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  • One in four Israelis using hard drugs amid Gaza genocide and regional wars

    One in four Israelis using hard drugs amid Gaza genocide and regional wars

    A sharp, unprecedented rise in harmful substance use across Israel has been documented by leading mental health researchers, linking the growing public health crisis to the cumulative psychological toll of ongoing military conflict in Gaza and escalating instability across the Middle East. Data published in Israeli outlet Haaretz, drawn from analysis by the Israeli Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, reveals that one in four Israelis now engage in harmful substance misuse — a figure that has more than doubled since before the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Pre-pandemic, the national rate of problematic substance use sat at just 10% (one in 10 Israelis). That figure climbed to 14% (one in seven) during the height of global pandemic-related lockdowns and uncertainty, before spiking dramatically to 25% in the months following October 2023, when Israel launched its large-scale military campaign in Gaza in response to attacks led by Hamas.

    The research breaks down the specific shifts in substance consumption: use of prescription sedatives has increased 250% compared to pre-conflict levels, while consumption of opiates and stimulants has nearly doubled. Rates of harmful alcohol and cannabis use have also ticked upward across all demographic groups. For Israelis living with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) linked to ongoing conflict, the rate of problematic substance misuse now reaches 54.2%, highlighting the deep intersection of trauma and addiction in the current crisis.

    Prof. Shauli Lev-Ran, founder of the Israeli Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, explained that repeated waves of national crisis have cemented harmful coping habits that formed during periods of extreme stress. “The more stress there is, the more people use,” Lev-Ran told Haaretz, adding a critical warning that these addictive patterns often persist long after periods of immediate crisis abate.

    Firsthand accounts from people who use substances across the country paint a stark picture of how conflict has normalized drug use as a coping mechanism for daily uncertainty. Many report relying on ketamine, cocaine, amphetamines, cannabis, and prescription sedatives to navigate repeated missile alerts, attend funerals of conflict victims, cope with military mobilization of loved ones, and process a constant stream of violent death reporting.

    One Israeli man described his drug use escalating in lockstep with the expansion of Israel’s regional military campaigns, explaining that substances helped him create emotional distance from “all the blood and death” dominating news cycles. Another account noted that mourners have used amphetamines to get through funerals held for conflict victims since October 2023. Other residents report using ketamine before entering bomb shelters to manage extreme anxiety, while working adults turn to stimulants to maintain productivity despite chronic sleeplessness and stress.

    This rise in misuse is not limited to informal nightlife settings: interviewees described open substance use taking place in private homes, office workplaces, neighborhood bars, and public bomb shelters. Widespread access to encrypted messaging apps and anonymous digital payment platforms has also made it easier than ever for Israelis to obtain controlled substances, removing barriers that previously limited access.

    Dr. Roy Zucker, a clinician working in drug harm reduction, notes that the changing nature of substance use has created new risks for public health: more than 80% of drug-related emergency department cases now involve polysubstance use, a dangerous mix of multiple different drugs that increases the risk of fatal overdose and severe medical complications compared to single-substance use.

    The crisis also extends to Palestinian citizens of Israel, who face the compounded trauma of witnessing the destruction of Gaza while coping with growing systemic repression within Israel’s borders. Many Palestinian residents report turning to substances to cope after the trauma of seeing massacres of Palestinians in Gaza, with limited access to affordable or accessible mental health treatment leaving few alternative coping options. One Palestinian citizen described whole communities “falling apart” in the wake of the Gaza campaign, with substance use becoming a default for many struggling with unaddressed trauma.

    Lev-Ran warned that without targeted intervention, the public health crisis will only deepen as long as conflict and permanent national alert continue. Prolonged cycles of violence, he explained, make it impossible for people to reset and return to normal daily life, as just one crisis begins to ease another attack, military mobilization, or regional escalation begins.

    This reporting is from independent outlet Middle East Eye, which provides dedicated, unrivaled coverage of the Middle East and North Africa region.

