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  • Thousands gather for anti-racism rally after Belfast unrest

    Thousands gather for anti-racism rally after Belfast unrest

    BELFAST, Northern Ireland – Thousands of demonstrators converged on Belfast’s streets Saturday to push back against overt racial violence, just days after a viral stabbing incident sparked two consecutive nights of rioting that targeted ethnic minority communities across the city. The demonstration, organized to reject bigotry, saw participants hold hand-painted placards emblazoned with unifying messages including “Hate is the only threat to our streets” and “Belfast stands against racism.”

    The unrest that preceded the rally traces back to a knife attack on Monday night. A graphic video of the assault – which captured a perpetrator straddling a victim on the pavement and repeatedly slashing him – spread rapidly across social media platforms, stoking tensions that boiled over into organized violence by Tuesday.

    Identified by authorities as 53-year-old Sudanese national Hadi Alodid, the suspect appeared in Belfast court Wednesday on charges of attempted murder. His victim, local resident Stephen Ogilvie, remains hospitalized in critical condition as of the latest updates.

    Within hours of the video going viral, hundreds of masked rioters took to the streets, launching coordinated attacks on homes and vehicles owned primarily by immigrant and ethnic minority residents. Footage captured in the aftermath of the violence showed young children being evacuated from burning residential properties, as arsonists set multiple homes ablaze. One of the targets was a Middle Eastern-owned supermarket that had only just been rebuilt after a similar racist attack two years prior.

    Sham Supermarket manager Mohammed, a Syrian national, told reporters that all new refrigeration units and stock – replaced after the store was destroyed during 2024 unrest that spread from Southport, England – were lost in the latest arson attack. “The attack took all the produce,” Mohammed said. “They burned it all.”

    The violence extended into a second night, after an organized “hit list” targeting homes of foreign-born residents was circulated among extremist groups, prompting masked rioters in balaclavas to continue their coordinated campaign of intimidation against ethnic communities. In the wake of the unrest, many minority residents have been left too afraid to return to their homes, creating a pervasive climate of fear across affected neighborhoods.

    Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn condemned the intimidation tactics, confirming reports that commuters have been pulled over in their cars mid-commute and interrogated about their nationality. Benn called the practice “completely unacceptable” and called for unity against bigotry.

    Local SDLP councillor Seamas de Faoite told reporters that Saturday’s large turnout reflected widespread outrage across the city over the racist violence. “People turned out today to show that they are appalled by what has happened,” de Faoite said of the demonstration.

    The unrest comes amid a documented surge in hate crime across Northern Ireland: an official government report published in December 2024 found that reported race hate crimes in the region are now at their highest level since recording began 20 years ago.

  • Nearly 100 UK MPs and peers urge cancellation of Israeli settlement event

    Nearly 100 UK MPs and peers urge cancellation of Israeli settlement event

    A growing cross-party political movement in the United Kingdom is pushing to block a controversial upcoming real estate event that promotes land sales in illegally occupied Palestinian territories, with nearly 100 members of both the House of Commons and House of Lords throwing their weight behind the campaign.

    Planned for this Sunday in London, the privately organized Great Israeli Real Estate Event has drawn fierce backlash for its core business: marketing plots and properties built in Israeli settlements across the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem—all of which are classified as illegal under long-standing international law. Notably, event organizers have deliberately hidden the venue from public view, fueling further criticism over the opaque nature of the gathering.

    The push to cancel the event gained public traction Friday, when Andy McDonald, Labour MP for Middlesbrough and Thornaby East, shared an open letter to the UK government on the social platform X. In his post, McDonald emphasized that the British government has a clear opening to meet its binding international legal obligations by stopping the event, arguing that allowing it to go forward would amount to complicity in Israel’s unlawful occupation of Palestinian land.

    The joint letter, addressed to newly appointed Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper, frames the event as an integral part of Israel’s decades-long colonial expansion project. It notes that the event enables the sale of land forcibly seized from displaced Palestinian families, while millions of Palestinian refugees who were displaced from their land during the founding of Israel—and their descendants—remain barred from exercising their internationally recognized right of return to their original properties.

