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  • Nigel Farage resigns as MP to force by-election he will stand in

    Nigel Farage resigns as MP to force by-election he will stand in

    In a dramatic Tuesday press conference broadcast live from central London, senior British right-wing political figure Nigel Farage announced his immediate resignation as the Member of Parliament for Clacton — and immediately confirmed he would run in the resulting by-election, casting the move as a stand against what he calls a coordinated smear campaign by the UK political establishment and national media.

    Farage’s resignation comes on the heels of two successive damaging revelations published by *The Sunday Times*, which have opened new ethical and regulatory probes into the Reform UK leader’s financial ties. First, the outlet reported earlier this month that British-Thai crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne donated £5 million to Farage personally in early 2024, just months before Farage won the Clacton seat in a general election. Now, a second follow-up investigation revealed that 32-year-old convicted aristocrat George Cottrell — who the paper describes as Farage’s closest personal advisor for more than a decade — covered the cost of Farage’s personal security and social media team in the 12 months leading up to Farage’s election to the House of Commons.

    Cottrell, a self-described crypto gambler nicknamed “Posh George,” has a criminal record: he previously faced up to 20 years in a U.S. prison after pleading guilty to 21 charges including money laundering, fraud, blackmail and extortion. He has accompanied Farage on official trips around the UK and across Westminster, the *Sunday Times* confirmed. He is also linked to Harborne through Tether.bet, an online casino and bookmaker that issues its own digital token, in which Harborne holds a partial ownership stake.

    The Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards is already conducting an official inquiry into whether Farage violated parliamentary rules of conduct by failing to properly declare Harborne’s £5 million donation. Farage confirmed Tuesday that a second separate investigation into the Cottrell payments has now been launched in response to the latest *Sunday Times* reporting. Under House of Commons procedural rules, an ongoing standards investigation is paused if a sitting MP resigns — but the inquiry can be immediately reactivated if the MP wins re-election.

    In fiery remarks from the press conference podium, Farage denied any wrongdoing, framing the revelations as an unfair attack by his political and media opponents. “The establishment has decided they can’t beat us fairly. They’ve chosen to use foul means,” Farage told reporters. “I’ve done nothing wrong. I’ve not broken the law in any way. I’ve not misused public money. My personal MP expenses are zero.”

    A former commodities trader who left the finance sector decades ago to lead the Brexit campaign, Farage pushed back against criticism of his outside income, arguing that political leaders should not be barred from earning money outside of parliament. “Britain’s political and media class seem to fundamentally object to any MP who has outside income,” he said. “Making money is not a crime. I gave up my former job in finance at a huge cost to fight for Brexit, and came out of that decades-long fight with very little money. Since then, I have earned income through work as a broadcaster and social media influencer, and that is entirely legitimate.” He described Harborne’s £5 million donation as a “large personal gift” and a “lottery win,” asking reporters, “Do we want leaders that know how to make money?”

    Farage cited the recent publication of details of his multi-million pound property portfolio — including a home owned by his daughter that was featured in an article in *The Times* — as the “final straw” that pushed him to resign. “I’ve never been angrier in my life,” he said of the coordinated coverage from *The Times*, *Sunday Times* and Sky News. Notably, both *The Times* and *Sunday Times* are owned by News Corp, the media company controlled by the Murdoch family. Farage has previously praised 95-year-old Rupert Murdoch as a “remarkable bloke” and “very good man,” and the pair were photographed celebrating together at a garden party shortly after the 2016 Brexit referendum, where both were reported to be in an ecstatic mood.

    Farage also claimed he has been the target of repeated threats, recalling one recent incident where he was forced to flee his local pub by a hostile crowd that later damaged his car. Critics of the Reform UK leader have previously linked his inflammatory rhetoric to a rise in violent far-right protests across the UK and Northern Ireland, where far-right demonstrators have targeted care workers and migrant communities in violent attacks.

    Rupert Lowe, a former Reform UK MP who now leads the rival right-wing party Restore, rejected Farage’s framing of the controversy, saying the MP was clearly aware he was required to declare Harborne’s donation to parliamentary authorities. “He should have declared that five million pounds. He knows it. We all know it,” Lowe told reporters. “Now he is going to weaponise a by-election to distract from that… Will Farage fund it out of his own pocket? Because he bloody well should.”

  • UK train operator bans Palestine badges after pressure from pro-Israel legal group

    UK train operator bans Palestine badges after pressure from pro-Israel legal group

    A major British train operating company has implemented a ban on staff wearing pro-Palestine solidarity badges during working hours, following a formal legal complaint lodged by a pro-Israel advocacy group that argued the political symbols created a hostile environment for Jewish passengers. The incident that sparked the policy change dates back to June 14, when a Jewish passenger was traveling on a London North Eastern Railway (LNER) service connecting Edinburgh to London. The passenger, who identifies as Jewish, filed a complaint stating that a food service employee wearing an official RMT trade union “Palestine Solidarity” badge left them feeling uncomfortable and unwelcome during their journey.