  • Bunnings launches PowerPass Pro Rewards with fuel discounts, store credits and Qantas Points for tradies

    Bunnings launches PowerPass Pro Rewards with fuel discounts, store credits and Qantas Points for tradies

    In an aggressive push to capture a larger share of the business customer market, Australian and New Zealand hardware retail giant Bunnings has launched PowerPass Pro Rewards, the most comprehensive update to its trade-focused PowerPass loyalty program since 2011. The new tiered rewards scheme, tailored specifically for tradies and small-to-medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), introduces a multi-layered benefits package including in-store credits, fuel rebates, and access to Qantas frequent flyer points for qualifying members. The rollout marks one of the most substantial retail loyalty expansions targeting trade customers in the region in recent years.

    The program is structured around six ascending membership tiers: Member, Essential, Plus, Elite, Ultimate, and Black, with increasingly valuable benefits unlocked as members’ annual spending increases. Under the core earning structure, members collect Pro Rewards Dollars that can be redeemed for future purchases at Bunnings: customers who spend $2,000 receive $100 in store credit, with an additional $50 awarded for every extra $1,000 spent. Eligible members also gain access to discounted fuel rates via the Shell Card Lite platform, plus exclusive offers from program partners and a suite of digital business tools.

    Qantas Points, one of the program’s most high-value perks, are reserved for members in the top three tiers (Elite, Ultimate, Black), who can earn points through their existing Qantas Business Rewards memberships. A host of additional launch partners have signed on to the scheme beyond Qantas and Shell, including Commonwealth Bank, Ultra Tune, Zeller, Beaumont Tiles, InstantScripts, PointsBuild, and MYOB, expanding the range of extra benefits available to participating businesses.

    Bunnings Managing Director Mike Schneider explained that the full program redesign was driven by direct feedback from trade customers, who sought more than just point-of-sale discounts. “PowerPass Pro Rewards is about delivering greater value for our customers today, while creating a platform that allows us to better support them into the future,” Schneider said. “We’ve listened closely to our customers, who told us they wanted more than a discount at the register – they wanted to be recognised for their loyalty and rewarded in ways that genuinely support their business.” He added that the program is designed to deliver value that extends beyond on-the-job expenses: “With fuel discounts, travel rewards, Pro Rewards Dollars and benefits that grow over time, the program will help customers unlock more value from every dollar they spend and use it well beyond the job site.”

    The launch also introduces upgraded digital functionality within the existing PowerPass mobile app, allowing members to track their reward progress, spending, and available benefits in real time. Andrew Glance, Chief Executive of Qantas Loyalty and Customer, noted that trade and business customers in construction, repair, and maintenance are already among the most engaged users of Qantas Business Rewards. These groups typically earn 30% more Qantas Points on average than other business users, with most points accumulated through partnered on-the-ground spending like retail purchases. “Our member base is incredibly diverse, ranging from tech start-ups to family-owned construction companies, all looking for ways to reduce their operating costs,” Glance said. “We expect most business members will use the points earned at Bunnings to offset future travel costs, or to reward their hardworking employees.”

    To celebrate the nationwide launch, Bunnings will host the PowerPass Pro Challenge event at its Alexandria location in Sydney on Saturday, July 25. Around 60 participants will compete in a series of practical, trade-focused challenges – including a Scan & Go Sprint, toolbox and power tool assessment, paint race, Qantas travel challenge, and Shell Card obstacle course – with progressive eliminations leading to a final head-to-head round. Prizes include three $10,000 fuel vouchers and a collective pool of 900,000 Qantas Points for top competitors.

  • At least 27 killed in Bangkok bar fire, Thai media report

    At least 27 killed in Bangkok bar fire, Thai media report

    A devastating overnight fire tore through a popular bar in central Bangkok early Friday, leaving at least 27 people dead and multiple others hospitalized, according to local Thai media reports.

    Emergency responders were dispatched to the entertainment venue shortly after midnight, when witnesses first reported flames spreading rapidly through the building. When firefighters arrived at the scene, they encountered dozens of panicked patrons scrambling to escape through the establishment’s smoke-choked, flame-covered main entrance, with many suffering from smoke inhalation and minor burns during their exit.

    Unverified user-shared footage circulating on social media captures the intensity of the blaze, with thick orange flames billowing out of the bar’s front entrance. The video shows one woman stumble and fall to the pavement just outside the venue before she manages to regain her footing and flee to safety.

    Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul traveled to the fire site to coordinate response efforts and speak with reporters. During his on-site press briefing, Anutin confirmed the current death toll of 27 and noted that injured survivors had been transported to nearby hospitals for urgent treatment. The prime minister emphasized that authorities have launched a full investigation into the origin and cause of the fire, and no official conclusions have been reached at this early stage.

