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  • Iraq arrests 47 officials in anti-corruption crackdown

    Iraq arrests 47 officials in anti-corruption crackdown

    In a landmark first major crackdown on deep-rooted graft, Iraqi security forces have detained 47 current and former officials – including sitting lawmakers and senior oil ministry leaders – in a nationwide overnight anti-corruption operation spearheaded by newly appointed Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi, Iraq’s official state news agency INA confirmed Sunday.

    Senior Iraqi officials confirmed to INA that all suspects are being held on formal corruption charges, following months of coordinated, rigorous monitoring by the country’s Commission of Integrity. The operation stretched across multiple Iraqi provinces, with the most high-profile raids carried out in central Baghdad. Security teams also executed search and arrest warrants in Baghdad’s heavily fortified Green Zone, the secure diplomatic and government compound that hosts Iraq’s national ministries, foreign embassies and luxury commercial hotels, according to regional broadcaster Rudaw.

    Beyond current public servants, the sweep also targeted former government officials, sitting members of parliament and private sector business leaders allegedly tied to corrupt public contracting and graft schemes, the Commission of Integrity confirmed in a statement released after the operation.

    Zaidi, a private sector entrepreneur with limited prior formal political experience, was tapped by Iraq’s majority Coordination Framework to form a new national governing administration back in April. From the launch of his premiership, cracking down on systemic corruption has been framed as his administration’s top domestic priority. Systemic graft has plagued Iraqi public institutions for decades, with every successive Iraqi prime minister since the 2003 political transition vowing to eliminate the practice, though none have succeeded in enacting meaningful, lasting reform.

    Global anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International consistently ranks Iraq among the world’s most corrupt nations. On the organization’s most recent Corruption Perceptions Index, Iraq placed 136th out of 180 evaluated countries, reflecting deep, pervasive institutional graft that has drained public resources, eroded public trust in government and stunted the country’s economic development despite its vast oil reserves.

  • Iran’s IRGC claims strikes on US targets in Kuwait, Bahrain in retaliation

    Iran’s IRGC claims strikes on US targets in Kuwait, Bahrain in retaliation

    Fresh tensions have erupted across the Persian Gulf region after Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) launched coordinated retaliatory strikes targeting US military facilities in Kuwait and Bahrain on Sunday morning, shattering a fragile ceasefire reached between Washington and Tehran just over a week prior.

    In an official statement carried by its affiliated media outlet Sepah News, the IRGC confirmed that its naval and aerospace divisions jointly launched the attack, deploying a combination of ballistic missiles and drones against eight key US infrastructure sites. These targets included the Ali Al Salem Air Base in Kuwait and positions belonging to the US Fifth Fleet based in Bahrain. The strike, the IRGC emphasized, came in direct response to earlier US airstrikes that hit five Iranian coastal outposts on the same morning.

    The IRGC noted that the US carried out its initial strikes under the false pretense of responding to the IRGC Navy’s enforcement action against a vessel that violated Iranian maritime rules. The statement issued a stark warning going forward: any ships attempting unauthorized passage through the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz will face far more forceful responses than in the past, and any act of aggression carried out under any pretext will be met with a crushing counterattack.

    Crucially, the IRGC pointed out that the US’s earlier strikes constituted a clear violation of the recent peace memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed by Iran and the United States to end cross-regional hostilities. Any further breaches, the statement added, will result in the full termination of all ongoing diplomatic negotiations between the two countries. Per the terms of the existing MoU, Iran holds formal responsibility for managing all maritime traffic transiting the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint through which roughly 20% of the world’s global oil supply passes daily.

    Sunday’s strikes drew immediate condemnation from Kuwait, whose foreign ministry decried the attack as a repeated violation of the country’s sovereign territory that undermines regional efforts to de-escalate long-running tensions. In a public statement posted to the social platform X, the ministry called the incident a “flagrant violation” of Kuwaiti sovereignty, adding that it poses a direct threat to the country’s security, stability, and the safety of all citizens and residents living within its borders.

    Bahrain also reported tangible damage from the attack: the country’s interior ministry confirmed that a residential building in Muharraq Governorate suffered structural damage, though no casualties were recorded in the incident. Authorities have already launched on-site response and inspection measures, the ministry added in its own X post.