    Top political figures across multiple UK parties have lined up to back the cancellation call, including Green Party leader Zack Polanski and former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, both of whom confirmed to independent outlet Middle East Eye that they believe the secretive event should be fully banned. London’s Labour Mayor Sadiq Khan has also publicly condemned the gathering, stating he opposes any effort to market property in illegal West Bank settlements and that he shares deep concerns about the event being hosted in the capital.

    Legal advocacy groups have already escalated the matter to law enforcement: Middle East Eye has confirmed that groups have asked London’s Metropolitan Police Service to investigate whether the event can be blocked under a Serious Crime Prevention Order. Earlier reporting from the outlet also uncovered concrete links between participating firms and enterprises that operate exclusively in illegal settlements.

    Earlier this week, Emanuel Vatari, CEO of the Emanuel Group—one of the event’s lead sponsors—publicly posted a full list of participating companies to his Facebook page. Among the named firms is Harey Zahav, an Israeli property developer that openly advertises residential units in Negohot, an illegal Israeli settlement located in the southern Hebron Hills of the occupied West Bank. Also on the list is the Meshulam Levinstein Group, a multi-disciplinary engineering, construction and real estate conglomerate that has built both residential and commercial developments in illegal settlements across the West Bank and occupied East Jerusalem.

    This is not the first time the Great Israeli Real Estate Event has sparked controversy. Last month, U.S.-based outlet The Intercept reported that during a previous iteration of the event held in New York City, multiple vendors were advertising land sales in Kfar Eldad, Karnei Shomron, and other illegal Israeli settlements in occupied Palestinian territory.

    Amnesty International UK has added its voice to the campaign, calling on the UK government to take immediate action to block the gathering from taking place on British soil earlier this week. A recent Amnesty International report documents that the current Israeli government has expanded access to gun licenses for civilian settlers, increased state funding for illegal settlements, and accelerated both the construction of new settlement units and the formal legalization of unauthorized outposts—settlements built even in violation of Israeli domestic law, which the government has increasingly retroactively legalized. The international community has repeatedly confirmed that all Israeli settlements, outposts, and commercial activities in occupied Palestinian territories violate the Fourth Geneva Convention and international humanitarian law.

    Critics warn that allowing the event to proceed in London would place the United Kingdom in violation of its own international legal obligations, and could open the country to accusations of complicity in potential war crimes linked to Israel’s prolonged occupation and settlement expansion.

  • Thousands rally in Belfast to condemn anti-immigrant rioting that followed stabbing

    Thousands rally in Belfast to condemn anti-immigrant rioting that followed stabbing

    LONDON – In a powerful rebuke of days of race-fueled arson and unrest sparked by a violent criminal incident, thousands of peaceful demonstrators gathered in Belfast on Saturday to condemn the anti-immigrant rioters whose actions left dozens homeless and multiple police officers injured earlier that week.

    The chaos erupted after a 30-year-old asylum seeker from Sudan was taken into custody on attempted murder charges connected to a brutal stabbing that left a local victim permanently partially blind. What began as public outcry over the attack was quickly manipulated into widespread violence by far-right and anti-immigrant agitators, despite repeated calls for calm from Northern Irish officials and even the stabbing victim’s own family.

    Groups of masked rioters targeted residential properties believed to house immigrant families, setting several homes and parked vehicles ablaze, torching a public bus, and launching a barrage of bricks, glass bottles, and firebombs at responding law enforcement. In the aftermath of the four nights of unrest, officials labeled the unrest organized thuggery that left more than 20 people displaced from their destroyed homes and 12 police officers injured.

    By Saturday, anti-racism organizers pulled together a large public rally outside Belfast City Hall to push back against the narrative of hate that had dominated headlines. Many demonstrators carried hand-painted signs with messages rejecting the conflation of criminality with race, including slogans like “The problem is evil & violence not race,” “Your racism is not patriotism,” and “Protect people not prejudice.”

    For some attendees, joining the rally was an unplanned but necessary choice. Newlyweds Cara Bell and Matthew Richardson had just wrapped up their wedding ceremony inside Belfast City Hall when they stepped out to join the crowd, still reeling from the violence they had watched unfold across the city days earlier. Bell emphasized that the large turnout of peaceful protesters told a far more accurate story of Belfast’s community than the riots had.