    This is an ongoing developing news story, and additional details and updates will be released as more information becomes available to the public.

  • Anthony Zurcher: From Trump critic to ally, Lindsey Graham was a political survivor of the Maga era

    Anthony Zurcher: From Trump critic to ally, Lindsey Graham was a political survivor of the Maga era

    Lindsey Graham, the South Carolina Republican senator whose 23-year congressional career became a defining case study of the seismic political shift that reshaped the U.S. Republican Party during the rise of Donald Trump, has died at the age of 71. Widely remembered as a skilled political survivor, Graham’s ideological and tactical trajectory over decades traced the growing influence of populist conservatism that upended traditional GOP politics. Throughout his tenure, he retained a set of core policy positions: a staunchly hawkish foreign policy centered on containing Russian expansion, unwavering support for Israel, and a longstanding call for regime change in Iran. Yet what marked his career most profoundly was his willingness to adapt to the shifting partisan currents that accompanied Trump’s takeover of the Republican Party.

    Graham launched his Senate career in 2002, quickly emerging as a close ally to legendary Arizona Republican senator John McCain, a staunch conservative who built a national reputation for his willingness to buck party orthodoxy and work across the aisle. When Graham launched his own 2016 presidential bid, bipartisan cooperation and de-escalating partisan tensions sat at the heart of his campaign platform. “If I get to be president, we’re going to open up a bar in the White House,” he once joked. “We’re going to get liquored up and solve problems.”

    His early relationship with Trump was defined by open, ferocious hostility. When Trump infamously mocked McCain’s status as a Vietnam War prisoner of war — declaring at a rally “He’s a war hero because he was captured. I like people that weren’t captured” — Graham hit back, calling the New York real estate developer a “jackass” unfit for the presidency. Trump retaliated by publicizing Graham’s personal phone number at a rally, flooding the senator’s phone with thousands of angry messages, a confrontation that ended with Graham posting a viral stunt video destroying a stack of his own phones in protest.

    As Graham’s presidential campaign collapsed in 2015, he doubled down on his criticism, labeling Trump a “race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot.” In a viral May 2016 tweet that would later be repeatedly cited by his critics, Graham warned that nominating Trump for president would lead to electoral disaster, writing “if the Republican Party chooses Trump as its nominee it ‘will get destroyed … and we will deserve it.’” Graham remained openly opposed to Trump through the 2016 general election against Hillary Clinton, refusing to back either major party nominee and instead supporting independent conservative candidate Evan McMullin.

    But once Trump secured an upset victory in 2016, Graham dramatically shifted his stance. As Trump consolidated total control over the Republican Party during his first term, Graham evolved from a fierce critic into one of Trump’s most vocal congressional allies and close personal friends. The pair regularly golfed together, and Graham, a staple of cable news political programming, used his platform to repeatedly defend Trump and his policy agenda. His most high-profile intervention on Trump’s behalf came during the 2018 Supreme Court confirmation battle for Brett Kavanaugh, when Graham aggressively pushed back against sexual assault allegations against the nominee (who denied all wrongdoing), helping to push through confirmation by the narrowest possible margin.

    Graham’s only major break from Trump came after the 2020 presidential election, when Trump lost to Joe Biden — a former Senate colleague of Graham’s, whom Graham once described as “the nicest person I’ve ever met in politics.” When a mob of Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, disrupting the certification of Biden’s victory and forcing Graham and other lawmakers to evacuate for safety, Graham announced he was cutting all political ties with the outgoing president. “Trump and I had a hell of a journey,” he said at the time. “I hate it to end this way… All I can say is count me out. Enough is enough.”

    Yet the break proved temporary. Just weeks later, Graham voted to acquit Trump in his second Senate impeachment trial over the Capitol attack. As Trump began building his 2024 comeback campaign for the Republican nomination, Graham once again lined up behind his former rival, framing his earlier break as a reaction to a singular moment rather than a long-term rejection. “He was a very good president from my point of view,” Graham explained in a 2023 interview with the BBC. “I am judging him by what he did as president.” After Trump won re-election in 2024, Graham returned to his role as a reliable ally, consistently backing Trump’s cabinet and judicial nominees, supporting his legislative agenda, and praising Trump’s military actions in the Middle East, even as he encouraged Trump to continue U.S. strikes until the Iranian regime collapsed. Though he publicly pushed for greater U.S. military support for Ukraine amid its war against Russia, he softened his criticism of Trump’s friendly overtures to Russian President Vladimir Putin and refused to back new Russian sanctions without Trump’s explicit approval.

