times and then leaving for free.
Cenk Tosun scored five goals in 14 games after joining for £27m but then made 14 starts in the subsequent four seasons as he was loaned out to Palace and Besiktas.
The theme is clear: when Everton have had larger sums of money available, they have often spent it poorly, a failing that cannot be repeated if the Toffees are to build towards the European football that Moyes has said he craves.
A dozen set to depart
There have been transfer successes since the more chaotic days of Moshiri’s ownership.
Jake O’Brien and Iliman Ndiaye, both signed last summer for initial fees of under £17m, have been prudent investments – although both purchases had to be funded by the £50m sale of Belgium international Amadou Onana to Aston Villa.
Everton’s ability to recruit effectively, and Moyes’ savviness in the transfer market, will be tested by the necessity to overhaul an entire squad, with 12 players, including 10 from the first team, out of contract this summer.
Captain Seamus Coleman and midfielder Idrissa Gueye are in negotiations to extend their current deals, although striker Dominic Calvert-Lewin could yet leave the club, along with Keane.
Ashley Young and Doucoure have already confirmed their departures, along with back-up goalkeepers Asmir Begovic and Joao Virginia, while loanees Jack Harrison, Jesper Lindstrom, Orel Mangala and Armando Broja have returned to their parent clubs.
Everton confirmed the permanent signing of Carlos Alcaraz for £12.5m in May but major gaps still exist in terms of goals, creativity and depth.
Osman, who made 437 appearances for the club between 2003 and 2016, believes that the exodus provides an opportunity for a “fresh start”.
“This is where we build from,” said the 44-year-old. “Everton have had so many managers over the years and so many different styles of player who play different systems. David Moyes knows what Everton are.”
‘A demanding dressing room’
Patience may be required for any rebuild as the Friedkin Group continues to navigate the implications of PSR.
The club’s most recent accounts for 2023-24, external show a loss of £53.2m, a reduction of £36m on the previous year, while revenue rose by 9% to £187m – an encouraging picture although one that means that money must still be spent wisely.
Osman, who was given his Everton debut by Moyes in 2003, believes that Everton must retain key players such as Jarrad Branthwaite, James Tarkowski and Jordan Pickford, while recruiting more leaders to bolster a rapidly thinning squad.
“A Moyes dressing room is hard, demanding,” he said. “Having spoke to a couple of the squad, they love the clarity and what he’s asking of them.
“A manager has to ask for that level and he always did that when I played for him. You also look at O’Brien, who has excelled at right-back when people thought he couldn’t do it. We need to make sure these people stay on the pitch.”
The failed pursuit of new Chelsea striker Liam Delap, who was spoken to by Moyes, shows that centre-forward – and more goals in the team – is a priority, along with a right-back, right-winger and central midfielder. Departures, though, mean that recruitment is needed in almost every position to provide squad depth.
The club are reportedly interested, external in Villareal striker Thierno Barry, who is currently playing for France in the European Under-21 Championship.
Everton have taken steps to streamline their process, moving away from a director-of-football model following the departure of Kevin Thelwell to a sports leadership team headed by new chief executive Angus Kinnear.
He has said that Everton will utilise experts in data and analytics, football operations, recruitment, talent ID and player trading as part of the club’s evolving approach.
Kinnear has also already met with supporters group the Fan Advisory Board – a far removal from the previous regime when former manager Dyche described communicating with then-owner Moshiri by “Whatsapp and the odd phone call”.
Osman has backed the new structure to succeed and added: “It’s time to get behind the new hierarchy and I expect they would lean into Moyes’ experience as much as they can. I trust David Moyes more than anyone.”
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Prior to losing 28-24 to Argentina in Dublin on Friday night, no British and Irish Lions had lost their opening tour game since 1971.
Few, though, will have faced opposition as strong and as on song as the Pumas.
Despite quickly giving all credit to the victors in the immediate aftermath, head coach Andy Farrell’s attention will quickly turn to what needs to improve before his side’s first game on Australian soil against Western Force on 28 June.
Scratch side still building connections
There was no competition for word of the day at the Lions media briefing on Wednesday – “cohesion” was clearly the focus.
Given how clunky these affairs have been in the recent past, and that this represented a first hit for what is a brand new side, it was fair to assume clicking quickly would be a challenge.
Two-time Lion Tadhg Beirne, for one, seemed a bit perplexed by such a notion however, reminding that we were talking about “world class” players.
Across their first 80 minutes together, the Lions attack felt like it should be judged in two different facets – ambition and execution.
In terms of the former, their shape was strong and they created plenty of opportunities through sharp passages.
