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  • Somaliland president meets Israeli counterpart in first Jerusalem visit

    Somaliland president meets Israeli counterpart in first Jerusalem visit

    In a moment that marks a pivotal shift in regional geopolitics, Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi — popularly known by his nickname Cirro and serving as the president of the self-declared independent state of Somaliland — arrived in Israel on Sunday, making history as the first Somaliland head of state to conduct an official state visit to the Jewish nation. The trip comes roughly six months after Israel made a groundbreaking move to recognize Somaliland as an independent sovereign state, a step no other United Nations member state had previously taken.

    Taking to the social platform X to share his first impressions after landing, Cirro expressed deep gratitude for the reception he received from Israeli President Isaac Herzog. He called the journey a once-in-a-generation milestone for the relationship between the breakaway East African territory and Tel Aviv. “For thirty-five years, the people of Somaliland have built a peaceful, democratic, and resilient nation. We asked the world: Do you see us? Israel answered first,” Cirro wrote in his public post, which was paired with an on-the-ground photo from his arrival. “Today, history is being written, and Somaliland stands ready to forge a shared future founded on friendship, cooperation, and mutual respect.”

    According to reporting from Israeli daily newspaper Maariv, the two-day visit will see Cirro hold additional high-level meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Foreign Minister Gideon Saar, beyond his initial talks with Herzog. Israeli President Herzog struck a collaborative tone in his response to the visit, noting that both sides aim to expand joint work across multiple priority sectors. “We both seek security and stability in the region and in the Horn of Africa. We both see the importance of protecting maritime freedom,” Herzog stated.

    To understand the full context of this historic encounter, it is necessary to outline Somaliland’s decades-long path to international recognition. The autonomous region in northern Somalia declared its separation from the rest of Somalia in 1991, following the collapse of the Siad Barre regime. To date, however, the United Nations, the African Union, and nearly every sovereign government across the globe still formally recognize the territory as an integral part of Somalia, leaving Somaliland’s independence bid isolated on the global stage.

    That changed this past December, when Israel became the first UN member state to formally grant recognition to Somaliland as an independent country. Regional analysts have widely framed the move as a calculated step to advance Israeli geopolitical interests in the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea region. The territory sits just 30 kilometers south of the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, the critical narrow waterway that links the Gulf of Aden to the Red Sea — one of the world’s most vital shipping lanes for global trade.

    A permanent Israeli foothold in Somaliland would place Israeli military and intelligence assets within very close proximity to Yemen’s Houthi movement, which has launched repeated attacks on commercial shipping in the Red Sea since late 2023. The Houthis have stated their attacks are a retaliation for Israel’s military campaign in Gaza against Hamas. For Israel, establishing a presence in Somaliland also advances a broader goal of countering the expanding influence of Iran and its regional allied network across the Red Sea and Horn of Africa, analysts add.

    Israel’s alignment with Somaliland also deepens its existing close security and political partnership with the United Arab Emirates, which has long backed Somaliland’s bid for international standing. Back in 2017, the Somaliland government approved a UAE bid to construct a military base at the strategic Port of Berbera, a move Hargeisa hoped would bolster its case for global recognition. Since Israel granted recognition to Somaliland earlier this year, senior Somaliland officials have confirmed they have held discussions about hosting an Israeli military base on their territory — a reversal of earlier denials of any such plans from Hargeisa’s foreign ministry.

    For Somaliland, the new partnership with Israel carries tangible potential benefits beyond the long-sought win of international recognition. In comments given to Reuters back in February, Cirro revealed that Somaliland expects to finalize a bilateral trade agreement with Israel in the near future, and has offered Israel exploration and extraction rights to its untapped mineral deposits as part of the broader deal. The breakaway region has also identified growing security cooperation with Israel as a key priority: after the United Nations partially lifted its long-standing arms embargo on Somalia in 2023, Somaliland has cited new growing security threats to its territory and has sought to strengthen its own military capabilities.

  • Can Tunisia finally break through at the World Cup?

    Can Tunisia finally break through at the World Cup?

    The old adage holds that consistency paves the way for long-term success, but for Tunisia’s national men’s football team, decades of reliable qualification have turned into a heavy burden of unmet expectation ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

    For nearly 30 years, the Carthage Eagles have outperformed most of their North African and regional rivals in major tournament qualifications. Since 1998, they have booked their spot at twice as many World Cup finals as any neighboring nation, and hold an unmatched continental record: 17 consecutive Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) qualifications dating back to 1994. This streak of steady performance earned them the nickname “the Germans of Africa” among football observers.

