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  • Cafe owner says UK police tried to recruit him to spy on Palestine Action

    Cafe owner says UK police tried to recruit him to spy on Palestine Action

    A Manchester-based cafe owner and prominent pro-Palestine activist has brought serious allegations against British law enforcement, claiming officers offered him financial incentives and informal leniency for minor offenses in exchange for spying on the banned advocacy group Palestine Action. Shams Sadiq, 51, who owns two local cafes, shared his account with The Guardian, detailing that the improper offer was made when he attended a police station in Ashton-under-Lyne on May 15 to recover electronic equipment police had seized following his 2023 arrest over alleged ties to the group.

    During the private meeting described as a “man to man” discussion, two officers told Sadiq they had examined his confiscated devices and concluded he had deep connections to Palestine Action. Instead of moving forward with charges related to his 2023 arrest, however, they presented him with an under-the-table deal. According to Sadiq, the officers explicitly stated there would be tangible benefits for cooperating with their investigations. When Sadiq pressed to confirm the incentives included financial support, the officers confirmed they could assist with expenses such as his tax obligations, and added that they would be willing to overlook certain low-level offenses. When Sadiq asked if the deal could cover his existing speeding tickets, the officers replied that minor infractions like speeding were of no concern to them in this arrangement.

    Sadiq says he understood the request to be a demand for him to provide intelligence on Palestine Action members and activities. He added that officers specifically noted his standing in the local Muslim community, leading him to believe they also wanted him to report on community members at his local mosque who they labeled as holding extreme views. This is not the first recent interaction law enforcement has had with Sadiq: just four days before the May 15 police station meeting, he was detained and questioned for three hours under Schedule 7 of the UK’s Terrorism Act at Manchester Airport. Though he was not arrested during that stop, officers again seized his electronic devices, which were only returned days later. During the airport questioning, Sadiq says he was interrogated about his connections to Palestine Action, his personal finances, and his views on Iran, as well as asked how he would respond to someone with extreme views at his mosque. Sadiq remains under active investigation for a separate alleged offense linked to Palestine Action that dates to 2024.

    Sadiq has long been a visible local figure for pro-Palestine advocacy, and has already been targeted for his activism: last year, vandals placed Israeli flags on the door of one of his cafes. After rejecting the officers’ offer, Sadiq chose to go public with his account as a safety measure. He told The Guardian that officers attempted to reassure him by offering protection for his family and did not pressure him for an immediate answer, instead leaving a private phone number for him to text if he changed his mind.

    Sadiq’s lawyer, Simon Pook, is preparing to file a formal complaint against Greater Manchester Police over the incident. Pook drew a parallel between the alleged conduct and the controversial informancy practices the British state employed during the Troubles in Northern Ireland, noting that “We’re unhappy that he was put in that position and offered inducements to work for the state.” Pook also raised questions about the legality of the airport detention under Schedule 7, arguing that if the stop was only a pretext to set up the later inducement offer, the use of the anti-terrorism powers was unlawful. Schedule 7 is legally only permitted to be used when authorities have reasonable suspicion that a person is involved in terrorism or terrorist planning.

    To date, Greater Manchester Police has declined to issue any comment on the allegations. The case comes amid growing controversy over the UK government’s 2023 decision to proscribe Palestine Action as a terrorist organization, a move that came after group members carried out a break-in at a British military air base. The ban makes membership in or public support for Palestine Action a criminal offense punishable by up to 14 years of imprisonment. Since the proscription went into effect, hundreds of people have been arrested and charged on grounds of supporting the group, including high-profile Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg, who was detained in December for holding a sign stating her support for Palestine Action prisoners and opposition to what she calls genocide in Gaza.

    The ban has also drawn sharp international criticism from human rights officials. United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk publicly condemned the proscription last July, arguing that UK authorities were misusing counter-terrorism legislation to suppress activities that amount to the legitimate exercise of fundamental civil and political rights. Turk called the decision “disproportionate and unnecessary.”

  • Israel issues new expulsion orders as forces press deeper into Lebanon

    Israel issues new expulsion orders as forces press deeper into Lebanon

    On Saturday, Israel’s military carried out a provocative new step in its expanding campaign in southern Lebanon, issuing formal expulsion orders forcing residents from 13 villages in the border region. This action came just one day after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed that Israeli troops had pushed deeper into Lebanese territory than ever before in the current conflict.

