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  • Streeting branded a hypocrite after accusing Starmer of ignoring Gaza war crimes

    Streeting branded a hypocrite after accusing Starmer of ignoring Gaza war crimes

    A deepening political firestorm has engulfed the UK Labour Party after former Health Secretary Wes Streeting publicly accused Prime Minister Keir Starmer of dismissing detailed evidence of alleged Israeli war crimes in Gaza, triggering accusations of deception, hypocrisy, and opportunism from across the political and activist spectrum.

    In a revealing interview with the News Agents podcast, Streeting, who stepped down from his cabinet post last month, claimed that when he circulated a dossier of testimony collected from British doctors who had worked in Gaza to fellow cabinet members, Starmer immediately questioned his motives, suggesting the move was a deliberate attempt to leak the document for political gain. Streeting pushed back against this characterization, noting that he never released the dossier to the public until this week, when private messages related to the document were made public, undermining Downing Street’s claims that he intended to leak it.

    Streeting explained his decision to circulate the dossier by saying he left meetings with visiting British doctors deeply distressed by their accounts, which included serious, credible allegations of widespread war crimes in Gaza. He argued that the United Kingdom holds both a moral and a legal obligation to respond to these allegations, rather than ignoring them. The existence of the dossier first came to light this week, when private messages from Peter Mandelson, the disgraced veteran New Labour figure and former UK ambassador to the US, were published. In the messages, Mandelson, who has long been a mentor to Streeting, dismissed Streeting’s calls for sanctions against Israel over alleged war crimes as “wild” and “hysterical”, further deriding the former health secretary’s initiative as “pathetic” and claiming he was suffering from an early midlife crisis. Cabinet minister Pat McFadden, another centre-right Labour figure aligned with Starmer and Mandelson, confirmed in the messages that Streeting had circulated the dossier and accompanying video footage to the full cabinet ahead of a scheduled meeting.

    Since Streeting’s public claims emerged, multiple parties have questioned both the accuracy of his account and his underlying motives, including British Palestinian medical professionals, Labour Party insiders, and Palestine solidarity campaigners. Most notably, Ghassan Abu Sittah, a prominent British Palestinian surgeon who has worked extensively treating casualties in Gaza, has directly refuted Streeting’s claim that he met with British doctors who collected the dossier’s evidence. Abu Sittah stated that neither he nor any British doctor he knows who has served in Gaza has ever met with Streeting, calling the former minister’s claims outright lies. He also condemned Streeting as a core part of the same political apparatus led by Starmer that has enabled what he describes as genocide in Gaza, pointing out that the party has suppressed public outrage and censored dissenting voices over the last two and a half years of the conflict.

    Abu Sittah further accused Streeting of pressuring the UK General Medical Council to launch what he called a “McCarthyite witch hunt” against doctors who have publicly spoken out against Israeli actions in Gaza. Streeting, while still serving as Health Secretary, supported new regulatory rules that make it easier for medical watchdogs to suspend or strike off doctors accused of antisemitism or racism over their pro-Palestine advocacy. Abu Sittah himself was reported to the GMC by pro-Israel group UK Lawyers for Israel, though independent tribunals have twice ruled that no disciplinary action is warranted.

    Critics also point to longstanding rumors that Streeting is positioning himself for a future leadership challenge to likely successor Andy Burnham, should Burnham win the upcoming Makerfield by-election and mount a challenge to Starmer. Streeting also faced tight re-election in his own Ilford North constituency in 2024, where British Palestinian independent candidate Leanne Mohamad came within just 528 votes of unseating him, driven largely by public anger over Streeting’s pro-Israel stances. Records also show Streeting has received significant campaign donations from prominent pro-Israel figures.