    Yet for all their routine qualification success, Tunisia has failed to carve out the iconic, memorable legacy that smaller, less consistent teams from the region have built. Algeria captured global admiration for its deep run at the 2014 World Cup, while Morocco made history by reaching the semi-finals in 2022. Even Saudi Arabia, which has suffered multiple lopsided defeats at World Cup tournaments, boasts one of the biggest upsets in the competition’s history: a 2-1 victory over eventual champion Argentina at the 2022 Qatar World Cup.

    Tunisian fans have long craved a similarly unforgettable milestone, but once-steady hope has gradually shifted to cynicism. Simply reaching the World Cup — a feat that eludes dozens of capable football nations every cycle — is no longer celebrated as an achievement on its own. For a side that has delivered consistent results for decades, fans expect more than just early-round exits, and frustration has grown over the team’s pragmatic, often uninspiring style of play.

    “If this team wins a game, it will never be by more than one goal. Given how they play, the maximum we can hope for is two points from three group stage matches,” veteran Tunisian journalist Maher Mezahi noted, echoing the sentiment of many disappointed supporters. One African football journalist added to Middle East Eye earlier this month: “A young football fan watching the World Cup at home will never pick Tunisia as their second favorite team. They have no breakout star players catching the global eye, and they don’t play attractive, exciting football.”

    It is important to contextualize Tunisia’s achievements, however. The core of the nation’s decades-long consistency has been an unshakable team spirit, a trait that has proven critical in the grueling, physically and mentally draining African qualification cycle. Away matches in African qualifying are notoriously hostile, and success often comes down to a squad’s ability to stay united under extreme pressure. That is a challenge that more star-studded sides have failed to overcome this cycle: both Cameroon and Nigeria, packed with globally recognized talent, missed out on the 2026 World Cup largely due to internal disarray and poor cohesion. Tunisia, by contrast, sealed its qualification without conceding a single goal.

    This unyielding determination has a name among fans and analysts: grinta. Borrowed from Italian, the term is widely used across the Mediterranean to describe courage, grit and unrelenting fighting spirit — qualities that have defined Tunisian football for generations.

    What many local supporters overlook is the steep structural disadvantage Tunisia faces compared to its regional rivals. With a total population of just over 12 million, the nation has a far smaller talent pool than neighbors Morocco (37 million) and Algeria (45 million), both of which also have much larger European diasporas to draw elite talent from. Wealthier rivals like Saudi Arabia and other Gulf nations have far deeper financial resources to invest in football development, while the World Bank classifies Tunisia as a lower-middle-income country.

    Two decades of persistent economic stagnation have forced Tunisian football to operate with tight budget constraints, forcing smart, frugal investment to stay competitive. Top-flight Tunisian clubs rarely offer large contracts to players, and foreign managers have become increasingly rare: as of 2026, only two of the 16 clubs in Tunisia’s top division employ a foreign manager.

    These financial limitations have also pushed clubs to prioritize youth talent development over buying established stars, a strategy that has turned Tunisian football into a respected talent incubator for overlooked players across the African continent. For example, Baghdad Bounedjah, Algeria’s all-time leading men’s international goalscorer, was ignored by clubs in his home country before signing with Tunisian side Etoile du Sahel in 2013. Just one year later, he earned a call-up to the Algerian national team, and moved to Qatari side Al Sadd for a $3.8 million transfer in 2016. In recent years, Tunisia has expanded its talent export market to Europe, with promising young players moving abroad earlier in their careers — a trend born of economic necessity, as government funding for football has declined and revenue from television rights and merchandising remains limited.

    In the wake of Morocco’s historic 2022 World Cup run, Tunisian fans are more eager than ever to see their side reach the World Cup knockout stage for the first time in the nation’s history. Many local analysts hold out cautious optimism for the 2026 tournament. “I am naturally an optimistic person when it comes to our chances,” said the founder of ActuFootTunisie, a leading local outlet covering Tunisian football. “Tunisia is capable of finishing second in the group, but we have to stay realistic. A third-place finish that earns a spot as one of the best third-placed teams is achievable. It would be a first for our country and a fantastic result for us.”

    This year, however, the traditional grit and cohesion of the squad is facing an unprecedented test, after new manager Sabri Lamouchi launched a complete overhaul of the national squad. Only five players from Tunisia’s 2022 World Cup squad retained their spots for 2026, and several senior stars — including former captains Ferjani Sassi, Ali Maaloul and Yassine Meriah — were left off the roster entirely.

    One of the most controversial new additions is Germany-born midfielder Rani Khedira, who previously rejected overtures from the Tunisian Football Federation (FTF), telling German media in 2015, “There was never any thought of playing for Tunisia.” Khedira’s selection over fan favorites Aissa Laidouni and Mohamed Ali Ben Romdhane has angered many supporters. The ActuFootTunisie founder notes that the decision is frustrating, given that other candidates played every minute of the qualifying campaign, and Khedira’s last-minute call-up can come off as opportunistic. “But now that he’s here, he represents our country, he’s Tunisian, so we support him,” he added, noting that the rest of the squad selection is strong. “It’s a good group with lots of young players, unlike previous squads that relied too much on veteran players. This group has real potential.”