    “It’s important to note that things like today really show that this is not the general feeling of people in Belfast,” Bell told reporters. “It was a week where you’ve seen the worst of humanity and the best of humanity in Belfast.”

    Elaine Crory, one of the rally speakers, told the gathered crowd that racism in the region remains a persistent threat that can be reignited almost instantly after a single high-profile incident involving a non-local, non-white person. “All it takes is for one person who’s not white and local to commit a crime and that fire of racism is rekindled,” she said.

    The unrest was not limited to Northern Ireland. Across the United Kingdom, far-right groups capitalized on the stabbing to incite anti-immigrant disorder in multiple cities. In Glasgow, Scotland, rioters targeted minority communities, forcing worshippers at a local mosque into lockdown as the violence surrounded the site.

    In a parallel show of solidarity on Saturday, thousands of Glasgow residents also gathered for an anti-racism rally organized by local activist groups, aimed at reclaiming the city’s streets from far-right extremism. The anti-racism gathering was met by a small but aggressive counter-group, primarily made up of men who were documented making Nazi salutes and shouting anti-Muslim slurs. In response, the thousands of anti-racism demonstrators chanted in unison: “Nazi scum off our streets.”

  • Peru police disguised as World Cup mascots arrest a suspected drug dealer in Lima

    Peru police disguised as World Cup mascots arrest a suspected drug dealer in Lima

    On the day the 2010 FIFA World Cup kicked off with the opening matchup between Mexico and South Africa, law enforcement in Lima, Pulled off an extraordinary, cleverly orchestrated arrest that has drawn attention around the region. According to Colonel Carlos Alcántara, commander of the Green Squadron—Peru’s specialized unit tasked with targeting common street and organized crime—the operation targeted 48-year-old Carlos Cabrera, a long-sought suspected drug trafficker, relying on a surprisingly effective cover that played directly into the suspect’s own love of football.

    Intelligence gathering had revealed a key detail about Cabrera: he was an enthusiastic lifelong football fan completely caught up in the global excitement surrounding the World Cup. Seeing an unmissable opportunity, the tactical team devised an unconventional undercover plan. Two officers volunteered to go undercover in full costume as Clutch, the bald eagle official mascot representing the host nations United States and Canada’s moose mascot Maple, a choice that let them move openly near Cabrera’s location without triggering any of his suspicions.

    Once the undercover officers got into position outside Cabrera’s location, the operation moved forward. The mascot-clad officers worked alongside uniformed colleagues to breach the property, using a heavy metal sledgehammer to break through a locked entrance to gain access. A search of the premises after the arrest turned up a major seizure: 2,524 packets of cocaine base, plus an unregistered firearm that Cabrera had on site.

    Under Peruvian national law, drug micro-trafficking carries a penalty of three to seven years behind bars for anyone caught holding just five to 50 grams of cocaine base—meaning the quantity seized in this operation will almost certainly result in severe legal consequences for Cabrera if he is convicted. This unorthodox sting is not the first time Peruvian law enforcement has leaned on creative disguise tactics to take suspects off guard. In earlier operations, officers have posed as beloved and instantly recognizable fictional characters from popular film, including the Grinch, Freddy Krueger, Deadpool, and Wolverine, and have even used Santa Claus costumes to avoid raising alarm before making an arrest.

    The successful operation highlights how Peruvian police are adapting their tactics to exploit targets’ routines and interests, turning the global excitement around one of the world’s biggest sporting events into an advantage for law enforcement.

  • Trump and Macron will meet over dinner at Versailles palace after G7 summit in France

    Trump and Macron will meet over dinner at Versailles palace after G7 summit in France

    As leaders of the world’s major industrialized economies prepare to gather in southern France for next week’s G7 summit, new details have emerged about the packed diplomatic agenda awaiting former U.S. President Donald Trump, including a high-profile celebratory dinner with French President Emmanuel Macron at the iconic Palace of Versailles.