    The badge at the center of the dispute was produced and distributed by the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT), Britain’s main rail workers’ union. It features the text “Palestine Solidarity” overlaying the Palestinian national flag alongside the RMT’s official logo. After receiving the passenger’s complaint, UK Lawyers for Israel (UKLFI), a pro-Israel legal organization, issued a formal legal letter to LNER last month pressing the company to address the issue.

    In its complaint, UKLFI argued that political symbols worn by customer-facing rail staff violate the UK’s 2010 Equality Act, which places a legal obligation on service providers to avoid subjecting customers to harassment based on protected characteristics, including religion. The group claimed the badge could create an intimidating, hostile or offensive environment for Jewish, Israeli and Zionist passengers.

    In response to queries from Middle East Eye, an LNER spokesperson confirmed the company’s existing uniform policy regulates the badges staff may wear while on duty. Under the policy, customer-facing staff are only permitted to wear one small pin badge on their blazer lapel, which must either be issued directly by LNER, aligned to an official company charity or public campaign, or limited to the standard logo of the worker’s trade union. Unauthorized external items, including political solidarity badges, are not permitted under the existing policy.

    LNER Managing Director David Horne confirmed in a response to UKLFI that the company had taken swift and appropriate action following the complaint. Horne noted that the employee involved was spoken to on June 17, three days after the reported incident, and reminded of the company’s uniform requirements. A company-wide briefing was also issued to all LNER staff to reiterate that no unauthorized badges or accessories may be worn as part of the official uniform during working hours. Horne added that the chair of LNER’s internal On Train Company Council, the staff representative body, was informed of the disciplinary action and expressed agreement with the company’s position.

    UKLFI director Caroline Turner praised LNER’s response, saying the organization was pleased the rail provider acted quickly and decisively to address the complaint. “Public transport providers serve passengers from every community,” Turner said in a formal statement. “Jewish passengers should be able to travel without being confronted by political messaging from staff members whilst receiving services.”

    The RMT, which has been one of the most prominent British trade unions supporting Palestinian solidarity and backing protests against Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, declined to comment on the LNER decision. The union has previously issued public statements condemning Israel’s actions in Gaza, encouraged its members to organize pro-Palestine advocacy in workplaces, and called on workers to join national pro-Palestine marches across the UK.

    LNER’s decision comes against a backdrop of growing national debate in the UK over the limits of pro-Palestine solidarity expression in public workplaces, in the wake of Israel’s ongoing military offensive in Gaza that began in October 2023. Palestinian solidarity campaigners have raised widespread concerns that British employers are disproportionately restricting displays of support for Palestinians, while opponents argue that customer-facing public service staff should not display overt political messaging that could alienate passengers or service users.

    The LNER case is not an isolated incident. Earlier in 2024, the UK Department of Health and Social Care endorsed a review of anti-Jewish hate and racism in the National Health Service led by the government’s antisemitism adviser Lord John Mann. The review recommended mandatory antisemitism training for 1.5 million NHS workers, alongside a ban on all NHS staff displaying political symbols including pro-Palestine badges in the workplace, and a ban on staff attending pro-Palestine protests while wearing official NHS uniform. Since the outbreak of the war, multiple British public sector workers have faced disciplinary action for displaying pro-Palestine solidarity in the workplace. One high-profile case involved a British-Palestinian nurse who was ordered to remove a video call background depicting a watermelon, a common symbol of Palestinian solidarity, after it was flagged as potentially antisemitic.

  • ‘This is our sport, not theirs’: Klopp attacks Fifa chief over Balogun red card reversal

    ‘This is our sport, not theirs’: Klopp attacks Fifa chief over Balogun red card reversal

    A fiery global controversy has engulfed world football after global governing body FIFA overturned a red card issued to United States striker Folarin Balogun, a decision that came after former U.S. President Donald Trump personally lobbied FIFA President Gianni Infantino to revisit the call. The incident has sparked widespread condemnation from football figures, politicians and governing bodies, who warn the move has fatally undermined the sport’s core principle of impartial officiating.

    The controversy traces back to a recent qualifying match between the U.S. and Bosnia and Herzegovina, where referee Raphael Claus issued Balogun a straight red card for a collision with an opposing player. Per standard FIFA rules, a red card carries an automatic one-match suspension that would have ruled Balogun out of the U.S.’s next fixture against Belgium. That all changed when Trump confirmed on Monday he had directly called Infantino to demand a review of the red card, insisting the incident was not a foul at all.