    Local Iranian media also reported multiple explosions across southern Iran’s Hormozgan province and Qeshm Island early Sunday, matching reports of follow-up US strikes. US Central Command (CENTCOM) confirmed in a Sunday X post that it had carried out “additional strikes against multiple targets in Iran”, framing the action as a response to an earlier IRGC drone attack targeting a Panama-flagged commercial tanker transiting near the Strait of Hormuz.

    CENTCOM clarified that its latest strikes were a direct response to “continued Iranian aggression against commercial shipping”, adding that US military aircraft specifically targeted Iranian military surveillance infrastructure, communication networks, air defense positions, drone storage sites, and naval minelaying capabilities.

    The exchange of fire is the second major escalation in as many days. On Saturday, CENTCOM launched airstrikes along Iran’s southern coast, to which the IRGC responded with its own retaliatory strike against US military positions across West Asia.

    The current upsurge in violence comes just 10 days after Iran and the United States signed the initial peace MoU to end cross-regional hostilities, including an end to clashes in Lebanon. Both parties have been engaged in ongoing diplomatic negotiations to work toward a binding final peace agreement ahead of Sunday’s escalation.

  • Rights groups criticise Turkey protest ban ahead of Nato summit

    Rights groups criticise Turkey protest ban ahead of Nato summit

    As the 32-nation NATO alliance prepares to convene its upcoming summit in Ankara this July 7–8, sweeping pre-event security measures implemented by Turkish authorities have drawn fierce international condemnation from human rights and press freedom advocates.

    Last week, the Ankara Governorate unveiled a 13-day province-wide prohibition on all public gatherings, set to begin Sunday. Officials justified the broad restriction by citing the need for enhanced national security and protective measures surrounding the high-stakes leadership conference. The ban has been accompanied by a large-scale law enforcement crackdown that has resulted in the detention of hundreds of people across Turkey.

    Turkish authorities confirm that 225 individuals have been taken into custody, with the government identifying many detainees as alleged affiliates of two groups: the leftist Revolutionary People’s Liberation Party/Front (DHKP/C) and the Islamic State. However, the detainee pool also includes a number of prominent Turkish civil society figures unaffiliated with any militant organization. Among those held are academic Emel Memis, LGBTQ rights activist and journalist Yildiz Tar, Nevzat Ozer, a representative from leading environmental NGO the Tema Foundation, Burcu Arikan, spokesperson for the independent labor union Umut-Sen, and Semra Demir and Kursat Bafra, two attorneys with the Progressive Lawyers Association. State-run Anadolu Agency confirmed that 178 of the detained suspects have been formally arrested, while the remaining 34 have been released conditional to judicial supervision.

    Global human rights watchdog Amnesty International has issued a scathing rebuke of the measures, framing the protest ban and mass arrests as an unjustifiable assault on foundational rights to peaceful assembly and free expression. “All the excessively broad and disproportionate restrictions that prevent the exercise of the right to peaceful assembly must be lifted,” stated Esther Major, Amnesty International’s deputy research director for Europe. Major also called out a separate, parallel restriction on press freedom: NATO’s decision to deny press accreditation to dozens of Turkish journalists, including reporters from leading independent Turkish outlets such as Cumhuriyet, Sozcu, Anka, T24 and Medyascope. Major described the accreditation denial as a direct blow to media freedom, urging the alliance to reverse its decision and allow excluded journalists to cover the summit.

    The upcoming summit marks a landmark gathering for the alliance, bringing together heads of state from all 32 member states, including U.S. President Donald Trump. Turkey has held NATO membership since 1952, and currently boasts the alliance’s second-largest standing land army. For decades, the country’s NATO membership has faced criticism from Turkish leftist groups and some Islamist factions, who argue the alliance has locked Turkey into U.S. geopolitical dominance and suppressed domestic socialist and anti-imperialist movements. Public anger over the summit has intensified in recent months, fueled by widespread opposition to U.S. support for Israel’s military campaign in Gaza and recent U.S. strikes on Iran, leaving the Turkish government eager to prevent large-scale public demonstrations during the leaders’ meeting.