    Streeting acknowledged in his interview that Starmer’s controversial LBC interview, in which the prime minister claimed Israel had a right to cut off water and electricity to civilian communities in Gaza, nearly cost him his seat in the 2024 general election. Despite his criticism of Starmer’s slow, insufficient response to the Gaza crisis, Streeting has stopped short of describing Israeli actions in Gaza as genocide, a position that has drawn further criticism from activists. The death toll in Gaza has surpassed 73,000 Palestinians, according to local health authorities, with nearly the entire enclave’s infrastructure destroyed. Streeting told the podcast he rejects the use of the term genocide as an ideological litmus test for concern about Palestinian lives, claiming he has met with survivors of both the October 7 attacks by Hamas and the subsequent Israeli offensive, and that he values the lives of all Israelis and Palestinians equally. He also described Hamas, which is designated as a terrorist organization in the UK, as “evil and vindictive”.

    Activist groups have rejected Streeting’s framing, arguing that his belated public criticism is too little, too late, and that his past actions as a cabinet member in Starmer’s government make his current claims disingenuous. Palestine Solidarity Campaign deputy director Peter Leary argued that Streeting should not need a leadership race to find his voice on Israeli atrocities, and that if he is serious about atoning for his role in enabling Israel’s actions, he should back immediate, comprehensive sanctions including a full arms embargo on Israel — a step Streeting has so far refused to take. Nick Dearden, director of Global Justice Now, added that Streeting was a sitting cabinet minister while the humanitarian catastrophe unfolded in Gaza, and that holding private discussions with Starmer is not enough to absolve him; he should either have forced a policy change or resigned immediately in protest. Dearden also noted that Andy Burnham, the likely front-runner to succeed Starmer, has similarly refused to take a clear stance, saying only that he does not know whether genocide is occurring in Gaza.

    One former senior Labour official, who has a long record of criticizing Starmer’s leadership, summed up the widespread anger at Streeting, calling him a “lying toad”. As of publication, Middle East Eye has reached out to Streeting’s office for a response to the allegations, but has not received a reply.

  • ICC states should respect judges’ report on prosecutor, says Norway’s deputy foreign minister

    ICC states should respect judges’ report on prosecutor, says Norway’s deputy foreign minister

    As the International Criminal Court (ICC) approaches a critical vote that will decide the future of its chief prosecutor Karim Khan, Norway’s deputy foreign minister Andreas Kravik is calling on member states to prioritize established procedural rules to prevent harmful perceptions that the review process has been politicized. In an exclusive interview with Middle East Eye (MEE) conducted ahead of the Monday voting deadline for the ICC Assembly of States Parties (ASP) Bureau, Kravik emphasized that institutional respect for pre-set protocols for investigating misconduct allegations is non-negotiable to protect the court’s global integrity.

    The unfolding controversy stems from sexual misconduct allegations brought against Khan in May 2024, which the prosecutor has repeatedly and forcefully denied. After the original complainant declined to cooperate with the ICC’s internal investigative body, the ASP commissioned an independent UN-led probe, whose findings were then passed to a three-judge panel appointed by the 21-member ASP Bureau for a formal advisory review. In March, MEE reported that the judge’s panel reached a unanimous conclusion: the UN investigation had failed to produce evidence confirming any wrongdoing by Khan. In a striking departure from standard process, however, a majority of Bureau members voted weeks later to disregard the panel’s assessment, opening the door to a finding of serious misconduct against Khan.

    Legal experts have already warned that the Bureau’s rejection of the independent judges’ advisory opinion creates significant risk that the entire misconduct inquiry will be seen as politically motivated, a threat to the court’s legitimacy that Norway says it cannot accept.

    “What we have said is that the ICC needs to look at this case in conformity with the procedures that have been established for examining such allegations of misconduct,” Kravik told MEE during the interview at the Norwegian foreign ministry in Oslo. “Because otherwise, there will be at least a perception of politicisation of the process. And that would hurt the integrity of the court. That’s something that we cannot afford, especially in this time when the court is under real pressure by other states and where certain states are trying, at the best of their ability, to portray the court as a politicised entity not operating in conformity with core principles of international law.”