    Speaking to reporters at the White House, Trump framed the call as a personal intervention rooted in his own self-described deep understanding of sport. “That wasn’t even an infraction, that was two guys running full speed that happened to crash into each other,” Trump said, before launching a personal attack on Claus, calling the referee “very suspect” and hinting at unspecified questionable past conduct. He also praised Infantino, claiming the FIFA chief’s respect had grown “tenfold” following their interaction.

    Behind the scenes, the lobbying effort was far broader than a single presidential phone call, reporting from Politico reveals: White House FIFA World Cup Task Force executive director Andrew Giuliani, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, and senior United States Soccer Federation officials spent four days organizing and lobbying to overturn the suspension. On Sunday, FIFA stunned the global sports community by reversing the red card, replacing it with a one-year probationary period, by invoking Article 27 of the FIFA disciplinary code – a provision that is almost never used in practice. Balogun was cleared to start against Belgium on Monday, though he turned in an underwhelming performance as Belgium secured a comfortable 4-1 victory.

    Infantino has pushed back against claims of political interference, insisting the decision was made independently by FIFA’s judicial bodies and not as a result of his conversation with Trump. “During our conversation, I explained that there was an ongoing legal process involving Fifa’s independent judicial bodies and that the case would be decided in due course by the competent bodies,” Infantino said. “That is how Fifa’s system works, and it is a principle that I will always uphold.”

    That explanation has done little to quiet widespread outrage. Former Liverpool manager Jürgen Klopp, one of the most respected figures in top club football, delivered a rare public rebuke of Infantino in response to the debacle. “This is our sport, not theirs,” Klopp said. “If Donald Trump and Gianni Infantino really sorted this out between themselves, it is madness. It calls everything into question.”

    FIFA’s chief of referees, Pierluigi Collina, rushed to defend Claus, the referee at the center of Trump’s attack, calling him an “experienced and highly respected” official and confirming FIFA retains full confidence in his work. The South American Football Confederation echoed that defense in an official statement.

    The backlash has extended to political circles in the United Kingdom, where multiple senior politicians have called for Infantino’s immediate resignation. Clive Betts, chair of the UK Parliament’s all-party group for football and a member of the ruling Labour Party, said: “The first thing they’ve got to do is explain their decision and if it literally was just a phone call from Trump then I’m sorry, but I think he has to resign or Fifa has to sack him if he won’t.” Ed Davey, leader of the UK Liberal Democrats, added: “No matter where it’s held, the World Cup belongs to the fans – not gangsters like Trump.” Former British sports minister Gerry Sutcliffe called the situation “appalling”, saying: “This clearly is an appalling situation where politicians and sport executives have ruined the integrity of the game. Infantino should resign immediately and Fifa should hold an immediate inquiry. President Trump admits contacting Infantino.”

    Even disgraced former FIFA president Sepp Blatter, who was banned from FIFA activities in 2015 over a widespread corruption scandal, joined the criticism. In a post on X, Blatter wrote: “Red cards are not overturned by political phone calls. They are overturned by rules, evidence and independent bodies. If a US President intervenes with the FIFA President – and a player is suddenly cleared before a World Cup knockout match – the question is unavoidable: Quo vadis [where are you going], FIFA?”

    European football’s governing body UEFA went a step further, saying the decision to reverse the red card “crossed a red line” in its own official statement. “Football, like any other sports, relies on rules, which are the basis for fair, honest and transparent competition. Sometimes rules are open to interpretation. In this case not,” the statement read. “A minimum automatic suspension of one match following a red card is not a discretionary option and does not require the decision of a competent body to be enacted.”

    The Belgian Football Association, which was directly impacted by the decision since it was set to face the U.S. with Balogun in the line-up, challenged Balogun’s eligibility to play before the match, noting it would leave “all further actions open” if FIFA allowed him to take the field. FIFA rejected Belgium’s appeal, ruling the association was not an interested party in the proceedings and rendering the challenge inadmissible. After the match, Belgian midfielder Nicolas Raskin said his squad had been unified by a “sense of injustice” over the off-pitch chaos, saying the team was determined to respond on the pitch. Responding to the controversy, after Romelu Lukaku scored Belgium’s fourth goal the team celebrated by performing the “Trump dance” that the former president popularized during his 2024 election campaign. The Belgian FA also posted a photo of Lukaku cupping his ear to Instagram with the caption “overturn this”, a thinly veiled jab at FIFA’s controversial decision.

