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BBC World Dec 9, 09:13

Ukrainians raise flag to show BBC the fight goes on in city claimed by Russia

Ukrainians raise flag to show BBC the fight goes on in city claimed by Russia11 hours agoShareSaveJonathan BealeDefence correspondent in PavlohradShareSaveBBC/Matthew GoddardUkrainian soldiers in Pokrovsk show a Ukrainian flag to prove the city has not yet fallenPokrovsk has not fallen yet. That is despite President Vladimir Putin's recent claim that Russian forces have taken the city. There is no doubt Ukraine has been losing ground in this key city in the east. For Russia, Pokrovsk is another stepping stone towards its goal of taking control of all of the Donbas. But Ukraine needs to prove it is still capable of resisting.At a Ukrainian command post, well behind the front line, orders are relayed by radio in rapid and quick succession. Soldiers watch dozens of live drone feeds. They are coordinating strikes on Russian positions inside the city.The commander of the Skala Assault Regiment, Yuri, is keen to prove to us that Ukraine still controls the north of the city - to show that the Kremlin's claim that it has taken Pokrovsk is a lie.Over the radio, they ask two of their soldiers to break cover from a building to display a Ukrainian flag. They move quickly to avoid being spotted. The drone feed shows the moment they briefly wave their yellow and blue flag, before quickly returning to cover.BBC/Matthew GoddardBattalion commanders are adamant they still have a foothold in PokrovskYuri tells me: "You've now seen it with your own eyes.""I think the whole world should know we will not just give up our territory," he says. "If we do not show this, everyone will lose faith and stop helping Ukraine."The battle for Pokrovsk, once a key logistics hub for Ukraine's military, has been grinding on for nearly 18 months. The city is already in ruins. The question now is how much longer can Ukraine hold on. Those tracking the Russian advances suggest Ukrainian forces barely have a hold on the city. Russian forces have slowly been advancing from the south. Ukraine is losing ground, but says it still holds the north, up to the railway line that bisects the city.Sasha, a 25-year-old battalion commander, shows me a map. On top he has placed green plastic soldiers to represent where Ukrainian troops are still defending. Brown plastic soldiers show where their enemy has advanced. The Russians have been using small teams of two to four soldiers to sneak past Ukrainian positions, sometimes dressed as civilians. "It's a good tactic to get behind enemy lines, to gain a foothold," Sasha says. But he adds: "The enemy who gets into our rear is quickly identified – it takes 15 to 20 minutes between detection and destruction."BBC/Matthew GoddardGreen and brown plastic soldiers on Sasha's Ukrainian map show the two armies still fighting in PokrovskRussia has suffered heavy casualties, but still has more troops. A Ukrainian soldier with the call sign Rabbit shows me passports and documents retrieved from their dead. I asked him if he thinks they have killed a lot of Russians. "Not enough," he replies.Rabbit described the situation as "hard, but under control". He shows me a Russian machine gun captured by one of his comrades who spent 70 straight days fighting in Pokrovsk. "All he wanted was cigarettes and ammunition," says Rabbit.Why the fall of this city would matter to Ukraine and RussiaFog helps Russian forces push deeper into key Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk Ukraine prepares new peace plan as Zelensky rules out giving up land The fighting is clearly taking its toll on Ukrainian forces, but there is no sign of them giving up. Nor does Rabbit agree with any suggestion that Ukraine should give up more land for peace. He says too much blood has already been spilt: "We are part of this land. If we give it up Russia will want more."Another soldier - call sign "Ghost" - fighting in another unit in Pokrovsk describes the situation as "tense, but not critical". He dismisses reports of its capture as "Russian propaganda", saying reports that "Pokrovsk is surrounded is fake information", but adds that "everyone is exhausted – both Russia and Ukraine".For Ukraine, holding ground is also proving costly. The Skala Regiment shares recent videos taken by their troops on the front line - often having to take cover in buildings from Russian drones. The buzz of an approaching drone is often accompanied by heavy automatic fire as they try to bring it down."Khotabych", who recently spent a month fighting in the city, says it is scary when the drones spot you: "There are lots and they fly round the clock."The Russians have more drones with thermal imaging cameras, which can see at night. Khotabych said he and his men always hope for "good weather" – by which he means fog, rain and grey sky. In other words, anything that makes it more difficult to fly.BBC/Matthew GoddardThe Skala Regiment's deputy commander, "Godfather", warns that Putin will not stop after UkraineIn Pokrovsk, Ukrainian soldiers are focused on the fighting, not peace talks. Most say they want to avoid "political questions". But a volunteer from Latvia – the Skala Regiment's deputy commander – is more willing to give an opinion. He says Latvians "understand that if Ukraine loses the war, it's going to be our country next". His call sign is "Godfather" and he has a tough message for Europe and the US. He describes President Donald Trump as a "charismatic and strong leader", but he says if Trump's peace envoy Steve Witkoff "stands with Putin, then it makes America and Trump look weak". As for Europe, he says "there's a lot of talking, a lot of bureaucracy and not enough doing".The message from the troops we talked to is that the situation in Pokrovsk is not so bleak. But Ukraine needs proof of its resolve at this critical time.Additional reporting by Mariana Matveichuk and Kyla Herrmannsen.War in UkraineRussiaUkraine
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BBC World Dec 9, 09:00

UN environment report 'hijacked' by US and others over fossil fuels, top scientist says

UN environment report 'hijacked' by US and others over fossil fuels, top scientist says11 hours agoShareSaveMatt McGrathEnvironment correspondentShareSaveGetty ImagesA key UN report on the state of the global environment has been "hijacked" by the United States and other countries who were unwilling to go along with the scientific findings, the co-chair has told the BBC.The Global Environment Outlook, the result of six years' work, connects climate change, nature loss and pollution to unsustainable consumption by people living in wealthy and emerging economies.It warns of a "dire future" for millions unless there's a rapid move away from coal, oil and gas and fossil fuel subsidies.But at a meeting with government representatives to agree the findings, the US and allies said they could not go along with a summary of the report's conclusions.As the scientists were unwilling to water down or change their findings, the report has now been published without the summary and without the support of governments, weakening its impact.Researchers say the objections to this new report reflect similar concerns expressed by countries at the recent COP30 talks.The BBC has approached the relevant US government departments for comment.Issued every six or seven years, the Global Environment Outlook is a significant scientific analysis of the major threats to the planet.Developed under the auspices of the UN, the normal practice for studies like this is to have the key conclusions and recommendations agreed word by word with governments and published as a "summary for policymakers".These summaries are seen as critical because they show that governments agree with the science and are prepared to put the findings into action.But this new version of the Global Environment Outlook does not have this type of summary, as the authors and the political representatives of around 70 countries could not agree one at a "stormy" meeting in Nairobi in October.Compiled by nearly 300 scientists worldwide, the report argues that the food we eat, the clothes we wear, and the energy we consume all involve the extraction of resources in a highly unsustainable manner.To solve the connected issues of climate change, pollution, nature and biodiversity loss, the report has many recommendations including a rapid move away from coal, oil and gas and a massive reduction in subsidies for farming and fossil fuels.The authors acknowledge this type of action will drive-up prices for consumers.But that short term pain will bring long term economic benefits for the whole world, the report says.These strong measures, especially on fossil fuels and plastics, were too much for the United States, Saudi Arabia and Russia among others at the approval meeting, which usually work by consensus.Getty ImagesSir Robert Watson is co-chair of the report"A small number of countries basically just hijacked the process, to be quite honest," Prof Sir Robert Watson told BBC News."The US decided not to attend the meeting at all. At the very end they joined by teleconference and basically made a statement that they could not agree with most of the report, which means they didn't agree with anything we said on climate change, biodiversity, fossil fuels, plastics and subsidies."Sir Robert is one of the world's most respected scientific voices. He's a former chief scientist for the UK's department of the environment and has also been chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), as well as working for the World Bank and Nasa.However he has had rows with the US in the past, criticising their decision to leave an earlier climate treaty, the Kyoto Protocol, when he was head of the IPCC. He was ousted from that role in 2002 after lobbying by the administration of President George W. Bush.Others present at the meeting agreed that the actions of the US and other countries "derailed" the process."I thought we had gone beyond the point of recognizing that when you burn oil, this big, thick black stuff comes up, and it probably isn't good, especially when you try and breathe it in," said Dr David Broadstock, with the Lantau Group, and one of the report's lead authors."It's kind of pretty obvious, and yet we're still seeing parties wanting to pursue the increasing scale of production of such things," he told BBC News.Since taking office President Trump has sought to boost fossil fuel production and roll back US commitments to fight climate change, calling for the country to be a global energy superpower with cheap and reliable resources. He has also sought to get the US courts to overturn the idea that carbon dioxide is a danger to public health. His government has also followed up with efforts to restrict or limit the efforts of international bodies that set out to tackle warming.This year has seen efforts at international plastics negotiations, at the international maritime organisation and during COP30 to strike out language that states that climate change is a major issue requiring the world to move away rapidly from fossil fuels.The disagreement over the Global Environment Outlook report will raise concerns about future negotiations for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports as these studies are seen as the bedrock of global efforts to limit global warming.ClimateEnvironment
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BBC Sport Dec 9, 07:15

Voting open for World Sport Star of the Year - meet the contenders

Voting is open for the BBC Sports Personality World Sport Star of the Year 2025 award.Six contenders have been shortlisted for the award, which will be presented during the live show on BBC One on Thursday, 18 December.The 2024 World Sport Star award was won by Swedish pole vaulter Armand Duplantis.Below you can vote for your favourite - and find out more about the contenders.Sorry, this vote cannot be loaded. In order to vote you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.Sport: Football Country: SpainSpain midfielder Caldentey enjoyed a stellar first season in English football, with her performances instrumental in Arsenal's march to Champions League glory, beating her former club Barcelona in the final.After scoring 19 goals in 41 appearances for the Gunners in her first season, Caldentey was named the Professional Footballers' Association women's player of the year and the Women's Super League player of the year.Caldentey scored in the Women's Euro 2025 final, which Spain narrowly lost to England on penalties.The 29-year-old was runner-up in the Ballon d'Or award, missing out to compatriot Aitana Bonmati, and was also included in Uefa's Champions League team of the year.The making of Spain and Arsenal's humble magicianArsenal's Caldentey wins WSL player of year awardSport: Boxing Country: United StatesCrawford cemented his status as one of the greatest boxers in history by becoming the first male fighter to be undisputed champion across three weight divisions in the four-belt era.The 38-year-old had to go up two weight classes to face the great Saul 'Canelo' Alvarez at super-middleweight, but secured a unanimous decision in front of a fiercely pro-Mexican crowd in Las Vegas.In claiming the WBA (Super), WBC, IBF, WBO and The Ring belts, the American extended his professional record to 42 straight victories - the past 20 of which have been world title fights.However, Crawford was stripped of the WBC belt earlier in December, with president Mauricio Sulaiman claiming the American did not pay sanctioning fees.'Crawford conquers Canelo to become the face of boxing'History-maker Crawford stuns Canelo in VegasSport: Athletics Country: SwedenIn 2025, Sweden's Duplantis once again soared above his rivals to capture a third pole vault World Championship gold.In doing so, he set yet another world record of 6.30m - his fourth of this year alone - and the 14th of his remarkable career.He also retained his indoor world title - meaning he has won eight successive golds in major global competitions - and won all 16 of his events to become the first male pole vaulter in modern history to go undefeated for two successive years.In November, the 26-year-old was named men's world athlete of the year for a third time.Duplantis gets 14th world record & third world titleThe making of Mondo: How Duplantis is reaching new heightsSport: Athletics Country: United StatesMcLaughlin-Levrone, the greatest female 400m hurdler of all time, made the switch to the 400m flat at the World Athletics Championships this year, but the result remained the same as she became the first athlete to claim career world titles in both disciplines.Her time of 47.78 seconds was the second fastest in history and she came close to breaking a world record that has stood since 1985.The 26-year-old is undefeated across both distances for two years.She added another gold in the 4x400m relay in Tokyo and was named the women's world athlete of the year.McLaughlin-Levrone wins 400m gold with second fastest time in historyDuplantis & McLaughlin-Levrone named world athletes of yearSport: Baseball Country: JapanOn the LA Dodgers' march towards retaining their World Series title, Japanese superstar Ohtani produced one of the greatest individual performances in Major League Baseball history.The rare 'two-way' player, who operates as both a pitcher and a hitter, smashed three home runs and struck out 10 batters against the Milwaukee Brewers.That made him the first pitcher since 1942 to hit three home runs in the same game.The 31-year-old was named as one of baseball's Most Valuable Players for the third straight year, and the fourth time overall, moving him into second on the all-time list.Ohtani wins fourth Major League MVP awardOhtani rewrites history to send Dodgers to World SeriesSport: Football Country: EgyptSalah, the 'Egyptian King', scored 29 Premier League goals and broke a host of records as he helped Liverpool to a record-equalling 20th top-flight title in the 2024-25 season.He became the first player to win the Golden Boot, the Playmaker award for most assists and the Premier League player of the season award in the same campaign. He was also named as the PFA men's player of the year for a record third time and collected a third Football Writers' footballer of the year award.The 33-year-old became the highest-scoring overseas player in Premier League history, overtaking Sergio Aguero's mark of 184.Salah has scored five goals in 18 appearances for Liverpool so far this season, and on Saturday said he felt like he had been "thrown under the bus" by the club and that his relationship with head coach Arne Slot had broken down.'The hunger makes me want more' - Salah wins third PFA award
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BBC Sport Dec 9, 07:12

Villa could still go up another level - Sutton

Chris Sutton and Conor Coady discuss Aston Villa's title credentials and their admiration for manager Unai Emery on the Monday Night Club.You can watch the full show on BBC iPlayer and BBC Sport YouTube, or listen on BBC Sounds.READ MORE: Are Aston Villa in title hunt?
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BBC Sport Dec 9, 06:51

Hurts loses ball twice on same play as Eagles beaten

Eagles' quarterback Hurts loses ball twice on same playPhiladelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts bizarrely lost the ball twice during the same play as the reigning Super Bowl champions slumped to a third successive defeat on Monday.The incident happened in the second quarter when Hurts was intercepted by the Los Angeles Chargers' Da'Shawn Hand. The defensive linesman then fumbled the ball and Hurts gathered it up, only to then lose the ball again when he was tackled.Reports from the US indicate it is the first time since records of this nature began in 1978 that a player has turned the ball over twice on the same play.It was a chastening game for Hurts who threw a career-high four interceptions at the SoFi Stadium in California, the final one coming when Tony Jefferson picked off a pass at the one-yard line to end the game in overtime.Cameron Dicker had earlier kicked what turned out to be the game-winning 54-yard field goal in the extra period - matching his career-high five field goals in a single game - as the Chargers won 22-19.Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert, who played after undergoing surgery on a fractured hand on 1 December, completed 12 of 26 passes for 139 yards.A fifth victory in their past six outings leaves the Chargers second in the AFC West, while the Eagles remain top of the NFC East.Both sides return to action on 14 December at 20:00 GMT, with the Chargers travelling to the Kansas City Chiefs and the Eagles hosting the Las Vegas Raiders.Get American Football news sent straight to your phone
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BBC Sport Dec 9, 06:28

England fast bowler Wood out of Ashes tour

Mark Wood has taken 119 wickets in 38 Tests for EnglandFast bowler Mark Wood has been ruled out of England's Ashes tour and replaced in the squad by Matthew Fisher.Wood only returned to action in the first Test in Perth after eight months out following knee surgery.The 35-year-old subsequently suffered swelling in the same left knee and was forced to miss the second Test.England were initially hopeful he could play a part in the remaining three Tests, but the Durham man is now due to go home at the weekend."Gutted to be out the remainder of the Ashes," wrote Wood in a post on Instagram."After extensive surgery and months of work and rehab to get back into the Test arena, my knee just hasn't held up."None of us expected this. I came here with high expectations about making a big impact. I'm desperately disappointed that despite yet more injections and intensive medical treatment it has become clear that the flare up in my knee is worse than feared."I'm really sorry that has left me unable to perform as expected but it is not for want of trying."However, he said he will attempt to make another comeback."Whatever happens I will continue to push the limits to get back again," Wood added. "It has been a tough road these past few months but I remain determined to give it another proper go."I still believe we can turn things around. Never give in. Come on England."England need to win next Test or Ashes will get embarrassing - McGrathWho is Matthew Fisher and could he play in the third Test?Daily Ashes Quiz: Five-wicket haulsIt is a huge blow to the tourists - who are already 2-0 down - and to Wood, whose international future is now in doubt.One of the fastest bowlers to ever play for England, Wood has taken 119 wickets in 38 Tests since making his debut in 2015.He was part of the team that won the Ashes in 2015, lifted the 2019 50-over World Cup and was in the England squad that won the T20 World Cup in 2022.His career has been blighted by injuries and the Perth Test was the end of a 15-month absence from Test cricket, firstly because of an elbow injury, then the knee problem.Wood bowled 11 overs at Perth Stadium, without taking a wicket. He has travelled with the rest of the England squad to their mid-series break in Noosa, but will not be part of the group for the third Test in Adelaide, beginning on 17 December (23:30 16 December GMT).Surrey's Fisher, 28, won his only Test cap on a tour of the West Indies in 2022. He has been part of the England Lions squad on their tour of Australia.Considered adept at bowling with the Kookaburra ball used in Australia, Fisher gets the nod ahead of Josh Hull.Sonny Baker and Tom Lawes would have been other options, but both were ruled out of the Lions squad with injuries.Meanwhile, Australia's Josh Hazlewood has also been ruled out of the remainder of the series.Hazlewood, 34, initially missed the first two Tests with a hamstring problem and has now suffered an Achilles tendon setback.However, Australia coach Andrew McDonald confirmed captain Pat Cummins is set to make his comeback when the hosts reveal their squad for the third Test on Wednesday.With Cummins due to return from a back problem and off-spinner Nathan Lyon likely to play in Adelaide after being left out of the day-night in Brisbane, Australia will make at least two changes to their team.Seamers Michael Neser and Brendan Doggett are the candidates to be left out.Australia could also recall batter Usman Khawaja after the opener struggled in the first Test with a back injury, then missed the second.McDonald said Khawaja could return at number five, leaving a new opening partnership of Travis Head and Jake Weatherald intact.Get cricket news sent straight to your phone
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BBC Sport Dec 9, 06:00

The parents of Alice, Elsie and Bebe on the love and legacy left behind

Homepage Accessibility links Skip to content Accessibility Help BBC Accountrequire(["idcta/statusbar"],function(a){new a.Statusbar({id:"idcta-statusbar",publiclyCacheable:!0})}),document.querySelector(".idcta-wrapper").classList.remove("no-js") Notifications Home News Sport Weather iPlayer Sounds Bitesize CBeebies CBBC Food Home News Sport Business Innovation Culture Travel Earth Video Live More menu Search iPlayer Home News Sport Weather iPlayer Sounds Bitesize CBeebies CBBC Food Home News Sport Business Innovation Culture Travel Earth Video Live Close menu !function(){var e=document.getElementById("tviplayer");-1===e.className.indexOf("tvip-js")&&(e.className+=e.className?" tvip-js":"tvip-js")}(); iPlayer NavigationiPlayer Accessibility HelpMenuChannels;;Channels Sub NavigationScroll Channels Sub Navigation leftBBC OneBBC TwoBBC ThreeBBC FourBBC Radio 1CBBCCBeebiesBBC ScotlandBBC NewsBBC ParliamentBBC AlbaS4CScroll Channels Sub Navigation rightCategoriesCategoriesCategory Sub NavigationScroll Category Sub Navigation leftDrama & SoapsFilmsComedyDocumentariesSportNewsEntertainmentMusicFoodLifestyleHistoryScience & NatureArtsFrom the ArchiveAudio DescribedSignedNorthern IrelandScotlandWalesCBeebiesCBBCScroll Category Sub Navigation rightDrama & SoapsFilmsComedyDocumentariesSportNewsEntertainmentMusicFoodLifestyleHistoryScience & NatureArtsFrom the ArchiveAccessible alternative formatsAudio DescribedSignedRegionsNorthern IrelandScotlandWalesChildren’sCBeebiesCBBCA-ZTV GuideWatchlistJavaScript seems to be disabled. Please enable JavaScript to take full advantage of iPlayer.HomeOur Girls: The Southport FamiliesOur Girls: The Southport FamiliesOur Girls: The Southport FamiliesThe parents of Alice da Silva Aguiar, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Bebe King, the three girls murdered in the Southport attack, on the love and legacy left behind. More
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BBC World Dec 9, 05:14

Goa nightclub owners fled to Thailand hours after deadly fire, police say

Goa nightclub owners fled to Thailand hours after deadly fire, police say15 hours agoShareSaveShareSaveReutersThe nightclub is located in a busy tourist areaThe owners of a nightclub in Goa, India, where a devastating fire killed 25 people on Sunday, fled the country hours after the tragedy, police have said.Indian authorities confirmed the two brothers, Saurabh and Gaurav Luthra, boarded a flight to Phuket in Thailand shortly after the incident.Investigators believe the fierce blaze was triggered by fireworks being set off inside the venue, Birch By Romeo Lane, which is located in a busy nightlife area of Goa, a coastal state popular with domestic and international tourists.The majority of the victims were staff members, while four were holidaymakers visiting from Delhi. Five people are still being treated in hospital.Police have appealed to Interpol for help to find and arrest the Luthra brothers.Police said they travelled to Delhi to carry out a raid on the mens' home, but discovered they had left the country. "It shows their intent to avoid police investigation," Goa police said in a statement. Saurabh Luthra, whose social media identifies him as the chairman of the company which operates the club, posted a statement on social media expressing "profound grief", but did not reference his whereabouts."In this hour the irreparable sorrow and overwhelming distress, the management stands in unwavering solidarity with the families of the deceased as well as those injured, and conveys its heartfelt condolences with utmost sincerity," Monday's post said.It added that "management" would provide "assistance, support and cooperation to the bereaved".His brother Gaurav Luthra has not commented publicly.At least four people were arrested in the immediate aftermath of the fire, including the venue's manager.Nightclub fire in India's Goa kills 25 staff and touristsNo Christmas homecoming: Families mourn victims of Goa nightclub fireThe Birch nightclub in Arpora, an area with several high-end nightlife businesses, was packed with customers who had come to hear a Bollywood DJ when the fire broke out in the early hours of the morning.Eye witnesses have described scenes of total panic to the BBC, as people tried to flee.The main section of the venue is built on an island in the middle of a lake, which visitors accessed via narrow walkways - a layout which made it difficult for firefighters to tackle the blaze.Part of the venue was entirely destroyed. Police initially said an exploding gas canister was the cause, but now believe it was due to pyrotechnics igniting wooden ceiling beams.Several of the victims were migrant workers who had travelled to Goa to find employment, including four Nepalese nationals.Among those who died were two brothers who were both engaged to be married next year, and four members of the same Delhi family.The police said the bodies of all the victims had been returned to their families. AsiaIndia
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BBC World Dec 9, 03:53