    The 2026 squad reflects this youth focus: 12 of the 26 players were born in the 21st century, including teenager Khalil Ayari, who had only been a professional for 18 months before moving from Stade Tunisien to Paris Saint-Germain ahead of the 2025-26 season.

    The squad renewal came after a string of underwhelming results that made clear the old approach was no longer working. Tunisia turned in poor performances at two major tournaments in the lead-up to 2026: at the 2025 FIFA Arab Cup in Qatar, the side opened with a 1-0 loss to Syria, then blew a 2-0 lead to draw 2-2 with Palestine, crashing out in the group stage. The Carthage Eagles did reach the knockout round of the 2025 AFCON a month later, but turned in unconvincing performances and were outclassed by top African sides. After Tunisia’s Round of 16 elimination at the hands of Mali, star midfielder Hannibal Mejbri did not mince words about the state of the nation’s football program.

    “We are behind in our football development, that’s the plain truth — we lag behind in so many areas,” said the Premier League star. “All of the leaders of Tunisian football need to sit down together and ask the hard questions, honestly.”

    The FTF’s response to that call for change came in January 2026, when the body hired Lamouchi, a former French international of Tunisian descent, to lead the national side. The hire was widely seen as an effort to appease fans who had grown frustrated with six straight local managers holding the job since 2018. When Lamouchi was introduced to the press, he promised sweeping change, and the heavily reshuffled 26-man squad delivers on that promise.

    Even with the promised renewal, the squad selection has not been without controversy. A recent investigative report claimed that some of Lamouchi’s selections were forced by FTF executives, who mandated a quota of players from Tunisia’s biggest clubs to secure more FIFA compensation. FIFA pays participating clubs $10,950 per player per day for releasing their players for the World Cup, with total compensation for the 2022 tournament exceeding $209 million globally.

    The claims are a serious black mark for the new FTF leadership, coming on the heels of a major corruption scandal that brought down the federation’s previous regime. Former FTF president Wadie Jary was arrested in 2023, and is currently serving a four-year prison sentence after being convicted of corruption and match-fixing. Many members of the new leadership — including current FTF president Moez Nasri and vice president Hussein Jenayah — were close allies of Jary during his tenure.

    As Tunisia prepares to travel to the 2026 World Cup in North America, questions far outnumber answers regarding the inner workings of the FTF, the long-term financial health of Tunisian football, and whether a heavily reshuffled squad can retain the grinta that carried the team to qualification for decades. This is Lamouchi’s first major tournament as Tunisia’s manager, and only five veterans remain from the 2022 squad that had no shortage of the famous fighting spirit, even with its other flaws.

    Only time will tell whether a new manager and a youth-focused squad overhaul can deliver Tunisia’s first-ever trip to the World Cup knockout stage. But for critics like Mezahi, the outlook is not positive. “If this team wins a game, it won’t be by more than one goal,” he said. “And given their style of play, the ceiling might be just two points from three group games.”

  • Israeli strike on Beirut kills three

    Israeli strike on Beirut kills three

    On a tense Sunday in the Middle East, an Israeli drone strike on an apartment building in Beirut’s southern Ghobeiry neighborhood of the Dahieh district killed at least three civilians and left 15 others injured, sending shockwaves through already fragile regional peace negotiations and drawing sharp condemnation alongside explicit threats of retaliation from top Iranian government and military officials.

    Lebanese media confirmed the targeted structure was a municipally owned apartment building in the densely populated Dahieh area, a district that has long been a stronghold of the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah. The attack marked the latest escalation in a cycle of cross-border violence that has gripped the Israel-Lebanon border for months, coming just hours after three unmanned aerial vehicles launched from Lebanese territory struck northern Israel earlier the same day. In response to that initial incursion, senior Israeli cabinet members immediately called for forceful, aggressive retaliation targeting Beirut directly.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz issued a joint statement confirming the Sunday strike was a deliberate targeting of Hezbollah assets in Dahieh, carried out in direct response to the earlier drone fire on Israeli territory. This latest attack fits a consistent pattern of Israeli military activity that has persisted since a temporary ceasefire went into effect across the region on April 16: Israel has conducted daily bombardment operations across southern Lebanon, while its ground forces have progressively expanded their occupation of southern Lebanese villages and carried out widespread demolitions of local residential and civilian infrastructure.