    Despite his deep alignment with Trump, Graham retained longstanding personal friendships with Democratic lawmakers across the aisle, a fact reflected in the widespread cross-partisan condolences that poured out after his death, even from outspoken Trump critics including California’s Adam Schiff and Massachusetts’ Elizabeth Warren. Trump himself acknowledged Graham’s unique cross-party ability during a Sunday morning television interview: “He was able to deal with Democrats. If I had a problem with a Democrat, he could work it out.”

    Graham’s relationship with anti-Trump Republicans was far more complicated, however. “Before Trump, we were friends,” former Congressman Adam Kinzinger, who served on the bipartisan committee investigating the January 6 attack, posted on X. “I choose to remember the man I knew before our paths diverged — the one who cared deeply about America’s role in the world and wasn’t afraid to see suffering up close.”

    Graham’s sudden death has created immediate upheaval for congressional Republicans and South Carolina’s GOP establishment. Graham, who had already secured the Republican nomination unopposed for a new six-year Senate term in the upcoming 2026 general election, was seeking re-election, leaving the party scrambling to fill the vacant spot. South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster, a Republican, will appoint an interim replacement to serve the remainder of 2026, and the state party will hold a new primary to select a general election candidate for November. While South Carolina is a deeply reliable red state, political analysts note that if Trump’s approval ratings remain stagnant and Republicans face strong national headwinds this cycle, the party will be forced to divert extra resources to defend the now-open seat, a race that was previously considered safe. Whoever wins the nomination will enter Congress as a junior senator, lacking the decades of seniority, institutional influence, and access to power that Graham built over his tenure through one of the most tumultuous eras in modern American political history.

  • Irrepressible Sinner outlasts Zverev to win second straight Wimbledon title

    Irrepressible Sinner outlasts Zverev to win second straight Wimbledon title

    On a sun-baked Centre Court Sunday, world number one Jannik Sinner delivered a masterclass in grit and clinical precision to defend his Wimbledon gentlemen’s singles title, outlasting French Open champion Alexander Zverev in a bruising four-set final that stretched three hours and 46 minutes.

    Sinner’s 6-7 (7/9), 7-6 (7/2), 6-3, 6-4 victory capped a remarkable run at the All England Club, where the 24-year-old Italian overcame early scares and a determined challenge from Zverev to lift his fifth career Grand Slam trophy. The match, defined by dominant serving from both competitors, saw Sinner drop the opening set in a tight tiebreak before clawing his way back to wear down his opponent, ending Zverev’s 13-match Grand Slam winning streak.

    Entering the final, Sinner carried the pressure of defending a major title for the first time in his career, fresh off a shocking second-round exit at the 2025 French Open where he squandered a two-set lead against Juan Manuel Cerundolo. His Wimbledon campaign got off to a rocky start too, requiring a five-set comeback against Miomir Kecmanovic in the first round to avoid an early exit. From that point forward, however, Sinner found his rhythm on grass, cementing his status as one of the most formidable players on the surface.

    The final opened with a tight first set, with neither player ceding a break point through 12 games. In a tense tiebreak, Zverev—who had never advanced past the quarterfinals in nine previous Wimbledon appearances—clinched the set with a blistering forehand winner, becoming the first player to take a set off Sinner in seven head-to-head meetings. The second set again went to a tiebreak, but this time Sinner raised his level, dominating the breaker to level the match.

    A pivotal moment came in the third set, when Zverev created his first break point of the match but slipped on the Centre Court turf while chasing a Sinner drop shot. After Sinner checked on his fallen opponent, Zverev returned to play but saw his serve break in the very next game, allowing Sinner to seize control of the set. Zverev, frustrated by the missed opportunity, threw his racket across the grass after netting a forehand, and Sinner closed out the set with a love service game capped by an ace.

    In the fourth set, Sinner broke Zverev to take a 4-3 lead, and closed out the championship on his own serve. A dramatic final game featuring two of the match’s best rallies ended with Sinner slamming a forehand winner on his first match point, collapsing to the grass in celebration of his second straight Wimbledon title.

