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  • Colombians vote in a presidential runoff that pits an outsider against a progressive

    Colombians vote in a presidential runoff that pits an outsider against a progressive

    BOGOTA, Colombia – As Colombia prepares to select its next head of state in this Sunday’s presidential runoff, a deeply fractured electorate stands at a crossroads, with the nation’s decades-long struggle with violence shaping every thread of the high-stakes race. Two candidates from opposite ends of the ideological spectrum – conservative political outsider Abelardo de la Espriella and progressive lawmaker Iván Cepeda, the standard-bearer of outgoing President Gustavo Petro’s leftist movement – are vying for the nation’s top office, both leaning into widespread public anxiety over a potential resurgence of internal armed conflict to win over voters. The pair secured their spots in the runoff after outperforming nine other challengers in the May 31 first round of voting.

    The defining issue of this election has been how to address the resurgence of widespread violence that has gripped Colombia a decade after the nation signed a landmark peace deal with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), an agreement that was once hailed as a permanent end to the vicious cycle of government-rebel fighting that stretched back generations. After the 2015 peace pact, hope for long-term stability quickly faded: most former rebel groups abandoned ideological warfare to pursue the massive profits of the drug trade, sparking deadly turf wars that have sent homicide rates soaring to their highest point in a decade. In 2024, official data recorded 14,780 homicides, a surge driven by clashes between competing illegal armed groups that even claimed the life of conservative presidential candidate Miguel Uribe during the campaign. Extortion rates have also exploded, hitting 13,417 reported cases in 2025 – more than double the number recorded just 10 years earlier. The violence that once defined Colombian life, including car bombings, mass kidnappings, forced disappearances, and widespread displacement, has reemerged as a top voter concern, and both candidates have positioned their policy platforms as the only path back to security.

    De la Espriella, a wealthy businessman and lawyer nicknamed “The Tiger” who is making his first run for elected office, has adopted a harsh, hardline security strategy modeled directly on the controversial policies of El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele. His plan includes cracking down on all illegal armed groups and constructing 10 new mega-prisons to incarcerate thousands of suspected criminals. The approach has earned him high-profile support from former U.S. President Donald Trump, though it has drawn criticism over potential human rights violations, mirroring the accusations leveled at Bukele’s policies in El Salvador, which have reduced homicide rates but sparked widespread outcry over mass detentions and due process violations.

    On the other side, Cepeda – a long-serving lawmaker and political heir to Petro, Colombia’s first leftist head of state – is running to continue Petro’s flagship “total peace” initiative, which prioritizes opening dialogue and negotiating peace agreements with all active illegal armed groups. Petro’s 2022 initiative has been widely panned for its lack of progress over three years: only this Thursday did the first small faction, comprising roughly 100 dissident guerrilla fighters, formally disarm and enter a civilian resettlement program, while Colombia is still home to more than 27,000 active members of illegal armed groups. Still, supporters of the strategy argue the decades-long conflict cannot be resolved in a single presidential term, and that the plan deserves more time to deliver results.

    Beyond security, the two candidates have also put forward starkly different solutions for Colombia’s other pressing crises: a collapsing public health system, rapidly growing national public debt, and deeply rooted systemic corruption that has plagued Colombian politics for generations.

    Official first-round results show a remarkably tight race: de la Espriella earned 44% of the first-round vote, while Cepeda finished just behind with 41%, a surprise finish that saw Cepeda slip from his consistent lead in pre-election polling. After the results were announced, Petro raised unsubstantiated questions about election fraud, deepening the already severe political polarization that has split the nation in the lead-up to the runoff.

    The campaign has been marked by escalating personal attacks and widespread accusations of misconduct, ranging from fraud and vote-buying to voter intimidation. Cepeda has even filed formal complaints against de la Espriella with both Colombia’s Attorney General’s Office and the International Criminal Court, alleging de la Espriella has longstanding ties to illegal paramilitary groups – allegations that de la Espriella has forcefully denied.

    For ordinary Colombians, the anxiety over the election’s outcome and the threat of renewed conflict runs deep. “Right now, what worries me is the polarization that exists between us: there are two very extreme sides, and the violence is concerning,” said John Manrique, a Bogota-based lawyer, as he walked through the capital. “What I hope is that people accept who won. Let’s accept it, regardless of the side, and try to reach a social consensus. … Let’s not go out and fight.”

    Yamile Guevara, a retired Bogota teacher and committed Cepeda supporter, argued that Petro’s peace initiative has been unfairly judged, given the 60-year history of conflict that cannot be undone in four years. She also pushed back against long-standing stigma against Colombia’s left, which has for decades been unfairly associated with rebel violence. “The left has always been viewed negatively; it has been harsh, and many people have died,” Guevara said. “So, one wonders what’s wrong with people who have forgotten history … how can they not think carefully about which candidate they are going to elect?”