    Following the accreditation denial, a coalition of global and Turkish press freedom organizations released a joint statement last Friday condemning NATO’s decision. The statement highlighted a striking contradiction at the heart of the rejection: NATO’s own accreditation criteria list editorial independence as a core eligibility requirement, making it deeply inconsistent that the alliance would reject applications from outlets that are explicitly defined by that standard of independence. “Should a governmental institution with a documented track record of restricting press access have played any role in this process, NATO risks allowing domestic media pressures to influence what should be an independent credentialing framework,” the joint statement added.

    Outlets that do not meet accreditation requirements in the upcoming NATO Summit. Middle East Eye, which first reported on the unfolding controversy, reached out to NATO press officials for comment on the accusations, but received no response by the time of this publication.

    This report has been prepared for independent news dissemination from the original reporting by Middle East Eye, which provides unrivaled independent coverage and analysis of the Middle East, North Africa and broader global affairs.

  • England cricket captain Ben Stokes makes dramatic retirement announcement during test match

    England cricket captain Ben Stokes makes dramatic retirement announcement during test match

    In a stunning announcement that has sent shockwaves through the global cricket community, England men’s cricket captain Ben Stokes revealed Sunday that he will retire from all forms of international cricket within days, making the surprise declaration in the middle of the series-deciding third Test against New Zealand at Trent Bridge.

    In a video of the dressing room address shared publicly by England Cricket, Stokes told his assembled teammates ahead of Day 4 play: “This is my last two days as your captain and my last two days representing England.” The declaration came with the three-match series deadlocked at 1-1, with the match set to extend into a fifth and final day on Monday to determine the series winner.

    Stokes’ bombshell announcement landed just 15 minutes before the afternoon tea break on Day 4. In a moment that encapsulated his legendary career, the all-rounder picked up a New Zealand wicket just moments after his revelation, and received a thunderous standing ovation from the packed Trent Bridge crowd as he led the England team off the pitch at the end of the session. When addressing his teammates, Stokes kept the specific motivations behind his early exit private for the time being, saying: “The reasons can wait (about) why. But I’ve had many trips to the well before for this team and I’ve got one more trip to do.”

    Over a 15-year international career, Stokes has cemented his status as one of the most iconic and successful cricketers of his generation. His most legendary performances came in two global title wins: he was the standout star of England’s dramatic, last-ball victory over New Zealand in the 2019 50-over World Cup final at Lord’s, widely regarded as one of the most thrilling matches in cricket history. He then repeated that championship success three years later, playing a pivotal role in England’s 2022 T20 World Cup triumph — the same year he took on the role of Test captain for the national side.

    The retirement announcement caps a turbulent series for Stokes off the pitch. After the opening Test at Lord’s, Stokes and teammate Gus Atkinson made headlines when they were dropped from the squad for the second Test. The pair had spent an evening at a London nightclub, where an England team security official was reportedly assaulted by a player from professional rugby side Saracens. The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) initially stated the pair had “breached specific contractual obligations”, issued them written warnings, and launched a formal investigation. The independent Cricket Regulator oversight panel later concluded there was “insufficient evidence to establish that any regulatory breach occurred”, and Stokes was reinstated to the side for the deciding third Test.

    ECB chairman Richard Thompson paid tribute to Stokes’ transformative career, calling him “one of England’s greatest ever cricketers and one of the defining figures of his generation.” Thompson added: “His performances under pressure, his relentless competitiveness and his ability to produce the extraordinary when it matters most have given me and millions of other fans memories that will endure forever. Beyond his remarkable achievements on the field, his performances have inspired many youngsters to embrace cricket with positivity and belief. We are losing a batsman, a bowler, a captain and a talisman.”

  • Israel moves to formally recognize Armenian WWI deaths as a genocide

    Israel moves to formally recognize Armenian WWI deaths as a genocide

    In a landmark decision that underscores the growing rift between Jerusalem and Ankara, Israel’s Cabinet voted unanimously on Sunday to advance a formal recognition of the 1915 mass killing of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire during World War I as a genocide. The groundbreaking proposal, which still requires a final vote of approval in Israel’s parliament the Knesset, marks a major shift from decades of Israeli policy that avoided formal classification to protect diplomatic relations with Turkey.