    Senior White House administration officials, speaking to reporters on condition of anonymity under the White House’s established press ground rules, confirmed Saturday that the summit will bring a full slate of one-on-one bilateral meetings for Trump, who has publicly stated he is working to finalize a new Iran nuclear agreement in the coming days. Trump is set to depart Washington D.C. on Sunday evening immediately after marking his 80th birthday with a primetime mixed martial arts event hosted on the White House South Lawn, and will arrive in France for the summit on Monday afternoon.

    Following the conclusion of the main G7 gathering in the scenic Alpine lakeside town of Evian-les-Bains, Macron will host Trump for a private dinner at Versailles, the opulent former royal residence just outside Paris that has long stood as a symbol of Franco-American diplomatic ties. According to the Élysée Palace, the dinner will also commemorate the 240th anniversary of U.S. independence, an occasion chosen to highlight the deep historical friendship between the two nations.

    Versailles, which served as the official seat of the French monarchy from the reign of Louis XIV through Louis XVI, is a regular venue for state visits and meetings with visiting global leaders. In 2021, Macron welcomed Britain’s King Charles III and Queen Camilla to the palace for its 400th-anniversary celebrations, hosting a state dinner in the palace’s famous Hall of Mirrors, one of the most famous spaces among the sprawling estate’s 2,300 rooms. Prior to that, in 2017 shortly after his first election to the presidency, Macron welcomed Russian President Vladimir Putin to Versailles, a meeting that took place before relations between Paris and Moscow collapsed entirely following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

    Beyond his scheduled meeting with Macron, Trump is also set to hold separate bilateral talks with the leaders of Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, and India. All four nations have been invited to participate in this year’s summit as guest countries at Macron’s request.

    The 2025 G7 summit, which brings together leaders from the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan, will cover a wide range of pressing global policy topics. Officials confirm the agenda includes discussions on sustainable global economic growth, securing resilient supply chains for critical minerals needed for the energy transition, addressing irregular cross-border migration, and establishing global guardrails for artificial intelligence development.

    Two ongoing conflicts are expected to dominate much of the off-agenda and bilateral conversation: the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and escalating tensions around Iran. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is confirmed to attend the summit to meet with G7 leaders, but administration officials noted that no formal bilateral meeting between Trump and Zelenskyy has been added to the U.S. president’s official schedule as of Saturday. The pair could still hold an informal meeting on the summit sidelines, officials added.

    The report was compiled from contributions by AP correspondent Petrequin, reporting from London, and fellow AP writer Aamer Madhani.

  • Canada’s Carney says middle-power countries shouldn’t compete for favor with the US

    Canada’s Carney says middle-power countries shouldn’t compete for favor with the US

    Ahead of the upcoming Group of Seven summit kicking off Monday in France, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has ramped up his diplomatic push to realign Canada’s global partnerships away from the United States and toward deeper integration with Europe, making his case for collective middle-power action during a visit to Dublin this weekend.

    Carney’s European tour began with a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday, followed by talks Saturday with Ireland’s Taoiseach Micheál Martin. During a remarks delivered at Dublin’s Trinity College, the Canadian leader laid out a clear alternative path for nations caught in an era of intensifying great power rivalry. Instead of smaller and middle-sized countries competing to win favor from major global powers, Carney argues that uniting with like-minded allies can multiply collective strength to create an independent, influential third way.

    “ In a world of great power rivalry, middle powers have a choice — to compete for favor or to combine to create a third path with impact,” Carney told the audience. This framing builds on comments he made earlier this year at the World Economic Forum in Davos, where he made global headlines by declaring the traditional post-Cold War rules-based global order defunct and condemned coercive pressure exerted by great powers on smaller sovereign states.

    Carney highlighted the combined scale of Canada and the European Union to back his case for closer cooperation: together, the two blocs hold a combined population more than double that of the United States, a combined GDP matching that of the U.S., and a collective defense budget twice the size of China’s. He framed the Canada-EU partnership as a values-driven force for global good, rooted in shared commitments to human rights, individual dignity, and pluralism.

    “The new world order will be built starting with Europe,” Carney stated during a joint press conference with Martin ahead of his Trinity College address. “Canada is the most European of non-European countries. We are transforming our cooperation with Europe.”