    Norway has been a member of the ICC since the court’s founding under the Rome Statute in 2002, but it holds no seat on the current ASP Bureau. Kravik confirmed that Norway has not been granted access to the highly confidential UN and judicial panel reports, and is not privy to closed-door Bureau deliberations. Even so, based on credible public and off-the-record briefings on the probe’s outcomes, Kravik said the judges’ independent conclusion should carry full legal weight in the decision-making process for both the Bureau and the full 125-member ASP.

    “We haven’t seen the full reports. But we understand that there has been an investigation by the UN entity responsible for carrying out such investigations,” Kravik shared in a forthcoming episode of MEE’s *Expert Witness* podcast. “The conclusions of that report have been transferred to a legal panel comprising three judges, and they have looked at it, and their conclusion is that there are no grounds for taking certain actions against the prosecutor, at least in terms of alleviating him from his responsibilities as prosecutor. From my vantage point, without getting ahead of the curve, it seems that that is a sensible conclusion.”

    Kravik stressed that Norway will make a final, fact-based determination on the matter if the vote advances to the full ASP, but that procedural integrity remains the country’s top priority. “For us, the most important thing here is that the procedures that have been established are respected and that all individuals, also the prosecutor, are entitled to the judicial safeguards enshrined in those judicial guarantees that are giving guidance to these processes,” he added.

    If the Bureau ultimately recommends a finding of serious misconduct against Khan, the full 125-member ASP will hold two consecutive votes: first to uphold the misconduct finding, which requires a two-thirds majority to pass, and a second vote to decide whether to remove Khan from office permanently. The ongoing misconduct probe has plunged the court into an unprecedented state of institutional uncertainty, with persistent media leaks about the unproven allegations further eroding stability around Khan’s leadership.

    Khan has already made clear that if the ASP votes to remove him, he will file an appeal with the Administrative Tribunal of the International Labour Organization (ILOAT), the independent body that handles employment-related appeals from ICC staff. Last month, former International Court of Justice judge Abdul Koroma issued a legal opinion shared with all ICC member states warning that the ILOAT could order Khan’s reinstatement and order the ICC to pay up to €1.5 million ($1.74 million) in damages if his removal is found to be improperly justified.

    The controversy surrounding Khan comes against a highly charged geopolitical backdrop: the prosecutor’s ongoing war crimes investigation into Israeli officials over alleged atrocities in Gaza has already drawn intense pushback from the United States and its allies, who have sought to disrupt the ICC’s work. Elected as ICC chief prosecutor by the ASP in February 2021, the British barrister has overseen investigations into alleged serious international crimes committed by leaders across the globe, securing arrest warrants for Russian President Vladimir Putin, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Myanmar’s junta leadership, and Taliban officials in Afghanistan. None of the US, Russia, or Israel are ICC member states, but the court holds jurisdiction over crimes committed by their nationals on the territory of ICC member states.

    In 2024, the Trump administration imposed retaliatory economic sanctions on Khan over his investigative work, measures that were later expanded to target two deputy prosecutors, eight ICC judges, the UN special rapporteur on Palestine, and multiple Palestinian NGOs that submitted evidence to the court. Russian courts have also issued an in absentia arrest warrant for Khan in retaliation for his work.

    In his interview with MEE, Kravik reaffirmed Norway’s unwavering support for the ICC and its commitment to enforcing all outstanding arrest warrants, including the one issued for Netanyahu. “The fact that some third states who aren’t party to the court have decided to sanction court officials for just doing their jobs is unconscionable,” he said. “We are in close discussions with our European partners, but also partners beyond Europe, about how we should oppose these actions taken primarily by the US. As a state party, we are committed to doing everything we can to ensure that those who are working for the court can do so without being subjected to sanctions or any other measures that try to prevent them from carrying out their functions under the court’s mandate.”

  • Iran’s World Cup squad granted US visas but some staff blocked

    Iran’s World Cup squad granted US visas but some staff blocked

    Amid heightened geopolitical friction between Washington and Tehran following the outbreak of cross-border conflict in late February, a key logistical disruption has hit Iran’s 2026 FIFA World Cup campaign: multiple senior administrative members of the Iranian delegation have been blocked from obtaining entry visas to the United States, Iranian state-aligned media confirmed Saturday.