    Scholars widely accept that roughly 1.5 million Armenians were systematically killed between 1915 and 1917, an event most historians label as the first systematic genocide of the 20th century. For more than a century, successive Turkish governments have rejected the genocide label, arguing the death toll is exaggerated and that the casualties stemmed from widespread civil conflict and regional unrest, not a coordinated campaign of extermination. Turkey has also lobbied aggressively against formal recognition by governments across the globe, while Armenian communities and advocacy groups have spent decades pushing for international acknowledgment of the atrocities.

    For generations, Israeli leaders avoided taking an official stance out of diplomatic caution, but the once-closely strategic alliance between Israel and Turkey has eroded steadily over the past 20 years, with tensions accelerating sharply in recent years amid ongoing conflicts in Gaza, Lebanon and tensions with Iran. Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar, who sponsored the cabinet resolution, delivered sharp criticism of Turkey’s longstanding denial campaign following Sunday’s vote.

    “Despite the extensive and unambiguous historical documentation, the Armenian Genocide remains to this day the subject of an institutionalized campaign of denial and minimization, including a manipulative rewriting of history, mainly by the Turkish government,” Saar told the cabinet. He added that multiple senior Israeli leaders, including current Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, have previously characterized the 1915 violence as genocide, but no formal government vote had ever enshrined that designation into official Israeli policy.

    Calling formal recognition “a moral and historical duty,” Saar noted that 32 other countries, including the United States, Syria and Lebanon, have already formally classified the atrocities as a genocide. As of Sunday evening, it remained unclear when the cabinet-approved proposal would be brought to the Knesset for a final vote, and there was no immediate public response from Turkish authorities following the cabinet’s announcement.

    Analysts trace the shift in Israel’s position to the steady deterioration of bilateral relations after Recep Tayyip Erdogan took power as Turkey’s president, with Erdogan’s increasingly Islamist foreign policy and open support for Palestinian armed groups pushing ties between the two countries to their lowest point in decades.

    The vote comes as Israel itself faces widespread international accusations, including from a United Nations-appointed independent expert panel, that its ongoing military offensive in the Gaza Strip constitutes genocide. Israel, which was founded in the aftermath of the Nazi Holocaust that killed six million European Jews, has forcefully rejected these accusations, calling the claims baseless and antisemitic. Last week, the UN expert panel released a report accusing Israeli forces of deliberately targeting children in Gaza and repeated the genocide allegations, prompting Israeli officials to dismiss the document as a “libelous sham.”

    Israel launched its current military campaign in Gaza in response to the October 7, 2023, attack carried out by Hamas that killed roughly 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and took roughly 250 hostages. Gaza’s Hamas-run Ministry of Health reports that more than 73,000 people have been killed in Israeli strikes to date, approximately half of whom are women and children. Israeli officials maintain they do not intentionally target civilian populations, and accuse Hamas of operating military infrastructure in densely populated civilian areas and using residents as human shields.

  • South Africa scrapes past Bangladesh and leaves India needing to upset Australia at Lord’s

    South Africa scrapes past Bangladesh and leaves India needing to upset Australia at Lord’s

    LONDON — The final group stage matchday of the Women’s Twenty20 World Cup delivered a tense opening contest at Lord’s on Saturday, with South Africa securing a hard-fought four-wicket victory over Bangladesh that forced India into a do-or-die battle against unbeaten Australia for the last semifinal spot on Sunday.

    Going into the final round of group matches, two elite sides — India, the reigning 50-over ODI world champions, and South Africa, runners-up at the previous two T20 World Cup tournaments — were locked in a tight fight for the fourth and final remaining place in the knockout round. Australia, having won every match it has played so far in the competition, had already secured its own place in the semifinals barring an unprecedented catastrophic collapse, leaving the final knockout spot down to the contest between South Africa, India and Bangladesh.