Zohran Mamdani confirms he will live in historic Gracie Mansion as New York mayor

Zohran Mamdani will live in historic Gracie Mansion as New York mayor16 hours agoShareSaveKayla EpsteinShareSaveGetty ImagesNew York City Mayor-Elect Zohran MamdaniNew York City Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani will live in the Manhattan mansion that his predecessors have called home, leaving behind a rent-stabilised apartment that became the subject of heated debate during his campaign.Gracie Mansion, which dates to 1799, has served as the residence for most New York City mayors since World War Two. But Mamdani, for whom affordable housing is a central issue, did not confirm he would live there immediately following his victory in November."This decision came down to our family's safety and the importance of dedicating all of my focus on enacting the affordability agenda New Yorkers voted for," Mamdani said in a statement on Monday.He has been living in the Astoria neighbourhood in the borough of Queens. The area, home to many middle-class families, is famous for its abundance of immigrant communities and global cuisine."To Astoria: thank you for showing us the best of New York City," Mamdani's statement said."While I may no longer live in Astoria, Astoria will always live inside me and the work I do."During his campaign, Mamdani tied his core platform - freeze the rent – to his own housing situation. But his rivals, mainly former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, criticised Mamdani for occupying the apartment even though he came from a famous family. His mother is the filmmaker Mira Nair, and his father, Mahmood Mamdani, is a professor at Columbia University.Bloomberg via Getty ImagesGracie Mansion, built in 1799, is the official residence of the New York City mayorNot every mayor has chosen to live at Gracie Mansion.Michael Bloomberg, the billionaire entrepreneur and founder of the eponymous financial and media company, chose to live in his own townhouse on the Upper East Side neighbourhood of Manhattan during his three terms, which ended in 2012.Bloomberg said he believed Gracie Mansion should be a space for public city functions, and he pushed for an extensive renovation of the ageing property.When Mamdani moves in, sometime around his inauguration on 1 January, he will find himself in surroundings very different than his modest Astoria digs.With its butter yellow paint, green shutters, and white railings, Gracie Mansion is a wedding cake of a house overlooking the East River. Inside, the lower floor of the Federal-style mansion is decorated in the spirit of the home's original era.The compound, which reportedly has five bedrooms, also has enhanced security to protect the mayor and their family.Some residents have alleged that Gracie Mansion also has supernatural lodgers. Chirlane McCray, the wife of former mayor Bill De Blasio, told reporters that doors occasionally opened and closed by themselves, and the floorboards creaked eerily.Outgoing Mayor Eric Adams was more certain. "I don't care what anyone says," he declared in 2022. "There are ghosts in there, man."Mamdani's current apartment is rent stabilised, meaning the city sets limits on how much landlords can raise the rent each year. New Yorkers consider these apartments valuable lifelines as the cost of housing outpaces what many can afford.Records showed Mamdani paid about $2,300 (£1,725) each month for his apartment. According to the real estate platform Zillow, the average rent for a one-bedroom apartment in New York City is $3,500 (£2,625) a month.Mamdani seals remarkable victory - but real challenges awaitWhat to know about Zohran Mamdani and what he wants to do as New York City mayorWho is Zohran Mamdani?New York CityUS politicsUnited States
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BBC World Dec 9, 03:06

Trump unveils $12bn farm aid package to help farmers who faced 'unjustified trade actions'

Trump unveils $12bn farm aid package to help farmers who faced 'unjustified trade actions'17 hours agoShareSaveBernd Debusmann Jr,at the White HouseandDanielle Kaye,business reporterShareSaveWatch: Trump announces $12bn farm aid to help farmersUS President Donald Trump has unveiled a $12bn (£9bn) farm aid package aimed at helping farmers impacted by low crop prices and the administration's ongoing trade wars.Most of the money – $11bn – is earmarked for one-time payments to farmers for row crops as part of the agriculture department's Farmer Bridge Assistance programme, with another billion reserved for crops not covered by the programme.While farmers have broadly supported Trump, the agriculture sector has been disrupted by trade disputes during his second term, particularly with China. Also on Monday, Trump threatened to hit Mexico with an additional 5% tariff in a row over water supplies to US farmers.The White House says the aid package will help farmers suffering from "years of unjustified trade actions" and accumulated inflation. Trump made the announcement during an event at the White House, alongside Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins. Members of Congress and corn, cotton, sorghum, soybean, rice, cattle, wheat and potato farmers were also in attendance. "Maximising domestic farm production is a big part of how we will make America affordable again and bring down grocery prices," Trump said. Sorghum and soybean farmers have been hit hard by the Trump administration's trade dispute with China, the greatest importer of their crops. Trump's farmer bailout raises fears about trade war winners and losersAccording to a White House official, the payments are intended to help farmers market this year's harvest and plan for next year's crops, as well as act as a bridge until the administration's policies "deliver a better market environment". Rollins said the last $1bn would be held back to help officials understand the state of "specialty crops" and ensure that the government is "making every forward moving position that we need to".When asked if further farm aid packages were planned, Trump said "it depends" on how the market develops."The farmers don't want aid," he said. "They want to have a level playing field."The announcement comes as polls suggest Americans are increasingly concerned about rising costs - an issue which Trump has at times characterised as a "hoax" and a "con job" perpetrated by Democrats.It also followed complaints from US farmers after they lost access to customers in China as a result of Trump's trade policies.For example, China is the world's biggest market for soybeans and has in recent decades been a major buyer from the US.But Beijing effectively shut the door on American soybean imports for months after Trump hit Chinese goods with new levies earlier this year.Later on Monday, Trump threatened to impose a new 5% tariff on Mexico, accusing it of violating an agreement that gives American farmers access to water."It is very unfair to our US Farmers who deserve this much needed water," he posted on social media.Trump was referring to a more than 80-year-old treaty that grants the US water from Rio Grande tributaries.For decades the US has accused Mexico of not meeting the terms of the agreement.Getty ImagesChina is the largest export destination for US soybeans. Mark Legan, a livestock, corn and soybean farmer in Putnam County, Indiana, told the BBC that the government aid would "help our bottom line"As crop prices have fallen and profitability has plummeted, he could use the funds to help replace tractors and other machinery - investments he has put on hold.During his first administration, Trump also provided aid packages to farmers, including $22bn in 2019 and another $46bn in a 2020 package that also included relief from the Covid pandemic. Mr Legan said he believed the new package would be similar to what he received during the first Trump term, in that it would not resolve persistent cost pressures and shrinking export markets, he said."The problem is still that we have high costs of production," Mr Legan said, pointing to record high prices for crop protection chemicals and seeds."While some markets have opened up, we're still not back to exporting as much ag products as we have in the past," he added.Another Illinois farmer, Brad Smith, heard news of the $12bn package while at the Illinois Farm Bureau State Convention in Chicago. "None of us really love it, but we're not in a position where we can be turning it down," he said. "We hope we can reduce the need for anything like this going forward."If he does receive funds from the government, the money will likely be in his hands for three days, he said, before spending it to clear outstanding bills and hopefully buy seeds, chemicals and fertilisers for next year's crop.Mr Smith said that distributing government aid to farmers who need it the most, rather than to larger farms, has been a challenge in the past.Following an October meeting between Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping in South Korea, the White House said China had committed to buying at least 12 million metric tonnes of US soybeans by the end of 2025, followed by 25 million metric tonnes annually for the next three years.So far, China has only purchased approximately one-quarter of that amount. Those purchases, however, have accelerated, and Bessent told CBS, the BBC's US partner, that China is likely to meet the goal by the end of February. Asked why a farm aid package was necessary, Bessent said "the Chinese actually used our soybean farmers as pawns in the trade negotiations". "We are going to create this bridge because... agriculture is all about the future," he said. "You've got to start financing for planning next year when things will be very good." On Saturday, he signed an executive order creating food supply chain security "task forces" and assessing "anti-competitive behaviour" in the agricultural sector.Additional reporting by Peter HoskinsTrump's farmer bailout raises fears about trade war winners and losersUS farmers are being squeezed - and it's testing their deep loyalty to TrumpWhat tariffs has Trump announced and why?Trump tariffsAgricultureUS governmentUnited StatesTrade
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BBC World Dec 9, 02:40

US deports second group of Iranian nationals, officials say

US deports second group of Iranian nationals, officials say17 hours agoShareSaveKhashayar Joneidi, BBC Persian CorrespondentShareSaveABEDIN TAHERKENAREH/EPA/ShutterstockThe US has deported a second group of Iranian nationals, officials in Tehran said, as the Trump administration continues its immigration enforcement efforts.A chartered plane carrying more than 50 Iranians flew out of Mesa, Arizona, on Sunday, travelling through Cairo and Kuwait before arriving in Iran, according to reports. Tehran's foreign ministry confirmed the Iranian nationals' return to Iran. US immigration officials could not "confirm or deny a flight" for security reasons.The first deportation flight took off from the US in late September, in a rare instance of cooperation between Iran and the US. Many Iranian nationals say they come to the US because they fear persecution at home.Father Joseph Bach, a member of Borderland Companions of Hope, a Franciscan organisation that provides support to migrants, said he has been informed through his contacts inside an Arizona detention facility that Christian converts were among those removed. He also said some detainees had identified as LGBT.Christian converts and members of the LGBT community are groups that face severe legal and social repercussions in Iran.Father Joseph called the deportations "the most unchristian thing to do", adding, "It's scary, it concerns me, it is not OK. I call this a death flight."Iranian authorities have facilitated the repatriation efforts. An Iranian consular official said the deported nationals had "announced their willingness for return following continuation of anti-immigration and discriminative policy against foreign nationals, particularly Iranians, by the United States", the Iran's judiciary-affiliated Mizan News Agency reports.However, one detainee who spoke with the BBC said not all those who were deported were willing to return.One person who was on a list for potential deportation told the BBC he and his partner crossed into the US on foot from Mexico earlier this year. Speaking from an immigration detention centre in Arizona, he said he feared for his life if he returned to Iran.The latest deportations come as already severely strained relations between the two countries further deteriorated in June, after the US bombed Iran's nuclear facilities.The removals highlight the US government's hardline immigration posture under President Donald Trump, who made border security and reducing unauthorised migration central to his political agenda.IranDonald TrumpMigration
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BBC World Dec 9, 01:38

Dozens injured after magnitude 7.5 quake strikes northern Japan

Dozens injured after magnitude 7.5 quake strikes northern Japan18 hours agoShareSavePatrick JacksonShareSaveWatch: CCTV shows moment earthquake hits JapanAt least 30 people were injured after a magnitude 7.5 earthquake hit north-eastern Japan on Monday night, forcing thousands of people to evacuate their homes.The quake occurred at 23:15 (14:15 GMT) at a depth of 50km (31mi), about 80km off the coast of the Aomori region, the Japan Meteorological Agency said. It prompted tsunami warnings which have now been lifted, while waves of 70cm (27in) were seen.Some train services have been suspended and thousands of homes have been left without power as a result. Authorities have also warned that a stronger tremor could occur in the coming days - urging the public to remain on high alert for at least a week, according to local media reports.EPAA car is stranded on a collapsed road in Tohoku, Northern JapanAddressing citizens affected by the earthquake, Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said: "Reconfirm your daily earthquake preparedness, such as ensuring that you secure furniture, and prepare to evacuate immediately if you feel shaking."Orders were issued for about 90,000 residents to evacuate, according to Reuters news agency.The Aomori prefectural government said around 2,700 homes have been left without power. East Japan Railway has also suspended some services along the north-eastern coast.The Japanese government has set up a response office within the prime minister's crisis management centre and convened an emergency team, chief cabinet secretary Minoru Kihara has said."We are making every effort to assess the damage and implement emergency disaster response measures, including rescue and relief operations," he added.Following the tremors, Japanese electric company Tohoku Electric Power said no irregularities were reported at its Higashidori and Onagawa nuclear power plants as a result of the quake, Tohoku Electric Power said.None were detected either at the disabled Fukushima nuclear power station site, the Japanese authorities told the International Atomic Energy Agency.Fukushima was damaged when a magnitude 9.0 quake struck off the country's eastern coast on 11 March 2011.That quake, the most powerful ever recorded in Japan, triggered a tsunami which swept over the main island of Honshu, killing more than 18,000 people and wiping entire towns off the map.EPAThis home in Aomori prefecture was among those affected by the earthquakeJapan is one of the world's most earthquake-prone countries. It sits on the Ring of Fire and, as a result, experiences about 1,500 earthquakes a year.Earlier this year, Japan's earthquake investigation panel said there was a 60-90% chance that a megaquake would occur in the Nankai Trough within the next 30 years, with worst-case scenarios suggesting it would cause trillions in damage, and potentially kill hundreds of thousands.Earthquakes along the Nankai Trough - an area of seismic activity which stretches along Japan's Pacific coast - have already been responsible for thousands of deaths.Does Japan's megaquake alert mean the 'big one' is coming?AsiaJapanEarthquakes
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BBC World Dec 9, 00:29

A wage for housework? India's sweeping experiment in paying women

A wage for housework? India's sweeping experiment in paying women19 hours agoShareSaveSoutik BiswasIndia correspondentShareSaveHindustan Times via Getty ImagesWomen in Maharashtra aged 21-65 receive a monthly cash transfer of 1,500 rupees ($16)In a village in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, a woman receives a small but steady sum each month - not wages, for she has no formal job, but an unconditional cash transfer from the government. Premila Bhalavi says the money covers medicines, vegetables and her son's school fees. The sum, 1,500 rupees ($16: £12), may be small, but its effect - predictable income, a sense of control and a taste of independence - is anything but.Her story is increasingly common. Across India, 118 million adult women in 12 states now receive unconditional cash transfers from their governments, making India the site of one of the world's largest and least-studied social-policy experiments. Long accustomed to subsidising grain, fuel and rural jobs, India has stumbled into something more radical: paying adult women simply because they keep households running, bear the burden of unpaid care and form an electorate too large to ignore. Eligibility filters vary - age thresholds, income caps and exclusions for families with government employees, taxpayers or owners of cars or large plots of land. "The unconditional cash transfers signal a significant expansion of Indian states' welfare regimes in favour of women," Prabha Kotiswaran, a professor of law and social justice at King's College London, told the BBC.How India calculates value of women's houseworkThe transfers range from 1,000-2,500 rupees ($12-$30) a month - meagre sums, worth roughly 5-12% of household income, but regular. With 300 million women now holding bank accounts, transfers have become administratively simple.Women typically spend the money on household and family needs - children's education, groceries, cooking gas, medical and emergency expenses, retiring small debts and occasional personal items like gold or small comforts.What sets India apart from Mexico, Brazil or Indonesia - countries with large conditional cash-transfer schemes - is the absence of conditions: the money arrives whether or not a child attends school or a household falls below the poverty line.AFPBihar transferred 10,000 rupees to women's bank accounts ahead of pollsGoa was the first state to launch an unconditional cash transfer scheme to women in 2013. The phenomenon picked up just before the pandemic in 2020, when north-eastern Assam rolled out a scheme for vulnerable women. Since then these transfers have turned into a political juggernaut.The recent wave of unconditional cash transfers targets adult women, with some states acknowledging their unpaid domestic and care work. Tamil Nadu frames its payments as a "rights grant" while West Bengal's scheme similarly recognises women's unpaid contributions.In other states, the recognition is implicit: policymakers expect women to use the transfers for household and family welfare, say experts.This focus on women's economic role has also shaped politics: in 2021, Tamil actor-turned-politician Kamal Haasan promised "salaries for housewives". (His fledgling party lost.) By 2024, pledges of women-focused cash transfers helped deliver victories to political parties in Maharashtra, Jharkhand, Odisha, Haryana and Andhra Pradesh. In the recent elections in Bihar, the political power of cash transfers was on stark display. In the weeks before polling in the country's poorest state, the government transferred 10,000 rupees ($112; £85) to 7.5 million female bank accounts under a livelihood-generation scheme. Women voted in larger numbers than men, decisively shaping the outcome. Critics called it blatant vote-buying, but the result was clear: women helped the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led coalition secure a landslide victory. Many believe this cash infusion was a reminder of how financial support can be used as political leverage.Yet Bihar is only one piece of a much larger picture. Across India, unconditional cash transfers are reaching tens of millions of women on a regular basis.Maharashtra alone promises benefits for 25 million women; Odisha's scheme reaches 71% of its female voters.Why are millions of Indian women dropping out of work?In some policy circles, the schemes are derided as vote-buying freebies. They also put pressure on state finances: 12 states are set to spend around $18bn on such payouts this fiscal year. A report by think-tank PRS Legislative Research notes that half of these states face revenue deficits - this happens when a state borrows to pay regular expenses without creating assets.But many argue they also reflect a slow recognition of something India's feminists have argued for decades: the economic value of unpaid domestic and care work.Women in India spent nearly five hours a day on such work in 2024 - more than 7.6 times the time spent by men, according to the latest Time Use Survey. This lopsided burden helps explain India's stubbornly low female labour-force participation. The cash transfers, at least, acknowledge the imbalance, experts say.Do they work?Evidence is still thin but instructive. A 2025 study in Maharashtra found that 30% of eligible women did not register - sometimes because of documentation problems, sometimes out of a sense of self-sufficiency. But among those who did, nearly all controlled their own bank accounts.Swastik PalSoma Das sells clothes using the money, supporting her household in West BengalA 2023 survey in West Bengal found that 90% operated their accounts themselves and 86% decided how to spend the money. Most used it for food, education and medical costs; hardly transformative, but the regularity offered security and a sense of agency.More detailed work by Prof Kotiswaran and colleagues shows mixed outcomes.In Assam, most women spent the money on essentials; many appreciated the dignity it afforded, but few linked it to recognition of unpaid work, and most would still prefer paid jobs.In Tamil Nadu, women getting the money spoke of peace of mind, reduced marital conflict and newfound confidence - a rare social dividend. In Karnataka, beneficiaries reported eating better, gaining more say in household decisions and wanting higher payments.Yet only a sliver understood the scheme as compensation for unpaid care work; messaging had not travelled. Even so, women said the money allowed them to question politicians and manage emergencies. Across studies, the majority of women had full control of the cash.Why female entrepreneurs are key to getting more women to work"The evidence shows that the cash transfers are tremendously useful for women to meet their own immediate needs and those of their households. They also restore dignity to women who are otherwise financially dependent on their husbands for every minor expense," Prof Kotiswaran says.Importantly, none of the surveys finds evidence that the money discourages women from seeking paid work or entrench gender roles - the two big feminist fears, according to a report by Prof Kotiswaran along with Gale Andrew and Madhusree Jana.Nor have they reduced women's unpaid workload, the researchers find. They do, however, strengthen financial autonomy and modestly strengthen bargaining power. They are neither panacea nor poison: they are useful but limited tools, operating in a patriarchal society where cash alone cannot undo structural inequities.Swastik PalWomen welcome the dignity the cash transfers provideWhat next? The emerging research offers clear hints.Eligibility rules should be simplified, especially for women doing heavy unpaid care work. Transfers should remain unconditional and independent of marital status.But messaging should emphasise women's rights and the value of unpaid work, and financial-literacy efforts must deepen, researchers say. And cash transfers cannot substitute for employment opportunities; many women say what they really want is work that pays and respect that endures."If the transfers are coupled with messaging on the recognition of women's unpaid work, they could potentially disrupt the gendered division of labour when paid employment opportunities become available," says Prof Kotiswaran.India's quiet cash transfers revolution is still in its early chapters. But it already shows that small, regular sums - paid directly to women - can shift power in subtle, significant ways. Whether this becomes a path to empowerment or merely a new form of political patronage will depend on what India chooses to build around the money.CashTamil NaduWomen in IndiaWomenMaharashtraIndia
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BBC World Dec 9, 00:21

Sudan air force bombing of towns, markets and schools has killed hundreds, report says