    Netanyahu’s announcement made explicit what military officials had signaled earlier in the week: Israeli ground forces had advanced beyond the Litani River, a key geographic marker that sits roughly 30 kilometers north of the official Lebanon-Israel border. “Our forces have crossed the Litani and advanced to controlling positions,” the prime minister stated publicly.

    This escalating military push unfolds against a backdrop of planned diplomatic negotiations set to kick off early next week, mediated by the United States. The talks, which will be the fourth round of negotiations since April 14, were preceded by a security meeting between Lebanese and Israeli military delegations held at the Pentagon in Washington DC this past Friday.

    According to Lebanese broadcaster Al Mayadeen, which cited an anonymous senior Lebanese official, Israeli negotiators rejected a core Lebanese demand for a full Israeli withdrawal from occupied Lebanese territory during Friday’s talks. The outlet also reported that Israel is insisting on the full dissolution of Hezbollah as a condition for any deal, a non-starter for Lebanese negotiating teams.

    Despite a nominal ceasefire that has been formally in place since April 17, Israel has maintained relentless heavy airstrikes and artillery bombardment across southern and eastern Lebanon. Just this week, the Israeli military confirmed it had expanded ground operations beyond an already established occupied security zone that already included dozens of southern Lebanese villages.

    The human cost of Israel’s military campaign, which launched on March 2, continues to mount. Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health reports that at least 3,355 people have been killed in Israeli attacks to date, with 31 additional fatalities recorded between Thursday and Saturday. Thursday marked a significant escalation of its own, when Israel carried out its first airstrike near the Lebanese capital Beirut in several weeks.

    More than 1 million Lebanese people have been displaced by the campaign, which has leveled entire residential towns and cities, shattered critical public infrastructure, and pushed Lebanon’s already fragile humanitarian system into catastrophic collapse.

    On the Lebanese side, the armed group Hezbollah has continued to mount coordinated retaliatory operations against Israeli targets. On Saturday alone, the group announced three separate attacks: it launched rocket barrages targeting the northern Israeli town of Kiryat Shmona, fired a precision missile at the air traffic control unit at Israel’s Meron Air Base – a key Israeli Air Force surveillance and command outpost located just 8 kilometers from the Lebanese border – and ambushed Israeli infantry troops near the southern Lebanese village of Ghandouriyeh, forcing the attacking unit to retreat. The group also stated it carried out a targeted strike on advancing Israeli troops near the historic Beaufort Castle (known locally as Qalaat al-Shaqif), a site that served as an Israeli military base during Israel’s 22-year occupation of southern Lebanon that ended in 2000.

  • Ebola spread in DR Congo ‘alarming’, charity warns, as WHO chief visits worst-hit area

    Ebola spread in DR Congo ‘alarming’, charity warns, as WHO chief visits worst-hit area

    Two weeks after the Democratic Republic of Congo officially declared an Ebola outbreak, international medical and public health authorities are sounding the alarm over an unprecedented rate of spread that has outpaced current response efforts. The epicenter of the outbreak is the northeastern Congolese province of Ituri, where transmission has already outstripped every recorded early-stage Ebola event in modern history.

    In a public statement released Saturday, Dr. Alan Gonzalez, deputy director of medical humanitarian organization Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), described the unfolding situation as deeply alarming. “Never before has an Ebola outbreak recorded so many cases so soon after its declaration,” Gonzalez emphasized, adding that frontline MSF teams on the ground have observed that response operations have not yet matched the speed of the virus’s advance. He warned that the full extent of the crisis remains unclear: hundreds of test samples from suspected patients are still backlogged and unprocessed, even as new potential infections are reported every single day.

    Gonzalez also outlined significant logistical barriers delaying critical containment work and aid delivery, pointing to widespread border and airport closures as major disruptive constraints. These challenges compound long-standing issues created by ongoing armed conflict in the region, which the World Health Organization (WHO) has repeatedly flagged as a major barrier to mounting an effective response.

    As of the latest updates, more than 1,000 suspected Ebola cases have been recorded across DR Congo, with at least 246 confirmed deaths linked to the outbreak. The virus has also spilled over the country’s northern border into neighboring Uganda, where nine confirmed cases and one fatality have been reported to date.