    Sinner finished the match with 58 winners and only 25 unforced errors, and saved the only break point he faced all afternoon on Centre Court. The victory marked his 100th career win at Grand Slam events, pushes his 2025 season record to a staggering 44-3, and gives him his sixth title of the year. He will take home £3.6 million ($4.8 million) in winner’s prize money for the victory.

    Reflecting on the win after the match, Sinner emphasized the weight of the moment and the quality of his opponent’s play. “You can feel the nerves on Sunday morning, it is a very special place,” he said. “You never know how many times you are going to come back. I never take it for granted. It has been an amazing final once again. It takes two players. I’m very happy about the win but I’m mostly very happy about the level we played.”

    For Zverev, the 29-year-old second seed, the result brings frustration but also a career milestone: he will climb above injured reigning world number two Carlos Alcaraz to claim second place in the ATP rankings when the new standings are released Monday. Zverev, bidding to become the first German man to win Wimbledon since Michael Stich in 1991, said the run left him believing he can claim a first Grand Slam on grass in future years. “At 29 years old, it’s the first time I actually believe I can win this trophy,” he said. Zverev’s 10-match losing streak against Sinner remains intact, with the German unable to snap his drought against the world number one despite his best performance at Wimbledon to date.

    With the victory, Sinner now has five Grand Slam titles, just two behind Alcaraz’s career major haul, and cements his position as the undisputed top men’s player in the world heading into the North American hard court swing this summer.

  • Irrepressible Sinner outlasts Zverev to win second straight Wimbledon title

    Irrepressible Sinner outlasts Zverev to win second straight Wimbledon title

    On a tense Sunday afternoon at the All England Club, world number one Jannik Sinner etched his name into Wimbledon history once again, edging out French Open champion Alexander Zverev in a bruising, four-set final to claim his second consecutive gentlemen’s singles title.

    The match, defined by relentless serving and grueling baseline rallies, pushed both athletes to their physical limits over three hours and 46 minutes of Centre Court action. After dropping a tightly contested opening set tiebreak 7-9, Sinner dug deep to level the match with a dominant 7-2 tiebreak win in the second set, before breaking Zverev’s resistance in the closing two sets to seal a 6-7 (7/9), 7-6 (7/2), 6-3, 6-4 victory.

    This title marks Sinner’s fifth career Grand Slam crown, pulling him just two major titles behind injured Spanish star Carlos Alcaraz, and caps off a remarkable comeback from his shocking second-round exit at the 2025 French Open, where he squandered a two-set lead against Argentine underdog Juan Manuel Cerundolo. The 24-year-old Italian also notched his 100th career win at Grand Slam events with Sunday’s result, extending his extraordinary 2025 season record to 44 wins and just three losses, with six titles already claimed this year.

    Sinner’s path to the final was far from smooth. He was pushed all the way to a five-set, come-from-behind win against Miomir Kecmanovic in the first round, the closest he came to an early exit from the tournament. From that point onward, however, Sinner found his rhythm on the grass courts of southwest London, evolving into an unstoppable force that no opponent could derail. His clinical performance in the final spoke to his champion mentality: he hit 58 winners alongside a mere 25 unforced errors, refusing to cave against a red-hot Zverev who entered the championship match on a 13-match Grand Slam winning streak.

    For Zverev, Sunday’s final marked a career-best run at Wimbledon, a tournament where he had never advanced past the quarter-finals in nine previous attempts. The German, who claimed his first ever Grand Slam title at this year’s French Open, entered the final with renewed confidence, and became the first player in seven meetings with Sinner to take a set off the Italian world number one. Despite the breakthrough, Zverev could not end his 10-match losing streak against Sinner, falling just short of becoming the first German man to lift the Wimbledon singles trophy since Michael Stich in 1991. He will, however, climb to second in the ATP rankings when the new standings are released on Monday, overtaking the injured Alcaraz.

    The first set unfolded as a masterclass in serving, with neither player facing a break point until the tiebreak. After 15 consecutive holds in the tiebreak, with both men saving set points, Zverev clinched the set with a blistering forehand winner. The second set followed a similar script, with no break opportunities for either competitor, but Sinner stepped up his aggression in the tiebreak to level the match at one set apiece.