Sudan air force bombing of towns, markets and schools has killed hundreds, report says20 hours agoShareSaveBarbara Plett UsherAfrica correspondentShareSaveAFP via Getty ImagesMillions have fled the fighting which began in April 2023Sudan's air force has carried out bombings in which at least 1,700 civilians have died in attacks on residential neighbourhoods, markets, schools and camps for displaced people, according to an investigation into air raids in the country's civil war.The Sudan Witness Project says it has compiled the largest known dataset of military airstrikes in the conflict, which began in April 2023.Its analysis indicates that the air force has used unguided bombs in populated areas.The data focuses on attacks by warplanes, which only the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) is capable of operating. Its rival, the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) does not have aircraft. It launches drone strikes, but drones were excluded from the research.The RSF has been internationally condemned for allegedly carrying out ethnic massacres in Sudan's western Darfur region, triggering charges of genocide by the United States."The RSF are being held responsible for a lot of damage and violations, and I think rightly so," says Mark Snoeck, who ran the project. "But I think the SAF should also be held accountable for their actions."The military has also faced international criticism, accused of indiscriminate bombings.The SAF did not respond to a BBC request for comment. But it has previously denied allegations of targeting civilians, saying its airstrikes are "directed solely at RSF gatherings, locations and bases recognized as legitimate military targets".Sudan Witness is an initiative by the Center for Information Resilience (CIR), a non-profit group which works to expose human rights violations. It received funding from the British foreign ministry for this project.According to an advance copy of the report obtained by the BBC, Sudan Witness analysed 384 airstrikes conducted between April 2023 and July 2025.A simple guide to what is happening in SudanHow Trump's pledge to tackle Sudan atrocities could play outPodcast: What is Sudan’s war really about?More than 1,700 civilians were reported killed and 1,120 injured in the incidents it documented. The group says these are conservative figures as it takes the lowest reported number.There were 135 cases involving residential areas, with verified destruction to homes and civilian infrastructure.In 35 instances the bombs struck markets and commercial facilities, often when they were crowded with people. And 19 strikes affected vulnerable groups in places like health facilities, sites housing displaced people and educational institutions.Sudan Witness acknowledges that its research is incomplete because the results reflect access to data rather than the total number of strikes. It's hard to get information from conflict zones due to poor telecommunications and the difficulty of identifying credible sources, it says, and strikes on military targets are likely to be underreported.But it says through a rigorous methodology, it has been able to build a wider picture of the military's air campaigns, visualising the information in an interactive map that shows the scale and impact on civilian populations."For us to say that the Sudanese Armed Forces conducted an airstrike on a certain location at a certain time would more or less require that the SAF be caught in the act in footage that can be verified," says Mr Snoeck. "And this would be a very high threshold, because footage like that is very exceptional in Sudan. So what we therefore have done is analysed hundreds of airstrikes claims to paint the bigger picture."The main patterns that emerge are repeated hits on residential neighbourhoods and markets, says Mr Snoeck, as well as a large number of alleged strikes on essential humanitarian and medical facilities."I think these patterns strongly suggest that the SAF isn't doing enough to avoid civilian casualties," he said.Justin Lynch, managing director at Conflict Insights Group which tracks foreign weapons supplies to Sudan, told the BBC that Sudanese civilians were bearing the brunt of the battles between the army and the RSF."Sudan's conflict is really a war against civilians," he told the BBC. "Air power and other heavy weapons disproportionately target civilian, more than military, sites."Sudan Witness calculates the credibility level of a reported airstrike based on publicly available digital information known as open source.It assesses the reliability of the source, ability to analyse the location through videos posted to social media, and available satellite imagery.Some of the incidents examined by Sudan Witness could be based only on reports. Where it was able to find corroborating evidence, it confirmed the attacks with a low-to-medium degree of certainty.But the group highlights cases where munitions, impact craters or shrapnel damage are identified.In one such instance Sudan Witness confirmed multiple videos and images showing a crater with an undetonated air-dropped bomb in the Zamzam camp for displaced people in North Darfur.FacebookA photographer in Zamzam camp captured this image of an unexploded bomb that fell there last yearIt appeared to match the SH-250 unguided munition produced by Military Industry Corporation, a Sudanese arms manufacturer."This is still one of the most troubling findings I've worked on," says Mr Snoeck. "Why drop an unguided bomb on a camp for internally displaced people? This area wasn't even under RSF control at the time, and the logic behind that strike still puzzles me."In another strike, Sudan Witness verified a rare video that captured the moment of impact, with the roar of an aircraft followed by multiple explosions as civilians took cover.At least 30 people were killed and 100 injured in the bombing of the Hamrat al-Sheikh Market in North Kordofan state, according to reports.Many of the air attacks attributed to the SAF have taken place in Darfur, which is controlled by the RSF.They include an August 2024 strike on a hospital in el-Daein, the historic capital of the Rizeigat people to which the majority of RSF forces belong.Sudan Witness verified footage that showed shrapnel damage to the building. The World Health Organisation and UN children's charity Unicef reported 16 civilians were killed, including three children and one healthcare worker.Even a rebel group allied to the army criticised this strike. The Sudan Tribune, an independent online news portal, quoted a spokesman for the Justice and Equality Movement, who said citizens were surprised by the indiscriminate airstrikes targeting hospitals and homes.The city of Nyala in South Darfur state is a frequent target. Its airport is alleged to be the main entry point for RSF weapons, including sophisticated drones, delivered by the United Arab Emirates. Abu Dhabi denies evidence that it is supporting the RSF.The SAF says it is targeting military supplies in the city.But, according to the Sudan War Monitor, a group of researchers who track the conflict, it lacks precision weapons to accurately hit them in such a crowded setting.Sudan Witness analysed a series of air strikes in the city centre carried out in February this year, also documented by Human Rights Watch. They hit residential neighbourhoods and a grocery store near an eye hospital, killing at least 63 people.The group says the strikes on busy marketplaces and commercial hubs not only kill civilians but also disrupt economic stability and aggravate the humanitarian crisis.In October last year at least 65 people were reported killed and 200 injured in a bombing that destroyed the al-Kuma market in North Darfur.AFP via Getty ImagesThe bombs that have fallen on markets have killed civilians as well as disrupted the lives of many othersSudan Witness verified the location of footage of the destroyed market and corroborated it with satellite imagery showing new burn scars over the area.Al-Kuma is located some 80km (50 miles) north-east of el-Fasher, until recently the focus of a fierce battle, and has been caught in the crossfire of SAF air assaults on the RSF."It is impossible for a country's army to bomb people with its air force and claim that it is doing so to protect the country," a local official told Dabanga, an independent Sudanese broadcaster.Another local source said the town had suffered more than 30 air raids since the beginning of the war."This evidence of military airstrikes hitting marketplaces and other civilian areas, shows a clear and unacceptable disregard for the safety of innocent Sudanese civilians," said a British foreign office official. "Whatever side of the conflict they are on, the perpetrators of these heinous crimes must be held accountable."The Sudan Witness Project has continued monitoring air raids beyond July 2025 but says there has been a shift towards drone strikes by both parties in recent months.The devastating cycle of aerial warfare sometimes targets groups seen as supporting the other side, says the Sudan War Monitor, highlighting an alleged SAF drone attack on al-Kuma in October, this time hitting a social gathering at the home of a local religious leader.Al-Kuma is predominantly inhabited by the Ziyadiya, one of the Arab nomadic groups that form the social and ethnic backbone of the RSF.That same weekend the RSF launched drone and artillery attacks on el-Fasher, striking a religious displacement centre and reportedly killing at least 60 civilians.El-Fasher is dominated by non-Arab groups such as the Zaghawa, which RSF fighters associated with Zaghawa armed groups defending the city."Neither side utilises drones and their airpower to primarily target military locations — they are either indiscriminate or designed to terrorise civilian populations under each other's control, which are war crimes," says Mr Lynch from Conflict Insights Group.The SAF says the RSF seeks refuge within residential neighbourhoods and insists it is strictly observing international humanitarian laws and rules of engagement, including protection of civilians and their properties.Both sides in Sudan's war have been accused of war crimes.This week the RSF and its ally the Sudan Liberation Movement-North was accused of drone strikes that hit a kindergarten and a hospital in the South Kordofan town of Kalogi.The WHO said 114 people were killed, including 63 children.Mr Lynch says not only are civilians suffering, neither side is achieving military success in the air war."SAF have used aerial operations to support the takeover of Khartoum, but with that exception their use of airstrikes has resulted in a lot of civilian death and not a lot of military success," he said."Similarly, the RSF use foreign mercenaries backed by the UAE to fly drones, but with a few exceptions it hasn't actually achieved results."You can access the Sudan Witness report here when it is published on 10 December.A simple guide to what is happening in Sudan'I saw them driving over injured people' - the terrifying escape from war in Sudan'There was a state of terror': Sudan hospital worker describes fleeing before alleged massacreHe made his money selling camels and gold. Now this warlord controls half of Sudan'Our job is only killing' - how Sudan's brutal militia carried out a massacreGetty Images/BBCGo to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafricaBBC Africa podcastsFocus on AfricaThis Is AfricaSudanAfrica
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BBC Sport Dec 9, 00:04

Are Man Utd turning the tide or is a 'bad result just around corner'?

Wolves booed as Man Utd score fourIn the one step forward, one step back world Manchester United are living in just now, they took a stride in the right direction against Wolves at Molineux.Whether it is significant or not remains to be seen.After all, the big win at Crystal Palace nine days ago was followed by a dire draw against third-from-bottom West Ham.Before that, a three-match winning run was followed by three games without a win, culminating in a home defeat by an Everton side reduced to 10 men after less than 15 minutes.Monday night's 4-1 drubbing of a hapless Wolves was United's biggest win of the season, equalling a four-goal haul Ruben Amorim's side have not bettered in the Premier League since he came to the club 13 months ago.United had 27 shots, their most in a Premier League game under the Portuguese manager. They have now led in games for longer this season than they did in the entirety of the 2024-25 campaign.Yet Amorim felt compelled to add a caveat, making reference to Wolves' lack of points on the pitch and mutinous atmosphere off it."This is a specific case," he said. "We faced a team that is really, really struggling."You can sense it in every situation of the game."This moment for Wolves is really hard, as a team and as a club. We took advantage of that."It is why Amorim felt United were in danger of blowing a significant chance to climb into the top six and on the coattails of the sides in contention for Champions League qualification.New Wolves boss Rob Edwards felt his side played the way he wanted in the final 15 minutes of the opening period. That included scoring their first goal in 540 minutes through Jean-Ricner Bellegarde.It wasn't the script Amorim envisaged. Certainly not one he wanted on a night when Sir Jim Ratcliffe had come to watch and was pictured in animated conversation with director of football Jason Wilcox in the directors' box.He told his players this before he left to sit in the visitors' dugout alone with his thoughts before United re-appeared for the start of the second half."We should have finished that half in a different way," he said. "At half-time, they understood we have everything to win the game."If you need to be really distracted, when you look at Everton, that was three points. We could have had two more points against West Ham. Look at the table. Look at the environment. Look at everything."We needed to win the second half. It didn't matter the result."Analysing the game for Sky Sports, Jamie Carragher praised the performance but said: "We make the assumption there is a bad result around the corner."He is not on his own with that opinion. United have still kept only one clean sheet in the Premier League, against Sunderland at Old Trafford on 4 October. Are they on one defeat in nine, or two wins in six?After failing to take opportunities to go second - twice - they are now sixth. If results go their way, they could be fourth once they have played Bournemouth on 15 December. Equally they could slide back into a mid-table position.Andoni Iraola's men have taken two points from their past six games but they have won 3-0 on each of their past two visits to Old Trafford.Nothing is for certain at Manchester United these days, it seems, and that includes the availability of their players.Amorim had thought the Netherlands international Matthijs de Ligt would be available for Monday's game after missing the West Ham match with a minor injury. He was wrong. Now the manager says he can't be sure when De Ligt will be fit.United remain in talks with the respective national associations of Morocco, Ivory Coast and Cameroon, which Amorim said is a "good sign" but added he "doesn't know" if Noussair Mazraoui, Amad Diallo and Bryan Mbeumo will be cleared to play against Bournemouth before they leave for Africa Cup of Nations duty."Let's wait for the middle of the week," said Amorim.Asked what moving into sixth place means, he added: "Nothing. It's always the same feeling. We should have more points. But that's in the past, let's focus on the future."Manchester United have now been in front for longer this season than they were in the whole of last seasonMason Mount's goal means he has now scored three times in the past four games he has started.The England star is now beginning to make the sustained impacted envisaged when he moved from Chelsea for £55m in 2023, before injuries halted his progress.It also means Amorim has options given main striker Benjamin Sesko is currently injured and Mbeumo will be leaving at some point in the near future."If you compare the past he had in Chelsea, he has a great quality," said Amorim."He can defend. He can attack and the quality when he touches the ball is really good."It's not a surprise for me. But, of course, we need to take care of him."But he's going to build that and is going to be really important for our club."Latest Manchester United news, analysis and fan viewsAsk about Man Utd - what do you want to know?
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BBC Sport Dec 8, 23:43

Who has made Troy's Premier League team of the week?

After every round of Premier League matches this season, BBC football pundit Troy Deeney will give you his team and manager of the week.Here are this week's choices. Do you agree? Give us your thoughts using the comments form at the bottom of this page.Bart Verbruggen (Brighton): He made four or five really good saves and kept them in the game in the draw against West Ham. On another day West Ham go on to win that. He was bang on it and a big reason why Brighton nicked a draw.Matty Cash (Aston Villa): Wonderful goal as Aston Villa beat Arsenal and great defending. As a Birmingham fan it pains me to give him credit but he was great and Aston Villa were fantastic. Everyone feels Arsenal are going to run away with the league, but Aston Villa said "no, not on my watch".Marc Guehi (Crystal Palace): He got his team over the line for their win at Fulham and led by example as he always does. He got my mind thinking - not only did he play well this weekend and has been great all season, how much would Liverpool not be in this mess if they had managed to sign him? How good could Liverpool be if they had a proper centre-half like him?Marco Senesi (Bournemouth): I don't know where Bournemouth keep getting these players from. They sold two centre-halves in the summer and he has just stepped in no problem. He's been absolutely fantastic, and was again as they shut out Chelsea.Bruno Guimaraes (Newcastle): I'm putting Bruno at the base of a diamond in midfield because he is the heart, soul and spirit of Newcastle's team, and was brilliant again against Burnley. He is just a very good football player and there are not many people you can say that about.Anton Stach (Leeds): He was the player who stood out for Leeds in their draw with Liverpool. The visitors were obviously cruising but I look at players and teams in that moment and look at who is hiding. This guy turned it up - not only a notch but another 10 notches - scored a goal and got an assist.Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall (Everton): Is he the signing of the season? He has been fantastic. Not only is he scoring, he is pulling the strings and has become the heartbeat of this new-look Everton team under David Moyes, who can get another gear out of these players as they did against Nottingham Forest.Bruno Fernandes (Manchester United): Top of the diamond is Fernandes. Two goals at Wolves and an assist. His passing was fantastic. He loses a bit of credit because it was against arguably the worst team I have ever seen in Wolves, but he did very well. Manchester United are back on the winning trail.Xavi Simons (Tottenham): He has had a bit of a tough time at Spurs but it felt like this was his moment to show everyone why people think he is so talented. He has pace, power and glides past people. We used to call people like that a luxury but when you put in a match-winning performance like he did against Brentford, you have to start saying he is just good.Hugo Ekitike (Liverpool): Even though he is in a team that is a shambles, he gets in through the middle. He scored two goals against Leeds. I understand Liverpool spent a lot of money on Alexander Isak - and I am a huge fan - but just start this kid. Get the two of them up front and figure it out.Rayan Cherki (Manchester City) My favourite footballer to watch in world football. Not only was his assist for Phil Foden in the win against Sunderland worth the admission fee, he was just delightful. He is like the cult heroes I grew up with and makes me feel like a kid again watching football. Back in the day you had Ronaldinho, Rivaldo, Ronaldo, Thierry Henry, Jay-Jay Okocha - a plethora of them. Now there is just Rayan Cherki - and he is fantastic.Unai Emery (Aston Villa): A massive game for Aston Villa. Against Arsenal it was that match where he gets to say: "Remember me? You got rid of me." I think with all that being said, Emery is manager of the week.Do you agree with Troy's selections? Who would be in your team of the week? Have your say using the comments form below:With Liverpool and Mohamed Salah appearing to be moving in different directions - and Salah heading to join his Egypt team-mates for the Africa Cup of Nations next week anyway - the Reds need other players to step up and fill the Salah-shaped hole in the scoring charts. In Hugo Ekitike, they may have found that man.Ekitike is now Liverpool's leading Premier League scorer with five goals, while in all competitions he also tops the charts with eight. On Saturday at Elland Road, the Frenchman scored the first double of his Liverpool career, and with the goals coming in the 48th and 50th minutes, he was the first Premier League player to score twice in the opening five minutes of the second half since Raheem Sterling in March 2019 for Manchester City against Watford.He led all players in the match for shots (5), shots on target (3) and touches in the opposition box (9) and his only disappointment must have been the scoreline - he was the first Liverpool player to score two goals in a Premier League and not win since Salah last December in a 3-3 draw with Newcastle.Despite playing just 398 minutes in the Premier League this season, no player has more assists than Manchester City's Rayan Cherki (5), with two of those coming in the 3-0 victory over Sunderland.Cherki created six chances in open play, the joint most by a player in a Premier League game this season, while at 22 years and 111 days on Saturday he was the second-youngest Manchester City player to achieve that in a Premier League game, older only than - maybe surprisingly - Mario Balotelli in February 2012 against Blackburn Rovers.Among players to play 300 minutes in the Premier League, no player has created more chances per 90 minutes than Cherki (3.4) and only four have had more touches in the opposition box per 90 minutes (7.7). The Frenchman is currently assisting a goal, on average, every 80 minutes - also a league best.Bruno Guimaraes has taken 10 corners in the Premier League this season and it is clear which one of those was most memorable - his in-swinging delivery on Saturday against Burnley caught his former team-mate Martin Dubravka out to give the Magpies the lead.It was not the first Premier League goal direct from a corner (or 'Olympico goal' as it's known) but it was Newcastle's first ever corner to be put directly into the opponent's goal in the Premier League, to give Guimaraes a slice of Magpies history. Given the term Olympico goal originates from South America, it seems apt that four of the past seven direct corner goals have been scored by players from that continent - all, in fact, from Brazil. Those scorers are Matheus Pereira, Douglas Luiz, Matheus Cunha and Guimaraes.Aside from swinging corners directly into the net, Guimaraes has been in excellent recent form - he now has four goals and two assists across his past nine Premier League appearances, scoring five in total this season. Only in 2023-24 has he ever scored more in one season, netting seven times.Follow your Premier League club on BBC SportAll your football quizzes in one placeGet football news sent straight to your phone
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BBC World Dec 8, 23:37

Thieves snatch eight Matisse artworks from library in Brazil

Thieves snatch eight Matisse artworks from library in Brazil20 hours agoShareSaveVanessa BuschschlüterShareSaveWatch: CCTV captures Matisse heist suspects making off with artworks on foot in São PauloTwo armed men have stolen eight engravings by French artist Matisse and at least another five by Brazilian painter Cândido Portinari from a library in São Paulo. Brazilian officials say the thieves held up a security guard and an elderly couple who were visiting the library on Sunday, before making off with the artworks on foot.On Monday, authorities said they had found the "escape vehicle", and several hours later one of the suspects had been arrested, authorities said.The heist comes less than two months after the art world was rocked by a brazen break-in at the Louvre museum in Paris, where thieves made off with priceless jewels. The engravings stolen from Biblioteca Mário de Andrade formed part of a joint exhibition with the São Paulo Museum of Modern Art.The thieves targeted the exhibition, entitled From Book to Museum, on its final day.They reportedly entered the library by the main entrance at 10:00 (13:00 GMT) on Sunday, and left by the same route, heading towards the nearest metro station.Bibilioteca Mário de Andrade is the country's second largest library and officials say that its building in the centre of São Paulo has cameras with facial recognition technology. The city itself also has an extensive security camera system. Brazilian news website G1 published a video purporting to show the two men rushing along a road, carrying between them what seems to be a sack with paintings in it.In a statement posted online, the São Paulo government said that the first alleged thief had been arrested following "analysis of security cameras that recorded the criminal act".Officials have not yet released a detailed list of the stolen works, but according to Folha de São Paulo newspaper, a collage Matisse made for the limited-edition art book Jazz is among those taken.Matisse is widely considered to be one of the 20th Century's most influential artists and art critics say the value of the stolen works is "incalculable".The thieves also took at least five engravings by Portinari, created to illustrate a special edition of the novel Menino de engheno (Plantation Boy) by Brazilian writer José Lins do Rego.Portinari, who often painted rural workers and labourers, is one of the most significant Brazilian Modernist artists. Four new arrests made following Louvre jewellery heistLouvre heist carried out by petty criminals, prosecutor saysSao PauloArt
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BBC Sport Dec 8, 23:07

Amorim hails Mount after win at Wolves

Manchester United manager Ruben Amorim praises the performance of Mason Mount after the midfielder scored in a 4-1 win at Wolves.MATCH REPORT: Man Utd hit four as winless Wolves suffer eighth straight loss
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BBC Sport Dec 8, 22:56

Man Utd score four as winless Wolves booed

BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountHomeNewsSportBusinessInnovationCultureTravelEarthAudioVideoLiveMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportBusinessInnovationCultureTravelEarthAudioVideoLiveClose menu BBC SportMenuHomeFootballCricketFormula 1Rugby UTennisGolfAthleticsCyclingMoreA-Z SportsAmerican FootballAthleticsBasketballBoxingCricketCyclingDartsDisability SportFootballFormula 1Gaelic GamesGolfGymnasticsHorse RacingMixed Martial ArtsMotorsportNetballOlympic SportsRugby LeagueRugby UnionSnookerSwimmingTennisWinter SportsFull Sports A-ZMore from SportEnglandScotlandWalesNorthern IrelandNews FeedsHelp & FAQsPremier LeagueScores & FixturesTableTop Scorers{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"VideoObject","name":"Premier League highlights: Wolverhampton Wanderers 1-4 Manchester United","description":"Watch highlights as Wolves lose 4-1 to Manchester United, suffering their eighth-straight loss in the Premier League.","thumbnailUrl":["https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1920x1080/p0mmdjd0.jpg","https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1232x1232/p0mmdjd0.jpg","https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/688xn/p0mmdjd0.jpg","https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/400xn/p0mmdjd0.jpg"],"uploadDate":"2025-12-08T22:56:19.968Z","duration":"PT9M23S"}Man Utd score four as winless Wolves booedThis content is not available in your location.There was an errorWatch highlights as Wolves lose 4-1 to Manchester United, suffering their eighth-straight loss in the Premier League.MATCH REPORT: Wolverhampton Wanderers 1-4 Manchester UnitedShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingRead descriptionEditor's recommendationsMan Utd score four as winless Wolves booed. Video, 00:09:23Man Utd score four as winless Wolves booed9:23Up Next. Slot 'no clue' if Salah has played his last Liverpool game. Video, 00:02:48Slot 'no clue' if Salah has played his last Liverpool game2:48'Winning made everything worth it' - Norris on world title triumph. Video, 00:02:46'Winning made everything worth it' - Norris on world title triumph2:46'Disrespectful' Salah comments threw club under bus - Rooney. Video, 00:01:35'Disrespectful' Salah comments threw club under bus - Rooney1:35'Salah's put his team-mates in jeopardy' - Coady. Video, 00:01:19'Salah's put his team-mates in jeopardy' - Coady1:19Villa could still go up another level - Sutton. Video, 00:01:43Villa could still go up another level - Sutton1:43'It can become hostile' - Savage on impact of fan abuse. Video, 00:02:52'It can become hostile' - Savage on impact of fan abuse2:52Tuchel reacts to England's 'difficult' World Cup group. Video, 00:02:37Tuchel reacts to England's 'difficult' World Cup group2:37'Bring it on' - Clarke reacts to Scotland's World Cup draw. Video, 00:00:48'Bring it on' - Clarke reacts to Scotland's World Cup draw0:48'Have I just outed Chelsea?' - Confession Cam. Video, 00:03:19'Have I just outed Chelsea?' - Confession Cam3:19'He wasn't happy' - Slot on Salah's reaction after being dropped. Video, 00:00:58'He wasn't happy' - Slot on Salah's reaction after being dropped0:58'Why would you do that?' - Sutton on Spurs fans booing. Video, 00:02:31'Why would you do that?' - Sutton on Spurs fans booing2:31'A boo-worthy performance' - Rodgers on Steelers' loss to Bills. Video, 00:00:47'A boo-worthy performance' - Rodgers on Steelers' loss to Bills
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BBC Sport Dec 8, 22:36