    The historic London ground hosted a day-night doubleheader, and the opening fixture brought no shortage of drama even before the first over of play concluded. In an extremely rare statistical quirk, both teams lost their star top batters to the very first delivery of their respective innings. Opening batter Juairiya Ferdous of Bangladesh swung and missed at a fast ball from South African pace bowler Marizanne Kapp, becoming the South African speedster’s 100th career wicket in T20 international matches. Just hours later, in South Africa’s batting innings, Proteas captain Laura Wolvaardt fell to Bangladesh seamer Marufa Akter, bowled through the gap between her bat and leg pad for a golden duck. This rare pair of opening golden ducks had only occurred once before in the history of the Women’s T20 World Cup, during a 2018 contest between Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

    Opting to bat first after winning the toss, Bangladesh struggled against South Africa’s well-rounded bowling attack. Led by Kapp’s tight 1-for-9, Shabnim Ismail’s 1-for-15, and spinner Nonkululeko Mlaba’s 2-for-22, Bangladesh could only post a total of 117 for 5 after their full 20 overs. Batter Sobhana Mostary top-scored for the side with 42 runs, while captain Nigar Sultana finished unbeaten on 32 runs from just 20 deliveries, pushing her to the top of Bangladesh’s run-scoring chart for the 2024 tournament.

    South Africa got a solid opening start from Annerie Dercksen and Tazmin Brits in their chase, but regular wickets kept the result uncertain right up to the final overs. Dercksen was caught behind the wicket in the 15th over, Kapp was run out in the 18th, and Nadine de Klerk fell in the 19th, putting the result in doubt before all-rounder Chloe Tryon scrambled two unconvincing miscued shots to cross the finish line and secure the four-wicket win.

    Following the hard-earned win, Kapp acknowledged the scrappy nature of the victory, telling reporters: “We seem to always do this but we take the win. A win is a win. Even if it was very scrappy.”

    South Africa’s win puts pressure firmly on India, who currently hold a narrow advantage over South Africa on net run rate. To lock in their place in the semifinals, India must defeat Australia in the second match of the Lord’s doubleheader to claim the final knockout spot, in one of the most anticipated final group stage matches in recent Women’s T20 World Cup history.

  • Eleven killed after plane carrying skydivers crashes in eastern France

    Eleven killed after plane carrying skydivers crashes in eastern France

    A devastating aviation disaster has claimed 11 lives in eastern France after a small civilian aircraft carrying skydivers crashed Sunday in the town of Tomblaine, local authorities have confirmed. All people on board — the pilot and all 10 passengers — perished in the crash. Among the passengers were five student skydivers and five experienced instructors, according to local government officials. The aircraft was operated by a local parachuting school and had just departed from nearby Nancy-Essey Airport when the accident occurred, regional media outlets reported. Local law enforcement has issued an urgent public advisory, urging all non-emergency personnel to stay clear of the crash zone located in France’s Meurthe-et-Moselle department. Officials confirmed that no bystanders on the ground were hurt during the incident, Meurthe-et-Moselle Prefect Yves Seguy told Agence France-Presse. In a grim twist, multiple relatives of the crash victims were already waiting at the airfield to greet the skydivers when the accident unfolded, local administrative leaders shared. The French Interior Ministry announced shortly after the crash that Interior Minister was traveling to the accident site to lead the initial response and oversee the upcoming investigation. This is a developing breaking news story. Authorities have not yet released information on the potential cause of the crash, and updates will be shared as more details become available. Audiences can access real-time updates on this incident via the BBC News mobile application or by following the official @BBCBreaking account on X for instant alerts.

  • Two boys rescued from Venezuela earthquake rubble after days of being trapped

    Two boys rescued from Venezuela earthquake rubble after days of being trapped

    Just days after a pair of powerful back-to-back earthquakes devastated large swathes of coastal Venezuela, two 11-year-old boys have been pulled alive from the rubble of collapsed buildings, separated by only hours in dramatic rescue operations that have reignited hope across the disaster zone.

    The first child, identified as Moises, was extracted from roughly 3 meters of compacted debris on Saturday following six hours of meticulous, high-risk work by rescue teams, Colombia’s National Unit for Disaster Risk Management confirmed. Video of the rescue captured the moment Moises was lifted from twisted concrete and metal beams, his eyes covered to shield them from sudden sunlight, as onlooking rescuers erupted in applause. Reuters reported that the boy was located close to the bodies of his mother and sister, who did not survive the disaster.