    Over the weekend, WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus traveled personally to Ituri to oversee and assess local containment efforts. Speaking after his arrival, Tedros explained that the WHO delegation was in the province to evaluate response progress and address unmet needs that are slowing control work. He called for greater engagement of local communities in outbreak response, noting that residents have on-the-ground knowledge that is critical to successfully curbing transmission. “They understand the problems better and they know the solution as well,” he said of local populations.

    One of Tedros’ first official stops during the visit was the National Institute for Biomedical Research laboratory in Bunia, Ituri’s provincial capital, where all samples from suspected Ebola patients are now processed. Local health authorities confirmed that the newly operational local testing facility can deliver confirmed results to care teams within 24 hours, a major improvement that allows clinicians to quickly isolate infected patients and initiate life-saving care. Prior to the opening of this lab, samples had to be transported more than 1,500 kilometers to Kinshasa, DR Congo’s capital, for testing — delays that put communities at greater risk of further spread and cost vulnerable patients critical care time.

    The current outbreak is caused by Bundibugyo, a rare strain of Ebola for which no widely proven vaccine currently exists. The virus has an average case fatality rate of roughly one-third, meaning approximately one in every three infected people will die from the disease. Like all Ebola strains, Bundibugyo originally circulates in wild animal populations, most commonly fruit bats; human outbreaks typically begin when people come into contact with or consume meat from infected animals.

  • Colombia accuses Ecuador of ‘deliberate interference’ in general elections

    Colombia accuses Ecuador of ‘deliberate interference’ in general elections

    BOGOTA – A sharp diplomatic dispute has erupted between neighboring Andean nations Colombia and Ecuador just 24 hours before Colombians head to the polls to choose their next president, with Bogota formally rejecting Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa’s recent pledge to scrap tariffs on Colombian imports as a blatant violation of international sovereignty.

  • ‘Decided on moments’: PSG, Arsenal in knife-edge Champions League final

    ‘Decided on moments’: PSG, Arsenal in knife-edge Champions League final

    The stage is set in Budapest’s Puskas Arena for one of the most tightly contested UEFA Champions League finals in recent memory, as defending champions Paris Saint-Germain prepare to lock horns with England’s Arsenal this Saturday, in a game widely billed as a battle that will be decided by split-second moments rather than pre-match form.

    With contrasting playing styles set to collide, PSG brings an explosive, high-octane attacking line-up against an Arsenal side that has built its tournament run on rock-solid defensive organization. Ahead of the kickoff, PSG manager Luis Enrique downplayed the tag of pre-match favorite, insisting the 90-minute showdown would be decided by tiny margins. ‘There are no favorites going into this European final,’ he said. ‘The difference will be in the details.’

    While bookmakers do rank the Ligue 1 title holders and defending champions as slight favorites, analysts note this final is the hardest to predict since Real Madrid’s iconic 2018 win over Liverpool. For Arsenal, the occasion carries extra weight: the club ended a 22-year wait for the English Premier League title this season, and is now chasing its first ever Champions League crown, 20 years after its last final appearance ended in a defeat to Barcelona in Paris.

    Arrived in the Hungarian capital in relaxed form, the Gunners’ squad took a casual stroll through Budapest on Saturday morning to beat the summer heat, with good news on the injury front: right-back Jurrien Timber, who had been a major doubt for the clash, recovered in time to make the match day squad, named to the bench alongside striker Viktor Gyokeres. Manager Mikel Arteta opted to start Kai Havertz in the attacking line for the final. The game’s earlier kickoff time — 6pm local time, two hours earlier than recent finals — is seen as a potential advantage for PSG’s fast, physically demanding pressing style.

    Arsenal’s tournament campaign has been defined by defensive resilience: the Gunners enter the final unbeaten in this season’s Champions League, having kept nine clean sheets and conceded only six goals. The widespread expectation is that Arteta’s side will drop into a deep defensive block and look to capitalize on set-piece opportunities against the French side. PSG winger and Ballon d’Or winner Ousmane Dembele acknowledged the challenge Arsenal poses, saying: ‘They’re strong pretty much everywhere, whether it’s in attack or in defence, and they’re dangerous on set-pieces as well, everybody knows that.’