    Early Sunday, the Israeli military had already issued a broad evacuation order urging residents of at least 30 towns and villages across Lebanon’s Nabatieh and Sidon districts, located north of the Litani River, to leave their homes immediately ahead of planned military operations. The timing of the Beirut strike carries particularly high stakes, as it comes at a critical moment when Washington and Tehran appeared to be on the cusp of finalizing a landmark US-Iran agreement designed to de-escalate the broader regional war. As recently as this weekend, both US and Pakistani leaders publicly predicted the deal could be finalized and signed as early as Sunday.

    Just last week, a separate Israeli strike on the Dahieh district already triggered a full exchange of cross-border fire between Israeli and Iranian forces, bringing regional tensions dangerously close to a full-scale conflict that would have collapsed the ongoing negotiation process entirely. Iran has long listed a full cessation of Israeli hostilities in Lebanon and a complete withdrawal of Israeli occupying forces from all southern Lebanese territory as non-negotiable conditions for any final wider agreement with the United States. On Friday, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi reaffirmed that the imminent deal would explicitly include commitments to end all hostilities in Lebanon and enforce the full withdrawal of Israeli troops from the south.

    Sunday’s strike has thrown these plans into complete disarray. Mohammad Baqer Ghalibaf, Iran’s chief nuclear and negotiation negotiator, argued that the attack exposed a critical failure on the part of the United States: either Washington lacks the political will to uphold its own commitments to the emerging deal, or it does not have the capability to rein in its Israeli ally to meet the agreed terms. In a public post on the social platform X, Ghalibaf warned that the current path toward negotiation would become completely unworkable if the US cannot deliver on the obligations it has put forward.

    Senior Iranian military leadership has further raised the threat of direct retaliation. Brigadier General Mohammad Jafar Asadi, deputy commander of Iran’s supreme military command, told Iranian state media that what he labeled Israeli “crimes” in Lebanon would not remain unanswered, signaling that Tehran is prepared to take direct military action in response to the strike.

    Adding another layer of complication to the negotiation process, Israeli Defense Minister Katz has already explicitly rejected the core Iranian condition for the deal: he confirmed earlier this week that Israel has no intention of withdrawing its forces from the areas of southern Lebanon it currently occupies. This stance puts Washington in an impossible position, as it tries to reconcile its unwavering military and political support for Israel with its diplomatic goal of reaching a de-escalation agreement with Iran to prevent a wider regional war.

  • Thousands of Palestinians buried under rubble in Gaza ‘may never be identified’, says Red Cross

    Thousands of Palestinians buried under rubble in Gaza ‘may never be identified’, says Red Cross

    Two years into the ongoing Israeli military campaign in the Gaza Strip, a grave new humanitarian crisis is emerging, with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) issuing a stark warning that thousands of Palestinians buried under collapsed infrastructure may never receive formal identification, leaving grieving families without closure. The warning, first reported by The Guardian on Sunday, comes against a backdrop of cripplingly slow body recovery efforts and a catastrophic scale of destruction that has left the enclave unrecognizable.

    Pat Griffiths, ICRC spokesperson based in Jerusalem, explained to the outlet that the mounting delay in retrieving human remains directly amplifies the risk of permanent identification failure. “The longer it takes for human remains to be recovered, the more difficult it can be to identify them,” Griffiths said. “The longer the deceased lie beneath the rubble, the more likely they will be in advanced stages of decomposition – even skeletonised – when eventually recovered. Forensic experts lose access to circumstantial evidence that can be used to corroborate their identity.”

    The ICRC emphasized that critical identifying markers — including intact fingerprints, dental records, and personal belongings that can link remains to missing people — degrade rapidly as time passes. Gaza’s environmental conditions only worsen this challenge: high humidity in the coastal enclave and scavenging animal activity steadily erode what little forensic evidence remains, making the work of identification teams increasingly futile.

    Official UN data underscores the unprecedented scale of destruction Gaza has suffered after two years of conflict. Some 61.5 million tonnes of debris now cover the territory, with 75% of all Gaza’s residential and public buildings reduced to rubble. The United Nations Environment Programme has confirmed that this volume of wreckage is 20 times greater than the total debris generated by all conflicts in Gaza combined between 2008 and the start of the current campaign.

    Local Gaza residents add another layer of concern: they fear Israeli military bulldozers operating in areas under Israeli control are moving and disturbing remains still trapped under rubble, scattering evidence and making it even harder for families to locate their missing loved ones.

    Official casualty figures put the total number of people killed in Israeli attacks across the besieged enclave at nearly 73,000, a toll that has continued to climb even after a nominal ceasefire took effect in December. Back in February, the Palestinian Civil Defence reported that roughly 8,000 bodies remained trapped under rubble across Gaza, even after months of exhaustive recovery work by local teams. An additional 3,000 people are still listed as missing, with no clarity on whether they are alive, dead, or being held in Israeli detention.