'Disgraceful' Salah comments caused 'carnage' - pundits

Mohamed Salah has scored 250 goals in 420 games for LiverpoolLiverpool forward Mohamed Salah has been called a "disgrace" who has caused "carnage" at the club by pundits as the fallout continues from his explosive interview.Salah said he feels he has been "thrown under the bus" after being dropped to the bench for struggling Liverpool's past three games, which led to him being left out of the squad for Tuesday's Champions League match at Inter Milan.The two-time Premier League winner's remarks have led to stinging criticism from former Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher and ex-Blackburn and Celtic striker Chris Sutton."I thought it was a disgrace," Carragher said on Sky Sports. "Some have painted it as an emotional outburst. I don't think it was."When Mo Salah stops in the mixed zone - which he has done four times in eight years - it is choreographed with him and his agent to cause maximum damage and strengthen his own position."Speaking on BBC Radio 5 Live, Sutton said: "Liverpool is carnage because of Mo Salah."He's been honest and open, but he's made it all about him and not the team. He's been extremely selfish - that's what he's done because now there's a bit of a civil war at Liverpool, and it didn't need to be like this."Liverpool manager Arne Slot said he was "surprised" by Salah's comments that their relationship had broken down completely and had "no clue" if the 33-year-old would play for the club again."I don't feel my authority is undermined - it is not the way I feel it," said Slot in Milan on Monday."After tomorrow we will look at the situation. There is always the possibility to return for a player."On Tuesday morning, Salah posted an image on social media, external of himself alone in the gym at Liverpool's training complex.Egypt winger Salah will depart for the Africa Cup of Nations next Monday, but with his future at Anfield in doubt it remains to be seen whether he will be involved in Saturday's Premier League home game against Brighton (15:00 GMT).Slot has 'no clue' if Salah will play for Liverpool againMonday Night Club: ‘Selfish’ Salah, Villa join title race & Leeds revival'He's making it all about him' - Murphy on SalahCarragher, who Salah had predicted would "go for me again" in his interview, was particularly critical of the timing of the comments, coming after Liverpool had conceded a late equaliser to draw 3-3 at Leeds on Saturday evening.The defending Premier League champions have won just four of their past 15 games in all competitions, going back to September, with Slot increasingly finding himself under pressure."He has waited, I think, for a bad result with Liverpool," Carragher said."Everyone connected with the club feels like they are in the gutter and he has chosen this time to go for the manager - and maybe try and get him sacked."The one line that stands out for me was 'thrown under the bus'. He has tried to throw the club under the bus twice in the last 12 months."Going after the owners initially, he complained a year ago because they hadn't given him a contract at the age of 32."With the manager, he should be doing all he can to help the club get out of the worst run of results they have had since the 1950s."Speaking on BBC Radio 5 Live, former England captain Steph Houghton agreed."It probably couldn't have come at a worse time for Liverpool," she said."That's what makes us think this is something that was pre-planned. He probably expected to come on at some point [against Leeds], he didn't, and for Mo Salah that probably hurts his ego."But it's poor from him. I think it does put other people in jeopardy. It's got us talking about it, which he wants."Carragher also called for Salah not to be "obsessed" with his own numbers and suggested he should help the other players, such as big-money signings Florian Wirtz and Alexander Isak, who are hoping to emulate his success at the club."Some of the criticism has been excessive this season, but I will go after Mo Salah when he tries to throw my club under the bus off the pitch and just thinks about himself," Carragher added."The club have made the right decision in him not going abroad with them and whether he will play for the club again I don't know."I hope he does because he is one of the greatest players we have ever had."'He's put his team-mates in jeopardy' - CoadyAfter a stellar season in 2024-25, in which he spearheaded Liverpool's surge to the title, Salah has been short of his best this campaign with only five goals in 19 games."He's had a phenomenal career," Sutton said."This season he hasn't played so well, his numbers are down, he's not the same player and all of a sudden he's been left out for a few games and wants to live by different rules than other players in the dressing room."I find the whole situation absolutely ridiculous."What good could come out of what he did? What sickens me a bit about it is when Liverpool have been doing well, and players come out and speak, 'it's the team spirit, we all get on so great and everything's marvellous'."And now we're seeing Mo Salah for what he really is. It's all about him. It's him being selfish. I hate that sort of stuff. I think he's really let himself down here."It's all about who will go - will it be Slot or will it be Salah? And how is that beneficial for someone who loves the club so much?"Speaking on BBC Radio 5 Live, Wrexham's former Everton and Wolves defender Conor Coady, who began his career in Liverpool's academy, added: "I could only think that something has gone on behind the scenes that we don't know about."He should never, ever go to the press and do what he's done because you put your team-mates in jeopardy, and that's the most important thing. That's the biggest wrongdoing he can do in my eyes."'I am not weak' says Slot, but Salah could returnSalah says he has been 'thrown under the bus' by LiverpoolSalah left out by Liverpool for Inter Milan gameLatest Liverpool news, analysis and fan viewsAsk about Liverpool - what do you want to know?
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BBC World Dec 8, 22:28

Australia's social media ban for children has left big tech scrambling

Australia's social media ban for children has left big tech scrambling21 hours agoShareSaveLily Jamali,North America Technology Correspondent, San FranciscoandTiffanie Turnbull,SydneyShareSaveWatch: What do teenagers think about Australia's social media ban?When Stephen Scheeler became Facebook's Australia chief in the early 2010s, he was a true believer in the power of the internet, and social media, for public good.It would herald a new era of global connection and democratise learning. It would let users build their own public squares without the traditional gatekeepers."There was that heady optimism phase when I first joined and I think a lot of the world shared that," he told the BBC.But by the time he left the firm in 2017, seeds of doubt about its work had been planted, and they've since bloomed."There's lots of good things about these platforms, but there's just too much bad stuff," he surmises.That's no longer an uncommon view as scrutiny of the largest social media companies has increased around the globe. A lot of it has centred on teenagers, who have emerged as a lucrative market for incredibly wealthy global firms - at the expense of their mental health and wellbeing, according to critics.Various governments, from the state of Utah to the European Union, have been experimenting with limiting children's use of social media. But the most radical step so far is set to unfold in Australia - a ban for under-16s that kicks in on 10 December has left tech companies scrambling.Many of the social media firms affected have spent a year loudly protesting against the new law, which requires them to take "reasonable steps" to keep underage users from having accounts on their platforms. They have claimed this ban actually risks making children less safe, argued it impinges on their rights, and repeatedly pointed to the questions around the tech that will be used to enforce the policy. "Australia is engaged in blanket censorship that will make its youth less informed, less connected, and less equipped to navigate the spaces they will be expected to understand as adults," said Paul Taske from NetChoice, a trade group representing several big tech companies.The worry inside the industry is that Australia's ban - the first of its kind - may inspire other countries."It could become a proof of concept that gains traction around the world," says Nate Fast, a professor at the University of Southern California's Marshall School of Business.Whistleblowers, lawsuits and questionsGetty Images(L-R) Jason Citron, CEO of Discord, Evan Spiegel, CEO of Snap, Shou Zi Chew, CEO of TikTok, Linda Yaccarino, CEO of X, and Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta at a Senate Judiciary Committee Hearing in JanuaryIn recent years, multiple whistleblowers and lawsuits have claimed that social media firms are prioritising profits over user safety.In January, a landmark trial will begin in the US hearing allegations that several – including Meta, TikTok, Snapchat and YouTube – have designed their apps to be addictive and knowingly covered up the harm their platforms cause. All deny this, but Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg and Snap boss Evan Spiegel have both been ordered to testify in person.The case consolidates hundreds of claims from parents and school districts, and is among the first to advance from a flood of similar lawsuits which allege social media contributes to poor mental health and child exploitation.In another ongoing case, state prosecutors alleged that Zuckerberg personally scuttled efforts to improve the wellbeing of teens on the company's platforms, including vetoing a proposal to ditch Instagram face-altering beauty filters which experts say fuel body dysmorphia and eating disorders.Former Meta employees Sarah Wynn-Williams, Frances Haugen and Arturo Béjar have given testimony before the US Congress alleging a range of wrongdoing they observed during their stints at the company.Meta maintains the company has worked diligently to create tools that keep teens safe online.But the broader industry has also recently been taken to task over mis- and disinformation, hate speech and violent content. Graphic footage of the assassination of Charlie Kirk was rapidly spread on various platforms, even confronting people who were not seeking it out. Elon Musk has sued states in the US over laws that require social media firms, including X, to define and disclose how they fight hate speech online. And Meta was heavily criticised earlier this year after announcing it was getting rid of factcheckers who monitor its platforms for misinformation.A rare bipartisan front has emerged among American lawmakers eager to cut tech bosses down to size.During a hearing last year, Zuckerberg was prodded by one to apologise to bereaved families who had come to watch in person. Among those in the audience was Tammy Rodriguez, whose 11-year old daughter Selena took her life after facing sexual exploitation on Instagram and Snapchat."This is why we invest so much and we are going to continue doing industry wide efforts to make sure no one has to go through the things your families have had to suffer," Zuckerberg said.Australia is banning social media for kids under 16. How will it work?Can you ban kids from social media? Australia is about to, but some teens are a step aheadPublic scrutiny and private lobbyingHowever, there's widespread criticism from many experts, lawmakers and parents - even kids - who feel social media companies are hiding from genuine action and accountability on these issues.As Australia's social media ban was considered, then formulated, the firms had little to say publicly."Hiding from the public discourse… it just breeds more suspicion and more distrust," Mr Scheeler says.Privately though, many were seeking to bend the government's ear. Spiegel personally sat down with Australia's Communications Minister Anika Wells. She also claimed YouTube had sent globally renowned children's entertainers The Wiggles to lobby on their behalf.In carefully worded public statements, several of the firms have tried to push responsibility elsewhere. Meta and Snap both said operators of the major app stores – namely Apple and Google – should take on age verification duties.And many argued government is overstepping. Parents know best, they say, and they should decide what makes sense for their teens when it comes to social media use. Along with a higher age limit of 16, Australia is the first jurisdiction to deny an exemption for parental approval in a policy like this - making its laws the world's strictest."While we're committed to meeting our legal obligations, we've consistently raised concerns about this law… There's a better way: legislation that empowers parents to approve app downloads and verify age allows families - not the government - to decide which apps teens can access," a statement from Meta provided to the BBC said.Watch: Anika Wells says big tech won't intimidate her over Australian social media banAsked why her government was unsympathetic to this reasoning - why anything short of a ban was unacceptable - Wells said the tech companies have had plenty of time to improve their practices."They have had 15, 20 years in this space to do that of their own volition now, and… it's not enough."Leaders in other countries feel the same, and have been knocking on her door for help, she says, rattling off the EU, Fiji, Greece, even Malta, as examples.Denmark and Norway have already begun work on similar laws, and Singapore and Brazil are watching closely too."We're pleased to be the first, we're proud to be the first, and we stand ready to help any other jurisdiction who seeks to do these things," Wells said.Too little, too late?As the Australia ban loomed, the mounting pressure prompted the companies to introduce versions of their products marketed as safer for young users, said Pinar Yildirim, a marketing professor at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School.Australia, after all, is a major market for social platforms. At parliamentary hearings in October Snapchat said it believed it had about 440,000 account users in the country aged between 13 and 15. TikTok said it had about 200,000 under-16 accounts and Meta said it had about 450,000 between Facebook and Instagram.Experts say they are also eager to ensure they don't lose others in even larger markets around the world.Getty ImagesFormer Meta engineer Arturo Béjar speaks during a rallyIn July, YouTube announced the rollout of AI technology that estimates a user's age in a bid to identify those younger than 18 and better shield them from harmful content.Snapchat has special accounts for children which it says put safety and privacy settings on by default for users between the ages of 13 and 17.And last year, Meta unveiled Instagram Teen accounts which similarly place users younger than 18 into more restricted privacy and content settings that Meta says are designed to limit unwanted contacts and exposure to explicit content. This development was accompanied by a massive marketing blitz in the US."If they create a more protected environment for these users, the thinking is, that may reduce some of the damage," Yildirim said.Yet critics aren't satisfied. Béjar, one of the Meta whistleblowers, led a study published in September that found almost two thirds of the new safety tools on Meta's Instagram Teen accounts were ineffective."The key issue here is that Meta and other social media companies aren't substantively addressing the harm we know teens are experiencing," Béjar told the BBC.Getty ImagesCritics say social media firms haven't done enough to protect childrenForced onto the defensive, the companies have attempted to convey that they are making a good faith effort to comply with Australia's impending ban despite their disagreement with it.But analysts say they'll be hoping the hurdles - which include legal challenges, technology loopholes for kids, and any unintended consequences of the ban - could bolster the case against such moves in other nations.And the companies "have a fair bit of influence in how smoothly things go", Professor Fast points out."[They] have an incentive to walk the very fine line about complying, but making sure that they don't comply so good that all the rest of the other countries go, 'Great, that works. Let's do the same'," Mr Scheeler agrees.SuppliedFormer Facebook Australia chief Stephen Scheeler says social media companies have hidden from public discourse about the banAnd the fines - a maximum of A$49.5m ($33m, £24.5m) for serious breaches - might just be seen as the cost of doing business, according to Carnegie Mellon University marketing professor Ari Lightman. "[They're] a drop in the bucket," he says, especially for larger players eager to secure their next generation of potential users.Despite the concerns around the policy's implementation, Mr Scheeler says he feels like this is a "seatbelt moment" for social media."Some would argue that bad regulation is worse than no regulation, and sometimes that's true, but I think in this instance, even imperfect regulation is better than nothing, or better than what we had before," he says."Maybe it will work, maybe it won't work, but at least we're trying something."Watch: Australia's social media ban explained... in 60 secondsSign up for our Tech Decoded newsletter to follow the world's top tech stories and trends. Outside the UK? Sign up here.Social mediaTikTokYouTubeSnapchatMetaInstagramTwitterFacebookAustralia
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CNBC Business Dec 8, 22:25

Paramount Skydance launches hostile bid for WBD 'to finish what we started,' CEO Ellison tells CNBC

LivestreamMenuMake ItselectUSAINTLLivestreamSearch quotes, news & videosLivestreamWatchlistSIGN INCreate free accountMarketsBusinessInvestingTechPoliticsVideoWatchlistInvesting ClubPROLivestreamMenuParamount Skydance is launching a hostile bid to buy Warner Bros. Discovery after it lost out to Netflix in a monthslong bidding war for the legacy assets, the company said Monday. Paramount will go straight to WBD shareholders with an all-cash, $30 per share offer. That's the same bid WBD rejected last week and equates to an enterprise value of $108.4 billion. The offer is backstopped with equity financing from the Ellison family and the private equity firm RedBird Capital as well as $54 billion in debt commitments from Bank of America, Citi and Apollo Global Management, Paramount said in a news release. A portion of the equity financing comes from outside Middle Eastern financing partners including Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, Abu Dhabi's L'imad Holding Company PJSC, and the Qatar Investment Authority. Another portion derives from Jared Kushner's Affinity Partners. Kushner is U.S. President Donald Trump's son-in-law. Those partners have agreed to "forgo any governance rights," including board seats, as part of their non-voting equity investment, according to a Paramount filing. The modifications allow the deal to be outside of the jurisdiction of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S., or CFIUS. Shares of Paramount gained 9% Monday. Warner Bros. Discovery's shares rose about 4% while Netflix was down 3%."We're really here to finish what we started," Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison told CNBC's "Squawk on the Street" on Monday. "We put the company in play." Paramount Skydance began its hunt for Warner Bros. Discovery in September, submitting three bids before WBD launched a formal sale process that ultimately brought in other suitors. On Friday, Netflix announced a deal to acquire WBD's studio and streaming assets for a combination of cash and stock, valued at $27.75 per WBD share, or $72 billion. Paramount had been bidding for the entirety of Warner Bros. Discovery, including those assets and the company's TV networks like CNN and TNT Sports. "We're sitting on Wall Street, where cash is still king. We are offering shareholders $17.6 billion more cash than the deal they currently have signed up with Netflix, and we believe when they see what it is currently in our offer that that's what they'll vote for," Ellison said. Ellison said Monday he places a value of $1 per share on the linear cable assets, which are set to trade as a separate public entity called Discovery Global in mid-2026. WBD executives have privately valued the assets closer to $3 per share. Paramount has repeatedly argued to the WBD board of directors that keeping Warner Bros. Discovery whole is in the best interest of its shareholders. Paramount made a bid on Dec. 1 and heard back from WBD that it needed to make certain alterations to the offer, Ellison said Monday. When Paramount made the changes and upped its bid to $30 per share, Ellison never heard back from WBD CEO David Zaslav, he said.Ellison said he told Zaslav via text message that $30 per share wasn't the company's best and final offer, suggesting the company is willing to bid higher still.Ellison argued Paramount's deal will have a shorter regulatory approval process given the company's smaller size and friendly relationship with the Trump administration. He called Trump a believer "in competition" and said Paramount's combination with WBD will be "a real competitor to Netflix, a real competitor to Amazon."Ellison also threw cold water on Netflix's chances of regulatory approval."Allowing the No. 1 streaming service to combine with the No. 3 streaming service is anticompetitive," Ellison said.CNBC reported Friday that the Trump administration was viewing the deal with "heavy skepticism," and Trump said Sunday that the market share considerations could pose a "problem." Netflix agreed to pay Warner Bros. Discovery $5.8 billion if the deal is not approved, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing Friday. Warner Bros. Discovery said it would pay a $2.8 billion breakup fee if it decides to call off the deal to pursue a different merger.Netflix, for its part, once again championed the deal as positive for shareholders, consumers and the media industry as a whole when its top leadership spoke at the UBS Global Media and Communications Conference on Monday. Co-CEO Greg Peters said they recognize the Netflix deal came as a shock but called the Warner Bros. studio and HBO Max content complementary to Netflix's business.Co-CEO Ted Sarandos said the acquisition would protect jobs at a time when layoffs have been rampant across media: "In the offer that Paramount was talking about today, they also were talking about $6 billion of synergies. Where do you think synergies come from? Cutting jobs. So we're not cutting jobs, we're making jobs." — CNBC's Lillian Rizzo contributed to this report. Got a confidential news tip? We want to hear from you.Sign up for free newsletters and get more CNBC delivered to your inboxGet this delivered to your inbox, and more info about our products and services. Data is a real-time snapshot *Data is delayed at least 15 minutes. Global Business and Financial News, Stock Quotes, and Market Data and Analysis. Data also provided by
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CNBC Business Dec 8, 22:23

Stellantis to bring tiny Fiat car to U.S. following Trump remarks

LivestreamMenuMake ItselectUSAINTLLivestreamSearch quotes, news & videosLivestreamWatchlistSIGN INCreate free accountMarketsBusinessInvestingTechPoliticsVideoWatchlistInvesting ClubPROLivestreamMenuDETROIT – Chrysler parent Stellantis on Monday announced it will offer an all-electric small "car" called the Fiat Topolino in the U.S.The automaker did not announce timing for the vehicle, but Fiat CEO Olivier François confirmed plans to bring the vehicle to the market, with "more details to come next year."Fiat's announcement comes less than a week after President Donald Trump praised small "Kei" cars from Japan during a meeting at the White House with Stellantis CEO Antonio Filosa and other U.S. lawmakers and automotive executives."They're very small. They're really cute," Trump said during the Wednesday meeting. "And I said, 'How would that do in this country?' And everyone seems to think 'good,' but you're not allowed to build them."Trump said he ordered U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy to allow small vehicles like the Kei "micro" cars to be built and driven in the U.S. It's not necessarily illegal to produce such cars in America, but they have to meet American safety standards, speed requirements and other regulations.A Stellantis spokeswoman said Fiat's announcement was unrelated to Trump's comments last week and that the automaker has been gauging customer interest for the Topolino at U.S. events such as auto shows.The Topolino, which translates to "little mouse" in Italian, is actually categorized as "an all-electric quadricycle" rather than a car, according to Stellantis. It has a top speed of roughly 28 miles per hour and driving range of up to 75 kilometers (less than 50 miles) on a single charge. The vehicle is produced in Morocco.Small cars have historically not sold well in the U.S.The most recent meaningful push to sell small cars in the U.S. occurred after the Great Recession in 2009 under the Obama administration. Back then, Italian automaker Fiat was allowed to purchase bankrupt automaker Chrysler, in part, to help bring such vehicles to the U.S.Fiat and its small 500 city car reentered the U.S. market in 2011 amid Fiat's takeover of Chrysler (both now owned by Stellantis). In its first full year in 2012, Fiat sold 43,772 vehicles in the U.S. Those sales have since dwindled to roughly 1,500 Fiat vehicles sold last year in the U.S.Got a confidential news tip? We want to hear from you.Sign up for free newsletters and get more CNBC delivered to your inboxGet this delivered to your inbox, and more info about our products and services. Data is a real-time snapshot *Data is delayed at least 15 minutes. Global Business and Financial News, Stock Quotes, and Market Data and Analysis. Data also provided by
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CNBC Business Dec 8, 22:01