    More than 41 million eligible Colombian voters are registered to cast their ballots this Sunday, as the nation waits to see whether voters will embrace a hardline security crackdown or give the progressive peace process a second chance.

  • Ayase Ueda scores twice in Japan’s 4-0 win against Tunisia in 1,000th men’s World Cup match

    Ayase Ueda scores twice in Japan’s 4-0 win against Tunisia in 1,000th men’s World Cup match

    In a dominant Group F World Cup clash held in Monterrey, Mexico, Japan delivered a spectacular 4-0 victory over Tunisia on Wednesday, moving the Asian side within touching distance of a fourth consecutive knockout stage appearance and marking the biggest ever winning margin for the Samurai Blue in World Cup history.

    Japan’s clinical attacking display leaves them level on four points with group leaders Netherlands after two matches, with the Dutch holding the top spot only on the tiebreaker of one additional total goal. For Tunisia, the defeat brings an early end to their World Cup campaign, making them the first team eliminated from this year’s tournament after a second underwhelming performance.

    The writing was on the wall for Tunisia from the opening minutes of the tie. Crystal Palace midfielder Daichi Kamada opened the scoring in just the fourth minute, slotting home a simple tap-in from Keito Nakamura’s perfectly placed cross. This strike stands as the fastest goal Japan has ever scored in World Cup competition, and marked Kamada’s second of the tournament.

    The 2-0 lead came in the 31st minute, when Feyenoord striker Ayase Ueda cut through Tunisia’s defense from the halfway line. What looked like a lost chance after Ueda chose to hold possession rather than pass to onrushing teammates turned into a moment of magic: the 27-year-old, who finished the 2023-24 Eredivisie season as top scorer with 24 goals, unleashed a well-placed angled strike from outside the box that nestled into the left corner of Tunisia’s net.

    Japan extended their advantage in the 69th minute, when a clever flicked pass from Ueda put winger Junya Itō through on a one-on-one with Tunisia goalkeeper Aymen Dahmen. Itō kept his cool under pressure, slotting the ball past the keeper to put the Samurai Blue up 3-0.

    Ueda capped off the dominant performance with his second of the night in the 83rd minute, a looping header that sailed over Dahmen and into the back of the net, closing out the 4-0 win. The four-goal haul is the highest number of goals Japan has ever put past an opponent in a single World Cup match.

    The result leaves Japan guaranteed at worst a third-place finish in Group F, a position that can still be enough to advance to the knockout stage as one of the best third-placed teams across all groups. For Tunisia, the elimination comes just one match after the North African side made a major coaching change, hiring two-time Africa Cup of Nations-winning manager Hervé Renard following a humiliating 5-1 opening defeat to Sweden. Renard’s arrival failed to turn Tunisia’s fortunes around, however, as the side could not contain Japan’s pacey attacking unit and failed to register a single clear goalscoring chance throughout the 90 minutes.

    Japan, who have not lost a 90-minute match to a European opponent since 2019, will face off against Sweden in Dallas on Thursday in their final group stage match. Tunisia will wrap up their tournament the same day, taking on the Netherlands in Kansas City.

  • A COVID lockdown led this woman to plant a vineyard at her parents’ home. Now a dream is realized

    A COVID lockdown led this woman to plant a vineyard at her parents’ home. Now a dream is realized

    When COVID-19 swept across the globe in 2020 and forced billions of people into unprecedented stay-at-home orders, many struggled to cope with the monotony and disruption of locked-down life. For Natasha Jacka, a 27-year-old who had just left a career in restaurants to pursue her passion for winemaking, the pandemic would become an unexpected catalyst to turn her long-held dream into reality years earlier than planned.

    Jacka had recently enrolled in viticulture studies at an agricultural college in Stellenbosch, South Africa’s iconic winemaking region just outside Cape Town, when lockdown closed campus and confined her to her parents’ sea-facing home in the Cape Town suburb of Noordhoek. Tired of the restlessness that came with being stuck at home, a moment of inspiration struck while she gazed out over her family’s sprawling yard: what if she turned that unused space into her own personal vineyard?

    What began as a passing “small spark” of an idea quickly turned into a full-scale labor of love. After winning buy-in from her family, Jacka set to work transforming the plot of land, which had once been part of a smallholding. She cleared the ground, sourced 1,400 grapevines split between two blocks (one for a white blend, one for a syrah red varietal), and planted each vine by hand alongside a supporting wooden stake. Even her parents joined the effort — though her mother Sonia was eventually sidelined from planting after accidentally putting one vine in upside down.