When it came to the latter, however, they were lacking. Offloads that went to ground or straight into Argentine hands were one serious issue, as were passes just a beat off the runner.
While there was the bones of an encouraging display with ball in hand, Farrell will clearly demand his side are sharper once they hit Australian shores.
“The whole story of the game is that we compounded too many errors and in the end weren’t able to put the pace on the game that we wanted to because of that,” said the irked head coach afterwards.
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‘A lot of lessons’ to learn from ‘disconnected’ loss to Pumas – Farrell
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Lions beaten by Argentina in pre-tour Dublin thriller
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‘We only showed glimmers’ – what they said after Lions lose to Argentina
Scrum dominant but line-out falters
There is a natural inclination to look at attacking combinations when the Lions first come together, but Friday’s defeat again offered the reminder of the difficulties of quickly gelling a collection of great individuals into a Test-ready unit at the set-piece.
While there were errors aplenty with the ball, perhaps the most concerning element of the performance was the line-out.
The Lions had 18 throws from touch and were turned over four times, a statistic that was all the more disappointing given that the maul did make headway when they got it right.
“I think we were just finding our rhythm, unfortunately we couldn’t get it quite as smooth as we wanted but we’ll definitely get better,” said skipper Maro Itoje.
“We’ll review, we’ll learn the lessons and we’ll get better.
“I think as we improve our relationships, as we spend more and more time together training and understanding each other’s triggers, that will come.”
The scrum was a different story. In what Farrell called an “aggressive” performance at the set-piece, the front row were able to eke out a string of penalties.
Starting props Ellis Genge and Finlay Bealham, the latter only added to the squad after Zander Fagerson’s injury, certainly made early cases for big roles on this tour.
Loss of aerial battle will catch Schmidt’s eye
When Joe Schmidt was coach of Ireland between 2013 and 2019, a huge part of his success was built upon an ability to zero in and ruthlessly exploit an opponent’s weaknesses.
Watching events in Dublin, the Australia head coach will surely have taken note of the Lions’ struggles defensively and under the high ball in their back-three.
There were times when those on the outside were left in unenviable positions out wide, but too many tackles did not stick and Argentina definitely got the better of things when putting boot to ball.
Some of the more athletic backs at Schmidt’s disposal would surely fancy their chances in an aerial battle should the Lions not improve in that area before the Test series.
When things did get scrappy after spilled kicks, Farrell seemed especially frustrated by his side’s inability to win loose balls.
“What is disappointing is scraps on the floor from that type of battle always seem to go to Argentina,” he said.
“There’s a bit of fight and hunger from them that we can’t accept.”
Fresh faces can provide boost in Australia
When it came to how those involved had helped or hampered their Test prospects, Farrell said: “Some people will be happy and obviously others won’t and will be dying to get another chance out there.”
When that chance comes for those who failed to impress is anyone’s guess.
It was hardly ideal that the schedule for this tour left the Lions without the vast majority of those involved in the United Rugby Championship and Premiership finals, as well as Toulouse’s Blair Kinghorn.
Now though, on the back of a defeat, Farrell has ample opportunity to freshen things up against Western Force with a host of players ready to see their first action of the trip.
The likes of James Lowe and Hugo Keenan would be expected to improve things under the high ball in particular, while both Garry Ringrose and Huw Jones would appear to be more natural fits in the outside centre role.
After Fin Smith’s strong showing in the 10 jersey, it will be fascinating to see how Bath’s Finn Russell goes in his first outing of the tour too.
‘Sea of Red’ on show in Dublin
While this was not a Lions Test in name, it certainly felt like one in terms of the occasion.
“Spectacular,” was Maro Itoje’s summary.
A huge percentage of the 51,700 crowd seemed to be at the Aviva Stadium early and it was striking to see so many red jerseys milling around the streets in the hours before kick-off.
When you think back to the South Africa trip four years ago, played in virtually empty stadiums due to Covid-19 restrictions, Friday offered a reminder of how big a part the travelling supporters will play when this tour lands in Australia.
“I don’t think the fans fully understand how much it means to us,” said centre Bundee Aki, who was on that South Africa tour four years ago.
“I got goosebumps when I saw the sea of red. [It was] unbelievable compared to what we had the last time. “
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Published
On the day Liam Delap made his first start for Chelsea, Nicolas Jackson’s response was to get himself sent off four minutes after replacing his new rival in the striker department.
Jackson was dismissed on his 24th birthday after a late, studs-up challenge on Flamengo defender Lucas Ayrton at the end of a disastrous six-minute collapse where goals from Bruno Henrique and Danilo cancelled out Pedro Neto’s early strike.