Here's what to expect in Paramount's quest to elbow out Netflix and buy Warner Bros. Discovery

LivestreamMenuMake ItselectUSAINTLLivestreamSearch quotes, news & videosLivestreamWatchlistSIGN INCreate free accountMarketsBusinessInvestingTechPoliticsVideoWatchlistInvesting ClubPROLivestreamMenuParamount Skydance laid out its plan Monday to persuade Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders that it's a better buyer for the company than Netflix. The hostile bid kicks off a tug-of-war that could get complicated. Paramount has officially launched a tender offer for current WBD shares at $30 per share, all cash. That bid is backed by $41 billion in equity financing. The remainder will be money from RedBird Capital and Jared Kushner's Affinity Partners. Paramount also has $54 billion in debt commitments from Bank of America, Citi and Apollo Global Management.Paramount's tender offer will be open for 20 business days, Paramount Chief Strategy Officer Andy Gordon said during a conference call for investors Monday. Warner Bros. Discovery has 10 days to respond, and after the 20 business days are up, Paramount has the option to extend the deadline to keep the offer open for WBD shareholders, Gordon said.During this time, any shareholder of WBD can sell its shares to Paramount for $30. If Paramount buys 51% of outstanding shares, it would control the company. "We do believe the [Paramount] offer should garner meaningful traction," Raymond James equity analyst Ric Prentiss wrote in a note to clients. "That said, we believe that Netflix is committed to this deal; if [Paramount] seems to be gaining traction, we would not be surprised to see a reaction."That reaction could come in the form of an increased Netflix offer, though Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos didn't mention as much when speaking Monday at the UBS Global Media and Communications Conference. A prolonged battle could eventually invite lawsuits or proxy fights that would demand full shareholder votes. The WBD board said in a statement Monday it "is not modifying its recommendation with respect to the agreement with Netflix." It advised shareholders "not to take any action at this time with respect to Paramount Skydance's proposal."Still, the board will "carefully review and consider Paramount Skydance's offer in accordance with the terms of Warner Bros. Discovery's agreement with Netflix, Inc.," the board said in its statement. If WBD shareholders seem to be convinced that Paramount's is the superior bid, Warner Bros. Discovery management could restart friendly discussions with Paramount to make sure it's getting the best deal possible. Paramount CEO David Ellison told CNBC's David Faber on Monday that the company's $30-per-share offer was not its "best and final," suggesting Paramount is open to paying more for WBD if discussions begin again.Ellison hopes to convince WBD shareholders that a $30-per-share, all-cash offer is more valuable than Netflix's $27.75-per-share, cash-and-stock offer for WBD's streaming and studio assets. Ellison told CNBC on Monday that he values the linear cable networks, which aren't part of Netflix's bid, at just $1 per share. WBD internally has valued that business at about $3 per share, CNBC previously reported.If WBD reaches a deal with Paramount, WBD would owe Netflix $2.8 billion as a breakup fee — meaning Paramount may have to increase its bid, or agree to pay the fee, to adjust for the added cost. Ellison said Monday that Paramount's odds for regulatory approval, combined with what he views as a higher bid, should sway shareholders that the WBD board made a mistake in choosing Netflix's offer. A Netflix-HBO max combination would create a streamer "at such a scale that it would be bad for Hollywood and bad for the consumer," said Ellison, noting it would be "anticompetitive in every way you fundamentally look at it.""We're super confident we're going to get it across the line and finish," Sarandos said Monday at the UBS conference. Sarandos also jabbed Paramount's estimate of $6 billion in synergies, noting those potential cost cuts would likely mean job losses."We're not cutting jobs, we're making jobs," Sarandos said.Got a confidential news tip? We want to hear from you.Sign up for free newsletters and get more CNBC delivered to your inboxGet this delivered to your inbox, and more info about our products and services. Data is a real-time snapshot *Data is delayed at least 15 minutes. Global Business and Financial News, Stock Quotes, and Market Data and Analysis. Data also provided by
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BBC Sport Dec 8, 22:00

'Salah's put his team-mates in jeopardy' - Coady

Chris Sutton and Conor Coady break down Mohamed Salah's fallout with Liverpool on the Monday Night Club.You can watch the full show on BBC iPlayer and BBC Sport YouTube, or listen on BBC Sounds.READ MORE: Salah is destroying his legacy - Rooney
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BBC World Dec 8, 21:14

Paramount launches rival bid for Warner Bros Discovery

Paramount launches rival bid for Warner Bros Discovery23 hours agoShareSaveNatalie ShermanBusiness reporterShareSaveWarner Brothers DiscoveryWarner Brothers Discovery is owner of HBO, known for shows like Sex and the City Paramount Skydance has made another offer to buy Warner Bros Discovery as it seeks to trump a rival plan from Netflix to buy the company's studio and streaming networks. Paramount, which is backed by the billionaire Ellison family, said it was making a direct offer to shareholders of $30 (£22.50) per share to scoop up the whole of Warner Bros, including its traditional television networks.It said its proposal was a "superior alternative" to Netflix's, delivering more cash upfront to shareholders and greater prospect of approval by regulators. President Donald Trump has said "there could be a problem" with Netflix's purchase, pointing to competition concerns given the size of the companies. A look at the competing bids for Warner Bros DiscoveryParamount is a smaller player than Netflix that is known for brands such as CBS News, Nickelodeon and Mission Impossible. It started submitting offers a few months ago, eventually prompting Warner Bros, owner of HBO and classics from Looney Tunes to Harry Potter, to formally open a bidding process. Wall Street analysts have long said they believe a Paramount-Warner Bros combination makes sense, because it would give the company the scale to compete against rivals such as Netflix and Disney. Paramount was also seen as a strong suitor because the relationship between Trump and the Ellison family, including tech billionaire and Republican megadonor Larry Ellison, was expected to help ease the approval process. But Warner Bros declared Netflix the winner of the auction on Friday, announcing a deal that valued its studio and streaming networks, including HBO, at about $83bn (£62.3bn), including its debt.It said the sale would proceed after a planned spin-off of other parts of Warner Brothers' business, including CNN, into an independent company.Paramount's offer values the entire company at $108.4bn, which it said was a better deal. Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, is among the financial partners Paramount is working with as part of the deal, according to paperwork submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission. Netflix executives on Monday expressed confidence in their plans, dismissing Paramount's attempt as "entirely expected". Warner Bros said it would review the offer but was not currently changing its recommendation. It said it would respond within 10 business days. Watch: Trump says he will be "involved" in the Warner Brothers merger decisionEither takeover is expected to face scrutiny from competition regulators in the US and Europe.Analysts said Netflix's plan would likely raise concerns about dominance in streaming, while Paramount's proposal would prompt a review of the impact on advertisers and local television distributors, given the power of a combined company over sports and children's networks.Paramount's plans, which would put CBS and CNN under the same parent company, have also been closely watched because of the potential impact on the news business and the Ellisons' ties to Trump.The president said over the weekend he expected to be involved in the approval process. But he has offered little certainty about his views.While noting potential concerns about Netflix's tie-up on Sunday, he also praised the streamer's bosses. Meanwhile on social media on Monday, he took aim at Paramount for a 60 Minutes interview that it aired with former Trump ally Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Republican representative.In an interview with CNBC, Paramount chief executive David Ellison said he had had "great conversations" with Trump about the deal, while noting that he did not want to speak for the president. Netflix is the biggest streaming company in the world, with more than 300 million subscribers. Mr Ellison's plan would build on his purchase earlier this year of Paramount, which he folded into his Skydance film studio. "Paramount ultimately needs this deal more than Netflix," said Ben Barringer, head of technology research at Quilter Cheviot, calling the Warner Bros assets simply "nice to have" for the streamer.Speaking to CNBC on Monday, Mr Ellison talked up the benefits of his plan for the entire media industry, arguing that Netflix's takeover of Warner Brothers Discovery would give one firm too much power over actors and other players in the industry."It's a horrible deal for Hollywood," he said.He also said he thought Warner Bros' plan to spin-off its traditional networks into an independent company would set them up to fail and ultimately prove a mistake for shareholders."I think [its shares are] going to be worth a lot less than people are claiming," he said. But Netflix executives, who spoke at a business conference on Monday, said they were confident their takeover could win approval, noting that their plan does not include plans for major cuts.Shares in Warner Bros rose more than 4% on Monday while Paramount shares jumped 9%.Shares in Netflix, however, dropped more than 3%.CompaniesMediaStreamingNetflix
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BBC World Dec 8, 20:53

Israel to review reports that troops killed three-year-old in Gaza

Israel to review reports that troops killed three-year-old in Gaza23 hours agoShareSaveJames CookJerusalemShareSaveEPAA three-year-old girl was killed by Israeli forces in Gaza on Sunday, according to local sources inside the Palestinian territory.Ahed Tareq al-Bayouk was reportedly playing near her family's tent in Mawasi, Rafah, southern Gaza, when she was shot.The Israel Defense Forces said in a statement that it was "not aware of a strike" but would "conduct an additional review" as more information was provided.Since a ceasefire came into effect in October, at least 370 people have been killed in Gaza including 140 children, according to Amnesty International. Ahed al-Bayouk's death appears to have taken place on the Palestinian side of the so-called Yellow Line, behind which Israeli troops agreed to withdraw as part of the first phase of a US plan to end fighting in the region.Phase one also required the return of all 20 living and 28 dead hostages taken in the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023.All have been returned except for the remains of an Israeli police officer, Ran Gvili, 24, who is believed to have been shot and killed while trying to repel the attack in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken hostage.Since then, more than 70,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli military action, according to Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry.The World Health Organization says at least 16,500 wounded or seriously ill Palestinians are in urgent need of evacuation for lifesaving medical treatment outside Gaza.International media, including the BBC, are prevented by Israel from reporting independently from inside Gaza.On Saturday, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani, the prime minister of Qatar, said the current situation was more of a "pause" than a ceasefire and his country was working with the US, Turkey and Egypt to push the plan towards phase two.This would involve the establishment of an interim governing authority in Gaza, the deployment of an international security force, the disarmament of Hamas, and Israel's eventual withdrawal from the territory.The plan is to be overseen by a Board of Peace chaired by US President Donald Trump.It also sets out how redevelopment and reform might create "a credible pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood".After talks in Jerusalem with the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said the eventual creation of a Palestinian state could be the best route to "a new Middle East".But standing alongside him, Netanyahu reiterated his opposition to the two-state solution.The "purpose of a Palestinian state," he argued, "is to destroy the one and only Jewish state"."We believe there is a path to advance a broader peace with the Arab states, and a path also to establish a workable peace with our Palestinian neighbours, but we're not going to create a state that will be committed to our destruction," he added.The Israeli and German leaders did agree that the second phase of the American plan should be advanced as soon as Mr Gvili's remains were returned.Netanyahu is expected to discuss the next phase of the plan when he meets Trump in the US on 29 December.Middle EastIsrael-Gaza war
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BBC World Dec 8, 20:34

About 100 abducted schoolchildren released in Nigeria

About 100 abducted schoolchildren released in Nigeria23 hours agoShareSaveMadina Maishanu,BBC Africa, AbujaandBasillioh RukangaShareSaveEPAThe parents are desperate for news of their childrenAbout 100 children who were abducted from a Catholic school in central Nigeria last month have been freed.They arrived in the Niger state capital, Minna, in a fleet of minibuses escorted by military vans and armoured vehicles, and were received by Governor Umar Bago.Details about their release remain unclear, including whether it was secured through negotiation or by force, and whether any ransoms were paid.Last month, more than 250 students and 12 staff were kidnapped from St Mary's Catholic school in Papiri, the latest in a wave of mass abductions.The BBC has learned that the rescued students will be transported to the school, located more than 300km (186 miles) from the state capital, on Tuesday where they will be reunited with their families.The governor of neighbouring Nasarawa state, Abdullahi Sule, told local media that the federal government had played a key role in securing their release, adding that the behind-the-scenes efforts could not be disclosed for security reasons.Last week, National Security Adviser Nuhu Ribadu visited Papiri and met a delegation led by Bishop Bulus Dauwa Yohanna, assuring them the children would soon be rescued and reunited with their families.About 153 students and 12 staff members are still with the unknown gunmen.I watched helplessly as gunmen snatched my son, says father after Nigerian school kidnappingNigerian villagers 'too scared to speak' after hundreds of schoolchildren kidnappedThe kidnap gangs, jihadists and separatists wreaking havoc in NigeriaSchools and places of worship have increasingly been targeted in the latest wave of attacks in north and central Nigeria.The attack on St Mary's, on 21 November, was preceded by mass kidnappings just days earlier: on 18 November, two people were killed and 38 abducted in an attack on the Christ Apostolic Church in Kwara state, and a day before that, two were killed and 25 Muslim students abducted from Government Girls' Secondary School in Kebbi state. All those taken in the Kwara and Kebbi attacks have since been freed.Last week gunmen abducted at least 20 people in two separate attacks - at a newly established church in central Kogi state, where a pastor, his wife and some worshipers were taken, and in the mostly Muslim northern Sokoto state, where a bride and her bridesmaids were among those kidnapped.It is not clear who is behind these kidnappings - most analysts believe they are carried out by criminal gangs seeking ransom payments. However, a presidential spokesman earlier told the BBC that the government believes they are the work of jihadist groups.The paying of ransoms has been made illegal in Nigeria in an attempt to cut the supply of funds to the kidnap gangs but it is widely believed that in many cases money is still handed over.Nigeria's security crisis attracted the international spotlight last month after US President Donald Trump threatened to send over troops if the government "continues to allow the killing of Christians".Nigerian officials and analysts say that members of all faiths are victims of the violence and kidnappings and say it is not true that Christians are being targeted.You may also be interested in:'We fear for our souls' - Nigerian farmers need armed guards to protect them from jihadistsNicki Minaj supports contested Trump claim Christians being persecuted in NigeriaAre Christians being persecuted in Nigeria as Trump claims?Getty Images/BBCGo to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafricaBBC Africa podcastsFocus on AfricaThis Is AfricaNigeriaAfrica
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BBC World Dec 8, 19:33

US Supreme Court appears poised to expand Trump's power to fire federal officials

US Supreme Court appears poised to expand Trump's power to fire federal officials1 day agoShareSaveMadeline HalpertShareSaveGetty ImagesFTC member Rebecca Slaughter sued Trump after she and another Democratic-appointed member were fired in MarchThe US Supreme Court's conservative majority appeared to side on Monday with the Trump administration in a case that could have major implications for the independence of federal agencies long shielded from the White House. The case, Trump v Slaughter, stems from President Donald Trump's firing in March of Rebecca Slaughter, alongside another Democratic member of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).The court heard more than two hours of arguments over whether Trump could fire her, since federal law says an commissioner can only be fired for "inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office". The court's decision is not expected to be announced for several months.Ms Slaughter sued Trump after she was ousted earlier this year for being "inconsistent with [the] Administration's priorities". Trump has argued that a president should be able to have full control over government agencies, even those set up by Congress to be shielded from presidential interference.When the FTC was established in 1914 - to protect the public from deceptive business practices and unfair competition - Congress passed a law saying a president could only remove commissioners for cause and that the five-member commission can have no more than three members of the same political party. Trump appointed Ms Slaughter in 2018 to fill a Democratic position on the FTC, and she was later reappointed by former President Joe Biden. Similar firing rules exist for other independent agencies like the National Labor Relations Board. The law was put to the test in 1935, when President Franklin Roosevelt tried to remove a member of the FTC, leading the Supreme Court to uphold the independence of certain federal agencies like the trade commission. In the 90-year-old ruling known as Humphrey's Executor, the court found that, while the president has the ability to remove executive officers without cause, such a power does not apply to agencies like the FTC that are "neither political nor executive, but predominantly quasi-judicial and quasi-legislative".During oral arguments on Monday, the four conservative justices on the court appeared to disagree with Ms Slaughter's lawyers' arguments that this would be an unacceptable expansion of Trump's powers.Arguing for the Trump administration, US Solicitor General John Sauer called the Humphrey's rule an "indefensible outlier" and "decaying husk" of a Supreme Court decision that should be overturned."I think broad delegations to unaccountable independent agencies raise enormous constitutional and real-world problems for individual liberty," said conservative Justice Neil Gorsuch.US Supreme Court ruling lets Trump fire top official on FTCUS Supreme Court agrees to hear case challenging birthright citizenshipThe three liberal justices pressed why the court would overturn a 90-year-old precedent."You're asking us to destroy the structure of government," said Justice Sonia Sotomayor, "and to take away from Congress its ability to protect its idea that the government is better structured with some agencies that are independent."Justice Elena Kagan suggested that allowing Trump to remove Ms Slaughter could have wide-reaching impacts, asking: "The question is, where does this lead?""Employees are wielding executive power all over the place, and yet we've had civil service laws that give them substantial protection from removal for over a century," she said.Lawyer Amit Agarwal, representing Ms Slaughter, said independent auditing groups like the FTC have a long history in US politics."Multi-member commissions with members enjoying some kind of removal protection have been part of our story since 1790. So if petitioners are right, all three branches of government have been wrong from the start," he said.The court has already issued one ruling against Ms Slaughter, which analysts suggested could indicate how it would ultimately rule.A lower court ruled that Ms Slaughter had been illegally removed from the FTC, leading the Trump administration to appeal the ruling to the Supreme Court. In a 6-3 decision, the conservative-majority court in September issued an emergency order maintaining her firing until the case could be heard. The Supreme Court is also set to take up at a later date a separate case on whether Trump had the power to remove Lisa Cook, a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. Donald TrumpUnited States
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CNBC Business Dec 8, 18:26

Comcast president outlines unsuccessful WBD offer and future of NBC's Peacock

LivestreamMenuMake ItselectUSAINTLLivestreamSearch quotes, news & videosLivestreamWatchlistSIGN INCreate free accountMarketsBusinessInvestingTechPoliticsVideoWatchlistInvesting ClubPROLivestreamMenuComcast's top brass on Monday pulled the curtain back on the company's unsuccessful bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, detailing an offer far different from its rival bidders. Mike Cavanagh, Comcast president and soon-to-be co-CEO, walked through the specifics of the proposal —and the company's thinking — during the UBS Global Media and Communications Conference on Monday, just days after Comcast was knocked out of the bidding war for Warner Bros. Discovery assets. "When we looked at the circumstances of how it all came to be ... we didn't expect that we had a high likelihood of prevailing with a deal that made sense to us. We debated whether to bother or not. Do we want the disruption? Do we want the distraction?" said Cavanagh. "But it's our job, so we thought better to take a look and do the work and see where it leads. You never know. And so that's what we did." Comcast, like Netflix, bid solely on the Warner Bros. film studio and HBO Max streaming business. Paramount Skydance's offer was for the entirety of the business, including the cable TV portfolio comprised of networks like CNN and TNT. "We are not interested in stressing the Comcast balance sheet," Cavanagh said Monday. "As a result, that meant our proposal was light, relative to other proposals from what I gather, on cash." Last week Netflix was named the winning bidder. On Monday Paramount launched a hostile offer. Comcast offered "a significant chunk of equity in a combined entertainment company," which would have put NBCUniversal — including its Universal theme parks and film studio as well as its broadcast network and streaming platform Peacock — together with Warner Bros.' studio and HBO Max, Cavanagh said. The resulting combination would have been a publicly traded, controlled subsidiary of Comcast. That vehicle would provide shareholders with returns, but would not constitute a full spinout, which would have involved a complete separation of the companies. Comcast's NBCUniversal is in the midst of a spinout of its portfolio of cable TV networks, which includes CNBC. In contrast, Netflix's proposed transaction is comprised of cash and stock, valued at $27.75 per WBD share. The equity value of the transaction is $72 billion, with a total enterprise value of about $82.7 billion.Paramount went straight to WBD shareholders on Monday with an all-cash, $30 per share tender offer, which equates to an enterprise value of $108.4 billion. "We respect and understand the decision of the Warner Brothers board to obviously prefer the certainty of high levels of cash or collared stock," said Cavanagh.Comcast leadership has long said the company's bar for doing mergers and acquisitions is high. "Good news is that we like what we are doing ... and we roll on with a lot of focus, but I think we're better for having taken a look," Cavanagh said. Comcast's NBCUniversal has been shape-shifting in recent years — from the spinout of its cable TV networks, to a heavy focus on bulking up on sports rights like the NBA, to building out its theme parks presence. The company has also been building out Peacock. NBCUniversal launched its streaming play in 2020 and it has slowly built up since then. As of Sept. 30 Peacock had 41 million subscribers, paling in comparison to HBO Max's 128 million customers as of Sept. 30 and Netflix's more than 300 million customers as of late 2024.Cavanagh said Monday that had Comcast's offer for Warner Bros. Discovery been successful, "it would have been an interesting play.""It probably would have changed our streaming aspirations to be global streaming aspirations by necessity," he added.Sports have been key to the playbook in fueling Peacock's subscriber growth. NBCUniversal has nabbed exclusive NFL games to Peacock in addition to simulcasting its "Sunday Night Football" package from NBC's broadcast network. It paid heavily to bring back the NBA to NBC, with exclusive games for Peacock, too. The Olympics have also be integral in its growth. Live events such as the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade have helped boost viewership across TV and streaming, too. Peacock has also been increasing its subscription price, similar to its peers. In July Peacock raised prices again, just months ahead of the beginning of the NBA season. Unlike most of its competitors, Peacock has yet to report a profit, however. For the quarter ended Sept. 30, Peacock reported losses of $217 million, an improvement from $436 million in losses during the same period last year. Cavanagh noted Monday that Peacock improved in the trailing 12 months by $900 million in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. Peacock's losses are expected to "meaningfully improve" next year compared with 2025, with "a trajectory to a positive future." Disclosure: CNBC parent NBCUniversal owns NBC Sports and NBC Olympics. NBC Olympics is the U.S. broadcast rights holder to all Summer and Winter Games through 2036. Versant would become the new parent company of CNBC upon Comcast's planned spinoff of Versant.Got a confidential news tip? We want to hear from you.Sign up for free newsletters and get more CNBC delivered to your inboxGet this delivered to your inbox, and more info about our products and services. Data is a real-time snapshot *Data is delayed at least 15 minutes. Global Business and Financial News, Stock Quotes, and Market Data and Analysis. Data also provided by
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BBC Sport Dec 8, 17:18