    This shift toward Europe is already well underway, Carney noted. Just five months ago, Canada became the first non-European country granted membership in the EU’s SAFE defense procurement initiative. In the 15 months since Carney took office as prime minister, this trip marks his ninth visit to the continent, and Canada has already secured 56 critical minerals partnerships across more than 10 European nations. Carney has also set a formal national target to double Canada’s non-U.S. exports over the next decade, a goal shaped by ongoing trade friction with Washington under the second Trump administration.

    Ireland, which is set to take over the rotating presidency of the Council of the European Union starting in July, has fully embraced Canada’s ambition. “Prime Minister Carney has spoken with great clarity and conviction about Canada’s desire to deepen its engagement with Europe. Ireland warmly and unreservedly welcomes that ambition, and we will do what we can to strengthen relations between the European union and Canada during our forthcoming presidency,” Martin confirmed.

    Even as Canada leans into closer European ties, trade tensions with the U.S. remain a lingering issue, with the upcoming July 1 mandatory review of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) looming on the horizon. The USMCA, the latest iteration of a North American free trade framework that has linked the three regional economies since the 1990s, has been the subject of conflicting signals from Trump, who said this week he may choose not to renew the pact.

    Carney pushed back against fears of a full collapse of the regional trade arrangement, noting that the Trump administration has made clear it has no interest in rewriting the core structure of the agreement. Changing the agreement fundamentally would require congressional approval, a step Carney said the White House has no intention of taking. He added that roughly 85% of Canadian exports to the U.S. already enter tariff-free under the current USMCA framework, a status the administration has chosen to maintain.

    A senior anonymous U.S. administration official confirmed that no bilateral meeting between Trump and Carney is scheduled for the G7 summit, and that no major trade breakthroughs are expected during the gathering. The official did note that the White House has viewed Canada’s recent reversal of a regulation requiring foreign streaming platforms to invest a share of their Canadian revenue into local content and news as a positive step, and that Washington has received outreach from Ottawa for further trade discussions.

    Carney acknowledged that Trump’s trade policies have created uncertainty for cross-border investment, a key factor driving Canada’s push to diversify its economic and geopolitical partnerships. The new alignment with Europe, he argues, will strengthen both blocs at a time of shifting global power dynamics.

  • Mass shootings in South Africa’s poorest areas are a symptom of organized crime and police failures

    Mass shootings in South Africa’s poorest areas are a symptom of organized crime and police failures

    A devastating mass shooting in an informal Johannesburg shack settlement has left 12 people dead and at least 15 injured, amplifying long-simmering concerns over organized criminal activity and systemic failures in South Africa’s law enforcement. No suspects have been taken into custody in the attack, which multiple perpetrators are believed to have carried out earlier this week.

    For criminologists and security analysts, the shooting is not an isolated tragedy — it is the latest outcome of a growing pattern of brutal violence concentrated in South Africa’s most underserved low-income communities. Experts agree that this violence stems directly from well-organized criminal syndicates exploiting widespread police dysfunction, from severe under-resourcing to open corruption and even collusion with criminal networks.

    Earlier this year, President Cyril Ramaphosa took the extraordinary step of deploying national army troops to high-violence crime hotspots across the country, a move that critics frame as a quiet admission that police have lost control of security in many marginalized communities. The deployment came amid a sprawling corruption scandal that has roiled South Africa’s top law enforcement ranks: more than a dozen senior police officers have been arrested, and both the national police commissioner and national police minister have been suspended over allegations of ties to organized criminal groups.

    Jacob Mofokeng, a criminology professor at the University of South Africa, explained that criminal gangs deliberately target under-policed poor settlements because the lack of security, inadequate street lighting, and delayed police response create the perfect cover for illegal activity. “Criminal syndicates explicitly capitalize on this to hide weapons, execute hits, and vanish into the shadows,” Mofokeng told the Associated Press.

    South Africa is already grappling with a national crisis of violent crime, with official annual data recording an average of more than 60 homicides per day across the country. The burden of this violence falls overwhelmingly on poor townships and informal settlements, a reflection of the deep socioeconomic inequality that has persisted in South Africa decades after the end of apartheid. Wealthy, gated communities with private security services see drastically lower rates of violent crime.