    PSG also got a key fitness boost ahead of kickoff: both Dembele and right-back Achraf Hakimi were named in the starting line-up after shaking off minor fitness concerns in the lead-up to the final. While Arsenal has played significantly more matches this season than PSG, winger Bukayo Saka rejected suggestions that fatigue could play a deciding role. ‘A game like this is not going to be decided on minutes, it’s going to be decided on moments,’ the England international said.

    Both sides carry historic motivation to lift the trophy. For PSG, a win would secure back-to-back Champions League titles, a feat only Zinedine Zidane’s Real Madrid has achieved in the modern era, when the Spanish club won three consecutive titles between 2016 and 2018. It would also make PSG the first French club to win multiple Champions League trophies, marking a historic milestone for French club football.

    For Arsenal, a first Champions League crown would cap a redemptive season for the club, honoring generations of Arsenal players who never reached the pinnacle of European football. Club icons have reached out to the current squad to offer support: former captain and Invincibles legend Patrick Vieira sent a personal good luck video to current skipper Martin Odegaard, who called the message a special moment. ‘This stage was one I had hoped to reach for my whole life,’ Odegaard said. ‘When I started playing football with my friends, on the little pitch next to my house, I was dreaming of this moment.’

    Thierry Henry, the club’s all-time leading goalscorer and part of the 2006 final squad that lost to Barcelona, also sent a personal message to Saka on Friday. Tens of thousands of Arsenal fans have traveled to Budapest, many without match tickets, to cheer on their side, packing the city’s famous ruin bars and tourist hotspots. Henry is among the high-profile Arsenal supporters in the city for the final.

    Security has been ramped up for the occasion, with almost 4,000 police officers deployed for the match — the largest security operation in Hungarian history. The build-up to the game has remained largely peaceful, apart from a minor scuffle between fans in Budapest’s seventh district on Friday night, which police are currently investigating.

    A win for Arsenal would also make history for English football. After Aston Villa lifted the Europa League title and Crystal Palace won the Conference League this season, an Arsenal Champions League triumph would mark the first time a single country has won all three major UEFA men’s club trophies in the same season since 1989-90, when Italy achieved the feat with AC Milan, Juventus and Sampdoria claiming the three trophies respectively.

  • Italy bans Kanye West and Travis Scott concerts over security concerns

    Italy bans Kanye West and Travis Scott concerts over security concerns

    In a decision that marks the latest in a string of performance cancellations for controversial rapper Kanye West (now legally known as Ye), Italian authorities have blocked two scheduled July concerts headlined by West and fellow rapper Travis Scott in the northern city of Reggio Emilia, citing urgent public order and safety concerns.

    The announcement came Friday from Prefect Salvatore Angieri, following a formal request from Reggio Emilia’s local Jewish community to scrap West’s planned appearance. Community leader Nicoletta Uzzielli had pushed local officials to scrap the event and replace it with a performance that would center music as a unifying, inclusive force for all people.

    West has sparked global outrage over the past three years for a repeated pattern of antisemitic, racist, and openly pro-Nazi rhetoric, a controversy that already led to the UK government barring him from entering the country earlier this year. The two cancelled Reggio Emilia shows, scheduled for July 17 and 18 at the city’s RFC Arena, were set to feature West and Scott alongside a roster of major A-list acts including The Chainsmokers, Rita Ora, and Swedish House Mafia.

    In an official statement, the regional prefecture outlined the multiple factors that guided its final call. Among the top considerations were the wave of concert cancellations for West already implemented across other nations, and the very real threat of large-scale counter-demonstrations targeting the event. Officials also noted that the close scheduling of the two back-to-back events, combined with projections of massive crowds gathering at the venue, created additional unmanageable public safety risks.

    Travis Scott, the co-headliner of the events, has also faced ongoing intense scrutiny over his role in the 2021 Astroworld Festival tragedy in Houston, Texas, where a crowd surge during Scott’s headline set left 10 attendees dead between the ages of 9 and 27, and injured thousands more when panic spread through the over-capacity crowd pressed against the stage.

    The Italian cancellation is just the latest domino to fall in a series of scrapped shows for West this year. Last month, London’s high-profile Wireless Festival was called off entirely after West, the announced headline act, was denied entry to the UK amid widespread public backlash over his inflammatory remarks. West’s pattern of problematic comments dates back to 2022, when he posted on social media that he would go “death con 3 On Jewish people”, and in May 2023 he released a track titled *Heil Hitler* and sold merchandise emblazoned with swastikas.