  • Belgium considers becoming latest EU country to recognise Palestinian statehood

    Belgium considers becoming latest EU country to recognise Palestinian statehood

    In a landmark announcement Monday, Belgian Foreign Minister Maxime Prevot confirmed he has directed his ministerial team to finalize preparations for Belgium’s formal recognition of an independent Palestinian state. The long-awaited policy shift comes just after Hamas carried out a key prerequisite set by the Belgian government: dissolving its 18-year governing administration in the Gaza Strip.

    Speaking to public broadcaster VRT, Prevot acknowledged uncertainty over whether the preparations will be completed in time for this Friday’s scheduled council of ministers meeting, but emphasized that the issue will be brought to the body for a vote in the near future. “I don’t know if we will be ready by Friday, but it will be on the table soon,” Prevot told reporters.

    Hamas’s formal dissolution of its Gaza governance clears the path for a handover of power to the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG), a Cairo-based body made up of independent Palestinian technocrats drawn from the Gaza Strip. This new administrative structure was designed to oversee daily civilian affairs in the enclave under the terms of the September 2025 ceasefire agreement mediated by the United States, Qatar, and Egypt.

    The pathway to this step was laid out more than a year ago, when Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever announced at United Nations headquarters in New York that Belgium would recognize Palestinian statehood only after two core conditions were met: the release of all remaining hostages held in Gaza, and the full withdrawal of Hamas from the territory’s governing institutions. A member of the Belgian parliament whose party had long pushed for recognition noted Monday that a cross-party agreement with the federal government had been reached the previous summer after months of negotiations, saying “Belgium must not break its word” on its commitment to recognize Palestine once conditions were met.

    If Belgium proceeds with recognition, it will join a growing wave of European nations that have formalized their recognition of Palestinian statehood following the outbreak of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza in October 2023, which the report notes has killed more than 73,000 Palestinians to date, with thousands more still missing and presumed dead under rubble. Spain, Ireland, and Norway became the first Western European states to grant formal recognition in 2024, joining more than 140 existing United Nations member states that already recognize Palestinian statehood. Most recently, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia announced their recognition in September 2025, a move that was quickly followed by France and Portugal. The wave of recognitions has drawn sharp condemnation from both the United States and Israel, which have opposed unilateral recognition of Palestine by Western nations.

  • Will the Iran-US MoU reshape economic relations in the Gulf?

    Will the Iran-US MoU reshape economic relations in the Gulf?

    On June 17, the United States and Iran signed a landmark Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) that carries the potential to upend the long-standing economic status quo of the Persian Gulf, unlocking new avenues for expanded bilateral and regional trade, as well as foreign direct investment into the Islamic Republic. At the core of this preliminary agreement is a sweeping commitment to roll back decades of punitive U.S. sanctions and reinsert Iran into the fabric of regional economic cooperation frameworks.

    Under the terms laid out in the MoU, Washington will lift both primary and secondary sanctions on Iran, and establish a $300 billion reconstruction and development fund backed by the U.S. and its regional Gulf partners. For Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states, which have long balanced geopolitical tension with Iran against the untapped commercial potential of closer ties, the deal represents a potential turning point after decades of estrangement.

    Qatar, one of the key mediators that brokered the agreement, has already moved to frame sanctions relief as a major economic opportunity. Speaking on the sidelines of this year’s G7 summit, Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim highlighted that the deal would open “huge investment opportunities in Iran”, signaling that many Gulf capitals view expanded economic engagement as a tangible reward for successful diplomatic outreach. This momentum builds on the 2023 Iran-Saudi Arabia reconciliation deal, which saw Riyadh signal its readiness to launch large-scale infrastructure and investment projects inside Iran shortly after diplomatic ties were restored. At the time, Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed al-Jadaan noted that investments could roll out “very quickly” once diplomatic relations were normalized, but those plans never materialized, held back largely by the continued weight of U.S. secondary sanctions that deterred major Saudi and international firms from entering the Iranian market. The new US-Iran MoU seeks to remove that core barrier.

    The preliminary text explicitly requires the full removal of all U.S. primary and secondary sanctions, and mandates that Washington issue all necessary licenses, waivers and regulatory approvals to enable unimpeded financial transactions between Iran and other regional states. Despite this clear framework, experts warn that full implementation will be a slow, gradual process, with significant lingering risks that will deter rapid large-scale investment.

    Robert Mogielnicki, a non-resident fellow at the Arab Gulf States Institute, notes that even in the most optimistic scenarios, sanctions-related risk will not disappear quickly. Regional and international businesses remain deeply cautious about the long-term durability of any U.S.-Iran agreement, a hesitation rooted in the 2018 U.S. withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the landmark Iran nuclear deal. Just three years after that agreement was signed, Washington walked away and reimposed crippling sanctions, forcing global multinationals including Boeing to exit the Iranian market almost overnight.