Norris keen to 'live a normal few days' and 'forget I drive in F1'

'Winning made everything worth it' - Norris on F1 title and what's to come in the futureLando Norris says he is looking forward to switching off and forgetting all about the year in which he achieved his lifetime's ambition of winning the Formula 1 World Championship.The McLaren driver spent Sunday night into Monday morning celebrating in Abu Dhabi, before digesting his triumph with BBC Sport in a hotel on Yas Island, a stone's throw from the F1 track.Norris is relaxed, good humoured and chatty as he reviews his journey.Next, he is heading to the McLaren factory, to analyse this year, and for work in the simulator, already thinking about next season.There are more celebrations to come this week, including picking up the official championship trophy at a prizegiving ceremony in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, on Friday, before the McLaren Christmas party in London on Saturday."Honestly," Norris says, "try to forget this season, try to forget a little bit what we've been able to achieve together. Forget that I drive in Formula 1."I don't want to forget what we've achieved this season, but just try to live a normal few days of the year, and go play some golf and do some normal things and that's it."The realisation of what he has achieved is beginning to dawn on the 26-year-old Briton but he says he "still finds it very surreal"."I was just by the pool earlier," he says. "And when someone says, 'Congrats, world champ' or something, it's definitely got a very different ring to it (than) when it's just 'Congrats, Lando,' or whatever it may be."I don't know. It's such a sizeable achievement."Norris is embraced by his mum Cisca and dad Adam just after the conclusion of the Abu Dhabi Grand PrixAt the celebrations, and waiting for him in the lobby of the hotel, were his father Adam and mother Cisca. The family are wealthy, thanks to Adam Norris' success as a pension trader, which made him a multi-millionaire.But becoming an elite sportsman still means starting learning your trade at a very young age, and a lot of personal sacrifices."Everything is different for everyone," he says, "so the sacrifices you've made are just very different sacrifices to all the people in the world have made. So I don't want anyone to feel sorry for me."But still as a family you want to spend time together. And that's something we've not really done a lot of since I started when I was like seven, eight years old."My dad was taking me everywhere. I spent a lot more time with my dad than I did with my mum. My mum was at home looking after my sisters."I see my mum 20 days a year maybe, something like that. Which is not a lot."But certainly winning and having the achievement we did yesterday made everything feel more worth it, all those times away."One thing that everyone wants to do, is make their parents proud. So the fact I got to do that yesterday, I hope make them even more proud, is the best thing you can ask for."Norris, then 15, celebrates winning the 2015 MSA Formula Championship (now known as the F4 British Championship) - 10 years before he reached the pinnacle of motorsportNorris says he's "seen a lot of photos over the last 12 hours; a lot of little me".One of them is of him doing donuts in a kart when he was still a small boy. What would he tell little Lando if he could talk to him now?"Probably just to have a bit more belief in myself," he says, "because it's something I never really had when I was younger. It's something I always lacked."In that video, I was so small. I was never the big kid or never the aggressive one, that kind of thing. I'm still the same, I think, now. I would just get my elbows out a little bit more. That's probably my only thing."This sort of vulnerability is Norris' trademark. It was evident after the race, too, when he said he was "proud that I've proved myself wrong".I ask what he meant, and he says it was a reference to his difficult first part of the season, when his McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri took the initiative, and the championship lead, and had won four races before Norris had taken his second.By the time of the Dutch Grand Prix at the end of August, Piastri had a 34-point lead over Norris and seemed a certain bet for the title, only for Norris to rally and overhaul it all."When Oscar was doing a better job than me and I wasn't doing a great job, I was like, 'Well, you know, maybe they're just a bit better. Maybe they can just be more consistent, get more out of the car,'" Norris says."I just never thought at times that it was possible. So for me to then do that for myself, to kind of go, 'You're wrong, you can do it,' is a pretty incredible feeling to have for yourself."I wouldn't say I'm a very selfish person, but I've also learned at times I almost have to be more selfish with some of these feelings and thoughts. I need that to almost make me a better and stronger driver."It's just nice to almost make myself have more confidence. But I often only do that when I prove it to myself. I've always had that thought of, 'Oh, the next step is such a big leap. Am I ever going to be able to perform at the level I need to perform at?' I have more doubts than positive thoughts at those times."But I've also changed a lot this season. I also feel through the year I've been able to be in a much better place, be a lot more confident in myself, change my whole approach and mentality."How Norris achieved his lifetime's ambition by 'winning it my way'Norris is 'only just getting going' - and rank British world championsIt's a trademark of all great F1 drivers that they look hard at themselves, analyse their weaknesses, and work out ways to improve, and keep doing it throughout their career.Norris is unusual, though, in that he speaks about that process so openly. Why?"Great question," he says. "I don't know, truthfully. I don't know why sometimes I tell you guys as much stuff as I do."Sometimes I get told I shouldn't and sometimes I probably do tell too much, or reveal too much, and people can see vulnerabilities in that and so forth."Maybe at times that's a mistake. But at the same time at least I'm being truthful to my own self. If I'm doing a bad job, I tell myself I'm doing a bad job and I certainly have people around me telling me the truth about things."What I hate the most is the opposite, is doing a bad job and someone going, 'That's all right, you'll be fine, things will just get better.' Because it's just not the case."I hate that kind of mentality and approach, and I've certainly not been brought up in that way. People around me have certainly not been like that."It's very much a brutal honesty which has made me the person I am today. But I'm also just I think quite an open, honest person, I will just say what I believe."Lando Norris set a new track record of 1:09.954 in taking pole position for the Monaco Grand Prix in MayNorris has achieved so much this year. Along with the world title, he has won the two races every driver dreams of winning - Monaco and his home grand prix at Silverstone.What else is there left to do? He smiles."I would have loved to make my life a bit easier and win it just earlier next time," he says. "But I won ones that people have dreams of winning. They're some of the most incredible ones."The lap I did in Monaco in qualifying was the only other time probably in the last 10 years that I cried a little bit over something."It was the one other moment this season that I proved myself wrong, because I had that bad run of results."I just couldn't perform in qualifying. Qualifying has always been my strong suit, my best. It's been my strength since I was in karting. All my qualifying results are my thing and they weren't at the beginning of the season."I went to the hardest track to do a qualifying lap. It's not been my best track in the past."I turned off my (lap time cockpit display) delta for the first time that weekend so I couldn't see if I was on a better lap, worse lap, whatever it was."For me to then to go there and put in that lap at the end of qualifying was one of the best moments of my career, because it was the time I almost doubted myself the most ever, in the most important season that it turned out to be."But that one lap - one minute nine seconds - was all it needed for me to flip everything and turn that thought of 'I just don't know if I've got this' to 'I can definitely do this'. That was a pivotal moment for me up here (he points to his head)."We end by discussing what he will take from this year into next. And he gives another revealing answer."I take a lot," he says, "plenty of things that I know I could have done better, I should have done better."But I did what I had to in the end. It was crazy close. Two points is all it was to Max (Verstappen). That's pretty insane, especially when he was so far back."What do I take? I take that I can do it. I do have what it takes."I had my flaws. I had my mistakes. But I'm confident, and I have the confidence now that I can look at them, review them, analyse them, not make them again and do even better next season."Backed by his family, propelled by his talent - the rise of NorrisInside McLaren's season - the rules, values, incidents & relationshipsQuiz: How well do you know F1 champion Norris?Lando Norris: The Making of a World Champion
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CNBC Business Dec 8, 17:14

McDonald’s will assess if franchisees are offering value for customers under new standards

LivestreamMenuMake ItselectUSAINTLLivestreamSearch quotes, news & videosLivestreamWatchlistSIGN INCreate free accountMarketsBusinessInvestingTechPoliticsVideoWatchlistInvesting ClubPROLivestreamMenuMcDonald's will soon assess its franchisees on how their prices deliver value as the company updates its franchising standards as part of a larger bid to win over cash-strapped diners."Effective January 1, 2026, we are enhancing our global franchising standards across all Segments to reinforce accountability for value leadership," Andrew Gregory, McDonald's senior vice president of global franchising, development and delivery, wrote in a memo issued Monday and obtained by CNBC. "With enhanced standards, we aim to provide greater clarity to the System to ensure every restaurant delivers consistent, reliable value across the full customer experience."Franchising standards are the policies that define how McDonald's operators should run their restaurants. Continued noncompliance with those standards could result in penalties, like not being permitted to open another restaurant, or even the termination of the franchise. Franchisees run about 95% of McDonald's restaurants worldwide and set their restaurants' prices, with input from third-party pricing advisors. Under the new standard, the company will "holistically assess" pricing decisions for how well they offer value, Gregory wrote in the memo."This approach enables franchisees to bring local insight to how value is delivered in their restaurants," he said.The change comes after McDonald's U.S. President Joe Erlinger told owners last month that they needed to keep their foot on the gas and stay the course on promoting the chain's value offerings.Across the restaurant industry, eateries have been leaning into value, betting that deals will attract cash-strapped customers. But discounts that are too steep can cut into profits, and operators have to strike a delicate balance to preserve both traffic and long-term profitability.For more than a year, McDonald's has reported that low-income consumers have been spending less money and visiting less frequently. To bring diners back to its restaurants, it has rolled out value menus in the U.S. and other key markets like France and Germany. The efforts have so far paid off, as the company has reversed same-store sales declines and attracted more high-income diners who are trading down to fast food.Still, McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski said he expects that the pressure on the consumer isn't going away anytime soon."We continue to remain cautious about the health of the consumer in the U.S. and our top international markets and believe the pressures will continue well into 2026," Kempczinski said on the company's earnings conference call last month. The company's change in standards is likely to rile some McDonald's U.S. franchisees who already have a contentious relationship with their franchisor. An independent advocacy group of McDonald's operators has pushed for the company to contribute financially to make discounts more sustainable for franchisees in the long run. Several years ago, a new grading system for franchisees drew the ire of some operators, who said at the time that it would alienate workers in a tight labor environment.In addition to updating the franchising standards, McDonald's has also invested in tools to help franchisees determine how to address value in their local markets."While Owner/Operators continue to set their own prices and make decisions that reflect local market nuances, we've now strengthened individual accountability for value leadership – equipping you with approved pricing consultants, tools, and other levels that support informed choices and elevate the overall guest experience across all order points," McDonald's USA Chief Restaurant Officer Mason Smoot wrote in a separate memo sent to U.S. franchisees Monday and obtained by CNBC.Got a confidential news tip? We want to hear from you.Sign up for free newsletters and get more CNBC delivered to your inboxGet this delivered to your inbox, and more info about our products and services. Data is a real-time snapshot *Data is delayed at least 15 minutes. Global Business and Financial News, Stock Quotes, and Market Data and Analysis. Data also provided by
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BBC World Dec 8, 17:01

European leaders walk tightrope between backing Ukraine and keeping US on board

European leaders walk tightrope between backing Ukraine and keeping US on board1 day agoShareSaveKatya AdlerBBC Europe editorShareSaveGetty ImagesOn Monday Zelensky held talks with Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron and the German Chancellor Friedrich MerzUkraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky has met key European allies as he faces US pressure to reach a swift peace deal with Russia.In London, Zelensky held talks with Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron and the German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.The meeting came amid US efforts to get Moscow and Kyiv to sign up - quickly - to a plan to end the war in Ukraine.For Kyiv, the crucial, thorny issues are the question of ceding territory to Russia as part of any peace deal and obtaining strong security guarantees to ensure that Moscow respects an eventual agreement.Ahead of the meeting in London, Starmer insisted - as he often has in the past - that Ukraine needed "hard-edged security guarantees". He has also repeatedly said that Kyiv must determine its own future, not have conditions imposed on it.The big names Starmer hosted in London discussed hugely significant issues - not only for Ukraine's future, but for the security of the continent as a whole.There's concern that if Russia is "rewarded" by being given Ukrainian territory as part of a peace deal, it could feel emboldened to attack other European countries in the future.But will Monday's talks in London make any meaningful difference to peace negotiations?The visuals of Europe's arguably most influential nations standing shoulder-to-shoulder with Volodymyr Zelensky in Downing Street tell one story. But when it comes to Washington, European leaders are walking a tightrope.In its National Security Strategy published on Friday, the US pointed the finger of blame at Europeans over Ukraine, accusing them of having "unrealistic expectations" as to how the war might end.Although they have not publicly commented on the document, behind closed doors Europe's leaders fear Donald Trump is keen for a quick fix in Ukraine, so he can turn his attentions elsewhere. But a quick fix, they worry, will not mean a long-lasting peace - only a temporary pause in Russian aggression in Ukraine and possibly further afield in Europe.Recent incidents including unmanned drones causing chaos in civilian airports in Germany, Denmark, Belgium and elsewhere, an act of railway sabotage in Poland that could have cost lives and significant cyber-attacks across the continent have all been laid at Russia's door. They have brought the war in Ukraine closer to Europeans, however far they are from the front line. With that has come a sense that Russia would like to weaken their continent as a whole.But we do not hear those European concerns broadcast loudly in public.For the most part, leaders continue to praise Trump. On Monday, Starmer said the US president had progressed peace negotiations "the furthest we've got in the four years" in just a few weeks. He added that talks were complicated, but progress was being made.German Chancellor Friedrich Merz suggested that he was "sceptical about some of the details which we are seeing in the documents coming from the US side", but added "we have to talk about it".How much have Europe and the US given to Ukraine?Trump administration says Europe faces 'civilisational erasure'Putin says Russia will take Donbas by force or Ukraine's troops will withdrawThe fact is, European leaders don't want to provoke the US president over differences on how to achieve peace.Donald Trump has flip-flopped dramatically in his attitudes towards Kyiv since he returned to the White House. He has a pretty tempestuous relationship with Volodymyr Zelensky, whereas he has often praised Vladimir Putin.Washington has already stopped direct aid to Ukraine - although it still provides much-needed intelligence to its military and allows European countries to purchase US weapons which are then sent on to Kyiv.European nations are not in a position to support Ukraine militarily without the US.After decades of under-investment in their militaries, they are not in a position to take on the security and defence of their own continent alone, either.The US is the biggest and most powerful member of Nato. Europe looks to Washington for intelligence, command and control capabilities, for air force capabilities - such as air-to-air refuelling - and much more.Despite a pledge to Donald Trump at a Nato summit a few months ago to vastly increase defence spending (and Trump is far from the first US president to ask for that), Europe cannot practically become militarily independent overnight.European governments are currently facing considerable budgetary constraints.In the UK, talk of struggling and failing public services is common. In France - which has long been in the throes of a huge budgetary crisis - next year's draft budget only sets €120m (£105m) in civilian and military aid for Ukraine.It is because of these limitations that - in public - the concerns about Washington and a peace plan for Ukraine are so carefully expressed by Europe's leaders. They don't want to risk being left completely alone by the power they still describe as their greatest ally.But the differences in the European and US approaches to Moscow are glaring.While Europeans – particularly in countries bordering Russia - view Moscow as a destabilising threat, in its National Security Strategy the Trump administration talked up the importance of building "strategic stability" with Russia, and questioned Europe's longer-term reliability as an ally.Europe's leaders are trying to avoid further alienating the US president, while fighting for Ukrainian sovereignty and future continental stability. It's a tortuous dance.War in UkraineVolodymyr ZelenskyUkraine
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BBC Sport Dec 8, 16:03

The most iconic and explosive Premier League outbursts

Rooney: "Disrespectful" Salah comments "threw Liverpool under the bus"There have been some iconic rants and outbursts - from both managers and players - throughout the history of the Premier League.Some of them were measured and planned, others came in moments of frustration. And then every now and again there was just plain anger.Mohamed Salah, for instance, deliberately picked his moment on Saturday to say he had been "thrown under the bus" by Liverpool. But it is not always so calculated.Everyone knows about Kevin Keegan's "I would love it" remark from the 1995-96 season.BBC Sport have picked out 10 other incidents that have helped to define the Premier League, and looked at what happened next.If Salah stops to speak to the media, it is usually for a good reason.After a 3-2 win at Southampton in November 2024, Salah dropped the bombshell that he was "probably more out than in" with regards to his Anfield future.The Egypt international had moved into the final year of his Liverpool contract and at that stage, looked unlikely to sign a new deal despite a desire to stay put.There had also been speculation about a potential move to the Saudi Pro League and Salah felt the need to set the record straight.Salah's comments ramped up the pressure on the Liverpool hierarchy as his goals propelled the club towards the Premier League title.According to Opta, Salah's goals and assists had been worth 17 points to Liverpool at that point - the most of any player in the division.What happened next: It took another five months, but Salah did eventually sign a new two-year deal in April.He has not been able to live up to his previous hot form, with five goals and three assists across 18 appearances this season.The fans were clearly going to be on his side last term, that unequivocal support might not be there this time.Salah in Liverpool training but not expected to travel for Inter gameIs there any way back for Salah and Liverpool?Salah is destroying his legacy - RooneySir Alex Ferguson wasted no time in showing Roy Keane the doorIt was 29 October, 2005, and Manchester United had just been thrashed 4-1 by Middlesbrough at the Riverside.After the game MUTV, the club's in-house television channel, spoke to an injured Roy Keane for a segment in which he would analyse the match. And what came next was classic Roy Keane.The captain criticised most of his team-mates in the interview. Rio Ferdinand, Darren Fletcher, Edwin van der Sar, Alan Smith, John O'Shea and Kieran Richardson in particular were singled out.Yet this interview has never been seen, because Sir Alex Ferguson ordered that it must not be broadcast and the tape destroyed.What happened next: Keane's glittering 12-year career at Old Trafford abruptly ended as his contract was mutually ripped up on 18 November, 2005.He joined Celtic as a free agent when the January transfer window opened."I want to talk about facts," Liverpool manager Rafael Benitez famously said in January 2009.It was the beginning of a long and planned speech about Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson.Reading from a piece of paper, Benitez hit out at Ferguson for his treatment of referees, and for his complaints about the fixture list.The bizarre part was the random nature of it, delivered during the pre-match press conference before a game against Stoke City. Liverpool were not due to play Manchester United until March.Benitez said he did not "want to play mind games too early," but it seemed like Ferguson had already won that battle.What happened next: Liverpool's form nosedived, first drawing 0-0 at Stoke. They drew four games in a row, and won three of the next 10.They dropped 11 Premier League points during this period. Come May, Manchester United would win the title with Liverpool four points behind in second.Transfers from Chelsea to Arsenal have become commonplace in recent years. Noni Madueke, Kepa Arrizabalaga, Kai Havertz and Jorginho being just four examples.But back in 2006 this very much was not the case. No senior player had moved between the clubs for 23 years.Then came the explosive transfer which saw Ashley Cole move to Stamford Bridge, with William Gallas going in the opposite direction.A few days after the deal was done, Chelsea released an incredible statement on their official website outlining a number of complaints about Gallas' behaviour and refusal to play games.Chelsea claimed that Gallas had threatened to "score an own goal or get himself sent off" if he had to play in the opening match of the 2006-07 season against Manchester City.What happened next: While Gallas admitted he had asked to leave Chelsea, he denied he had ever threatened to deliberately score an own goal.Gallas had just won back-to-back Premier League titles under Jose Mourinho, but he didn't win a single trophy in four years at Arsenal.In that time Chelsea won the Premier League, three FA Cups and the League Cup.Wayne Rooney said in his latest podcast episode that Salah was "destroying his legacy at Liverpool" with the Egyptian now fighting for his Anfield future.Rooney has been there himself - but has proved there can be a way back.It was October 2010 when Sir Alex Ferguson said in a press conference that Rooney had asked to leave the club.Then, hours before a Champions League game against Bursaspor, the striker issued his own statement.Rooney said he had not received assurances "about the continued ability of the club to attract the top players in the world."What happened next: In a miraculous u-turn, two days later Rooney signed a new five-year contract at Old Trafford.Rooney asked to leave the club again in May 2013, handing in a transfer request. But he eventually signed another new deal and stayed until 2017.Cristiano Ronaldo joined Al Nassr in Saudi Arabia after a breakdown in his relationship with Erik ten HagFor Salah in 2025, read Cristiano Ronaldo in 2022.Ronaldo had returned to Manchester United to much fanfare in August 2021, scoring twice on his second debut in a 4-1 win over Newcastle United.Gradually, it turned sour for the Portuguese and on 14 November, 2022 he gave an interview where he said he felt "betrayed" and that "fans should know the truth."On manager Erik ten Hag, he added: "I don't have respect for him because he doesn't show respect for me."What happened next: Ronaldo had played his last game for the club. He jetted off to the World Cup in Qatar with Portugal. On 22 November it was announced that his contract had been ended by mutual agreement.Raheem Sterling's relationship with the fans deteriorated over the final two months of the seasonRejecting a contract is one thing, how you go about it is a whole different ball game.Sterling was only 20 when he told the BBC in April 2015 that he was stalling on signing a new Liverpool contract with remarks which suggested he could win more trophies elsewhere.A deal worth £100,000-a-week was on the table, and the forward insisted it was "not about the money at all."Although he had not expressed that he wanted to quit the club, it was not hard to read between the lines. Liverpool fans didn't buy it.A few weeks later reports emerged that he had asked to leave. It led to a frosty final few weeks of the season with the supporters.What happened next: Sterling joined Manchester City in July for an initial £44m.He got the trophies he desired, winning four Premier League titles, the FA Cup and five League Cups.Sterling has been jeered every time he's played against Liverpool.After seven Premier League games without a victory, Leicester City had won four in a row in April 2015.That was before they came right back down to earth with a bump having lost 3-1 at home to Chelsea. It left them a point above the relegation places and manager Nigel Pearson hit out at the press.Pearson was attempting to pull off an unlikely escape from relegation. But he felt that some negative comments about his players were not helpful to their cause."If you don't know the answer to that question then I think you are an ostrich," Pearson told reporter Ian Baker. "Your head must be in the sand."Pearson went on to mimic the reporter as he grew increasingly frustrated during the exchange. He would later publicly apologise for the outburst.What happened next: Leicester won three of their last four matches and ended up being six points clear of the bottom three at the end of the season.But Pearson had a fractious relationship with Leicester's owners and he was sacked in the summer.It worked out well for the Foxes, though. They appointed Claudio Ranieri and shocked the football world by winning the Premier League in 2015-16.When Joe Kinnear returned to management with Newcastle in 2008 it was an appointment that came out of nowhere.Kinnear had been out of work for nearly four years after leaving Nottingham Forest in 2004. Newcastle opted for the former Wimbledon boss as an interim manager after Kevin Keegan's departure.Kinnear had only been in charge for two weeks when he laid into Daily Mirror journalist Simon Bird in a press conference. He felt he had been misrepresented in newspaper reports.The rant lasted five minutes and included over 50 swear words, of many different varieties.What happened next: Kinnear's interim stint was eventually made permanent, but he had to leave the club in February 2009 after requiring a heart bypass operation.He was not finished with Newcastle and was back as director football in June 2013. Eight months later he was gone again.In November 2018, Southampton striker Charlie Austin lost his cool in a post-match interview after he had seen a goal ruled out for offside.Southampton went on to draw 1-1 with Watford, so the decision was crucial.There was no VAR in the Premier League at this point."The officials cost us two points," Austin said. "They said it was offside, that is a joke."People go on about VAR, they clearly need help. If this is the best, most-watched league in the world then give them all the help they need. It is a joke."What happened next: VAR was introduced at the start of the 2019-20 season, and the same old arguments still rage. These days, the ire is directly towards the video official.Get news, insight and fan views on your Premier League teamAll your football quizzes in one place
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BBC Sport Dec 8, 15:45