    Following the UK entry ban, cancellations quickly spread across mainland Europe. In mid-April, West announced the Marseille stop on his European tour would be postponed “until further notice”, with French media reporting at the time that Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez was actively moving to ban the scheduled June 11 show. That same month, a planned June 19 concert at Poland’s Silesian Stadium in Chorzów was also cancelled, with venue officials citing unspecified “formal and legal reasons”.

    West has made recent attempts to rebuild his standing in mainstream entertainment after stepping back from public view. In January, he published a lengthy apology in *The Wall Street Journal*, claiming “I am not a Nazi or an antisemite” and asserting “I love Jewish people”. He also attributed his past harmful comments to his bipolar disorder diagnosis, writing that he had “lost touch with reality” during the period when the remarks were made.

  • Medical or a PR exercise? Why presidents get annual check-ups

    Medical or a PR exercise? Why presidents get annual check-ups

    For decades, the annual physical examination of the sitting U.S. president has evolved into far more than a routine health check—it is a tightly choreographed political ritual that sits at the intersection of public accountability, national security, and perceptions of executive power.

    Today, amid the election of two of the oldest presidents in American history back-to-back, public and political scrutiny of these check-ups has reached a fever pitch. The conversation traces back to a long-running tradition: every modern U.S. president makes the short trip from the White House to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for a yearly physical, a practice as much about projecting political vitality as it is about tracking personal health. “Americans historically have wanted masculine, vigorous presidents,” explained Dr. Matt Dallek, a political historian at George Washington University. A clean bill of health, released publicly, is one of the most visible ways a commander-in-chief can demonstrate they are physically and mentally capable of holding the most powerful office on Earth.

    This dynamic has been central to former president Donald Trump’s public image, even as he approaches his 80th birthday. Just weeks out from turning 80, Trump completed his 2026 annual physical, and the White House subsequently released a memo from his personal physician declaring the president in “excellent health” with strong cardiac, pulmonary, neurological and overall physical function. The document confirmed Trump is “fully fit to carry out all duties of the commander-in-chief and head of state”, though it did include a recommendation that he increase regular exercise and adjust his diet to lose weight. The memo also publicly released Trump’s full vital statistics: standing 75 inches (191cm) tall, he weighs 238 pounds (108kg), has a resting heart rate of 73 beats per minute, and a blood pressure reading of 105/71 mmHg. It addressed recent public speculation about visible bruising on Trump’s hand, attributing the marks to minor soft tissue irritation from frequent handshaking and his daily aspirin use for cardiovascular prevention, and noted Trump’s lifelong abstinence from tobacco and alcohol. Shortly after the results were released, Trump posted on his Truth Social platform that “everything checked out perfectly.”

    Even so, questions about the transparency and reliability of presidential health disclosures have persisted for more than a century, long before the current era of advanced age in the Oval Office. Unlike many public officeholders, U.S. presidents face no legal requirement to release full medical records, and they are protected by the same federal health privacy laws that apply to all American citizens. This has allowed for deliberate concealment of serious health crises throughout history: in 1919, President Woodrow Wilson suffered a devastating stroke that left him largely incapacitated for the final year of his term, with his wife effectively stepping in to make major presidential decisions while his physician and staff covered up the full severity of his condition. Decades later, Franklin D. Roosevelt’s paralysis from polio was consistently downplayed by White House officials, who hid his reliance on a wheelchair from the public until his death in office in 1945.

    It was not until the 1960s, during Lyndon B. Johnson’s administration, that any U.S. president formally publicly announced the results of a routine physical. That shift came in the wake of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination and amid rising Cold War tensions, when questions about a leader’s fitness to govern took on new urgency. In the 1970s, President Gerald Ford went a step further, overruling his own physician’s objections to release partial medical details to the public. “I feel fit as a fiddle. Getting healthier every day,” Ford told reporters after his 1976 check-up, noting he swam daily to maintain his physical condition. Still, gaps in transparency have continued to spark controversy decades later: President Ronald Reagan only publicly announced his Alzheimer’s diagnosis five years after leaving office, leading to widespread ongoing speculation about his cognitive state during his second term in the White House.