    A dramatic turning point came in the seventh game of the third set, when Zverev created his first break point of the match but slipped while chasing a Sinner drop shot. The Italian immediately crossed the net to check on his injured opponent, who was able to continue after shaking off the knock. Sinner broke Zverev’s serve in the very next game, and closed out the set with an unblemished love service game, sealed with an ace to take a two-sets-to-one lead. A frustrated Zverev smashed his racquet into the grass after surrendering the break, a visible sign of his disappointment.

    Zverev fought gamely to extend the contest, but Sinner secured a decisive break to go up 4-3 in the fourth set. The Italian closed out the title on his own serve, wrapping up the win on his first match point with a forehand winner after two of the most thrilling rallies of the entire match, before collapsing to the Centre Court turf in celebration.

  • Fire breaks out at a pub in Bangkok, killing at least 27 people, officials say

    Fire breaks out at a pub in Bangkok, killing at least 27 people, officials say

    In the early hours of Monday, a massive out-of-control fire tore through a popular pub in northern Bangkok, leaving at least 27 people dead and multiple others injured, Thai officials confirmed. Emergency responders were alerted to the blaze at the Na Ladprao pub shortly after midnight, according to rescue authorities.

    Graphic footage shared publicly by first responders captures the full scale of the disaster: towering orange flames roar from the venue’s front entrance, sending thick, toxic plumes of black smoke billowing into the night sky, while panicked patrons scramble to escape the rapidly spreading inferno.

    It took firefighting crews approximately 30 minutes to fully contain the blaze and secure the site. Post-fire images from the scene reveal a gutted interior, with charred furniture, blackened walls, and extensive structural damage throughout the venue.

    Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul traveled to the disaster site shortly after the fire was contained to speak with reporters and coordinate response efforts. He confirmed the death toll of 27, noting that multiple injured victims have been transported to nearby hospitals for urgent medical care. As of Monday, the exact cause of the fire remains under official investigation.

    The Prime Minister shared preliminary details from an on-site witness: a musician who was performing on stage during the fire told investigators he first noticed smoke emanating from a circuit breaker positioned near the stage moments before the venue lost all power. Seconds later, an explosion rang out, and dense smoke rapidly filled every section of the pub, trapping dozens of people inside.

    Anutin added that most of the fatalities were recovered from the pub’s rear restrooms, where many people had fled in a desperate attempt to escape the smoke and flames.

    This tragedy marks the latest in a series of deadly venue fires in Thailand that have raised ongoing questions about public safety and fire code enforcement in the country. In 2022, a fire at another music pub in eastern Thailand killed 14 people. The deadliest such incident in modern Thai history dates back to New Year’s Eve 2009, when an indoor fireworks display sparked a massive blaze at Bangkok’s Santika nightclub, killing 66 people and injuring more than 200 others.

  • South Africa says more than 53,000 foreigners deported in migration campaign

    South Africa says more than 53,000 foreigners deported in migration campaign

    Five weeks into a national migration management operation, South Africa has confirmed that more than 53,000 undocumented foreign nationals have been deported or repatriated, in one of the broadest crackdowns on irregular migration in the country in recent years. The operation was triggered by weeks of large-scale anti-immigration protests that have been marked by sporadic violence, targeted intimidation, and widespread looting of migrant-owned properties.

    Protesters across the country have poured into streets demanding tightened border security and mass expulsions, blaming undocumented migrants for South Africa’s persistent socioeconomic crises: sky-high national unemployment, surging violent crime, and the steady breakdown of core public services from healthcare to education. Demonstrators set an unofficial 30 June deadline for all irregular migrants to self-deport, a threat that has already pushed thousands of foreign residents to flee the country to avoid rising hostility. Multiple African nations including Ghana, Nigeria, Uganda and Kenya have organized emergency repatriation flights to bring their vulnerable citizens home in recent weeks.

    Anti-migration activists have not softened their demands, threatening to hold weekly demonstrations until the government clears all undocumented migrants from the country. Observers and global bodies have raised growing alarms that the unrest could escalate into broader, more widespread violence against foreign communities.

    Justice and Constitutional Development Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi officially confirmed the deportation figures in a Pretoria press conference Sunday, noting that the vast majority of those repatriated are from three neighboring Southern African states: Malawi, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique. She added that the count will continue to climb as immigration enforcement operations proceed across the country.