    The project came with unexpected hurdles beyond manual labor. Curious neighbors questioned the unusual backyard project, and Spirit, the family’s miniature horse, developed a taste for young vine shoots, costing Jacka one or two plants before she could secure the plot. For context, Jacka’s 1,400 vines are a tiny fraction of the more than 50,000 vines that cover the average commercial wine farm, making the endeavor a long shot from the start.

    Unlike many fast-paced modern industries, winemaking rewards patience. Four long years passed before Jacka was able to harvest her first vintage from the vines she had nurtured from tiny cuttings. She carried out every step of the process herself, from harvesting the grapes to crushing them by foot on her parents’ property. When the finished wines debuted, they earned glowing praise from leading South African wine critics — a relief far more meaningful than any potential profit for Jacka.

    “I wasn’t looking at it like, oh this is going to make a fortune or anything like that. This is a labor of love,” Jacka explained, adding that she could not imagine the disappointment if years of work had amounted to nothing.

    Christian Eedes, editor of South Africa’s leading online wine publication winemag.co.za, who gave Jacka her first positive review, called the project “a triumph of hope over good sense.” Eedes notes that producing high-quality wine and turning a profit from such a small operation is notoriously difficult, but Jacka’s handcrafted, small-batch wine fills a unique niche in a market dominated by mass-produced brands.

    “There’s plenty of space in the world for craft and handmade,” Eedes said. “It’s the opposite of mass produced. It’s made with thought and care and typically hard to come by.” He remains fascinated by the project that grew out of lockdown boredom, adding, “She managed to not be bored, like we all were. It’s really just an extraordinary undertaking.”

    Now 32, Jacka has turned her lockdown passion project into a full winemaking career. Her Alinea wine line now includes five additional vintages made from grapes sourced across the greater Cape Town region, which boasts centuries of rich winemaking heritage. Still, she remains deeply connected to her original Noordhoek micro-vineyard, where she continues to handle every role from harvest and stomping to labeling, sales, accounting and delivery. She says she is already eagerly looking forward to her next backyard harvest.

  • More than just happy to be here, New Zealand hunts first-ever knockout run

    More than just happy to be here, New Zealand hunts first-ever knockout run

    The 2026 expanded-format FIFA World Cup has already delivered one of its most compelling underdog stories, as 82nd-ranked New Zealand stands one win away from breaking a decades-long tournament drought and punching its first-ever ticket to the knockout round. When the All Whites touched down in British Columbia for this year’s competition, just qualifying for their first World Cup appearance since 2010 felt like a victory in its own right. But a dramatic 2-2 draw against 22nd-ranked Iran in their opening group stage match has transformed their unlikely underdog run into a genuine shot at history this Sunday against 29th-ranked Egypt.

    New Zealand’s path to this year’s tournament would not have existed without FIFA’s decision to expand the World Cup field from 32 to 48 teams. The expansion marked the first time the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC) earned an automatic berth to the tournament, a long-awaited change that cleared the way for New Zealand to claim the spot after a three-step qualifying run that ended with a 3-0 win over 151st-ranked New Caledonia.

    The dynamic of the OFC has shifted dramatically since 2006, when former regional powerhouse Australia left the confederation to join the Asian Football Confederation in pursuit of stiffer competition and more reliable qualifying paths to the World Cup. Australia’s departure left New Zealand as the undisputed top side in a region with a stark ranking gap: after the All Whites, the next highest-ranked OFC side is New Caledonia, leaving New Zealand without consistent top-tier competition in regional play.

    This imbalance highlights a long-debated feature of FIFA’s World Cup qualification structure: allocation of tournament slots is based heavily on confederation geography, rather than global team rankings. This system means that many higher-ranked teams from deeper, more competitive confederations miss out on qualification entirely; this year alone, 17 of FIFA’s top 48 ranked teams failed to qualify, including 20th-ranked Denmark from the UEFA confederation and 14th-ranked Italy, which has now missed three consecutive World Cups. By contrast, smaller confederations get far fewer slots: UEFA claims 16 berths for this expanded tournament, while OFC holds just one.

    Well aware that regional competition cannot prepare them for the global stage, New Zealand has actively sought out friendly matches against far higher-ranked opponents to sharpen their play. That intentional strategy paid off in their opening match against Iran, where winger Elijah Just netted both of the All Whites’ goals to secure the draw. Just’s two goals matched New Zealand’s total goal output across both of its previous World Cup appearances in 1982 and 2010, giving the side a surge of confidence heading into their critical match against Egypt.