    Ali Ahmadi, executive fellow at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy, explains that memories of that collapse have left lasting scars on investor and banking confidence. “Even before the U.S. withdrew from the JCPOA, fears of a future pullout meant international markets were hesitant to lend to Iran,” he said. He added that years of suspended financial links between Iran and the global banking system mean rebuilding those connections will not be quick or simple, especially for large global banks with heavy exposure to U.S. dollar regulation and regulatory risk.

    As a result, industry analysts broadly agree that large-scale cross-border regional investment into Iran will expand gradually, as confidence rebuilds and the financial infrastructure needed to support transactions is reconstructed. In the near term, growth will be concentrated in existing small and medium-volume trade routes, with sectors including consumer goods, electronics, automobiles, medical supplies, pharmaceuticals and construction materials poised to see immediate expansion.

    Iraq, alongside the Kurdistan Regional Government, will also play a central role in this early growth, notes Amanj Yarwaessi, director of the MEED Foundation. Baghdad and Erbil already maintain high-volume trade links with Iran, supported by established cross-border transport infrastructure, multiple official border crossings, and deep-rooted private sector relationships that have persisted through years of sanctions and tension.

    Notably, all six GCC member states have publicly welcomed the June MoU, a show of unified diplomatic support that comes even as the bloc has faced months of direct Iranian missile and drone attacks targeting GCC territory starting in late February. Alongside Qatari and Pakistani mediation that enabled the MoU, Gulf states have already taken tangible steps toward deeper engagement: Oman has held bilateral talks with Iran over joint management of the strategic Strait of Hormuz, and delegations from Doha, Muscat and Riyadh all attended the July 3 funeral of former Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

    Mehran Haghirian, research director at the Bourse & Bazaar Foundation, explains that this unified GCC approach marks a clear shift from pre-2023 dynamics. “Qatar and Oman are not just representing their own interests, but those of the entire GCC,” he said, contrasting this with the split approach seen in years past, when even after the UAE-Iran reconciliation, Dubai expanded private trade with Tehran while Abu Dhabi continued to frame Iran as a core threat to regional security. Haghirian notes that recent regional conflict has forced that long-unresolved tension into the open, clearing the way for a coordinated GCC approach.

    Still, analysts agree that the long-term success of Iran-GCC rapprochement will depend on whether economic progress can be matched by tangible progress on regional security. GCC states have made clear that large-scale long-term investment will not move forward unless Tehran provides credible assurances that it will halt attacks on GCC territory and de-escalate regional tensions.

    Justin Alexander, director of Khalij Economics, argues that for Iran to unlock the full economic benefits of Gulf trade and investment, it will need to acknowledge the harm caused by recent attacks that have killed Gulf nationals, and make binding commitments to avoid future aggression. Despite these significant security and implementation hurdles, the underlying commercial incentives for closer regional integration remain strong for both Iran and its Gulf neighbors.

    Decades of geographic proximity, pre-existing trade networks, and deep people-to-people business connections have created a foundation of commercial links that have persisted through years of strained diplomatic relations and repeated rounds of U.S. sanctions. These existing connections, spanning traders, logistics providers, distributors and cross-border investors, mean regional integration can build on existing infrastructure rather than starting from zero. If security concerns can be addressed and sanctions risks are gradually eliminated, this foundation could support rapid expansion of economic ties across the Gulf.

  • Ghana delays visit by South African president amid row over anti-migrant protests

    Ghana delays visit by South African president amid row over anti-migrant protests

    A deepening diplomatic dispute between Ghana and South Africa, sparked by violent anti-foreign xenophobic protests in South Africa, has led Ghana to postpone a planned state visit by South African President Cyril Ramaphosa that was intended to ease cross-border tensions.

    Ramaphosa had scheduled the high-profile visit for the first week of August, a trip widely viewed as an opportunity to open dialogue and repair frayed relations between the two African nations following weeks of unrest targeting foreign residents. But Ghanaian officials concluded that proceeding with the visit amid widespread public anger over the treatment of Ghanaian citizens in South Africa would likely trigger large-scale disruptive protests, leading to the decision to delay the trip indefinitely for the time being.

    “We sent them a communication indicating that it would be best to defer the visit in view of the present climate around xenophobia,” Ghanaian government spokesman Felix Kwakye Ofosu confirmed to the BBC in a statement Tuesday.

    In response, South African presidential spokesperson Vincent Magwenya reaffirmed the country’s continued commitment to strengthening bilateral ties, framing the two nations as sister partners aligned on advancing shared pan-African goals. “The two countries will continue to engage through diplomatic channels to identify a mutually convenient date,” Magwenya noted, downplaying the severity of the current rift.