    Medical ethicists argue that even modern disclosures cannot be taken at face value, because presidents are free to select which information to release to the public. “If I were the public, I would ignore that information (released by the White House) entirely,” said Dr. Jacob Appel, a medical ethicist at New York’s Mount Sinai Hospital and presidential health historian. “The president can cherry pick what looks good, and what doesn’t look good.” Beyond political posturing, Appel notes that full transparency also carries national security risks: any health details released to the American public are also accessible to foreign adversaries, giving potential opponents insight into a sitting president’s vulnerabilities.

    In recent years, the conversation around presidential health has been drastically amplified by the trend of older leaders holding office. After a generation of relatively young commanders-in-chief—Bill Clinton was 46 at inauguration, George W. Bush was 54, and Barack Obama was 47—the U.S. has elected two of the oldest presidents in its history in rapid succession. Trump was 70 when he first took office in 2017, and 78 when he began his second term in 2025. Joe Biden, who held office between Trump’s two terms, was 78 when he was inaugurated and 82 when he left office, making him the oldest sitting president in U.S. history. During his 2024 annual physical at age 81, Biden joked with reporters, when asked if there were any concerning health issues the public should know about: “Well, they think I look too young.”

    That era of older presidents has “turbocharged” public interest in annual physical results, Dallek said. “The scrutiny of Biden and Trump because of their age operates in a totally different plane. The concerns in the media, in the public, the debates that happen about whether they’re fit to serve, those debates get intensified.” Biden’s declining fitness became a central issue during the 2024 presidential campaign, ultimately forcing him to drop out of the re-election race. After Trump took office for a second term, Trump and congressional Republicans seized on a new tell-all book that alleged Biden White House staffers covered up the true state of Biden’s health to push claims of a deliberate cover-up. A Biden spokesperson pushed back at the time, arguing “evidence of aging is not evidence of mental incapacity.”

    Now, Trump faces the same level of public scrutiny over his own advancing age. Polling conducted before his 2026 physical shows a majority of Americans harbor doubts about his health and cognitive fitness. A Washington Post-ABC-Ipsos poll released in early May found that 59% of respondents do not believe Trump has the mental acuity to serve as president, while 55% doubt his physical health is sufficient for the role. A separate poll from the Economist and YouGov found that nearly half of all Americans believe Trump is too old to hold the Oval Office.

  • Sabalenka, Osaka set up French Open clash, Gauff eyes second week

    Sabalenka, Osaka set up French Open clash, Gauff eyes second week

    The 2025 French Open is heating up amid a lingering Paris heatwave, with Saturday’s third-round play producing one of the most anticipated round-of-16 matchups in recent Grand Slam history, alongside shocking upsets and breakthrough runs that have reshaped both the men’s and women’s draws.

    World number one and top women’s seed Aryna Sabalenka kicked off the day’s standout results with a commanding 6-0, 7-5 victory over 53rd-ranked Daria Kasatkina, wrapping up the 76-minute contest to secure her spot in the fourth round. After blitzing through the opening set without dropping a game, Sabalenka found herself in an early break deficit in the second set, but fought back to seal the win. Speaking on court after her victory, the 28-year-old Belarusian credited her resilience through tough moments, as Roland Garros wraps up the final day of a heatwave that has blanketed Paris since the tournament kicked off.

    Sabalenka’s win sets up a high-stakes fourth-round showdown with four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka, a matchup between two players who have each claimed four major titles: two Australian Opens and two US Opens apiece. While Sabalenka has defeated Osaka twice already in the 2025 season, Osaka holds the edge in major meetings—she beat Sabalenka in the same round at the 2018 US Open, the first of her career Grand Slam wins.

    Osaka, the tournament’s 16th seed from Japan, earned her place in the fourth round after a grueling three-set battle with 18-year-old American starlet Iva Jovic, 7-6(7/5), 6-7(3/7), 6-4. The match was defined by dominant serving from both players, with the first two sets settled entirely by tiebreaks. Osaka secured the decisive break of Jovic’s serve in the 10th game of the final set to close out the win. The result marks a career milestone for Osaka, who had never advanced past the third round at Roland Garros before this year’s tournament. “I was a lot calmer than in my first matches… In a Slam the further I get the calmer I am. It’s such an honour to be here. It’s the furthest I have ever been here,” Osaka said after her win.