    While Iranian national team players have successfully secured visas to compete in the group-stage matches hosted across North America, senior support personnel have been excluded from the approval process, senior U.S. officials have confirmed. The 2026 World Cup, a co-hosted tournament between the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, kicks off its group stage Thursday, with Iran scheduled to play three matches on U.S. soil: an opening fixture against New Zealand in Los Angeles on 16 June, followed by matchups against Belgium in Los Angeles and Egypt in Seattle.

    Confusion around the delegation’s visa status had swirled for days: Iran’s ambassador to Mexico, Abolfazl Pasandideh, initially stated Thursday that no members of the delegation had received visas, but a White House official clarified to Reuters Friday that all players had in fact been granted entry approval.

    Semi-official Iranian news outlet Tasnim has named the three high-ranking staff denied visas: Mehdi Kharati, the delegation’s executive director; Hedayat Mombini, secretary general of the Iranian Football Federation; and Mohsen Motamedkia, the team’s media director. According to Tasnim, the staff denied U.S. visas will initially travel with the full squad to Mexico, where diplomatic teams will continue working to resolve the entry issue ahead of the team’s first U.S.-based match.

    The visa dispute has already forced major last-minute changes to Iran’s tournament preparations. Facing entry uncertainty and growing domestic pressure to limit the team’s time in U.S. territory, Iranian officials negotiated a late shift of the squad’s pre-tournament training base from Arizona in the U.S. to Tijuana, a Mexican border city. The full Iranian squad is scheduled to arrive in Tijuana Sunday.

    Pasandideh noted that Washington has never issued a formal public statement barring the entire Iranian team from entering the U.S. for the tournament, but U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio publicly confirmed Tuesday to congressional lawmakers that the U.S. would reject entry for any Iranian delegation members tied to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), a U.S.-designated foreign terrorist organization. This is not the first such restriction: Mehdi Taj, the current president of the Iranian Football Federation and a former IRGC commander, was already denied entry to the U.S. for the World Cup tournament draw held in Washington last December.

    Despite the diplomatic friction, Pasandideh framed Iran’s decision to compete in the tournament, including playing matches on U.S. soil, as a deliberate gesture of peaceful intent. Speaking through a Spanish interpreter at the Iranian embassy in Mexico City, he stated, “Iran’s participation in the World Cup – even on the soil of what is seen as its enemy – shows that Iran seeks peace.”

    The visa disruption comes against a backdrop of open conflict between the U.S., Israel, and Iran that began in late February, which has thrown Iran’s participation in the global tournament into widespread doubt. While diplomatic talks between Washington and Tehran remain ongoing, both sides have continued military strikes against enemy targets in the region, keeping tensions at a sustained high level.

  • Iran’s nightly pro-government rallies reveal both unity and deep divisions

    Iran’s nightly pro-government rallies reveal both unity and deep divisions

    Amid the ongoing conflict between an alliance of the United States and Israel and Iran that began in late February, nearly nightly pro-government rallies held across major Iranian cities have exposed deep rifts within Iranian society, bridging old political divides for some while fueling frustration and internal factional tension for others. These public demonstrations, which launched in mid-March, draw crowds to central squares of major urban centers, where participants wave Iranian national flags, chant anti-US and anti-Israel slogans, and occupy public streets for hours on end. The gatherings have persisted through a national internet blackout, continuing even after partial restrictions on connectivity were lifted, and have drawn a diverse cross-section of attendees with competing motivations for participating.

  • Christmas Day lights up Epsom Derby as O’Brien makes more history

    Christmas Day lights up Epsom Derby as O’Brien makes more history

    In a landmark Saturday at Epsom Downs, legendary Irish trainer Aidan O’Brien etched his name deeper into horse racing history, becoming the first conditioner to claim four straight Epsom Derby titles after longshot entry Christmas Day claimed a comfortable victory in Britain’s most prestigious flat race.