    Within hours of Moises’ rescue, Venezuela’s interim President Delcy Rodríguez announced that a second 11-year-old boy had been pulled from wreckage in the hard-hit coastal town of Caraballeda. Rodríguez shared a video of the operation on X, showing the child carried on a stretcher down a towering mound of rubble. “In these hours, every life is hope for Venezuela,” she wrote in the accompanying post.

    The twin disasters, registering magnitude 7.2 and 7.5, struck just 39 seconds apart last Wednesday, reducing hundreds of structures to rubble and leaving untold numbers trapped beneath. As of Sunday, official reports have confirmed at least 1,430 deaths, with tens of thousands more still unaccounted for. More than 85 hours have passed since the initial quake, but rescue teams have refused to abandon search efforts, saying survivors can still hold on if they have access to water and food under the debris.

    Desperate family members have led informal search efforts alongside professional teams, digging through wreckage by hand when heavy equipment has not arrived. Multiple survivors told the BBC they can hear calls for help from trapped people, but are unable to move heavy concrete slabs on their own.

    La Guaira state, the coastal region home to Caraballeda, has suffered the worst damage. Rescue operations have been slowed by ongoing aftershocks, which have added to the terror of displaced residents. “To be honest, it makes you feel kind of nervous. Any little noise… horrible,” 64-year-old bus driver Jesús Andueza told BBC Mundo.

    Thousands of people left homeless by the quakes have taken shelter in open spaces, sleeping in their cars or setting up informal camps at local sites including the state airport and Caraballeda’s 18-hole golf course. What was once a carefully maintained recreational space has now been transformed into the main hub of the region’s emergency response: its manicured fairgrounds host a makeshift hospital, a centralized donation sorting center, and a helicopter landing pad that receives supplies and rescue personnel from across Venezuela and around the world. Near the small course lagoon, displaced survivors sift through stacks of donated clothing and boxes of food and medicine to meet their basic needs.

    Milagros González, a resident of the badly damaged Caribe neighborhood whose apartment building escaped full collapse, fled to the golf course immediately after the quakes with her two young daughters and two elderly relatives. “I left with my two young daughters and my two elderly relatives. But thank God we got out alive. The building can’t be lived in. But we’re alive, which is what matters,” she said. Like many other survivors, González continues to struggle with psychological aftereffects: every time she lies down, she wakes up dizzy, convinced another quake is starting. “A psychologist just told me that it’s part of the process,” she explained, as her daughters played with dolls on a mattress spread across the grass.

    In a Sunday video address, Rodríguez confirmed that a second large emergency hub has been set up at the José María Vargas sports complex in La Guaira, where armed forces are organizing the distribution of relief supplies. “everything is functioning as well as possible during these terrible moments, these terrible hours, that our people are enduring,” she said. “Let them know that no one here is alone, not a single family or individual need feel alone. Our people and our state are here, the social protection system is here, and international solidarity is here.”

    Despite official reassurances, frustration has mounted among survivors and local residents, who criticize the government’s initial response as slow and inefficient. Entire neighborhoods in the worst-hit areas of Caribe and Tanaguarena have not yet seen any debris removal work begin, days after the disaster.

    In recent days, international rescue teams from Mexico, Spain, Qatar, the United States, and the United Kingdom have arrived to reinforce local search efforts. Tom Fletcher, representing the United Nations, said Saturday that 39 search and rescue teams totaling almost 2,000 personnel and 111 search dogs have been deployed across the disaster zone, alongside specialized medical teams. High-tech tools including small “cockroach drones” are being used to locate signs of life deep in collapsed buildings, boosting the chances of pulling more survivors out alive more than three days after the quakes hit.

  • Sooryavanshi, 15, made to wait for India debut after being left out of T20 against Ireland

    Sooryavanshi, 15, made to wait for India debut after being left out of T20 against Ireland

    BELFAST, Northern Ireland — One of cricket’s most anticipated teenage prospects will have to wait a little longer for his senior international breakthrough. Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, the 15-year-old Indian batting sensation who finished as the highest run-getter in the 2025 Indian Premier League, was once again left out of India’s playing XI for the second and decisive T20I against Ireland in Belfast.