    Head coach Darren Bazeley has emphasized that the team is staying grounded, refusing to let the weight of a potential historic berth distract from the task at hand. “We can’t let the occasion get too big,” Bazeley said in a pre-match press conference. “It’s about us winning a game of football.” He added that the side has no fear of facing higher-ranked opponents, noting: “If we’re going to win a World Cup, we have to play against top teams and top players and perform well.”

    Midfielder Ben Old echoed that confidence, saying the entire squad relishes the once-in-a-generation opportunity to make New Zealand football history. “Putting ourselves in such a great position – like this opportunity to create history – we know how good we can be,” Old said. “It’s just a really exciting moment to be in.” The side has long embraced its identity as international football’s underdog, Old added, a mindset that has taken away any pressure of expectation against higher-profile opponents: “We’re always used to being the underdogs. We’re not afraid to play any of these teams.”

    With one point already in the group stage table and two matches remaining, New Zealand is not only in contention for knockout stage qualification, but also poised to break multiple team World Cup records: a single win against Egypt would send them through, and even one more goal would break their record for most goals scored in a single World Cup tournament.

  • US Vice President JD Vance lands in Switzerland to launch talks with Iran on its nuclear program

    US Vice President JD Vance lands in Switzerland to launch talks with Iran on its nuclear program

    U.S. Vice President JD Vance touched down in Zurich on Sunday, kicking off a critical new phase of diplomatic efforts to formalize an agreement with Iran that would curb Tehran’s nuclear ambitions and solidify the fragile interim deal aimed at ending the ongoing war in the country. The foundational framework for the negotiations was signed just one week prior, setting negotiators from both sides on a tight 60-day deadline to hash out complex technical details that carry sweeping consequences for global energy markets and international security.

    The opening days of this critical two-month negotiation window have already been thrown into chaos by renewed violent exchanges across the Lebanon-Israel border between the Israeli military and Iranian-backed Hezbollah. Escalating tensions there prompted an immediate announcement from Iran’s military that it had closed the Strait of Hormuz, the strategically vital global shipping chokepoint through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s traded oil and natural gas pass.

    Vance’s arrival had originally been scheduled for Friday at the scenic Bürgenstock resort outside Lucerne, but his departure from the U.S. was pushed back after cross-border fighting intensified and Iranian officials initially canceled their delegation’s travel plans. His trip got underway only after Iranian state television confirmed that Tehran’s negotiating team had already reached Swiss soil. The Iranian delegation includes parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, and senior officials from Iran’s central bank and ministry of petroleum.

    In a direct pushback against Tehran’s closure announcement, U.S. Central Command has disputed Iran’s claim that the strait is shuttered, noting that U.S. military assets remain deployed in the region to monitor activity and guarantee unimpeded passage for global shipping. Vance himself has pushed back on the closure narrative, confirming that millions of barrels of oil have continued transiting the waterway in recent days.

    Once on the ground, Vance will join special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, who have already begun preliminary work unpacking the technical parameters of the nuclear negotiations. The talks will also include Qatari mediators, alongside Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Pakistani Army Chief Field Marshal Asim Munir.

    While Vance has stated he only intends to stay in Switzerland for “a day or two,” leaving the bulk of technical negotiations to be led by Witkoff and Kushner, his high-profile involvement has drawn intensified public and political scrutiny, coming as he openly considers a potential 2028 presidential campaign.

    The interim deal itself, signed by Trump and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, has already sparked fierce backlash from hard-line factions within Trump’s own Republican Party. Critics have drawn unfavorable comparisons to the 2015 Iran nuclear deal negotiated by the Obama administration, an agreement Trump and congressional Republicans have long argued failed to fully eliminate Iran’s ability to develop a nuclear weapon. Under the terms of the new interim agreement, Tehran immediately gains the right to resume open global oil sales and unlocks access to billions of dollars in overseas assets that have been frozen under international sanctions. It also requires Iran to dilute its existing stockpile of highly enriched uranium, material that was the target of U.S. military strikes on Iranian nuclear sites last summer.

    The framework also guarantees free passage for commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz for the 60-day duration of negotiations, but does not rule out the imposition of transit fees by Iran at a later date. Over the weekend, Trump issued a counter-threat on social media, stating that if no permanent agreement is reached within the 60-day window, the U.S. will impose its own transit tolls on the strait, with proceeds going to what he called the U.S. “Guardian Angel” mission protecting Middle Eastern nations.