    Tensions began to spike earlier this year after a graphic video of a Ghanaian resident in South Africa being harassed and ordered to leave the country went viral across social media, sparking outrage across West Africa. Since the unrest erupted, Ghana has already repatriated more than 900 of its citizens from South Africa, with a final group of more than 900 additional Ghanaians expected to be brought home in the coming weeks.

    Ghana is not alone in its response to the anti-immigrant unrest. Other African nations including Nigeria, Malawi, and Kenya have also organized repatriations for their citizens who felt unsafe amid the protests. Local anti-immigration groups gave undocumented migrants a deadline of June 30 to leave South Africa, and United Nations data indicates that roughly 25,000 foreign migrants have been repatriated to their home countries across the continent so far.

    The dispute escalated dramatically last week over conflicting accounts of a Ghanaian national’s death in Cape Town’s Khayelitsha suburb. Ghanaian authorities allege that 40-year-old Bahiru Isak was killed during anti-immigration protests held on June 30, a claim South African officials have outright denied. South African authorities confirm only one Ghanaian fatality, 35-year-old Kwabena Boagen, and insist his death was not connected to the xenophobic demonstrations. This disagreement led South Africa’s Justice Minister to accuse Ghana of spreading deliberate misinformation about the unrest and irregular migration.

    A core point of contention also remains over the immigration status of repatriated Ghanaians: Ghana claims nearly all of its citizens residing in South Africa held valid legal residency documentation, a claim Pretoria has rejected. Neither side has yet released public evidence to back up their opposing assertions.

    Back in May, Ghana submitted an official petition to the African Union calling for a formal fact-finding mission and urgent intervention to address the recurring waves of xenophobic violence in South Africa. Ghanaian officials argue that attacks on foreign African residents directly contradict the core principles of the African Continental Free Trade Area agreement, which aims to facilitate free movement of people and goods across the continent.

    Regional political analysts warn that if South Africa does not take urgent, concrete action to address the anti-immigrant violence and resolve ongoing diplomatic tensions, it faces growing political isolation across the African continent.

    Xenophobic sentiment targeting foreign residents is not a new issue in South Africa. For decades, some native South Africans have blamed undocumented and documented foreign migrants alike for high levels of domestic unemployment and rising crime rates. But many citizens of other African nations have pushed back on this narrative, reminding Black South Africans of the widespread cross-border solidarity and support their countries provided during the anti-apartheid struggle that led to South Africa’s transition to multiracial democracy.

    Additional reporting for this article was contributed by Khanyisile Ngcobo and Natasha Booty. More coverage of African political and social developments is available at BBCAfrica.com.

  • EU lawmakers call for probe of FIFA boss over Trump contact before US-Belgium match

    EU lawmakers call for probe of FIFA boss over Trump contact before US-Belgium match

    BRUSSELS — A growing coalition of European legislators has rallied behind a formal push to launch an official inquiry within the European Parliament into Gianni Infantino, the president of global soccer governing body FIFA, over his role in the controversial reversal of a suspension for United States men’s national team forward Folarin Balogun.

    The controversy traces back to a July 1 friendly match between the U.S. and Bosnia-Herzegovina, where Balogun received a straight red card before the U.S. secured a win. Under standard FIFA competition rules, a red card suspension automatically forces a player to sit out his team’s next scheduled match. But just days after the red card was issued, the suspension was lifted ahead of the United States’ next fixture on Monday, following reported direct intervention by former U.S. President Donald Trump, who personally appealed to Infantino to clear Balogun to play.

    Three European Parliament members — Barry Andrews, Lara Wolters, and Niels Fuglsang — leading the inquiry effort have issued a scathing joint statement condemning FIFA’s decision, calling it “a disgrace and a perversion of justice” to alter red card suspension rules in the middle of an international match window to accommodate political pressure. “Once again, we’ve seen Infantino and FIFA surrender to the demands of the Trump administration,” the statement added.

    As of this week, 35 additional European Parliament members have added their signatures to the letter calling for the inquiry. The legislators are also urging national soccer federations across all European Union member states to pressure FIFA’s independent Ethics Committee to open a broader probe. The investigation would specifically examine whether political pressure from the Trump administration directly influenced the decision to lift Balogun’s suspension, as well as probe other alleged violations of FIFA’s commitment to political neutrality — including the controversial 2021 decision to award Trump the FIFA Peace Prize.

    FIFA has pushed back against the allegations, asserting that the decision to lift the suspension was made exclusively by its internal disciplinary committee, with no outside political influence. The legislators, however, reject that explanation, arguing that core principles of fair play depend on consistent, impartial rule application across the sport. “The beauty of sport is that it is based on impartial and transparent rules. When Infantino allows political pressure to determine who gets to play, this sense of fairness goes out the window,” the legislators wrote in their joint statement.