    Since the ceasefire was implemented, recovery operations have been crippled by systemic shortages of essential heavy machinery. Rescue teams have been forced to rely on basic hand tools — shovels, pickaxes, wheelbarrows — and even bare hands to sift through millions of tonnes of wreckage, as repeated requests to Israel to allow excavators and other heavy recovery equipment into Gaza have been denied.

    Griffiths stressed that unimpeded access and proper resources are non-negotiable for the recovery effort to succeed. “Search and recovery teams need access to all sites where human remains are thought to be located,” she said. “We know that much of this machinery and equipment remains almost impossible to bring into Gaza right now. And it remains our call, and part of our ongoing direct dialogue with the relevant authorities, to allow the entry of these items and equipment into Gaza.”

    For thousands of grieving Palestinian families, the growing risk of permanent unidentified burials adds another layer of unending trauma, as they face the prospect of never being able to properly bury and mourn their loved ones lost to the conflict.

  • Justin Trudeau skipped Canada World Cup opener because girlfriend Katy Perry performed at US game

    Justin Trudeau skipped Canada World Cup opener because girlfriend Katy Perry performed at US game

    In a surprising personal turn amid the 2026 co-hosted FIFA World Cup, former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau opted to attend the United States’ opening tournament match against Paraguay this past Friday instead of cheering on his own country’s squad in their opening game held in Toronto. The high-profile appearance drew immediate public attention, as Canada shares hosting duties for this year’s World Cup alongside the United States and Mexico, making the Toronto match a landmark moment for Canadian soccer.

    Trudeau, who served as Canada’s head of government from 2015 to 2025, quickly clarified his decision on social media platform X over the weekend. He explained that his attendance at the match at Inglewood, California’s SoFi Stadium stemmed from a commitment to his girlfriend, global pop star Katy Perry, who headlined the pre-game performance ahead of the U.S. versus Paraguay fixture.

    “Sometimes supportive boyfriend duties call. But you know who I’m rooting for to take the Cup,” Trudeau wrote in his social media post, confirming that despite his presence at the U.S. match, his championship support remains with his home nation’s team.

    The scheduling of the two opening matches created an unavoidable conflict for Trudeau: Canada’s 3 p.m. EDT opening draw against Bosnia-Herzegovina finished just hours before the U.S. match kicked off six hours later in California. Canada left their opening match with a 1-1 tie, while the host United States secured a solid 4-1 victory over Paraguay in their opening outing. Full coverage of the 2026 FIFA World Cup is available via The Associated Press’ dedicated coverage hub.

  • UK and Japan agree £18bn investment deal

    UK and Japan agree £18bn investment deal

    In a high-profile diplomatic and economic meeting held in London on Sunday, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his Japanese counterpart Sanae Takaichi have formalized a landmark multi-billion-pound bilateral investment pact that London officials frame as opening a new chapter of deepened cooperation between the two island nations.

    According to announcements from Downing Street, the agreement brings a total of up to £18 billion in planned Japanese investment across key UK sectors. Japanese private firms have committed more than £9 billion to UK infrastructure, real estate and financial services projects over the next five years, with an additional £9 billion earmarked for British offshore wind energy development. If fully realized, Downing Street projects the investments will generate tens of thousands of new jobs across the country.

    Alongside the core investment package, the two leaders confirmed ongoing collaboration on two major high-tech projects. The pair reaffirmed their shared commitment to the GCAP global combat air programme, a next-generation fighter jet initiative developed jointly by the UK, Japan and Italy. Additionally, a new technical partnership was announced: British engineering giant Rolls-Royce will join forces with Japan’s Atomic Energy Agency to advance cutting-edge next-generation nuclear technology, while a broader R&D agreement will connect UK software and research expertise with Japanese manufacturing capabilities to drive cross-border innovation.

    Major Japanese firms participating in the infrastructure and real estate commitments include Mitsubishi Estate, Mitsui Fudosan and Nomura Real Estate, according to Downing Street. After holding talks with Japanese business leaders alongside Takaichi, Starmer called the negotiations “very productive”, and said he was pleased to lock in the expanded bilateral partnership. For his part, Takaichi emphasized through a translator that the UK remains “an extremely important partner” for Japan in Europe and globally.

    The deal comes at a critical moment for the UK economy, which is already facing significant headwinds even before accounting for new geopolitical risks. While the UK registered 0.6% GDP growth in the first quarter of 2025, analysts broadly predict sluggish growth in the coming quarters. Last month, the International Monetary Fund warned that the ongoing conflict between the US-Israel alliance and Iran will hit the UK harder than any other advanced global economy. The Bank of England has also cautioned that the conflict could push UK inflation back up to as high as 6% in a worst-case scenario, putting renewed pressure on households and policymakers.