    The 56-year-old trainer did not just notch another Derby win – he crossed a once-unthinkable threshold, securing his 50th victory in British Classic races, while extending his own all-time record for the most Epsom Derby titles to 12. Christmas Day, sent out at 7/1 odds as one of O’Brien’s four entries in the 14-horse field, was not the betting favorite going into the race. But jockey Ronan Whelan, in only his second season working with O’Brien’s stable, delivered a masterclass ride to guide the three-year-old colt to his first career Derby win.

    An unusual incident added an unexpected twist to the race after the finish. O’Brien’s pre-race favored entry Benvenuto Cellini, which crossed the finish line well down the rankings, was later officially declared a non-runner after stewards confirmed the horse had become caught in the starting stalls with one hind leg before the race got underway.

    Speaking after the win, O’Brien highlighted his colt’s steady improvement and endurance that made the victory possible. “We fancied his chances as he is improving all the time and stays,” he said. “Ronan gave him a beautiful ride. He is a tough hardy horse.” True to his longstanding habit, O’Brien deflected praise for the historic 50th Classic win onto the large team of stable staff back at his Irish base, saying: “It is unbelievable, but I am just a small part of a huge team.”

    For Whelan, who became the ninth different jockey to win a Derby under O’Brien’s training, the race felt almost effortless from the saddle. He credited fellow stable jockey Wayne Lordan, who rode O’Brien’s other entry Action, for setting a perfect early pace that let Christmas Day conserve energy down the hill to the finish. “It was so easy to be honest! I had Wayne there to do the fractions and he never gets it wrong from the front,” Whelan explained. “The horse loves the ground and it felt so effortless for him. I can’t thank everyone enough. It’s my second season (with O’Brien) and I’ve made friends for life down there. It hasn’t sunk in yet. When we were running down the hill and Wayne was smacking away, I knew I had loads left. I wish I was as cool a customer as the horse was!”

    Once Christmas Day moved to the front of the pack in the final finishing straight, no challenger ever seriously threatened his lead. Maltese Cross crossed the line in second place, while James J Braddock, trained by O’Brien’s son Joseph O’Brien, rounded out the top three. Remarkably, the Epsom win marked O’Brien’s second Derby title in just seven days: the week prior, he trained the first three finishers to claim victory in the French Derby, cementing his status as one of the greatest trainers in modern horse racing history.

  • Police arrest supporters of banned group ahead of rally in Pakistan-administered Kashmir

    Police arrest supporters of banned group ahead of rally in Pakistan-administered Kashmir

    The contested Himalayan region of Kashmir, split between nuclear-armed neighbors India and Pakistan since their 1947 independence from British rule, has entered a new phase of political unrest following a government crackdown on a prominent opposition group. Officials and witness statements confirm that Pakistani Kashmir police took into custody dozens of supporters of the outlawed Joint Awami Action Committee (JAAC) on Saturday, one day after regional authorities in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir, formally banned the organization over threats to public order and national security.

    The ban and subsequent arrests are the culmination of weeks of escalating tensions between the regional government and JAAC, which has organized a series of demonstrations in recent years demanding expanded public services and greater political rights for local residents through a 38-point charter of demands. Last year, negotiations between JAAC representatives, regional government officials, and Pakistan’s federal government resulted in 36 of the group’s 38 demands being formally accepted by authorities. These included key calls for subsidized wheat and lower-cost electricity, two of the group’s top priorities for improving local livelihoods.

    Regional Prime Minister Faisal Mumtaz Rathore has repeatedly stated, both before and after the ban was enacted, that his administration remains open to sitting down with JAAC leadership to resolve the two remaining sticking points. One of these unresolved issues centers on a demand for 12 reserved legislative assembly seats specifically for Kashmiri refugees who have settled in the region. Despite the government’s offer of continued dialogue, the regional government confirms JAAC has rejected calls to cancel a mass protest march scheduled for Tuesday, and is insisting all 38 of its original demands be met in full before any de-escalation.