    Kubayi emphasized that the government’s campaign aims to establish orderly, regulated migration that addresses public anxieties while upholding international human rights standards and preserving the dignity of all people within South Africa’s borders, regardless of their citizenship or immigration status. She also confirmed that the deportation operation has assisted law enforcement in apprehending individuals wanted on criminal charges, a secondary win for national security.

    Going forward, Kubayi said authorities will continue to enforce the country’s existing immigration laws, but issued a sharp warning to protesters: vigilante actions including unauthorised searches of private homes and businesses suspected of housing undocumented migrants violate the law and will not be tolerated. President Cyril Ramaphosa has echoed this stance, acknowledging that the public has legitimate concerns about unregulated migration but explicitly condemning targeted attacks on migrant communities and warning citizens against taking enforcement into their own hands.

    As the most economically developed nation on the African continent, South Africa has long drawn migrants from across the region seeking improved employment prospects and higher living standards. A portion of these migrants cross the border without formal authorization, a reality that has fueled long-running public resentment that boiled over into open protest in recent months. The United Nations has previously spoken out against the crackdown, warning South African leaders against scapegoating migrants for the country’s deep-rooted socioeconomic challenges.

  • World Cup semifinals: Four previous champions, a bitter rivalry, Mbappé vs Yamal and Messi vs Kane

    World Cup semifinals: Four previous champions, a bitter rivalry, Mbappé vs Yamal and Messi vs Kane

    The 20XX FIFA World Cup has delivered a semifinal lineup unmatched in modern soccer history, bringing together the world’s top four ranked nations, all previous tournament champions, and a cast of global soccer royalty that has fans across the globe buzzing with anticipation. Only two matches now stand between Argentina, Spain, France, and England from lifting the sport’s most coveted trophy, and analysts agree that every matchup is too close to call. This year’s final four marks the first time since 1990 that every remaining contender has previously claimed the World Cup title, echoing a historic parallel that adds even more drama to the upcoming fixtures. France will face off against Spain in Arlington, Texas on Tuesday, a fixture that falls on France’s national Bastille Day holiday, before England and Argentina meet in Atlanta on Wednesday to cap off the semifinal round.

    The England-Argentina matchup is far more than a game for a spot in the World Cup final: it reignites one of the bitterest and most storied rivalries in international soccer, with tensions that have spilled beyond the pitch for decades, rooted in the 1982 Falklands Islands conflict between the two nations. The rivalry’s history on soccer’s biggest stage is littered with iconic controversial moments that are still debated by fans today. In the 1966 World Cup quarterfinals, Argentina captain Antonio Rattin — whose passing was announced just days before this year’s semifinal — was sent off in a fractious match that ended in a 1-0 English win; after the final whistle, then-England manager Alf Ramsey refused to let his players swap shirts with their Argentine opponents in a show of disrespect. Two decades later at the 1986 World Cup, Diego Maradona’s infamous illegal “Hand of God” goal secured a 2-1 quarterfinal win for Argentina, who went on to win the tournament that year. In 1998, David Beckham was sent off after kicking Argentina’s Diego Simeone, a moment that sparked widespread media fury in England, and Argentina won the match on penalties. Beckham earned his revenge four years later, scoring a match-winning penalty to knock Argentina out of the tournament in the group stage. Adding a new layer of history to this long-running rivalry: this will be Lionel Messi’s first ever competitive match against England at any World Cup.

    Widely described as soccer’s greatest of all time (GOAT), the 39-year-old Messi is widely expected to be playing in his final World Cup, and his performances this tournament have only cemented his legacy. If he guides Argentina to a second consecutive title, he will surpass Maradona by becoming the second Argentine men’s player to win two World Cups, and Argentina will become the first national men’s team to win back-to-back World Cup titles since Brazil’s legendary squads of 1958 and 1962 led by Pelé. As the defending 2022 World Cup champions, Argentina already enters this semifinal with a historic parallel to the 1990 tournament, when Argentina was also the defending champion and reached the final before falling to West Germany.