  • Kenya, Tanzania suppress protests with heavy police deployments

    Kenya, Tanzania suppress protests with heavy police deployments

    On Tuesday, a date carrying deep symbolic weight for both East African nations of Kenya and Tanzania, large-scale deployments of security forces successfully prevented planned opposition protests from going forward in both countries’ capitals.

    July 7 holds distinct historical meaning for each neighbor. For Kenya, the date marks the 1990s pro-democracy movement that fought to establish multiparty rule, a landmark moment in the country’s democratic journey. For Tanzania, the date commemorates the 72nd founding anniversary of the organization that eventually became its current ruling party.

    In Tanzania, the planned protests had two core demands: sweeping democratic reforms in the wake of a deeply contested October 2024 general election, and the immediate release of prominent opposition leader Tundu Lissu, who remains in custody on charges of treason that critics call politically motivated.

    In Dar es Salaam, Tanzania’s bustling commercial hub, joint units of uniformed police and military personnel were positioned across key urban areas ahead of the scheduled protests. By the end of the day, no assembled protesters had been spotted in public spaces, and the city’s annual trade fair operated as scheduled under heavy armed guard.

    Speaking to reporters ahead of the protest date on Monday evening, Tanzania’s Home Affairs Minister Patrobas Katambi made clear the government’s hardline stance. “Tanzania is not a country where any group can unilaterally dictate when and where protests will be held,” Katambi said, adding that state security forces were fully prepared to act against any action that threatened public order.

    Political analysts note that the Tanzanian government has maintained an elevated state of alert ever since the disputed October election, when post-vote protests and a subsequent government crackdown left hundreds of people dead across the country.

    Wade Green, a threat analyst at Aldebaran Threat Consultants, explained that for any protest movement to successfully challenge the current security posture, organizers would need to catch state forces off guard. “Right now, security forces are on extremely high alert across the country,” Green noted. “Unless opposition protesters are exceptionally well-organized and numerically overwhelming, they have no way to counter the lethal force that Tanzanian security forces deployed last year, and are fully prepared to use again.”

    In Kenya’s capital Nairobi, the security response was equally robust. Police cordoned off the country’s parliamentary buildings with rolls of barbed wire, blocked access to major arterial roads, and took a small number of people into custody. Most businesses across the capital remained shuttered for the day as a result of the security buildup.

    Senior Kenyan opposition politician James Orengo condemned the heavy police deployment, framing it as a deliberate campaign to intimidate ordinary citizens. “This is exactly what a police state looks like,” Orengo said. “Police are deployed en masse even when there is no unrest, no march, no active demonstration; roads are emptied of traffic, and even holding a simple press conference becomes nearly impossible. But we will not be deterred.”

  • Sinner eyes Djokovic showdown after moving into Wimbledon semis

    Sinner eyes Djokovic showdown after moving into Wimbledon semis

    Wimbledon’s 2025 quarterfinal round delivered two dramatic victories on Tuesday, as defending men’s champion Jannik Sinner and rising American star Coco Gauff booked their spots in the tournament’s final four, setting the stage for potentially historic showdowns in the coming days.

    World number one Sinner navigated both a tricky opponent and a punishing London heatwave to end 36-year-old German Jan-Lennard Struff’s Cinderella run, clinching a 7-5, 7-6(7/4), 6-3 victory on Court One. Struff’s run to the quarterfinals already made history: he is the oldest first-time major quarterfinalist in the Open Era. But Sinner, a four-time Grand Slam champion, relied on his powerful serve to keep the world number 74 under control, securing his 10th Grand Slam semifinal appearance and third trip to the Wimbledon last four.

    The result puts Sinner one step away from a highly anticipated semifinal clash with seven-time Wimbledon champion Novak Djokovic, who faces Canada’s Felix Auger-Aliassime in a later Tuesday quarterfinal. For Sinner, the win also silenced pre-match questions about his heat endurance, a weakness that derailed his French Open campaign earlier this year. At Roland Garros, he collapsed from physical fatigue after holding a two-set and 5-1 lead over Argentina’s Juan Manuel Cerundolo, suffering a stunning second-round exit. Speaking after his win over Struff, Sinner confirmed his team had reworked his preparation to address that shortcoming. “It was a huge test today. I felt comfortable on the physical side, a good step forwards,” he said. “We worked a lot after Paris trying to understand what went wrong and prepared in the best possible way.”