    This omission marks the second consecutive match the young prodigy has missed out on, after he did not feature in the series opener on Friday. That first match ended in a historic 34-run victory for Ireland, the first time the nation has beaten India in any format of international cricket.

    If given his cap in the upcoming five-match T20 series against England, which kicks off next Wednesday, Sooryavanshi — who will be 15 years and 93 days old on the date of the first match — will break the long-standing record for the youngest male player to debut in top-tier men’s T20 internationals. The current record belongs to Ireland’s own Joshua Little, who was 16 years and 309 days old when he made his first T20I appearance.

    A debut for Sooryavanshi would also etch his name into Indian cricket history as the youngest player to ever represent the men’s senior national team. The legendary Sachin Tendulkar, widely regarded as one of the greatest batters of all time, holds the current record for India, having made his Test debut at 16 years and 205 days back in 1989, with his ODI debut following 33 days later.

    Across all formats of men’s international cricket, the record for the youngest debutant still belongs to Pakistan’s Hasan Raza, who stepped out for his Test debut in 1996 at just 14 years and 227 days old, a mark that has stood unchallenged for nearly 30 years.

    In the second T20I at Belfast’s Stormont ground on Sunday, India captain Shreyas Iyer won the pre-match coin toss and elected to bowl first against the hosts. India handed out senior debuts to two other young prospects: all-rounder Suryansh Shedge and 24-year-old fast bowler Prince Yadav.

    National selectors opted to retain the established top-order batting trio of Sanju Samson, Abhishek Sharma and Ishan Kishan, choosing experience over the chance to introduce the teenage prodigy to the international stage on this tour.

    Full Playing XI:
    Ireland: Tim Tector, Ross Adair, Harry Tector, Lorcan Tucker (captain), Ben Calitz, Gareth Delany, George Dockrell, Matthew Humphreys, Matt Hollard, Liam McCarthy, Jai Moondra
    India: Sanju Samson, Abhishek Sharma, Ishan Kishan, Shreyas Iyer (captain), Tilak Varma, Suryansh Shedge, Shivam Dube, Axar Patel, Arshdeep Singh, Harshit Rana, Prince Yadav

  • New Zealand digs in and becomes a strong favorite to beat England in series-deciding 3rd test

    New Zealand digs in and becomes a strong favorite to beat England in series-deciding 3rd test

    On Sunday at Trent Bridge in Nottingham, New Zealand seized firm control of the third and series-deciding Test match against England, closing the first session of Day 4 at 180 for four wickets. That score gave the side an unassailable 264-run lead heading into the middle period of the day, with young all-rounder Rachin Ravindra falling agonizingly short of a sixth international century just before the lunch break.

    Resuming the morning at 120-3, Ravindra and veteran batsman Daryl Mitchell faced a challenging pitch that was producing increasingly inconsistent bounce, yet the pair managed to build a solid, match-changing partnership. Their 129-run stand for the fourth wicket came together when New Zealand was in a precarious position at 51-3 on Day 3, pulling the side out of early trouble to turn the tide of the match.

    Ravindra, who had looked in imperious form throughout his innings, was finally trapped leg before wicket by England off-spinner Shoaib Bashir when he was just six runs away from a well-deserved century, ending his knock at 94. At the end of the opening session, Mitchell remained unbeaten on 47, while wicket-keeper Tom Blundell had not yet scored, sitting on 0 not out. Through 25 overs of tightly contested play, New Zealand added 60 runs to their overnight total.

    Beyond the day’s play, the series itself carries historic stakes for both sides. New Zealand has not won a multi-Test series of three matches or more on English soil since 1999, a drought the side is keen to end on this tour. For England, the pressure is mounting: the side has not dropped a home multi-Test series since 2012, but a defeat here would heap significant additional scrutiny on the team’s leadership.

    That pressure already builds after a humiliating 4-1 Ashes defeat to Australia last year, and ongoing questions about the squad’s culture and professionalism have lingered following the controversial disciplinary dropping of star all-rounder Ben Stokes and fast bowler Gus Atkinson ahead of the second Test of this series. With New Zealand firmly in the driver’s seat, England faces an uphill battle to avoid a historic home series loss.