    Regional instability continues to complicate the diplomatic push. Neither Israel nor Hezbollah are parties to the U.S.-Iran interim deal. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has pledged to keep Israeli forces deployed in southern Lebanon until all perceived threats to Israeli territory are eliminated, while Hezbollah has refused to halt cross-border attacks until Israel agrees to a full withdrawal from Lebanese territory. In the first days of fighting following the U.S.-Iran framework signing, clashes have left 47 people dead in Lebanon and four Israeli soldiers killed, raising fears that broader regional conflict could derail the nuclear negotiations entirely.

  • France restricts public alcohol consumption and outdoor sports as heat wave bakes parts of Europe

    France restricts public alcohol consumption and outdoor sports as heat wave bakes parts of Europe

    As an intense, record-breaking heat wave spreads across Western Europe, French authorities have rolled out a sweeping set of emergency measures to mitigate risks, including activating wildfire monitoring for emergency services and military units, limiting public alcohol consumption, and scrapping multiple outdoor recreational events.

    On Sunday, Météo-France, the country’s national weather service, placed roughly one-third of French territory under its highest-level red heat alert, with unseasonably high temperatures recorded across the entire nation. Some regions saw mercury climb to 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) on Sunday, and forecasters warn even hotter conditions will settle over the country on Monday. Compounding the risk, air conditioning remains far less common in French residential and public buildings than in many other warm-climate nations, leaving many residents with limited options to cool down.

    To protect crowds visiting popular tourist sites, iconic landmarks including the Eiffel Tower have installed misting cooling stations, one of dozens of adaptive measures rolled out by national and local leaders to cut heat-related health risks.

    The crisis comes amid new warnings from the World Health Organization’s European regional office, which released a report earlier this month finding that more than 200,000 Europeans have died from heat-related causes over the past four years, with the vast majority of these fatalities entirely preventable. The WHO also warned that the entire 2024 summer season is projected to see consistent above-average temperatures, which can trigger dangerous health outcomes ranging from painful heat exhaustion to fatal heat stroke. To address this systemic risk, the WHO has urged all European governments and public institutions to roll out comprehensive national heat action plans, such as opening free public cooling centers, implementing mandatory midday work breaks, or adopting flexible shift schedules to keep workers out of the dangerous peak afternoon sun.

    France’s annual Fête de la Musique, held every summer solstice, has emerged as a top priority for public safety officials. The nationwide celebration draws millions of attendees to thousands of free concerts held in public squares, club venues, and open-air spaces across the country, growing into a major tourist draw that brings international visitors to communities large and small. To reduce strain on emergency response teams, the French government has ordered event organizers to restrict alcohol sales, a rule designed to preserve capacity for first responders to focus care on the most vulnerable populations.

    Public officials are particularly concerned about high-risk groups: unhoused people living on exposed urban streets, and elderly residents, both in nursing homes and those living alone in residential properties. France’s devastating 2003 heat wave, which killed an estimated 15,000 older people, remains a defining national reckoning with the lethal danger of unmanaged extreme heat.

    In additions to public health measures, the government announced Saturday that it was boosting wildfire preparedness across at-risk regions and ordering enhanced monitoring of water supplies for the country’s extensive network of nuclear power reactors, which rely on consistent water access for safe operation.

    While authorities have not ordered widespread school closures, they note that shutdowns will only be implemented as a last-resort measure. For ongoing end-of-year academic exams scheduled for afternoon hours, many have been moved to cooler morning slots or rescheduled entirely to reduce heat exposure for students.

    Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu convened an interagency crisis meeting Saturday to coordinate the government response, and has scheduled a second follow-up meeting for Sunday as peak heat arrives. Lecornu has also instructed cabinet ministers to develop long-term plans to improve France’s resilience to future heat waves, explicitly including expanded access to air conditioning where necessary, as the country adapts to more frequent extreme heat events driven by climate change.

  • Curacao’s Eloy Room makes 15 saves, sends island nation to 0-0 draw with Ecuador in World Cup

    Curacao’s Eloy Room makes 15 saves, sends island nation to 0-0 draw with Ecuador in World Cup

    In a stunning display of goalkeeping grit at Children’s Mercy Park in Kansas City, Missouri on Saturday night, 37-year-old Curacao shot-stopper Eloy Room turned in one of the most memorable performances in FIFA World Cup history, snatching a historic 0-0 draw against tournament favorites Ecuador and securing the tiny Caribbean island nation its first-ever World Cup group stage point.

    Room’s standout outing came just days after Curacao suffered a lopsided 7-1 defeat at the hands of Germany, bouncing back from that heavy loss to deliver a defensive masterclass against an Ecuador side that dominated possession and chances for the full 90 minutes. The veteran goalkeeper finished the night with 15 total saves, just one stop short of the official World Cup record of 16 set by United States keeper Tim Howard during his 2014 clash against Belgium.