    Authorities have deployed additional security personnel across Pakistan-administered Kashmir to prepare for the planned demonstration, amid a history of violent unrest linked to JAAC’s actions. Just last year, clashes between JAAC supporters and security forces left multiple people dead, including several on-duty police officers. Tensions flared again over the weekend: JAAC claimed Saturday that two of its members were wounded when police opened fire during the arrest operations. However, local Kashmir police have refuted this claim, stating that the shooting incident occurred overnight when unidentified armed men opened fire on officers after failing to stop their vehicle when ordered.

    Kashmir has remained one of the most volatile flashpoints in South Asia for more than 75 years, with both India and Pakistan claiming the entire region as their sovereign territory. Two of the three full-scale wars the two nations have fought since independence have been waged over control of Kashmir, and cross-border tensions in the region remain a constant source of concern for global security.

  • Andreeva wins first Grand Slam title at French Open

    Andreeva wins first Grand Slam title at French Open

    Tennis history was made on the red clay of Roland Garros on Saturday, as 19-year-old Russian rising star Mirra Andreeva claimed her maiden Grand Slam crown with a dominant straight-sets victory over Polish qualifier Maja Chwalinska in the women’s singles final. Finishing the clash 6-3, 6-2, Andreeva etched her name into the tournament’s record books as the youngest women’s singles champion at Roland Garros since then-18-year-old Monica Seles captured her third consecutive Paris title back in 1992.

    Beyond this milestone, Andreeva also made history as the first player of any gender born after 2005 to lift a Grand Slam singles trophy. This major win adds another prestigious accolade to Andreeva’s already impressive young career, which has seen her collect two WTA 1000 titles to date, and the iconic Coupe Suzanne Lenglen will now take pride of place in her growing trophy collection.

    Speaking to the crowd on centre court immediately after her victory, an emotional Andreeva shared that the win fulfilled a lifelong dream. “I’ve been watching Roland Garros on TV since I was very, very young, so it’s also a big dream of mine to win this tournament and I honestly cannot believe that I’m holding this trophy right now,” she said, before extending thanks to her support team, singling out her psychologist for special recognition. She also paid tribute to Chwalinska’s incredible run through the event: “Congrats to Maja for these amazing three weeks, passing through qualies, winning so many matches, beating so many great players.”

    For Chwalinska, ranked world No. 114 entering the tournament, the final defeat brought an end to a Cinderella run that already secured her place in tennis history. The Pole became the first qualifier ever to reach the women’s singles final of the French Open in the Open Era, after winning nine consecutive matches across qualifying and the main draw in Paris. While she fell short of the title, the run will catapult her rankings to No. 21, guaranteeing her direct entry and regular competition in all future Grand Slam tournaments.

    In her post-match remarks, Chwalinska graciously congratulated Andreeva on her win, joking: “Congrats to Mirra, you’re such an incredible player. You’re so young and talented, it’s so annoying. I wish (the spectators) could see a better match today, but Mirra was just too good for me, so I guess it’s her fault.” Adding of her breakthrough run, “I will definitely not forget these three weeks. Paris will stay forever in my heart.”

    The final got off to a tense start, with Chwalinska dropping two opening serves into the net on the very first point of the match. Blustery wind conditions on centre court amplified the pressure of the occasion for both players, who had never faced each other before, with the match opening with four consecutive breaks of serve. After the initial flurry of breaks, each player held serve once as they began to test one another’s strengths and weaknesses.

    Andreeva soon dug in and seized control of the set, showcasing greater consistency than her opponent to claim three straight games and build a 3-0 lead. Though Chwalinska briefly pulled back a game to cut the deficit, Andreeva held firm, showing impressive mental mettle for a player of her age to retain her advantage. She quickly closed in on the set, and though Chwalinska refused to surrender easily — holding serve to make it 5-1 before breaking Andreeva when she served for the set — the young Russian would not be denied. She closed out the set in the very next game, and carried her momentum through the second set to claim the historic win.

    When the winning backhand flew past Chwalinska, Andreeva collapsed to her knees in celebration, surpassing a milestone set by her own coach: former top player Conchita Martinez, who finished as Roland Garros runner-up in 2000. That 2000 final was won by Mary Pierce, who was in attendance for Saturday’s trophy ceremony — a detail Andreeva highlighted in a playful quip, saying “I don’t know if I should thank you, Mary, as you beat my coach here in the final. But I’m joking of course, thank you so much!”