    A primary driver of violence in these Johannesburg-area settlements is the illicit trade in unregulated gold mining, run by notorious local gangs known as *zama zamas* — a Zulu term loosely translated as “hustlers” or “chance-takers.” For decades, these gangs have set up operational bases in underserved, poorly policed areas, where they fight violent turf wars with rival groups to maintain control of illegal mining operations. Many gang members are undocumented migrants from neighboring countries, a detail that makes police investigations far more difficult. With no formal legal identification, registered address, or existing law enforcement biometric data, “they are effectively a ghost,” Mofokeng noted.

    The South African government estimates that illicit mining drains more than $3 billion annually from the national economy, and the long-standing *zama zama* crisis was a key justification for Ramaphosa’s year-long military deployment against organized crime. Local residents of the settlement targeted in this week’s shooting confirmed that illegal mining gangs have operated openly in the area for years, and law enforcement officials confirmed that the gangs are the central focus of the ongoing investigation into the mass shooting, though a confirmed motive has not yet been released.

    Compounding the crisis is a massive unregulated firearms problem: while South Africa enforces strict rules for legal gun ownership, independent research and civil society groups estimate that between 2 million and 3 million illegal firearms are currently circulating among the country’s 62 million population. Guns are responsible for the vast majority of homicides nationwide.

    Willem Els, an analyst with South Africa’s Institute for Security Studies, said the combination of unregulated gun flows and systemic police failure has created an environment where organized crime can operate with near-total impunity. “In South Africa, we actually managed to create conditions that are very conducive for violent crime and also for organized crime syndicates to operate with impunity,” Els told the AP. “We’ve got a lot of unregistered firearms that are not being controlled by the police.”

    Beyond resource shortages, widespread allegations of police corruption have eviscerated public trust in law enforcement, creating a further barrier to cracking down on gang activity. Last year, a senior provincial police commander made public allegations that top law enforcement officials were colluding with criminal syndicates, prompting Ramaphosa to launch a national corruption probe that has already led to dozens of arrests of senior officers.

    Mike Bolhuis, a private investigator and veteran security specialist, said the corruption crisis has created a cycle of distrust that makes community cooperation with police nearly impossible. “The public doesn’t trust the police, they don’t trust the authorities, and they don’t trust each other,” Bolhuis said.

  • Why is football called ‘soccer’ in the US and Canada?

    Why is football called ‘soccer’ in the US and Canada?

    As the 2026 FIFA World Cup, co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico, draws near, a longstanding linguistic debate has reemerged for football fans across the globe: why do U.S. and Canadian fans call the world’s most popular sport soccer, rather than football? For one sports academic who grew up in 1960s and 1970s England, this debate always felt deeply odd. Stefan Szymanski, emeritus professor at the University of Michigan, recalls that “soccer” was a completely unremarkable, acceptable term during his childhood in Britain, prompting him to dig into the little-known history behind the word.

    Szymanski’s research traces the origin of “soccer” back to the very founding of modern organized football in 19th century Britain. When elite Oxford-educated graduates founded the Football Association in 1863 to standardize the sport’s rules, the new code was formally named “association football” to clearly separate it from the other dominant mainstream 19th century football variant: rugby football.

    By the 1880s and 1890s, wealthy students at top British universities had developed a popular slang trend: shortening common nouns and adding an “-er” ending to the end of the truncated word. This habit turned breakfast into “brekker” and rugby football into “rugger” — and it was this same trend that gave birth to soccer. Students extracted “soc” from the middle of “association,” added the characteristic slang “-er” suffix, and created the term we know today. While Szymanski notes that no historian can claim absolute certainty over the word’s earliest origins, multiple documentary sources confirm it was coined by Oxford students. Sports historian Andy Mitchell supports this timeline, having identified at least three printed instances of “soccer” (or its variant “socker”) in British school publications dating back to late 1885, with evidence suggesting the term was already in common verbal use even earlier.