    A key question hanging over the investment package remains unresolved: Downing Street has not clarified what share of the announced £18 billion represents new, previously unannounced commitments versus existing investment plans that were already public. Political opposition has also weighed in on the deal. Andrew Griffith, shadow business and trade secretary for the opposition Conservative Party, said his party welcomes any agreement that brings new investment to the UK, but added that the current Labour government’s “tax hikes and employer red tape are doing huge damage, destroying jobs and putting more and more people onto welfare”.

    While Downing Street frames the agreement as a long-term boost to British jobs and sustainable economic growth, most economists continue to expect near-term economic strain for the UK regardless of the new investment, which will take years to roll out fully.

  • ‘Boyfriend duties call,’ Trudeau says after skipping Canada match to watch Perry

    ‘Boyfriend duties call,’ Trudeau says after skipping Canada match to watch Perry

    What was supposed to be a celebratory moment for Canadian soccer fans during the opening round of the 2026 World Cup quickly turned into a social media firestorm after former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau missed his home nation’s first group stage match to attend the United States’ opening game alongside his partner, global pop superstar Katy Perry.

    Canada kicked off its World Cup campaign in Toronto at 3:00 PM EDT on Friday, playing out a tense 1-1 draw against Bosnia and Herzegovina. Trudeau was notably absent from the stands for the historic home fixture. Instead, just six hours later, he was spotted in the crowd at Los Angeles’ SoFi Stadium for the USA’s match against Paraguay, which the American side won 4-1. Perry had been scheduled to perform at the U.S. hosting leg of the World Cup’s opening ceremony, leading Trudeau to offer a lighthearted justification for his conflicting schedule after drawing widespread criticism.

    “Sometimes supportive boyfriend duties call. But you know who I’m rooting for to take the Cup,” Trudeau wrote on his social media channels, paired with a Canadian flag emoji to clarify his official sporting allegiance.

    Footage captured by event cameras shows Perry rushing off stage immediately after her performance to greet Trudeau with a warm kiss. Televised broadcasts of the match also repeatedly cut to the high-profile couple, who were seen relaxing in their box seats, sipping craft beers and sharing casual moments together as the game unfolded. But many Canadian social media users were far from amused by Trudeau’s choice to prioritize his partner’s performance over his home country’s opening World Cup match.

    A user based in Toronto wrote on platform X that Trudeau’s decision was “a slap in the face of this country. Distasteful doesn’t begin to cover it”. As clips of the couple in Los Angeles spread virally across social platforms, other users went even further, labeling the former prime minister a “traitor” and a “fraud” for his scheduling conflict.

    For her opening ceremony set, Perry performed *Wonder*, a relatively underrated ballad from her 2024 studio album 143. Ahead of the performance, she told People Magazine that she intentionally chose to forgo one of her decades of chart-topping hits – a catalog that includes global smashes like *California Gurls*, *Teenage Dream*, *Firework*, and *E.T.* – in favor of the newer track. “It’s very fitting for the ceremonial song that I get to sing,” she explained of her song selection.

    The high-profile relationship between Trudeau and Perry first made tabloid headlines in July 2025, and the pair officially confirmed their romance with a joint Instagram post that December. Before their relationship, Trudeau was married to Canadian television host Sophie Grégoire for 18 years; the couple announced their separation in 2023 and share three children. Perry was previously married to English comedian Russell Brand from 2010 to 2012.

  • Teen shot and buses torched in Manhattan after historic NBA win for Knicks

    Teen shot and buses torched in Manhattan after historic NBA win for Knicks

    More than 50 years after their last NBA title win, the New York Knicks secured a historic championship on Saturday, beating the San Antonio Spurs 94-90 in a decisive fifth game held in Texas. Though the final match took place thousands of miles away in San Antonio, ecstatic New Yorkers flooded city streets by the thousands to celebrate a milestone decades in the making for the franchise and the city. What began as a raucous, joyful street party quickly devolved into chaotic violence in the early hours of Sunday, leaving a teenager shot, multiple vehicles destroyed, and dozens arrested in Midtown Manhattan.

    Even before the celebrations spun out of control, Knicks owner James Dolan publicly appealed for calm, interrupting a post-game press conference with player Josh Hart to share a message with fans. “We know that they’re celebrating, we want them to have a great time,” Dolan said. “Please be safe. Don’t get hurt, don’t hurt anybody.”

    In the hours after Dolan’s warning, crowds pouring out of bars and public viewing parties began clashing with law enforcement in Manhattan’s Midtown neighborhood. According to official statements from the New York Police Department (NYPD), crowds grew “increasingly destructive,” engaging in a pattern of “incredibly reckless and dangerous behavior” across the district.