Smith & Blackstenius star in WSL goals of the week

BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountHomeNewsSportBusinessInnovationCultureTravelEarthAudioVideoLiveMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportBusinessInnovationCultureTravelEarthAudioVideoLiveClose menu BBC SportMenuHomeFootballCricketFormula 1Rugby UTennisGolfAthleticsCyclingMoreA-Z SportsAmerican FootballAthleticsBasketballBoxingCricketCyclingDartsDisability SportFootballFormula 1Gaelic GamesGolfGymnasticsHorse RacingMixed Martial ArtsMotorsportNetballOlympic SportsRugby LeagueRugby UnionSnookerSwimmingTennisWinter SportsFull Sports A-ZMore from SportEnglandScotlandWalesNorthern IrelandNews FeedsHelp & FAQsWomen's FootballScores & FixturesTableTop ScorersWomen's Super League{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"VideoObject","name":"WSL: Women's Super League best goals starring Smith, Blackstenius","description":"Arsenal stars Olivia Smith and Stina Balckstenius both feature in the best goals from the weekend's Women's Super League action.","thumbnailUrl":["https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1920x1080/p0mm8mxp.jpg","https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1232x1232/p0mm8mxp.jpg","https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/688xn/p0mm8mxp.jpg","https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/400xn/p0mm8mxp.jpg"],"uploadDate":"2025-12-08T15:45:18.217Z","duration":"PT1M51S"}Smith & Blackstenius star in WSL goals of the weekThis content is not available in your location.There was an errorArsenal stars Olivia Smith and Stina Balckstenius both feature in the best goals from the weekend's Women's Super League action.WATCH MORE: Everton shock Chelsea to end unbeaten runShareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingRead descriptionExplore moreSmith & Blackstenius star in WSL goals of the week. Video, 00:01:51Smith & Blackstenius star in WSL goals of the week1:51Up Next. BBC Women's Footballer of the Year contender Alessia Russo. Video, 00:02:21BBC Women's Footballer of the Year contender Alessia Russo2:21BBC Women's Footballer of the Year contender Mariona Caldentey Video, 00:02:35BBC Women's Footballer of the Year contender Mariona Caldentey2:35Editor's recommendationsSlot 'no clue' if Salah has played his last Liverpool game. Video, 00:02:48Slot 'no clue' if Salah has played his last Liverpool game2:48'Winning made everything worth it' - Norris on world title triumph. Video, 00:02:46'Winning made everything worth it' - Norris on world title triumph2:46'Disrespectful' Salah comments threw club under bus - Rooney. Video, 00:01:35'Disrespectful' Salah comments threw club under bus - Rooney1:35'Salah's put his team-mates in jeopardy' - Coady. Video, 00:01:19'Salah's put his team-mates in jeopardy' - Coady1:19Villa could still go up another level - Sutton. Video, 00:01:43Villa could still go up another level - Sutton1:43'It can become hostile' - Savage on impact of fan abuse. Video, 00:02:52'It can become hostile' - Savage on impact of fan abuse2:52Tuchel reacts to England's 'difficult' World Cup group. Video, 00:02:37Tuchel reacts to England's 'difficult' World Cup group2:37'Bring it on' - Clarke reacts to Scotland's World Cup draw. Video, 00:00:48'Bring it on' - Clarke reacts to Scotland's World Cup draw0:48'Have I just outed Chelsea?' - Confession Cam. Video, 00:03:19'Have I just outed Chelsea?' - Confession Cam3:19'He wasn't happy' - Slot on Salah's reaction after being dropped. Video, 00:00:58'He wasn't happy' - Slot on Salah's reaction after being dropped0:58'Why would you do that?' - Sutton on Spurs fans booing. Video, 00:02:31'Why would you do that?' - Sutton on Spurs fans booing2:31'A boo-worthy performance' - Rodgers on Steelers' loss to Bills. Video, 00:00:47'A boo-worthy performance' - Rodgers on Steelers' loss to Bills
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BBC World Dec 8, 15:39

Hunt under way for Benin coup plotters as two hostages reportedly freed

Hunt under way for Benin coup plotters as two hostages reportedly freed1 day agoShareSavePaul Njie,Thomas Naadi,Chiagozie Nwonwu,BBC Africa reporters,Lucy FlemingandMansur AbubakarShareSaveBTVMost of the soldiers who appeared on state TV early on Sunday morning are on the runTwo senior military officials taken hostage during Sunday's attempted coup in Benin have been freed, a government source has told the BBC.It remains unclear how they were released or if other hostages are still being held.Security forces are continuing a manhunt for those involved in the plot, who remain at large.A group of soldiers appeared on state TV early in the morning to announce they had taken over in the West African country, and gunfire was heard near the presidential residence.However, President Patrice Talon later announced that the situation was "totally under control".Regional power Nigeria assisted in thwarting the mutiny, saying its fighter jets had helped "dislodge the coup plotters from the National TV and a military camp" following a request from Benin's government.On Sunday afternoon, huge explosions were heard in Cotonou, Benin's largest city and seat of government. They were thought to have been the result of an air strike.Prior to the explosions, flight-tracking data showed that three aircraft had entered Benin's airspace from neighbouring Nigeria before returning home.The extent of the damage is not clear.Earlier on Sunday, Benin government spokesperson Wilfried Leandre Houngbedji told the Reuters news agency that 14 people had been arrested in connection with the attempted coup.A journalist in Benin also told the BBC that of those reportedly arrested 12 are believed to have stormed the offices of the national TV station - including a soldier who had previously been sacked.The coup plotters said they were led by Lt Col Pascal Tigri, whose whereabouts are unknown.In Sunday evening's national address, the 67-year-old president said that loyalist forces had "cleared the last pockets of resistance held by the mutineers"."This commitment and mobilisation enabled us to defeat these opportunists and avert disaster for our country. This treachery will not go unpunished," he added."I would like to reassure you that the situation is completely under control and therefore invite you to go about your business peacefully."It is not clear if there have been any casualties, but the president expressed his condolences "to the victims of this senseless adventure, as well as to those still being held by fleeing mutineers".The West African regional bloc, Ecowas, has also deployed troops from Nigeria, Ghana, Sierra Leone, and Ivory Coast to secure key installations and prevent any resurgence of the violence.Under intense pressure after a string of successful coups in the region, Ecowas is signalling that it is no longer willing to watch democratically elected governments fall without resistance.Benin, a former French colony, has been regarded as one of Africa's more stable democracies.The nation is one of the continent's largest cotton producers, but ranks among the world's poorest countries.Nigeria, Benin's large neighbour to the east, has described the coup attempt as a "direct assault on democracy".Watch: People in Benin felt 'total fear' at attempted coupThe rebel soldiers justified their actions by criticising Talon's management of the country, complaining first about his handling of the "continuing deterioration of the security situation in northern Benin".Benin's army has suffered losses near its northern border with insurgency-hit Niger and Burkina Faso in recent years, as jihadist militants linked to Islamic State and al-Qaeda spread southwards.The soldiers' statement cited "the ignorance and neglect of the situation of our brothers in arms who have fallen at the front and, above all, that of their families, abandoned to their sad fate by Mr Patrice Talon's policies".The rebels also hit out at cuts in health care, including the cancellation of state-funded kidney dialysis, and taxes rises, as well as curbs on political activities.Talon, who is regarded as a close ally of the West, is due to step down next year after completing his second term in office, with elections scheduled for April.A businessman known as the "king of cotton", he first came to power in 2016. He has endorsed Finance Minister Romuald Wadagni as his successor.Talon has been praised by his supporters for overseeing economic development, but his government has also been criticised for suppressing dissenting voices.In October, Benin's electoral commission barred the main opposition candidate from standing on the grounds that he did not have enough sponsors.Last month, constitutional amendments were passed by MPs, including the creation of a second parliamentary chamber, the Senate.Terms for elected officials were extended from five to seven years, but the presidential two-term limit remained in place.Sunday's attempted coup comes just over a week after Guinea-Bissau's President Umaro Sissoco Embaló was overthrown - though some regional figures have questioned whether this was staged.In recent years, West Africa has also seen coups in Burkina Faso, Guinea, Mali and Niger, prompting concerns about the region's stability.Russia has strengthened its ties with these Sahel countries over recent years - and Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger have left the West African regional bloc Ecowas to form their own group, the Alliance of Sahel States.News of the attempted takeover in Benin was hailed by several pro-Russian social media accounts, according to BBC Monitoring.Ecowas and the African Union (AU) both condemned the coup attempt.You may also be interested in:Three military-run states leave West African bloc - what will change?Was it a coup or was it a 'sham'? Behind Guinea-Bissau's military takeoverThe region with more 'terror deaths' than rest of world combinedGetty Images/BBCGo to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafricaBBC Africa podcastsAfrica DailyFocus on AfricaNigeriaBeninAfrica
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CNBC Business Dec 8, 15:13

Rising stocks and IPOs helped create 287 new billionaires this year

LivestreamMenuMake ItselectUSAINTLLivestreamSearch quotes, news & videosLivestreamWatchlistSIGN INCreate free accountMarketsBusinessInvestingTechPoliticsVideoWatchlistInvesting ClubPROLivestreamMenuRising stock markets, a return of merger activity and flowing inheritances helped create 287 new billionaires this year, bringing the global total to over 2,900, according to a new report.Billionaire wealth reached a record $15.8 trillion as of the end of the third quarter, up 13%, according to the UBS Billionaire Ambitions Report 2025. Of the world's 2,919 billionaires, 2,059 are self-made and 860 inherited their wealth, according to the report.This year marked the second-highest total of newly minted billionaires recorded by the UBS survey, behind only 2021, when 360 new billionaires were created. Over the past four years, 727 people have become billionaires, increasing the global total by 27%.While artificial intelligence and tech billionaires may dominate the wealth headlines, the new billionaires of 2025 made their fortunes in a more diverse array of industries – from software and genetics to restaurants, infrastructure and natural gas.The new cohort includes Ben Lamm, co-founder of genetics and bioscience company Colossal; Michael Dorrell, co-founder and CEO of Stonepeak, an infrastructure investment firm; and Bob Pender and Mike Sabel, who co-founded Venture Global, a liquid natural gas exporter that went public in January. The Inside Wealth newsletter by Robert Frank is your weekly guide to high-net-worth investors and the industries that serve them.Subscribe here to get access today. "There is a lot of room for new, self-made entrepreneurs to create wealth," said Judy Spalthoff, head of UBS Family Office Solutions Group.The U.S. led the global billionaire increase, with 92 new self-made billionaires representing wealth of $180 billion, according to UBS. Nearly a third of the world's billionaires, or 924 people, are in the U.S. Their total wealth soared by 18% over the past year to $17.5 trillion. Three quarters of American billionaires are self-made, the report found.The great wealth transfer is also minting new billionaires through inheritance. In the past year, 91 people became billionaires through inheritance, receiving nearly $300 billion in wealth, UBS found. Of the inheritors, 64 were male and 27 female. Over the next 15 years, $5.9 trillion will be inherited by children and spouses from billionaires, mostly in the U.S., the report estimates.Attitudes toward raising the next generation of wealth, however, are changing – especially among family-owned companies. Rather than expecting them to take over the family business, today's billionaires are hiring professional managers or selling their companies, allowing their kids to be more independent and find their own careers."A few decades ago, succession into the family business was the norm, because markets were slower to change and continuity provided stability," one unnamed European billionaire told UBS for the report. "Today, globalization, faster disruption cycles, and greater risk that existing businesses may not endure in their current form have shifted priorities. With professional management more common, families now see more value in children developing resilience, education and adaptability over inheriting a role." When it comes to investing, billionaires remain bullish on stocks, especially in the U.S. Despite signs of an over-heated market and growing concentration among a handful of AI-driven tech stocks, 43% of billionaires plan to add to their public equities in the next 12 months, UBS reports. Only 5% plan to decrease their equities, it found. Private equity is a mixed bag. Half plan to add to their direct investments in the next year, while 37% plan to add to their private equity funds, according to UBS. At the same time, 28% plan to reduce their investments in private equity funds, likely as a result of poor returns and lack of exits. Most plan to keep their cash holdings the same and a third plan to add to their real estate holdings.Billionaires' faith in America as an investment has declined in the past year. The share of those surveyed who see investment opportunities in the U.S. dropped from 80% to 64%. In turn, billionaires are more optimistic about Europe, with the share of respondents saying they see investment opportunity there rising from 18% to 40%. With regard to China, that same share rose from 11% to 34%."When we look at the volatility around the marketplace that we had this year, the policy uncertainty and the high valuations, we're consistently seeing from these billionaire families that they're looking to diversify to more value trades," said Daniel Scansaroli, head of portfolio strategy in the UBS Chief Investment Office. "They still have a strong bias towards American exceptionalism. It's just lost a lot of the shine in the process."Along with moving their money, billionaires are also moving their residences around the world. More than a third (36%) of billionaires have relocated, with a quarter of them relocating more than once, according to UBS. Another 9% said they are considering a relocation.Their chief reason for moving to another country was "to be able to have a better quality of life for me or my family," according to the report. Spalthoff said that could include better weather, better healthcare or closer proximity to children or family. They also cite geopolitical concerns and tax organization.Overall, Spalthoff said she expects the billionaire population and wealth to continue to grow next year."We see wealth continuing to accelerate," she said. "In the U.S., especially, with the rapid growth of tech and industrials, we don't see the growth of billionaire wealth slowing down."What the retail boom in alternative assets means for risk, liquidity and portfolio allocationLeslie PickerWhere billionaires' investment firms placed their bets in NovemberHayley CuccinelloAsset-backed finance is growing fast and drawing new scrutinyRobert FrankRead MoreSubscribe to CNBC PROSubscribe to Investing ClubLicensing & ReprintsCNBC CouncilsJoin the CNBC PanelDigital ProductsNews ReleasesClosed CaptioningCorrectionsAbout CNBCInternshipsSite MapCareersHelpContactNews TipsGot a confidential news tip? We want to hear from you.Sign up for free newsletters and get more CNBC delivered to your inboxGet this delivered to your inbox, and more info about our products and services. Data is a real-time snapshot *Data is delayed at least 15 minutes. Global Business and Financial News, Stock Quotes, and Market Data and Analysis. Data also provided by
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Sky News Dec 8, 14:42

Golden Globes 2026: The full list of nominees

The nominees for next year's Golden Globes have been announced, ahead of a star-studded ceremony due in January. Action thriller One Battle After Another starring Leonardo DiCaprio leads the film field, while perennial favourite The While Lotus is most recognised in the TV categories. Here is the full list of nominees. FILM Best film - drama Alexandre Desplat - Frankenstein Max Richter - Hamnet It Was Just An Accident The Secret Agent Sentimental Value Sinners Best film - musical or comedy Blue Moon Bugonia Marty Supreme No Other Choice Nouvelle Vague One Battle After Another Best non-English language film It Was Just An Accident No Other Choice The Secret Agent Sentimental Value Sirât The Voice Of Hind Rajab Best animated film Arco Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle Elio KPop Demon Hunters Little Amélie Or The Character Of Rain Zootopia 2 Best actress - drama Jessie Buckley - Hamnet Jennifer Lawrence - Die, My Love Renate Reinsve - Sentimental Value Julia Roberts - After The Hunt Tessa Thompson - Hedda Eva Victor - Sorry, Baby Best actor - drama Joel Edgerton - Train Dreams Oscar Isaac - Frankenstein Dwayne Johnson - The Smashing Machine Michael B Jordan - Sinners Wagner Moura - The Secret Agent Jeremy Allen White - Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere Best actress - musical or comedy Rose Byrne - If I Had Legs I'd Kick You Cynthia Erivo - Wicked: For Good Kate Hudson - Song Sung Blue Chase Infiniti - One Battle After Another Amanda Seyfried - The Testament of Ann Lee Emma Stone - Bugonia Best actor - musical or comedy Timothée Chalamet - Marty Supreme George Clooney - Jay Kelly Leonardo DiCaprio - One Battle After Another Ethan Hawke - Blue Moon Lee Byung-Hun - No Other Choice Jesse Plemons - Bugonia Best supporting actress Emily Blunt - The Smashing Machine Elle Fanning - Sentimental Value Ariana Grande - Wicked: For Good Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas - Sentimental Value Amy Madigan - Weapons Teyana Taylor - One Battle After Another Best supporting actor Benicio Del Toro - One Battle After Another Jacob Elordi - Frankenstein Paul Mescal - Hamnet Sean Penn - One Battle After Another Adam Sandler - Jay Kelly Stellan Skarsgård - Sentimental Value Best director Paul Thomas Anderson - One Battle After Another Ryan Coogler - Sinners Guillermo del Toro - Frankenstein Jafar Panahi - It Was Just an Accident Joachim Trier - Sentimental Value Chloe Zhao - Hamnet Best screenplay Paul Thomas Anderson - One Battle After Another Ronald Bronstein, Josh Safdie - Marty Supreme Ryan Coogler - Sinners Jafar Panahi - It Was Just An Accident Eskil Vogt, Joachim Trier - Sentimental Value Chloé Zhao, Maggie O'Farrell - Hamnet Best original song Miley Cyrus, Andrew Wyatt, Mark Ronson, Simon Franglen - Avatar: Fire and Ash; Dream As One Joong Gyu Kwak, Yu Han Lee, Hee Dong Nam, Jeong Hoon Seo, Park Hong Jun, Kim Eun-jae (EJAE), Mark Sonnenblick - KPop Demon Hunters; Golden Raphael Saadiq, Ludwig Göransson - Sinners; I Lied To You Stephen Schwartz - Wicked: For Good - No Place Like Home Stephen Schwartz - Wicked: For Good - The Girl In The Bubble Nick Cave, Bryce Dessner - Train Dreams; Train Dreams Best original score Alexandre Desplat - Frankenstein Ludwig Göransson - Sinners Jonny Greenwood - One Battle After Another Kanding Ray - Sirāt Max Richter - Hamnet Hans Zimmer - F1 Cinematic and box office achievement Avatar: Fire And Ash F1 KPop Demon Hunters Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning Sinners Weapons Wicked: For Good Zootopia 2 TV Best TV series - drama The Diplomat The Pitt Pluribus Severance Slow Horses The White Lotus Best TV series - comedy or musical Abbott Elementary The Bear Hacks Nobody Wants This Only Murders in the Building The Studio Best limited TV series Adolescence All Her Fault The Beast In Me Black Mirror Dying For Sex The Girlfriend Best TV actress - drama Kathy Bates - Matlock Britt Lower - Severance Helen Mirren - Mobland Bella Ramsey - The Last Of Us Keri Russell - The Diplomat Rhea Seehorn - Pluribus Best TV actor - drama Sterling K Brown - Paradise Diego Luna - Andor Gary Oldman - Slow Horses Mark Ruffalo - Task Adam Scott - Severance Noah Wyle - The Pitt Best TV actress - comedy or musical Kristen Bell - Nobody Wants This Ayo Edebiri - The Bear Selena Gomez - Only Murders In The Building Natasha Lyonne - Poker Face Jenna Ortega - Wednesday Jean Smart - Hacks Best TV actor - comedy or musical Adam Brody - Nobody Wants This Steve Martin - Only Murders In The Building Glen Powell - Chad Powers Seth Rogen - The Studio Martin Short - Only Murders In The Building Jeremy Allen White - The Bear Best TV actress - limited series Claire Danes - The Beast In Me Rashida Jones - Black Mirror Amanda Seyfried - Long Bright River Sarah Snook - All Her Fault Michelle Williams - Dying For Sex Robin Wright - The Girlfriend Best TV actor - limited series Jacob Elordi - The Narrow Road To The Deep North Paul Giamatti - Black Mirror Stephen Graham - Adolescence Charlie Hunnam - Monster: The Ed Gein Story Jude Law - Black Rabbit Matthew Rhys - The Beast In Me Best supporting actor - TV Owen Cooper - Adolescence Billy Crudup - The Morning Show Walton Goggins - The White Lotus Jason Isaacs - The White Lotus Tramell Tillman - Severance Ashley Walters - Adolescence Best supporting actress - TV Carrie Coon - The White Lotus Erin Doherty - Adolescence Hannah Einbinder - Hacks Catherine O'Hara - The Studio Parker Posey - The White Lotus Aimee-Lou Wood - The White Lotus Best TV stand-up comedy performance Bill Maher - Is Anyone Else Seeing This? Brett Goldstein, The Second Best Night Of Your Life Kevin Hart - Acting My Age Kumail Nanjiani - Night Thoughts Ricky Gervais - Mortality Sarah Silverman - PostMortem PODCAST Best podcast Armchair Expert With Dax Shepard Call Her Daddy Good Hang with Amy Poehler The Mel Robbins Podcast SmartLess Up First from NPR
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BBC Sport Dec 8, 14:13