    In a politically charged third-round matchup, Ukraine’s Oleksandra Oliynykova lost 7-5, 6-1 to Russian opponent Diana Shnaider, after Oliynykova accused Shnaider in pre-match comments of accepting funding from a company that supports Russian war crimes and liking social media posts from pro-war propagandists.

    Defending women’s champion Coco Gauff, the tournament’s fourth seed, will look to join Sabalenka and Osaka in the second week when she faces off against Austria’s Anastasia Potapova in Saturday’s later action, targeting a spot in the tournament’s fourth round.

    On the men’s side of the draw, the bracket remains wide open after the shocking early exits of top seed Jannik Sinner and 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic. Italian 10th seed Flavio Cobolli sent a clear message to the rest of the field with an emphatic 6-2, 6-2, 6-3 victory over American Learner Tien on Court Philippe Chatrier, wrapping up the win in just one hour and 45 minutes. Cobolli, who is now set to face Zachary Svajda for a spot in the men’s quarter-finals, said he is focusing on one match at a time amid widespread talk of a first-time Grand Slam champion this year. “I want to think match by match. That’s the way that I want to think this week,” Cobolli said. “I know that… for sure we will have a new Grand Slam champion, but I don’t want to think about this. For sure I have now another tough match.”

    American world number 85 Zachary Svajda continued his dream Grand Slam run, upsetting 25th seed Francisco Cerundolo of Argentina 6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 4-6, 6-3 to secure his spot in the second week. The 23-year-old had never advanced past the second round of any major tournament before this year’s French Open, marking his first run into the second week of a Grand Slam.

    Saturday’s closing action will see Canadian fourth seed Felix Auger-Aliassime face off against American 31st seed Brandon Nakashima in the night session on Court Philippe Chatrier, while 17-year-old rising French home star Moise Kouame will take on Chile’s Alejandro Tabilo on Court Suzanne Lenglen as he looks to extend his breakout run at the tournament.

  • Vingegaard on verge of Giro glory after powering to penultimate stage

    Vingegaard on verge of Giro glory after powering to penultimate stage

    One step away from writing his name into road cycling history, Team Visma-Lease a Bike’s Jonas Vingegaard delivered a dominant mountain performance to claim victory in the Giro d’Italia’s penultimate stage on Saturday, putting his first overall title at the three-week Grand Tour all but out of reach.

    The 29-year-old Dane, a pre-race favorite and two-time Tour de France champion, has been a class of the field at this year’s Giro, overcoming an early-race illness to win five stages and build an insurmountable lead heading into Sunday’s ceremonial final lap around Rome. Barring an unprecedented catastrophe on the flat, largely ceremonial route through the Italian capital, Vingegaard will become just the eighth rider in cycling history to secure the sport’s triple crown: overall victories at all three of road cycling’s Grand Tours (the Giro d’Italia, Tour de France, and Vuelta a España). He will join legendary figures including Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, and Italian great Vincenzo Nibali in the exclusive group.

    Saturday’s decisive stage was centered on two grueling 14.5-kilometer climbs to the summit finish at Piancavallo, where Vingegaard turned a comfortable general classification lead into an unassailable advantage. When the main peloton reached the first ascent, a breakaway group had already built a four-minute advantage at the front of the race. By the start of the second climb, that gap had shrunk to just over two minutes, and Vingegaard launched his decisive attack a little more than 10 kilometers from the finish line.

    He first pulled clear of the main chasing pack, then easily distanced his closest overall rival, Austria’s Felix Gall, who could not match the Dane’s power on the upper slopes of the climb. Vingegaard then surged past the remaining remnants of the early breakaway to cross the line first, extending his lead over Gall to more than five minutes in the general classification. Gall will head to Rome as the clear second-place finisher, with no realistic path to overturning that gap on the flat final stage.

    In the race’s secondary classifications, Italy’s Giulio Ciccone secured the blue Mountains classification jersey with his performance on Saturday, capping a standout performance in the hills. This marks the third Grand Tour mountains classification title of Ciccone’s career, adding to his 2019 Giro mountains win and his 2021 Tour de France polka-dot jersey victory.