Wallace Yan rounded off the scoring with a late goal as Flamengo beat the Blues 3-1 in the Club World Cup.
It was the least a confident Flamengo, led by former Chelsea defender Felipe Luis, deserved. But the scapegoat will almost certainly be the Senegal international striker.
It was, after all, his second red card in four matches and he is now suspended in two competitions – the Premier League and Club World Cup.
It means Delap will likely start the next match – an important clash against Tunisian side ES Tunis – and the opening game of the Premier League season at home to Crystal Palace.
Chelsea boss Enzo Maresca is anticipating a longer ban as he suspects Jackson’s red card for such reckless foul could rule him out of the competition.
When asked about the sending off, he said: “It happened against Newcastle and today. I am not 100% sure it’s a red card compared to the Newcastle one.
“It’s a little bit of a bad moment for Nico. The red card has nothing to do with Nico’s future… Nico knows in both games it was not good for the team.”
Jackson apologised on Instagram while both defender Marc Cucurella and Maresca revealed the striker said sorry in person to his team-mates after the match.
‘I’m so angry at myself’
Jackson issued a statement on social media less than two hours after the match had finished.
It read: “I want to say sorry. To the club, the staff, my team-mates, and all the fans watching, I let you down.
“Another red card… and honestly, I’m so angry at myself. I work hard every day to help the team not to put us in this kind of situation. I still don’t fully understand how it happened.
“But one thing is clear: it wasn’t intentional. Just a football moment that went the wrong way.
“No excuses. I take full responsibility. I’ll reflect, I’ll grow, and I’ll come back stronger for the badge and for everyone who believes in me. Sorry.”
Chelsea manager Maresca said in his post-match press conference that the red card has no bearing on Jackson’s future.
“Six minutes changed the game,” he said. “In the second half, we started better compared to the first half. But we conceded two goals in two minutes and then the red card. It changed the dynamic. They deserved to win.
“Nico apologised. At Newcastle, we were just 1-0 down and it was in the first half. Today, we were 2-1 down but with half-an-hour left. There was time to play, but with one man down it became all the more difficult.”
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Jackson criticised for ‘stupid mistake’
One of Jackson’s long-time critics is former Chelsea midfielder John Obi Mikel, who featured on the TV broadcast of the game on Dazn.
He said: “[It’s an] unbelievable, stupid, stupid stupid mistake, I don’t know what is going through his head. You come into the game at 2-1 down and your team needs you and he does that.
“He did that at Newcastle, a very important game we needed to win to get to the Champions League. You can’t keep making mistakes. I don’t care what his frustration is, it is massive club, Chelsea Football Club.
“If you are annoyed that Delap is going to be the competition with you, if you are a big player you have to embrace it. We can become successful together as a team.
“Maresca must ask do I still trust this guy or do I stick with the player I brought into the football club, Delap? If he doesn’t trust him then it is time for Delap to start the game.
“It is the competition he is not embracing, he wants to be the only guy in the club. No, healthy competition is important. If he is not ready for it he shouldn’t be at Chelsea Football Club.”
Cucurella defended his team-mate, saying: “He’s very sad. He tried to win the ball, had the bad luck that he kicked his leg and that’s it. He’s a young player with a lot of quality but maybe needs to improve a little bit in these things.
“But he has to learn. After the manager spoke, he said sorry, he didn’t do it on purpose. He’s a very important player for us.”
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Flamengo beat Chelsea as Jackson sent off in Club World Cup
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Delap a ‘future England number nine’ – Maresca
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Published5 days ago
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Could Delap replace Jackson?
Maresca said during the Premier League season that Jackson needs support from another forward and the Blues agreed a £30m fee with Ipswich for Delap just 24 hours after winning the Conference League.
Delap scored 12 goals in 37 games for relegated Ipswich Town but also scored 24 times in Maresca’s league-winning Manchester City Under-23 team in 2021, which also featured both Cole Palmer and Romeo Lavia.
Jackson started the 2-0 win over Los Angeles FC in the opening Club World Cup match and delivered an assist. But Delap also set up a goal for Enzo Fernandez on his debut – as the pair battle to impress.
Subsequently, Delap earned his first start against Flamengo but had a quiet game where he received a yellow card. Third striker option Marc Guiu came on after Jackson’s dismissal.
Maresca previously said of the competition for places before his match with LAFC: “I am curious to see how Nico reacts (to Delap). He competed with [Marc] Guiu who is very young during the season. They are both good No9s.”
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Published26 July 2022
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