    As the sport of association football spread across the world throughout the 20th century, the term “soccer” traveled with it. Today, the name remains in common use in countries including Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Canada, and of course the United States, where “football” had already been adopted to describe the distinctly American gridiron variant of the sport that evolved from rugby in the same 1880s-1890s period that “soccer” was coined in Britain. Szymanski points out that American football and association soccer are actually close sporting cousins, and the parallel rise of both games in the late 19th century cemented the use of “soccer” for the global game in the U.S.

    What many modern fans do not know is that “soccer” remained in widespread use across British media for decades after it caught on in North America. Analysis conducted by Szymanski and his colleague Silke-Maria Weineck shows that major British newspapers continued to use “soccer” alongside “football” well into the 1960s and 1970s, only phasing it out gradually to leave “football” as the universal dominant term in Britain by the 1990s.

    Today, it is common for American fans to feel awkward about using the word “soccer” around international supporters, often apologizing for the term out of a belief that it offends British fans. Szymanski says this unnecessary awkwardness is rooted in a modern misconception: “soccer” is not an American corruption of the proper name — it is a uniquely British invention from the sport’s earliest days. For the professor, there is no reason for North American fans to hesitate to use the term that has been part of the sport’s linguistic history for more than 130 years.

  • As Belfast burned, two Sudanese women braved the streets and sheltered those under attack

    As Belfast burned, two Sudanese women braved the streets and sheltered those under attack

    A wave of racially motivated violence has shaken Northern Ireland’s capital Belfast, leaving immigrant families from Sudan displaced and terrified, as local volunteer groups stepped in to fill the gap left by absent state authorities. Earlier this week, two Sudanese families living in Belfast’s Tiger Bay neighborhood were targeted in coordinated attacks by gangs of masked men, who broke into their properties and set fire to the homes and work vehicles parked outside.

    One attack trapped a single mother and her two young children upstairs as flames consumed the floor below. Too afraid to confront the attackers who had explicitly targeted people perceived as foreign, the family hid in place while waiting for emergency response that took a full hour to arrive. Next door, a father shielding his two children waited out the violence, already wondering how he would explain the chaos to his wife, who was traveling overseas for work. Both heads of household work as translators for the UK’s National Health Service, and their work cars, left parked on a street decorated with loyalist murals, were completely destroyed in the arson.

    The violence followed a stabbing incident in Belfast earlier that week perpetrated by a man of Sudanese descent, and quickly spiraled into targeted attacks against the city’s entire Sudanese immigrant community. Even before the worst unrest broke out, two Sudanese community leaders – Areej Fareh and Twasul Mohammed, who run the Belfast-based women’s collective Anaka – had been working to address growing safety risks for immigrant residents. When the first night of attacks erupted on Tuesday, members of the Anaka collective, most of whom are immigrant women from diverse backgrounds, took to the streets despite the danger of flying petrol bombs and makeshift checkpoints set up to target people who appear non-local.

    With no sign of police, housing officials or other state agencies responding to the crisis, the grassroots organizers launched an independent evacuation effort. They first moved out 12 families whose homes and vehicles had already been destroyed by arson. When a leaked list of additional targeted addresses circulated on social media and WhatsApp groups the following night, the team expanded their operation: using a shared network of volunteer contacts, a centralized database of displaced people and a registry of local residents with spare rooms to offer, the group ultimately relocated more than 200 vulnerable families and individuals, many of whom remain unable to return to their neighborhoods.

    Fareh and Mohammed’s experience organizing against authoritarian rule in their home country prepared them to step into this crisis. The pair became friends while studying at university in Sudan, where they both organized opposition to the 30-year dictatorship of Omar al-Bashir, who was ousted in a 2019 popular revolution. Mohammed relocated to Belfast in 2016, while Fareh remained in Sudan to take part in the uprising, an experience that left her with first-hand trauma from state repression. During a 2019 protest in Khartoum, she was arrested by al-Bashir’s security forces, harassed and abused. She had already watched a close friend, a young chemist, killed by gunfire during a 2013 protest crackdown led by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), the Janjaweed-derived paramilitary now accused of genocide in Sudan’s ongoing civil war. By the time al-Bashir fell, Fareh made the decision to leave to protect her 15-year-old son, and resettled in Belfast.