    Five yellow school buses, originally deployed to shuttle World Cup football fans to Times Square after a match between Brazil and Morocco, became major targets for rioters. Photographs from the scene captured revelers swarming, climbing on top of, and entering the abandoned buses to pose for photos before the vehicles were set ablaze or destroyed with baseball bats. Onlookers gathered to capture footage and images of one burning bus as it was engulfed in thick smoke and flames. Police vehicles were also targeted: multiple officers reported rioters using bats to damage car bodies, shatter windshields, and jump on vehicle roofs.

    At approximately 2:00 a.m. EDT, shots rang out at the intersection of 42nd Street and Broadway, sending panicked partygoers scrambling for cover. Officials confirmed a 17-year-old boy suffered a gunshot wound to the foot. No fatalities were reported in the incident, and the victim was transported to a nearby hospital in an NYPD patrol car after dense crowds blocked ambulance access to 43rd Street. Investigators took three persons of interest into custody and recovered a firearm at the shooting scene.

    Beyond the shooting and arson, the NYPD documented a wide range of additional disorderly and violent incidents, including four stabbings and slashings, widespread damage to private civilian vehicles, illegal fireworks set off within large crowds, multiple physical brawls, and repeated failures by crowds to comply with dispersal orders. By the end of the night, law enforcement had arrested 63 people on charges ranging from assaulting police officers and illegal weapon possession to criminal mischief, disorderly conduct, resisting arrest, and obstruction of government administration. Ten officers suffered injuries in the line of duty during the unrest: one was punched in the face, while another was struck by a thrown glass bottle, among other harm. Rioters threw additional projectiles, including street cones and glass bottles, at mounted police who were deployed to help clear overcrowded streets.

    For many fans, the championship marked a once-in-a-lifetime moment of joy before violence broke out. Early in the evening, the entire city embraced a festive atmosphere: emergency service workers chanted pro-Knicks slogans over loudspeakers, strangers hugged and shook hands in the streets, and drivers honked their horns in celebration for hours. “Oh my God. It’s like New Year’s Eve times 20,” Carol Marino, a fan who watched the game at a Manhattan bar, told reporters ahead of the unrest. Mathieu Ogno, celebrating at a Central Park watch party, added, “I’m so overwhelmed. I’m so happy.”

    City officials have confirmed that official public celebrations for the Knicks’ championship are still scheduled to go forward this Thursday, including a ticker-tape parade through Manhattan and a formal ceremony at New York City Hall, per an announcement from Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s office.

  • Italy’s Meloni faces a far-right dilemma as ‘Il Generale’ Vannacci rises

    Italy’s Meloni faces a far-right dilemma as ‘Il Generale’ Vannacci rises

    Near the Vatican, in a crowded Rome auditorium, former Italian army commander Roberto Vannacci—dubbed “Il Generale” by his loyal base—stood before supporters of his newly launched political project to declare his challenge to the existing right-wing order and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. What began as a fringe political ambition has quickly grown into a major disruption for Meloni’s ruling conservative coalition, injecting unanticipated volatility into Italian politics years ahead of the 2027 national general election.

    Political analysts across the country now agree that Vannacci’s influence on the upcoming electoral cycle is no longer a question of if, but how much. He has carved out a solid niche to the far right of Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party, forcing the prime minister to confront an uncomfortable dilemma: can she contain, co-opt, or outmaneuver the rising challenger before his movement irreparably splits the conservative vote?

    Vannacci’s rapid ascent is not an isolated Italian political anomaly; it aligns with a broader continental trend of far-right, nationalist movements gaining traction across Europe, reshaping the entire continent’s political landscape by centering polarizing issues of migration, national security, and cultural identity.

    At his party’s founding assembly over the weekend, Vannacci positioned his Futuro Nazionale (National Future) movement as the “authentic right” of Italy. “With us, Italy will once again be the home of Italians,” he told the gathered crowd. “Everyone must feel safe in their own home.” He proudly refers to his core group of lawmakers as the “dirty dozen,” leaning hard into his self-styled image as an anti-establishment outsider rejecting the compromised norms of mainstream Italian politics.

    The 57-year-old first entered the public consciousness as a political figure in 2023, when he self-published his controversial book *The World Upside Down*, which drew widespread backlash for its vicious attacks on LGBTQ+ people, migrants, and other marginalized groups. A year later, he launched his political career as a member of Matteo Salvini’s anti-migration League party, winning more than 530,000 individual preference votes in the 2024 European Parliament elections. He split from the League this past February to launch Futuro Nazionale, a move Salvini publicly labeled a “betrayal.”

    Since his break from the League, Vannacci has rapidly consolidated support. Futuro Nazionale claims to have already topped 100,000 registered members, and currently holds eight seats in Italy’s lower parliamentary chamber—several of which were filled by defectors from the League and the coalition’s centrist partner Forza Italia, a clear sign of simmering discontent within Meloni’s ruling bloc.