    The result of the Group E clash also had immediate ripple effects across the group: it locked in Germany’s place in the knockout round after Die Mannschaft earned a late 2-1 victory over Ivory Coast earlier the same day in Toronto. Deniz Undav’s stoppage-time strike secured three points for Germany, meaning an Ecuador loss on Saturday would have sent La Tri home early. Instead, the draw keeps both Ecuador and Curacao in contention for knockout qualification heading into the final round of group matches next Thursday.

    Saturday’s match was played in what essentially amounted to a home-field advantage for Ecuador. Thousands of the South American side’s supporters packed the 76,000-capacity stadium, decked head to toe in the team’s iconic bright yellow kits that drew comparisons to a gathering of the animated Minions characters. In contrast, only small scattered groups of Curacao fans, clad in the team’s signature blue, were in attendance — a fitting reflection of the nation’s small size: the entire population of Curacao is less than half the stadium’s seating capacity. Several local professional athletes, including Kansas City Royals stars Bobby Witt Jr., Salvador Perez and Starling Marte, were also spotted in the crowd.

    From the opening whistle, the match was defined by contrasting fortunes. Curacao’s side, led by veteran 78-year-old manager Dick Advocaat, managed to carve out multiple dangerous chances in the first half, finding gaps through the center of Ecuador’s backline to create open scoring opportunities. But the Caribbean side failed to convert, wasting each chance with sloppy passing or off-target shots.

    Ecuador’s first clear chance came just minutes in, when veteran forward Enner Valencia broke through one-on-one with Room. The keeper read the shot correctly, diving to his left to deflect Valencia’s effort and keep the match level.

    The pressure built steadily for Curacao’s goal in the second half, as Ecuador threw everything forward in search of the winning goal that would keep their knockout hopes firmly in hand. Room continued to turn away every chance: an early long-range effort from Moises Caicedo was spectacularly turned away, a well-placed Valencia header was palmed wide, and the keeper followed that stop with two more sensational saves on the subsequent corner kick before Curacao could clear their lines.

    The draw leaves Ecuador in a precarious position heading into their final group match against already-qualified Germany, set to be played in New York. Curacao, meanwhile, will take on Ivory Coast in Philadelphia, with both teams still holding out hope of snatching a knockout spot. For Curacao, however, the night already went down in the nation’s history books, with Room’s 15-save masterclass delivering a milestone the small island nation will never forget.

  • Dutch royals swap orange for blue as they cheer for the Netherlands, then Curaçao at the World Cup

    Dutch royals swap orange for blue as they cheer for the Netherlands, then Curaçao at the World Cup

    HOUSTON & KANSAS CITY, Mo. – For King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima of the Netherlands, the 2025 FIFA World Cup has delivered a unique, double-sided cheering opportunity that few other royal spectators can claim. On a packed Saturday of match action, the royal couple pulled off a cross-country U.S. sprint to support two separate teams under the Dutch kingdom’s banner, swapping team gear and stadiums in a single day of global football.

  • France bans alcohol consumption at music festival events under red headwave alert

    France bans alcohol consumption at music festival events under red headwave alert

    As Europe grapples with an extraordinary early-season heatwave that has sent temperatures soaring far above normal seasonal averages, French authorities have implemented a targeted alcohol ban for select events at the country’s iconic annual Fête de la Musique, a move designed to reduce strain on overstretched medical services amid dangerous heat conditions.

    Held every year on the summer solstice, Fête de la Musique is one of France’s most beloved public celebrations, drawing millions of attendees out onto streets and public spaces across the country to enjoy free live performances. In 2025 alone, nearly two million people participated in events within Paris, making crowd and public health management a top priority for officials even under normal weather conditions. This year, however, the celebration coincides with one of the most intense early heatwaves in recent memory, prompting urgent public safety interventions.

    Thirty-five of France’s administrative departments are currently under the highest-level red heatwave alert, a classification that triggers strict public safety protocols. Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu’s office confirmed that all state-organized events and their affiliated partners have received formal instructions to halt alcohol service to attendees. The government’s official guidance frames the ban as a critical measure to “preserve emergency and healthcare services and allow medical staff to focus on caring for the most vulnerable” who are at greatest risk of heat-related illness.

    Meteorological forecasts paint a stark picture of the coming days: on Sunday, temperatures between 39°C and 40°C are projected to stretch across a wide swathe of the country, from the southwestern regions through the Paris basin and into Burgundy, with isolated pockets potentially hitting 41°C. The heatwave, which has already built across much of Western Europe, is delivering temperatures 10°C to 15°C higher than the long-term average for this time of year. Temperatures are expected to peak on Monday, with Météo-France warning that readings could match or exceed historic national records.