  • Hegseth invokes immigration and ‘invasion’ in D-Day speech in France

    Hegseth invokes immigration and ‘invasion’ in D-Day speech in France

    Normandy, France — The 82nd anniversary of the 1944 D-Day landings, a landmark event that marked the start of Western Europe’s liberation from Nazi occupation, became the stage for a heated political intervention by senior Trump administration officials over the weekend, drawing swift condemnation for framing migration as an existential threat to the freedom Allied troops fought to secure.

    U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth delivered his address from the hallowed grounds of the Normandy American Cemetery in Colleville-sur-Mer, where more than 9,000 U.S. service members killed during the invasion are buried. In his speech, he drew a provocative parallel between the 1944 Allied amphibious landing that freed Europe and what he framed as a modern-day “invasion” reaching European shores. Though he never explicitly used the word “immigration” in his remarks, his language left little room for ambiguity: he referenced “different dangerous ideologies” storming Europe’s beaches today, naming coastlines in Spain, Italy, Greece and Bulgaria where migrant boats regularly arrive, and challenged European leaders to act before it is too late.

    Hegseth’s comments align closely with broader Trump administration pressure on European governments over migration policy, border security, and the Trump White House’s criticism of what U.S. officials claim is unfair censorship of nationalist and far-right political voices across the continent. A December 2024 update to the Trump administration’s national security strategy amplified this framing, warning that Europe faces the risk of “civilizational erasure” and could become “unrecognizable” to current generations within two decades if current trends continue.

    The controversy did not end with Hegseth’s speech. Separate remarks by U.S. Vice President JD Vance drew sharp rebuke from 10 Downing Street, the official office of British Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Vance had linked the fatal stabbing of 18-year-old British student Henry Nowak in Southampton to immigration, a claim that fell apart under basic factual scrutiny: both Nowak and his suspected killer are British citizens. Starmer’s spokesperson issued a clear public condemnation of Vance’s inaccurate and exploitative comments in the wake of the tragedy.

    The dual controversies have thrown a spotlight on the Trump administration’s increasingly sharp rhetorical approach to European migration issues, turning a solemn commemoration of wartime sacrifice into a platform for advancing nationalist policy priorities that have divided transatlantic allies.

  • Andreeva wins first Grand Slam title at French Open

    Andreeva wins first Grand Slam title at French Open

    In a historic display of teenage tennis talent at Roland Garros, 19-year-old Russian rising star Mirra Andreeva captured her maiden Grand Slam title on Saturday, outclassing Polish qualifier Maja Chwalinska in a straight-sets 6-3, 6-2 victory in the women’s singles final.

    Andreeva’s breakthrough win carries landmark significance beyond her first major crown. She becomes the youngest women’s singles champion at the French Open since 18-year-old Monica Seles claimed her third consecutive Paris title back in 1992, and also makes history as the first player of any gender born after 2005 to lift a Grand Slam trophy. The Coupe Suzanne Lenglen will now take pride of place in Andreeva’s fast-growing collection of silverware, which already includes two WTA 1000 titles earned earlier in her young career.

    For Chwalinska, the run to the final capped a truly astonishing underdog journey through the tournament. Starting her campaign in the qualifying draw, the world No. 114 won nine consecutive matches in Paris to become the first qualifier ever to reach the French Open women’s singles final in the Open era. While she fell just short of a fairy tale title, her remarkable run will catapult her to a career-high ranking of No. 21, guaranteeing her direct entry and regular competition in the sport’s biggest major events moving forward.

    The final unfolded with early tension amplified by blustery conditions on Philippe Chatrier Court, which threw off both players’ rhythm from the opening points. Chwalinska showed immediate nerves, dumping two opening serves into the net, and Andreeva survived a seven-minute opening game to secure the first break of serve. But the Pole responded instantly, breaking back when Andreeva overhit a backhand down the line after a prolonged rally of looping defensive exchanges.