    For Djokovic, a win over Auger-Aliassime would mark a series of historic milestones. The 39-year-old Serb is chasing a record-tying eighth Wimbledon singles title that would also give him a record 25th Grand Slam crown, making him the oldest men’s Grand Slam champion of the Open Era. A victory would also push him into a record-extending 15th Wimbledon semifinal and 55th major semifinal overall, as well as an eighth consecutive trip to the All England Club’s last four — a new record for the longest streak of men’s singles semifinal appearances in Wimbledon history.

    In the women’s draw, Gauff fought back from an opening set loss to defeat fellow American Jessica Pegula 4-6, 6-3, 6-3, booking her first ever Wimbledon semifinal spot in an all-American clash on Centre Court. The seventh-seeded 20-year-old, a two-time Grand Slam champion, was competing in her first Wimbledon quarterfinal, and got off to a sluggish start, allowing 32-year-old fourth seed Pegula to take the first set. But Gauff shifted gears quickly, seizing momentum in the second set and closing out the win in the third to advance.

    The milestone caps a remarkable career arc for Gauff, who made history seven years ago as the youngest player to qualify for the Wimbledon main draw at 15, famously beating Venus Williams in her debut. Now, she is just two wins away from claiming the most prestigious title in tennis, and already has made history as the youngest player to reach the semifinals of all four Grand Slams since Maria Sharapova achieved the feat in 2007. It is also Gauff’s first Grand Slam semifinal appearance since she won the 2024 French Open. “Considering I hadn’t won a match in two years on grass before this tournament, I’m really happy with how I played today,” Gauff said. She will next face either Japanese four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka or Czech 10th seed Karolina Muchova, whose quarterfinal is scheduled for later Tuesday.

    Osaka, 28, is enjoying a career resurgence at this year’s Wimbledon, five years after her last Grand Slam title. While she has claimed two Australian Open and two US Open crowns, she had never found success at the All England Club until this tournament, where she pulled off a stunning fourth-round upset over world number one Aryna Sabalenka to reach her first Wimbledon quarterfinal. A fan favorite throughout the event for her bold, eye-catching entrance outfits, Osaka is now aiming to back up the off-court attention with a deep run in the draw. Muchova, a 29-year-old former French Open finalist, is also vying for her first Wimbledon semifinal spot.

    In other delayed action on Tuesday, 2024 French Open champion Alexander Zverev returned to finish his suspended third-round match against Czech player Jiri Lehecka. The match was called off at the 2200 GMT curfew on Monday evening, with Zverev holding a two-set lead.

  • Alvarez one of three changes for Messi-led Argentina against Egypt at the World Cup

    Alvarez one of three changes for Messi-led Argentina against Egypt at the World Cup

    ATLANTA — The 2026 FIFA World Cup round of 16 is set to deliver a high-stakes showdown between defending champion Argentina and historic underdog Egypt, with both teams announcing key starting lineup shifts ahead of Tuesday’s match. Argentine head coach Lionel Scaloni made three notable changes to his side, headlined by recalling Atletico Madrid striker Julian Alvarez to the starting frontline in place of Lautaro Martinez. Scaloni also swapped in left-back Nicolas Tagliafico and midfielder Leandro Paredes into the starting XI to shore up the side ahead of the knockout round test.

    On Egypt’s side, manager also adjusted his lineup, opting to bench Manchester City forward Omar Marmoush in favor of starting winger Haissem Hassan. Midfielder Mohanad Lashin reclaimed his spot in the starting group after serving a one-match suspension, returning to add defensive stability and distribution to the Pharaohs’ midfield.

    This knockout match carries historic stakes for both sides. Argentina enters the contest chasing a unique place in World Cup folklore: if Lionel Scaloni’s side can lift the trophy for a second consecutive tournament, they will become the first nation to win back-to-back World Cup titles since Brazil achieved the feat in 1958 and 1962. The defending champions already faced a major test in the round of 32, getting an unexpected scare from Cape Verde, an underdog ranked far lower in the global standings. Argentina ultimately scraped through with a 3-2 extra time win, but the tight contest proved that even the tournament favorites can be pushed to the limit by determined lower-ranked sides.

    For Egypt, this match already marks a watershed moment in the nation’s World Cup history. This is the first time Egypt has advanced past the group stage in five total World Cup appearances, having fallen at the first hurdle in each of its four previous campaigns. Led by star forward Mohamed Salah, the African side will look to add another chapter to its historic run by upsetting the defending champions and advancing to the quarterfinals.

    Full starting lineups for the match are as follows:
    – Argentina: E. Martinez; Molina, Romero, L. Martinez, Tagliafico; De Paul, Mac Allister, Paredes, Fernandez; Messi, Alvarez
    – Egypt: Shobeir; Hany, Ibrahim, Rabia, Hafez; Ashour, Attia, Lashin, Hassan; Salah, Zico

    Reporting by James Robson, additional coverage from the Associated Press.