    The extreme heat has already disrupted daily life across France for days. Dozens of train services have been canceled due to safety risks associated with high temperatures warping rail tracks, and schools across affected regions have suspended in-person classes to protect students and staff. Roughly three-quarters of France’s total population is currently living under heatwave conditions, but Météo-France says it remains uncertain how long the extreme weather event will persist.

    To help residents and visitors cope with the oppressive heat, Paris authorities have taken the unusual step of keeping all municipal parks and gardens open throughout the night, giving people a cool, open-air space to escape overheated indoor environments. As the country prepares for the peak of the heatwave, the alcohol ban at Fête de la Musique stands as one of the most visible adjustments to a beloved national tradition, highlighting the growing impact of extreme heat events on large public gatherings in Europe.

  • At CrimeCon true crime obsessives come face-to-face with real loss

    At CrimeCon true crime obsessives come face-to-face with real loss

    Beneath the hum of thousands of conversations inside a sprawling Las Vegas convention center, CrimeCon 2026 brings together a one-of-a-kind crowd: true-crime podcasters rubbing elbows with veteran prosecutors, casual fans in playful themed apparel, and grieving family members who have traveled thousands of miles to keep their loved ones’ cases in the public eye. Attendees wander the exhibit floor carrying branded conference bags printed with the provocative slogan “unsolved crime is a choice,” many wearing custom T-shirts that range from tongue-in-cheek quips like “True Crime And Wine” and “I’m Only Here For An Alibi” to solemn tributes to missing and murdered loved ones. The annual gathering, now owned by Fox News following its 2025 acquisition of organizer Red Seat Ventures, has grown dramatically alongside America’s decade-long obsession with true-crime media, but it continues to navigate a tense, fine line between commercial popularity and respectful advocacy for victims.

    For many participants, attendance is far more than a recreational outing—it is a deeply personal mission to keep cold cases from fading into obscurity. Dr. Maggie Zingman, a trauma psychologist whose daughter Brittany Phillips was murdered in an unsolved 2004 killing, has spent years crisscrossing the country in a pink-and-purple wrapped vehicle to draw attention to her daughter’s case, and CrimeCon has become a key stop on her advocacy journey. Standing stoically behind a booth lined with photos of Brittany, Zingman acknowledges the inherent contradictions of a for-profit event built around real-life tragedy. “It’s a balance,” she says. “I wouldn’t get 8,000 people learning about my story if it wasn’t here.”

    The rise of CrimeCon tracks directly with the explosion of mainstream true-crime culture that transformed the genre from a niche interest to a global pop-culture phenomenon. Industry observers trace the current craze to groundbreaking early hits: 2014’s breakout podcast *Serial*, followed by 2015’s hit docuseries *The Jinx* and *Making a Murderer*, which turned true crime into a watercooler topic and mainstream entertainment. Since its 2017 debut, which drew just 800 attendees, CrimeCon has expanded exponentially: attendance jumped to 2,400 in 2018, and this year’s Las Vegas iteration drew 6,500 guests, with some paying upwards of $1,600 for premium VIP access.

    As the genre has grown, so has criticism that many true-crime platforms center perpetrators over victims, profiting from the pain and loss of grieving families. But long-time participants and event organizers argue CrimeCon has intentionally shaped its space to center victims and advocacy. Numerous victim-rights and missing-person organizations operate booths on the exhibit floor, including the foundation founded by the parents of Gabby Petito, the young travel blogger whose 2021 murder by her boyfriend sparked a national manhunt. Wearing T-shirts that read “Victim exploitation does not equal victim advocacy,” Joe and Nichole Petito have attended since 2023, and Joe notes the event has evolved steadily to prioritize advocacy over sensationalism. The convention hosts major national groups including the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and the Black and Missing Foundation, giving them space to connect with audiences and raise awareness for their work. “It does a really good job of toeing the line… for pushing the advocacy side and not the exploitative side of victims and their families and loved ones,” Joe Petito says.

    Event co-founder Kevin Balfe explains that organizers have intentionally curated the event to weed out visitors drawn only by sensationalized fascination with serial killers. “Over the years, we’ve had people who show up expecting this to be serial-killer this and that, and they just realise quickly this event’s not for them,” he says. “And we ultimately have curated an audience of people who, I think, really care.”