    Blustery winds that sent spectators’ straw hats flying off the stands contributed to two more consecutive breaks, leaving both players still searching for their footing. Chwalinska was the first to settle, holding serve to love and winning over the Paris crowd with a spectacular display of shot variety: a deft drop shot drew Andreeva to the net, before she pulled off a perfectly weighted lob to take a 3-2 lead.

    But Andreeva showed the poise of a veteran far beyond her years. She fought through her first service hold of the match, closing the game out with a blistering winner up the line followed by an unreturnable ace. From that point, the 19-year-old seized control of the match. She pounced on a Chwalinska service game heavily disrupted by the wind to re-take the lead, held comfortably, then broke the Pole once more with a clinical crosscourt backhand winner to close out the first set.

    Andreeva carried her momentum into the second set, jumping out to an early lead as Chwalinska’s error count climbed. Though the Polish underdog pulled one break back to briefly threaten a comeback, Andreeva displayed immense mental toughness to hold serve and move ahead 3-0, putting Chwalinska firmly on the back foot. Andreeva won the next two games to move within one game of the title, but Chwalinska refused to capitulate, holding serve to make it 5-1 and breaking Andreeva when the teen served for the championship.

    That small comeback was not enough to derail Andreeva’s historic run. She broke straight back in the next game, sealing the title with a decisive backhand winner before collapsing to her knees in celebration. The win also sees her surpass the achievement of her own coach, Conchita Martinez, who finished as Roland Garros runner-up back in 2000. The victory lifts Andreeva to a new career-high ranking of world No. 6, announcing her as one of the leading new forces in women’s tennis.

  • Rain chaos stalls England at Lord’s as New Zealand slumps to 55-5 chasing 254

    Rain chaos stalls England at Lord’s as New Zealand slumps to 55-5 chasing 254

    LONDON – Persistent wet weather cut short England’s bid to seal a opening Test victory over New Zealand on a sodden third day at the iconic Lord’s Cricket Ground Saturday, leaving the Black Caps clinging on at 55 for five wickets in their second innings as they chase a daunting 254-run winning target.

    Only 9.4 overs of play were possible before an early tea was called, with England’s pace bowler Ollie Robinson claiming the only two wickets to fall on a stop-start day interrupted by multiple rain delays. Play was delayed by two hours before it even got underway, followed by three further rain breaks – the final one coming shortly after 2 p.m. that forced officials to call an early tea break.

    The match has already been defined by a seam-friendly pitch that offers erratic movement and sharp bounce for bowlers, turning it into what commentators call a “seamer’s paradise.” Through less than two full days of official play, 35 wickets have already fallen, putting batters under relentless pressure from the opening over.

    New Zealand’s chase got off to a disastrous start on Friday, when the side stumbled to 36-3 by stumps on day two. Statistical models gave England an 80% chance of victory at that point, and by Saturday afternoon that probability had climbed to nearly 100% as the Kiwis lost two more wickets before rain set in.

    Overnight batsman Devon Conway, who notched a double century on his Test debut at Lord’s back in 2021, resumed on 12 alongside Rachin Ravindra. Ravindra narrowly avoided being dismissed for a pair (zero runs in both innings), taking 10 deliveries to open his account. But the young all-rounder fell for 8 to a searing delivery from Robinson that nipped away off the seam, capping a forgettable match for the Kiwis that has already included two dropped catches.

    Daryl Mitchell came to the crease to replace Ravindra, but lasted just three deliveries before he was adjudged leg before wicket to Robinson, with a video review confirming the on-field decision. Conway, meanwhile, had ground out 19 runs from 55 balls, with wicketkeeper Tom Blundell not out on 2 when rain stopped play.

    For Robinson, the two wickets pushed his match figures to 2-18, marking a strong comeback performance for the pace bowler who now sits on six wickets for the match so far. England is just five wickets away from taking a 1-0 lead in the three-Test series, but will have to wait for a break in the weather to finish the job.