    Vannacci rejects the traditional “far-right” label, insisting his movement represents the only true conservative voice in Italy. He has openly criticized Meloni for failing to deliver on the shared right-wing policy priorities she campaigned on, and has so far ruled out any formal electoral alliance with the prime minister’s bloc. His policy platform centers on hard-line nationalist positions: aggressive security and migration restrictions, including explicit calls for the “remigration” of foreign-born residents he deems not integrated; staunch opposition to EU policy initiatives like the European Green Deal; and public criticism of Western economic sanctions on Russia over its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

    Political analysts frame Vannacci’s rise as a reflection of a broader shifting political and cultural mood within Italy. “He is leading a sort of political raid for hard-right voters within the main parties of the current ruling coalition,” explained Massimiliano Panarari, a politics professor at the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia. “Meloni’s core political strategy was to leave no viable space to her right. Now that space is occupied.”

    Panarari describes Vannacci as “an entrepreneur of fear,” whose rhetoric amplifies polarizing, divisive positions—including open anti-LGBTQ+ and anti-feminist views—that Meloni can no longer publicly embrace now that she is serving as prime minister and leading a national government.

    Lorenzo Pregliasco, a political analyst and leading polling expert at Italian analytics firm YouTrend, notes that Vannacci’s movement introduces a dynamic never seen before in current Italian politics: an organized opposition to Meloni’s government coming from the right, rather than the left. “Now there is a force outside the governing majority that challenges it on the most electorally popular issues: migration, security, and the global culture wars,” Pregliasco said.

    This shift carries substantial electoral weight. Recent public polling puts support for Futuro Nazionale at between 4% and nearly 5% of the national vote—a share that could prove decisive in a close election, where Italy’s main center-right and center-left blocs consistently run neck and neck. “They could easily be the difference between finishing ahead or behind,” Pregliasco said, labeling Vannacci a potential “wild card” capable of upending the entire electoral result.

    For Meloni, the dilemma is fundamentally a strategic one. “In terms of political debate, he introduces instability across the entire right wing,” Pregliasco explained. “She and her allies have to decide whether to absorb him and his movement into the ruling coalition—but that would create significant political problems for her, both domestically and with European partners.”

    Speaking to Italian parliament earlier this week, Meloni accused lawmakers aligned with Vannacci of actively undermining her government and inadvertently boosting the political fortunes of the center-left opposition. Her Brothers of Italy party and the coalition’s centrist allies have already publicly ruled out any formal electoral agreements with Futuro Nazionale.

    For now, Meloni has opted to avoid direct public confrontation with Vannacci, a strategy political observers see as a calculated bet that his momentum will fade over time. “The core issue is what to do with this loose cannon of Vannacci, which could drag the entire Italian right back toward overt far-right extremism,” Panarari noted. “I’m not sure it would benefit Meloni to shift further to the right ahead of general elections. Her approach will likely be marked by ambiguity and ambivalence, for as long as that strategy remains possible.”

  • Tourist train overturns and injures 17 during Cártama tapas festival

    Tourist train overturns and injures 17 during Cártama tapas festival

    A minor accident at a popular annual culinary event in the Andalusian town of Cártama, located just outside the major tourist hub of Málaga in southern Spain, has left 17 people with non-life-threatening injuries, local authorities confirmed Sunday. The incident unfolded shortly after 21:30 local time (20:30 BST) on Saturday evening, when one wagon of a tourist road train carrying approximately 30 passengers overturned while navigating a turn at a crossing on Santo Cristo Road. No serious injuries have been reported, city officials emphasized in statements released after the accident.

    Among the injured, four people including three children required further medical care and were evacuated by emergency response teams to a nearby hospital for evaluation and treatment. All casualties are expected to make full recoveries, with none facing critical health conditions, per local updates. Social media posts from witnesses at the scene show first responders attending to the injured, including one child receiving care while seated on the pavement near the derailed wagon.

    The free tourist road train was a complimentary shuttle service offered as part of Cártama’s annual five-day La Ruta de la Tapa y el Cóctel, a community-focused event designed to support local food and beverage businesses. Running from June 10 to 14 this year, the event invites attendees to travel across the city to participating restaurants and bars, where they can sample signature tapas and cocktails, collect stamps from each establishment they visit, and enter a raffle for promotional prizes. The shuttle train was intended to make travel between venues easier for event-goers, stopping at regular intervals to drop off passengers at participating businesses.

    As of Sunday, the tourist train service has been temporarily suspended for the remainder of the weekend while local officials launch an investigation into the root cause of the overturn. At this stage, authorities have not confirmed what led to the accident, and are reviewing witness statements and on-site evidence to determine contributing factors. Located roughly 17 kilometers from Málaga and a 44-minute drive from the upscale coastal resort of Marbella, Cártama is a popular stop for both domestic and international tourists visiting the Costa del Sol region, particularly during the spring and early summer event season.