    That said, the unmistakeable energy of a pop-culture convention permeates the space. Steps from an entry arch welcoming guests to CrimeCon 2026, a wall is covered in missing-person posters and a guide to “8 Simple Rules for Being an ETHICAL True Crime Fanatic,” but just five minutes away, a branded merchandise store sells everything from CrimeCon shot glasses to $80 event sweatshirts, with staff roaming the hallways promoting next year’s event and the premium CrimeCon Cruise experience. Some attendees fully embrace the playful side of the theme: one guest wears form-fitting leggings printed with crime-scene tape, while two best friends show off homemade handbags lined with blood-spatter fabric. The crowd is overwhelmingly female, with many fans lining up for selfies with high-profile true-crime personalities like Nancy Grace, who is presenting new theories on the unsolved disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, and for meet-and-greets with Steve and Kristi Goncalves, parents of University of Idaho murder victim Kaylee Goncalves. This year’s annual Clue Awards, which honor outstanding true-crime content, named three Jeffrey Epstein survivors and their non-profit as Crimefighters of the Year.

    For many repeat attendees, the draw goes far beyond curiosity about unsolved mysteries. Ruth-Ann Labrecque, 52, traveled from Maine for her sixth CrimeCon alongside her 67-year-old aunt Roberta Randall, and each has spent roughly $3,000 on the trip. Brandi Barrett Elkins, a 53-year-old from Idaho who first developed an interest in true crime as a child, says many fans are drawn to the genre out of a desire to learn how to stay safe. “You want to learn what happened so you’ll know how to recognize it,” she explains. “I know for a fact if somebody came up to me with a broken arm and asked me to help them load a sailboat, aka Ted Bundy, I would be like: ‘Mmmm, sorry dude.’” Amy Dixon, an Illinois teacher and mother of three who created a CSI summer camp for her students, agrees, noting that learning about crime helps people prepare for unexpected danger. “It can happen anywhere,” she says. This is Dixon’s third CrimeCon, and she has upgraded her ticket each year, purchasing a $1,200 platinum badge for this year’s event.

    Even the small number of male attendees often find themselves won over by the event’s mission. Jim McConnell, 71, a Texan who accompanied his wife Susan, a youth pastor, to the convention, says he never expected to enjoy the experience but has been impressed by the community’s commitment to advocacy. Susan McConnell has wanted to attend CrimeCon for years, and came hoping to connect with podcasters to raise awareness for the local unsolved 2021 murder of Missy Bevers, who was killed in a Texas church near her home. A photo of Bevers is printed on her T-shirt, and she says just getting the case more exposure makes the trip worthwhile.

    For first-time attendee Greg Wallace, an Indiana father whose 23-year-old daughter disappeared nearly eight years ago, the convention is both emotionally exhausting and deeply hopeful. Struggling with PTSD from his daughter’s disappearance, the large crowd and loud noise pushed him to his emotional limits on the first day, but he says the opportunity to share his daughter’s story with a global audience makes the discomfort worth it. “But I’m really glad I did it, because, you know, I’ve got her name out there globally now, and that just gives me more hope,” he says.

    Zingman, who has attended multiple CrimeCons, acknowledges the event still has growing pains, and has experienced firsthand the hierarchy that places more attention on families of high-profile victims. During a 2018 Nashville event, she says she felt uncomfortable watching attendees pass her booth to reach families of more well-known victims, overhearing visitors whisper “Who is that?” as they walked by. “And I was like: I don’t know if I can handle this, because it is very commercial,” she recalls. Over time, however, she has learned to separate the commercial aspects of the event from the valuable platform it provides, and says she has watched CrimeCon evolve to prioritize victims and their families far more than it did in its early years.

    The Goncalves, attending their first CrimeCon this year, have been overwhelmed by the support they have received from attendees, and are already planning to return next year with a booth for their Murder Has a Name foundation, which raises funds for DNA testing in cold cases. “You can’t beat the people that are here,” Kristi Goncalves says. “The media people that are here, the citizens that are here, the true crime families.”

    Nicole Earnest-Payte, a first-time attendee, sexual assault survivor and speaker who waited 27 years for justice after being attacked by the NorCal rapist, says CrimeCon often gets an unfair reputation because of its name’s similarity to the pop-culture convention Comic Con. “They think, ‘Oh, this is just a bunch of people that are obsessed with murder that come there,’” the 56-year-old Californian says. “And I don’t think that’s what this is.” Instead, she sees the event as a space for education and connection, where attendees can leave with a better understanding of criminal behavior and investigative work. “It’s really important for fans to understand that these are real human beings, real lives, real parents, real children, real spouses whose lives have been completely destroyed,” she says. That understanding, she argues, is the key to keeping the event focused on respect, not exploitation.