    For years after her arrival, Fareh said she felt entirely safe in her new home. “The first few years, until the attacks in 2024, I never worried that people on the street were racist,” she explained. “I was confident. Even if it was late and I was on my own I felt safe. Now I feel it all the time. If I see two men I feel worried.”

    Today, a central Belfast church has been converted into a makeshift refuge for hundreds of people displaced by the violence, with volunteer organizers running a full kitchen serving hot meals to displaced residents. Even amid the trauma, small moments of community connection persist: as the World Cup kicks off, a local resident organized a casual pool on when the first tournament goal would be scored. Local organizers like Brenda, a 15-year veteran of film and television set production in Belfast, have streamlined operations at the refuge to ensure every displaced person has support.

    Community housing organizer Conol Matthews, who has worked alongside the volunteer evacuation effort, argues that the anti-immigrant violence is stoked by manipulative forces that benefit from working-class division. When he encounters anti-immigrant sentiment among local working-class residents, he challenges them to ask who actually gains from the UK housing crisis that places asylum seekers and refugees in working-class neighborhoods, with private landlords charging the state inflated rents. “It’s those boys in suits,” he tells them. “They benefit. You have to live it. Maybe look not at the people living a life like yours.” Matthews has faced retaliation for his work: his phone number was leaked to loyalist extremist WhatsApp groups, and his call log is now flooded with endless anonymous threatening calls.

    Despite the fear and trauma of recent attacks, both Fareh and Mohammed say they refuse to leave Belfast, drawing on their experience of resistance in Sudan to reject the narrative of collective punishment that blames the entire Sudanese community for the actions of one individual. Mohammed notes that while rising anti-immigrant sentiment is a problem across much of the West, Belfast has a unique context of colonial history that creates solidarity. “There are more good people here than bad,” she said. “It’s becoming like this all over the West, but at least here the Irish understand, they have the history of being colonized.”

    For Fareh, the message to the racists targeting their community is clear: the Sudanese community will not be driven out. “We are not leaving it for them,” she said. “If you think you should leave then you have to think: no way.”

  • Woman seriously injured in shark attack at Sydney beach

    Woman seriously injured in shark attack at Sydney beach

    On a recent Saturday morning, a major shark attack unfolded at one of Sydney’s most popular coastal destinations, leaving a 35-year-old woman with critical injuries and prompting authorities to shut down multiple nearby beaches as a safety precaution.

    New South Wales Police confirmed that emergency response teams were dispatched to Coogee Beach, located in Sydney’s eastern coastal corridor, immediately after reports of the incident emerged. According to official statements, quick-thinking members of the public pulled the injured woman from the ocean and administered urgent first aid before first responders arrived. The attack left her with severe wounds to both her arm and leg, requiring urgent medical intervention that led to her being airlifted via emergency helicopter to a nearby major hospital for treatment.

    Nicola Logan, an eyewitness who was at the beach during the attack, shared her harrowing account of the event with Reuters. She told reporters that she first spotted a large, dark pool of blood spreading through the shallow water, before noticing the woman struggling to stay afloat, making frantic motions to swim and creating large splashes as she fought for safety. A recreational ski paddler who was on the water nearby quickly moved in to help bring the injured woman back to shore, Logan added.

    This latest attack comes just one week after a fatal shark bite killed a male diver off the southeast coast of Perth, Western Australia. Authorities suspect that attack involved a great white shark measuring approximately 4.5 meters, or nearly 15 feet, in length. That incident marked the second fatal shark attack near Perth in just a few months: back in May, a man who was a father of two was also killed by a shark while in waters close to the city.

    While shark attacks are statistically rare events globally, they occur more frequently in Australian waters than in most other regions of the world. Historical records, which date back to 1791, show that there have been nearly 1,300 confirmed unprovoked shark attacks across Australia, with more than 260 of those incidents resulting in death. Despite the higher frequency of encounters, the majority of shark attacks in the country are not fatal.

    To reduce risk to beachgoers, most popular Australian swimming and surfing locations routinely implement a range of shark mitigation measures, from drone surveillance and shark spotting towers to netting and drum line barriers. Still, unpredictable encounters remain a persistent risk for those recreating on the country’s iconic coastlines.