    Beyond his imminent first Giro title, Vingegaard’s performance this week has set the stage for what is already shaping up to be one of the most anticipated battles in modern cycling at July’s Tour de France. Vingegaard is targeting a rare Giro-Tour de France double this season, a feat only a handful of riders have pulled off in modern cycling history. His top rival, Slovenian superstar Tadej Pogačar, skipped this year’s Giro to focus on the Tour, and the head-to-head between the two Grand Tour greats is expected to be one of the most fiercely contested battles in the 111-year history of the race. Vingegaard’s dominant performance at the Giro, even while recovering from early-race sickness, has cemented his status as the man to beat when the Tour gets underway in July.

  • Liverpool sack Slot, Iraola in line to take over

    Liverpool sack Slot, Iraola in line to take over

    Just 12 months after delivering a joint-record 20th English top-flight title in his sensational debut season at Anfield, Arne Slot has been dismissed as Liverpool manager following a catastrophic Premier League title defence that has left the Merseyside giants searching for a new strategic direction.

    The club’s American ownership group Fenway Sports Group (FSG) confirmed the sacking in an official statement released on Saturday, capping weeks of mounting fan pressure and internal speculation over the Dutch manager’s future. The decision ends Slot’s 14-month tenure, which began with huge expectations as he stepped into the enormous shoes left by the departure of club legend Jurgen Klopp.

    This season’s collapse has been one of the most dramatic in modern Premier League history. After splashing a league-record £450 million (approximately $605 million) on new transfers last summer, Liverpool finished a full 25 points adrift of new champions Arsenal, landing in fifth place in the final table. The club’s 60-point total was their lowest return since the 2015/16 campaign, marking a stark fall from grace just one season after lifting the trophy.

    Slot’s second season at the helm was marred by multiple challenges beyond poor on-pitch results. Discontent among the playing squad spilled into public view earlier this month, when departing star Mohamed Salah posted an explosive message on social media calling for a return to Klopp’s famous “heavy metal football” — a thinly veiled criticism of Slot’s more conservative tactical approach. The post was quickly liked by multiple current Liverpool first-team players, confirming widespread reports of dressing room disharmony. Key summer signings also failed to deliver on their price tags: British record signing Alexander Isak spent much of the campaign sidelined with repeated fitness issues, while £100 million wunderkind Florian Wirtz struggled to adapt to the physical and tactical pace of the Premier League after moving from Bayer Leverkusen. Compounding these struggles, Slot was forced to navigate the devastating emotional blow of the death of fan-favourite forward Diogo Jota in a car accident last July.

    Despite a late run of form that ultimately secured Liverpool a place in next season’s Champions League — which had previously led to reports that Slot would keep his job — FSG ultimately bowed to growing fan anger to remove the former Feyenoord manager. In its official statement, the club framed the decision as a necessary change of course, not a rejection of Slot’s personal ability.

    “We have collectively come to the conclusion that change is necessary in order for the club to keep moving forward,” the statement read. “Again, it must be stressed that this is not a decision which has been reached lightly, anything but. The conclusion we have come to is built on a belief that the team’s trajectory is best addressed through a change of direction. That does not diminish the work Arne has done here, or the respect we have for him. Nor is it a reflection of his talents. Rather, it is indicative of the need for a different approach. Arne leaves with our gratitude, with a Premier League title to his name, and with the knowledge that he and his family will always be welcomed back at Anfield.”

    FSG added that the hiring process for Slot’s replacement is already well underway. While a large section of Liverpool supporters have publicly pushed for the return of fan favourite Xabi Alonso, the former Reds midfielder has already agreed to take the head coaching role at Chelsea for the 2025/26 season, ruling out a return to Merseyside this summer.

    Instead, the frontrunner for the job is outgoing Bournemouth manager Andoni Iraola, who is on track to become Slot’s permanent successor after a historic season with the Cherries. The Spanish manager led Bournemouth to a sixth-place Premier League finish and qualification for European competition for the first time in the club’s 125-year history, capping the campaign with an 18-match unbeaten run that saw the south coast club finish just three points behind Liverpool, despite operating with a far smaller playing budget. Iraola also has an existing working relationship with Liverpool sporting director Richard Hughes, who previously held the same role at Bournemouth before moving to Anfield.

    The dismissal caps a turbulent season for one of English football’s biggest clubs, and sets the stage for a new era at Anfield as the ownership looks to reset the team’s trajectory ahead of the next campaign.