    In the other semifinal, France will chase quick revenge against a Spanish side that knocked them out of the 2024 European Championship in a 2-1 semifinal win two years ago. That 2024 match saw 16-year-old prodigy Lamine Yamal score for Spain, who went on to lift the Euro title after beating England in the final. For France, that match was hampered by a broken nose injury that blunted star striker Kylian Mbappé’s impact, while young emerging talents Michael Olise and Désiré Doué had not yet broken into the senior national squad. Today, France enters this World Cup semifinal as the tournament’s most impressive team, boasting a deep, dynamic attacking roster that has overwhelmed opponents throughout the knockout stage.

    In contrast, Spain entered this World Cup already dealing with major injury setbacks, losing both Yamal and winger Nico Williams before the tournament began. The Spanish side has nonetheless fought its way to the semifinals, clinching narrow late wins against Portugal and Belgium, both off goals from substitute Mikel Oyarzabal. The two nations have a long tournament history: France defeated Spain to claim the Euro 1984 title.

    Beyond the race for the World Cup trophy, the tournament also features a thrilling tight race for the Golden Boot, awarded to the tournament’s top goalscorer. Five of the world’s six top goalscorers remain in the competition, with Erling Haaland the only eliminated top contender after Norway fell to England in the quarterfinals. Mbappé and Messi currently share the lead with eight goals each, followed by Jude Bellingham and Harry Kane with six, Ousmane Dembélé with five, and Oyarzabal with four, putting multiple players within striking distance of the award. The two superstars are also competing for the title of the all-time leading World Cup goalscorer: Messi has 21 career World Cup goals, just one ahead of Mbappé’s 20.

    If both France and Argentina advance to the final, the 2026 World Cup will host a rematch of the iconic 2022 final, adding another historic chapter to what is already the most anticipated final four in recent World Cup memory.

  • One Extraordinary Photo: Argentina’s Lautaro Martinez in the stands celebrating his goal with fans

    One Extraordinary Photo: Argentina’s Lautaro Martinez in the stands celebrating his goal with fans

    For award-winning Associated Press photographer Ashley Landis, the 21-year veteran of visual journalism based in Houston, Texas, capturing those once-in-a-tournament split-second moments is what makes sports photography unforgettable. Over six of her two decades in the industry, Landis has built her career covering everything from breaking hard news to intimate human interest features, with a core focus on sports storytelling. In a behind-the-scenes breakdown, Landis has opened up about how she captured one of the most vivid images from the 2022 FIFA World Cup: the celebration of Argentina’s match-winning goal against Switzerland.

    It was a decisive overtime contest that would send Argentina through to the next round of the tournament, and when Inter Milan striker Lautaro Martinez slotted the game-winning goal past the Swiss defense, he reacted in a way few players do in the heat of the moment. Rather than immediately running back to join his teammates on the pitch, Martinez lept over the sideline’s LED advertising boards to share his joy with the Argentine fans packed into the front row of the stands. Recognizing that this unscripted, emotional moment would not come again, Landis made the split-second call to keep her lens locked on Martinez rather than panning back to the rest of the team’s celebration. As she recounts, Martinez stopped to share high-fives with the cheering fans in the front row before turning back to the pitch to join his squad, creating a candid frame that blends player joy and fan passion into one iconic shot.

    Landis explains the technical choices that allowed her to nail the shot from her position across the pitch. She had already captured the moment of the goal from her vantage point, and kept Martinez tracked through the celebration with a long 400mm f/2.8 telephoto lens — the go-to tool for sports photographers needing to isolate action from a distance. With crowds of players and fans swarming around the striker, Landis deliberately kept her camera’s focus locked on Martinez to ensure he stayed sharp amid the chaos.

    Looking at why the image resonates so strongly with viewers, Landis notes that Martinez’s unfiltered, explosive reaction was so clear it read even from her distant position across the field. Even with dozens of fans and teammates all clad in Argentina’s iconic albiceleste jersey filling the frame, Martinez stands out sharply thanks to his overjoyed facial expression and raw, peak emotion. The surrounding fans, their arms thrown high in celebration as they surround the striker, create a natural frame that draws the viewer’s eye directly to Martinez in the bottom center of the composition, anchoring the moment’s energy. This shot, which captures both the elation of a star player and the joy of the fans who supported him, stands as a perfect example of how sports photography can distill the raw emotion of global football into a single, unforgettable frame. More of The Associated Press’ full coverage of the World Cup is available to view on their official platform.