Inside McLaren's season - the rules, values, incidents & relationships

Inside McLaren's season - the rules, values, incidents & relationshipsMcLaren's greatest achievement this year is arguably not what they have accomplished on track. It's something they have managed off it.The team won the constructors' championship with six races remaining, with Lando Norris eventually pipping Red Bull's Max Verstappen and his McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri to the drivers' title in a three-way showdown at the season finale in Abu Dhabi.Norris and Piastri got there while remaining friendly.McLaren's ability to keep two evenly matched drivers, of a similar age and career development, competing for their first title in the same team without falling out with each other is almost unprecedented in modern F1.This sort of situation turns toxic far more often than not.Not just, most infamously, Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost at McLaren in 1989. But also Nigel Mansell and Nelson Piquet at Williams in 1986-7, Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso at McLaren in 2007, Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber at Red Bull in 2010, and Hamilton and Nico Rosberg at Mercedes in 2014-16.That list underlines just how difficult it is to keep two intensely driven individuals in relative harmony with each other for an entire year, while fighting for the biggest prize in their sport in identical cars, out of the same garage.It's hard enough to stop things getting noxious even when two title rivals are in different teams, such as in the tense relationship between Hamilton and Max Verstappen in 2021.But add in the claustrophobia of the rivals being in the same engineering meetings and team briefings, balancing race strategies, and the intensity only increases.Heading into this season, McLaren Racing chief executive officer Zak Brown and team principal Andrea Stella were well aware of the jeopardy, and consciously created a culture aimed at preventing the relationship between Norris and Piastri descending into disruptive conflict.They have a carefully thought out internal philosophy, applied with intelligence and empathy to two drivers who have been convinced that keeping things harmonious is the best solution for all.McLaren operate on a principle of fairness, trust and transparency, rooted in a basic principle that the drivers are allowed to race each other with equal treatment, with the proviso that they don't crash into each other."We are McLaren Racing," Stella says. "We are here to race."We want to give our two drivers the possibility to express their talent, achieve their aspirations, but this needs to be done within the principles and the approach that we have contributed to build together with our drivers. Fairness, sportsmanship, and respect for one another."Stella says he "leans on the experience" he has gained - through 25 years in F1 with Ferrari and McLaren, and as a student of F1 - to construct what he considers the optimum way of running the team.The McLaren team and drivers celebrated securing the constructors' championship at Singapore Grand Prix, with six races still remaining in the seasonThe starting point was that the only place the team cannot be fully united is in the quest for the drivers' championship. So don't ignore that. Put it first, and work from there."The way we operate now is the result of having learned so many lessons," Stella says. "We talk to the driver - straight talking."And if we get something wrong now, it needs to be, 'We didn't think about it.' But it can't be because we haven't talked openly and straight and honestly enough. Because that's the recipe to have a problem."Why this approach? Because if issues are not discussed when they arise, they are likely to pop up the next time there is a moment of stress, when they are more likely to be expressed in a negative way, and so become harder to control.Stella's achievement has been to get Norris and Piastri to buy into the idea that trusting the team to operate fairly is in their best interests, as well as those of the team, and consequently that the drivers should behave accordingly.He has probably been aided in this by the fact that both have spent their entire careers at McLaren, are growing up with the team and, thanks to their relationships with the management, trust what the team are trying to create and achieve.The drivers have reflected the culture Stella has constructed in repeatedly making two key points this year.First, that open, fair competition between two evenly matched team-mates drives McLaren forward by consistently raising the bar of performance, and gives them a collective advantage over rivals who don't have that; and second, that they both wanted this to be their first title campaign with McLaren, not their only one.Norris, who eventually prevailed thanks to his third-place finish in Abu Dhabi, says having "two drivers who respect the team and are not selfish" is fundamental in this."We work very well as team-mates," he says. "We've helped the team in a very good way. There's been plenty of examples [in the past] of things not going as smoothly as they have done. And the team's then gone in a downward spiral. That's what we want to avoid as a team - that's our priority."He adds: "I've always got on well with my team-mates since karting. I've always wanted to because it just makes my life more fun, more enjoyable, and that's also why I'm here - because I love what I do. So, the more I can do that, the better."But we still very much understand that we work for McLaren, we want the best for the team, we work very hard."As drivers always do, you try and maximise your own performance more than anything. But when we step out of the car, we can still have a joke, we still have laughs in our debriefs, and we still enjoy everything away from the track."Off track, there is no tension between Norris and Piastri. They are friendly but not best friends.What does that mean? Well, for example, if they are at an event, they will chat and eat with each other, quite happy in each other's company. But they probably won't be messaging when they've left.Both have been firm in their conviction that they would rather race this way and risk being beaten to the title by a rival - as so nearly happened with Verstappen this season - than have one prioritised by the team to the detriment of the other.Piastri says: "On both sides of the garage, we want to win because we've been the best driver, the best team, including against the other car in the team."You always want to earn things on merit and you want to be able to beat everyone, including your team-mate."That gives Lando and I the best chance of our personal goals of trying to become drivers' world champion, while also achieving the main result for the team, which is the constructors' championship."Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris collided at the start of the US Grand Prix sprint in October, putting both drivers out of the race. In June, they collided in Canada. Norris apologised for that incident, which forced his retirement from the grand prix.A small group of senior figures at McLaren discuss with the drivers how they are going to approach their racing. They review what happened after each grand prix, and apply the lessons for the following race.This happens in formal meetings, more informal conversations and ad hoc.And they keep building on that process, over and over again.This is all well and good in theory, but it's only sustainable in practice if everyone sticks to the principles when problems arise, as they inevitably do through an F1 season.In 2025, there have been a number of races where equality and harmony have been tested - particularly Hungary, Italy, Singapore and Austin.In Hungary, Norris was allowed to switch to a one-stop strategy after a bad start left him fifth, and ended up beating Piastri, whose two-stop from an early second place saw him spend the final laps trying and failing to pass Norris for the win.In Italy, a decision to invert the natural pit-stop choreography after they had spent the race running in the order Norris-Piastri behind Verstappen was followed by a slow pit stop for Norris, and Piastri being asked to hand back the second place he had inherited.In Singapore, Norris scrambled past Piastri into third place at the first series of corners, banging wheels in the process, leading to the Australian saying over the radio: "Are we cool with Lando just barging me out of the way?"In Austin, an attempted cut-back move by Piastri on Norris at the first corner of the sprint race ended up in a collision that took both of them out.Externally, these situations have either led to accusations that Norris was being favoured, or that McLaren were meddling too much, or both.Internally, they were dealt with quietly, behind closed doors, and with the apparent result that everyone came away satisfied it had been resolved in the best possible way.McLaren insiders have told BBC Sport that the driver meetings really are conducted in the way they are externally presented - issues are discussed openly, constructively and calmly, and a resolution is arrived at from which everyone can move on with equanimity, even if they had issues with what happened at the time.If there has been any deviation from that in the drivers' minds privately, they have certainly not given any hint of it in public.Piastri has rejected any suggestions that the team was not being fair, saying he's "very happy that there's no favouritism or bias".And Norris says: "We still always have the right to question it. We're never going to just go around - because I think it's just a racing driver's mind - and be happy to accept whatever the team wants to do or what they think is correct."I understand that a lot of people have different opinions and think maybe other things are correct. But I still stand by the fact that Andrea and Oscar and all of us together are confident that our approach is better than what other people's are."Brown says that any idea the team were siding with Norris is "nonsense".He explains that when they let Norris switch to a one-stop in Hungary, "Andrea and I were like, 'This ain't gonna work.' But it was a free punt, and Lando drove brilliantly."Monza, he says, was "just like what happened in Hungary the year before", when Norris let Piastri by for the win after a similar pit-lane arrangement."If the lead car is prepared to sacrifice their rights to the first call to help his team-mate, who's actually his number one competitor in the championship, that's great teamwork," Brown says."So I understand what it looks like from the outside, but it's not what's going on on the inside, and we're trying so hard to give them equal opportunity and let them race hard. I wish everyone recognised more of that."But I've definitely come to the conclusion there's too many fans with too many views that we've just got to be comfortable with how we're going racing inside McLaren, and that's what's most important to us."Can this be sustained into 2026? That's impossible to know.Norris and Piastri seem level-headed and humble. They are also both intensely ambitious.Becoming world champion can change drivers. The more successful they become, the more demanding they get, especially in their requirements off-track.McLaren have managed Norris and Piastri with sensitivity and effectiveness, but the challenges do not lessen just because that has been the case so far.If anyone has an understanding of how hard it is to pull this off, it is Fernando Alonso.The two-time champion has lived this dynamic in a title fight, and he's worked with both Stella and Brown - Stella at Ferrari then McLaren from 2010-18, and Brown when the American came on board at McLaren in 2016."The credit has to go for Andrea and Zak that they created a winning structure and car, but they were also able to manage the drivers for the benefit of the team," Alonso says."It is less exciting to watch and for media because there is no controversy in some of the wins, not yet."But instead of thinking that way, we should think how well Andrea and Zak are managing everything."Norris keen to 'live a normal few days' and 'forget I drive in F1'How Norris achieved his lifetime's ambition by 'winning it my way'Norris is 'only just getting going' - and rank British world championsBacked by his family, propelled by his talent - the rise of NorrisQuiz: How well do you know F1 champion Norris?Lando Norris: The Making of a World Champion
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CNBC Business Dec 8, 14:00

United maintains elite status requirements for 2027, but here's what's changing

LivestreamMenuMake ItselectUSAINTLLivestreamSearch quotes, news & videosLivestreamWatchlistSIGN INCreate free accountMarketsBusinessInvestingTechPoliticsVideoWatchlistInvesting ClubPROLivestreamMenuUnited Airlines is joining Delta Air Lines in holding steady its requirements to earn elite frequent flyer status next year after it raised the bar in 2025.Airlines have spent years making it more expensive to get high-tier status, which comes with perks like early boarding, free first-class upgrades (when they're available), waived baggage fees or even airport lounge access.But hordes of elite travelers in the wake of the pandemic — when airlines let many customers hold onto their status — have meant more crowded early boarding groups. And a rise in premium credit card-toting customers has led to longer waits at some airport lounges than at TSA checkpoints.Airline executives have also said that more customers are willing to pay cash to sit in first class, making fewer seats available for complimentary upgrades that are a draw for many consumers to chase status.For United, its program is more in balance now, said Luc Bondar, president of United's MileagePlus loyalty program. "When you have benefits like upgrades, if everyone has status, then … fewer and fewer customers are going to get access to upgrades," he said in an interview. "We feel good that they're at the right level."United is making some changes next year, when the status flyers earn will apply to travel in 2027. The airline is changing how its so-called Plus Points — a currency beyond regular miles that can be earned by top-tier Platinum and 1K loyalty program elites — can be used. The carrier currently has a mileage chart, where customers need to earn set amounts for certain cabins, like its top Polaris long-haul business class. In 2027, it will move instead to dynamic pricing based on demand. United next year will also allow elites with high-level 1K status to earn Plus Points through co-branded credit card spending.The carrier also said status holders and United Chase credit card holders will also have "increased access" to Polaris Saver Award fares, which the airline said will make it easier to book in the top cabin.Airlines' lucrative loyalty programs bring in billions in profits, in part when the carriers sell miles to banks when customers earn them through credit card spending. Last year, United raised the amount customers had to spend to reach frequent flyer status in 2026. The thresholds to reach elite status in the airline's MileagePlus program went up about 25% and include either spending on a co-branded card or a combination of spending and flying.Last week, Delta said it would keep its earning requirements the same next year for 2027 status.American Airlines hasn't announced a change to its frequent flyer program elite thresholds this year. The carrier trails Delta and United in profits and is trying to win over more big spenders with refreshed cabins and lounges, though its rivals' decision to hold elite-earning requirements steady could pressure American to do the same.Got a confidential news tip? We want to hear from you.Sign up for free newsletters and get more CNBC delivered to your inboxGet this delivered to your inbox, and more info about our products and services. Data is a real-time snapshot *Data is delayed at least 15 minutes. Global Business and Financial News, Stock Quotes, and Market Data and Analysis. Data also provided by
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BBC Sport Dec 8, 12:52

England cannot have 'glass jaw' - McCullum

Brendon McCullum's England team are winless in their past four TestsEngland will have "no chance" of recovering in the Ashes series if they play with a "glass jaw", says head coach Brendon McCullum.The tourists are 2-0 down with three to play after defeat in the second Test in Brisbane. England have never come back from that deficit to win an Ashes series.Following the loss at the Gabba, captain Ben Stokes said his dressing room is "no place for weak men".Asked if he agreed with Stokes, McCullum replied: "100%. It's no different to the language I've been using. You don't get to feel sorry for yourself in these jobs."This is not a country where you can expect to be anything other than fully committed to what you're doing."England are on the verge of surrendering the series at the earliest possible opportunity after losing the first two Tests in fewer than six days of cricket.In the first Test in Perth, the tourists were bowled out for 172 and 164, including collapses of seven wickets for 78 runs and 9-99. In the second innings in Brisbane, England lost 6-80."Ultimately, you can't afford to flinch when you come down here," said McCullum."This is not a country to start doubting yourself or to walk away from the challenge."You come to this country and have a glass jaw, you have no chance. You have to be strong, tough, and you have to get on with it."The loss in Brisbane extended England's winless run in Australia to 17 matches, including 15 defeats, dating back to 2011.Stokes' team must be victorious in all three of the remaining Tests, beginning in Adelaide on 17 December (23:30 GMT, 16 December), if they are to win the urn for the first time since 2015.England will spend part of the gap between Tests on a break in the resort town of Noosa, on the Sunshine Coast. They will then train for three days in the run-up to the match in Adelaide.Decisions around preparation and tour games have come under scrutiny on the tour. England played only one match, against England Lions, before the series began, then opted to send none of the players from the first Test to a Lions game against the Prime Minister's XI in the run-up to the second Test.'England in battle to avoid worst Ashes tour in modern times'England's 'Bazball' message dead - Agnew columnEngland fast bowler Wood out of Ashes tourThe visitors instead trained for five days in Brisbane, which McCullum said was "too much". The New Zealander now feels it is right for his team to "freshen up"."A few days away wouldn't be the worst thing," he said. "I'm a horse-racing man and in the horse-racing game you wouldn't keep doing the same thing with your horse if it's struggling a bit."Separately, it is understood the England and Wales Cricket Board will approach Cricket Australia over an arrangement covering the 2027 Ashes in the UK and the 2029-30 series in Australia.The approach would involve an agreement between the two boards to lay on the highest possible standard of warm-up facility and opposition to help ensure an entertaining, competitive Test series.McCullum admitted he was open to the possibility of making changes to the England team for Adelaide when he said: "Over a five-Test series you'll need a majority of your squad."Two players that would come under scrutiny are batter Ollie Pope and Jamie Smith, but both received backing from the coach.On Smith, McCullum said: "He's a flair player and he likes to approach the game in a simple way."He works very hard on his game but he also has the courage and conviction when he feels he's given himself the best chance. It doesn't guarantee everything but I'm sure he'll appreciate the conditions in Adelaide with the boundary sizes and the pitch."Asked about Pope, McCullum added: "Popey has been number three. He's done well. He's averaged 40-odd for us. He's our number three here in Australia."I've stressed that we have the squad that we've got. There's no sense looking elsewhere. We're confident in everyone and that hasn't changed. We've just got to find ways to go to get ourselves back into this contest."Get cricket news sent straight to your phone
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Sky News Dec 8, 12:33

Host of British stars nominated for Golden Globes

British drama Adolescence has seen its lead stars all nominated for Golden Globe awards. The drama, starring Stephen Graham, depicts the aftermath of the stabbing of a teenage girl, as a 13-year-old boy from her school is arrested for her murder. It was one of the most talked-about shows of the year. Graham, along with Owen Cooper, Ashley Walters and Erin Doherty are all up for gongs. It follows a host of wins at the Emmys in September. Receiving five nominations in total, the Netflix limited series was only beaten by White Lotus, which got six nods, coming top in the TV category. Cynthia Erivo was nominated for her role in the Wicked sequel, Wicked For Good, while British stars Gary Oldman, Helen Mirren and Aimee Lou Wood and Jason Isaacs also got recognition for their roles in Slow Horses, Mobland and The White Lotus, respectively. Mirren will also be awarded one of the Globe's two lifetime achievement awards, the Cecil B DeMille Award, announced a few days before the ceremony in the New Year. Emily Blunt picked up a surprise nomination for her role in The Smashing Machine, opposite Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson - who also got a nod for the sports biopic, which was not well received by critics. Jacob Elordi got two nods, one for Guillermo del Toro movie Frankenstein and one for the Australian miniseries The Narrow Road To The Deep South. Tessa Thompson was recognised for her role in Hedda, a modern re-telling of Henrik Ibsen's classic play, Jude Law for crime thriller Black Rabbit and Bella Ramsay for post-apocalyptic hit The Last Of Us. Irish stars Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley were both nominated for Hamnet, the adaptation of Maggie O'Farrell's book about William Shakespeare and his wife Agnes. The movie isn't out in the UK until January. Surprises and snubs Unlike other awards, the Golden Globes cover both TV and film and are split by genre, falling into either the drama or comedy and musical category - meaning a wealth of nominees are in the running. This year, there are 28 categories. In the film category, One Battle After Another, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, led the nominations with nine, followed by Norwegian comedy-drama Sentimental Value with eight, and vampire horror Sinners with seven. While Wicked saw its sequel score five nominations, including best actress and best supporting actress for its two female leads Erivo and Ariana Grande, it failed to get a nod in best musical or comedy film, which many will see as a snub for the box office hit. One surprise nod went to Sorry, Baby star Eva Victor, nominated for best actress in a drama, for the black comedy they wrote, directed and starred in. KPop Demon Hunters, the most-watched film on Netflix ever, received three nominations - best animated film, cinematic and box office achievement and original song - making an Oscar nod further down the line look more and more likely. New to this year's nominations is a category for podcasts. Selected from a long list of the 25 most-listened to shows, Good Hang With Amy Poehler, Armchair Expert With Dax Shepard and Call Her Daddy were among the casts that made the cut. Sarah Jessica Parker will be honoured with the Carol Burnett Award. Now in comeback mode, the Globes had previously faced criticism over a lack of diversity in the organisation, which led to the event being held behind closed doors in 2022. The 83rd Golden Globes ceremony will take place in LA on 11 January, and will be hosted by US comedian Nikki Glaser for the second year running.
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BBC World Dec 8, 12:19

Elon Musk's X bans European Commission from making ads after €120m fine

Elon Musk's X bans European Commission from making ads after €120m fine1 day agoShareSaveLaura CressTechnology reporterShareSaveGetty ImagesX has blocked the European Commission from making adverts on its platform - a move which comes a few days after it fined Elon Musk's site €120m (£105m) over its blue tick badges.Nikita Bier, who has a senior role at the social media site, accused the European Union (EU) regulator of trying to "take advantage" of "an exploit" in its advertising system to promote its post about the fine on Friday."It seems you believe that the rules should not apply to your account," he said. "Your ad account has been terminated."A European Commission spokesperson told BBC News the Commission "always uses all social media platforms in good faith".X's fine, issued on Friday, was the first under the EU's Digital Services Act.The EU regulator said the platform's blue tick system was "deceptive" because the firm was not "meaningfully verifying users"."This deception exposes users to scams, including impersonation frauds, as well as other forms of manipulation by malicious actors," it said.It claimed X was also failing to provide transparency around its adverts, and was not giving researchers access to public data.The social media platform has been given 60 days to respond to the Commission about concerns surrounding its blue checkmarks, or face extra penalties.Following the fine, Elon Musk posted on his platform to say the EU "should be abolished", and retweeted a response from another X user comparing it to fascism.US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) accused the EU regulator of attacking and censoring US firms, adding, "the days of censoring Americans online are over".'Never been abused like this'The dispute originated with Mr Bier, who accused the Commission of activating a rarely-used account "to take advantage of an exploit".He claimed it had posted a link which itself deceived users - tricking them into thinking it was a video "to artificially increase its reach".He said the "exploit", which had "never been abused like this", had now been removed.Ad accounts on X are used by businesses to create and analyse paid advertising campaigns and run "promoted" posts on the site, separate from the users' X profile. In response, a European Commission spokesperson told BBC News that it was "simply using the tools that platforms themselves are making available to our corporate accounts"."⁠We expect these tools to be fully in line with the platforms' own terms and conditions, as well as with our legislative framework," it said.And it is not the first time there has been disagreement between X and global regulators.In 2024, Brazil's Supreme Court lifted a ban on X after it agreed to pay 28 million reais ($5.1m; £3.8m), and blocked accounts accused of spreading misinformation. The previous year, Australia's internet safety watchdog fined it A$610,000 ($386,000; £317,360) for failing to cooperate with a probe into anti-child abuse practices.Sign up for our Tech Decoded newsletter to follow the world's top tech stories and trends. Outside the UK? Sign up here.Social mediaElon MuskTwitter
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BBC Sport Dec 8, 11:38

'That's life' - Verstappen and Piastri react to missing out on title

Red Bull driver Max Verstappen says "life goes on", while McLaren driver Oscar Piastri adds that he's "proud" of the work he and his team have put in after finishing first and second in the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix but missing out on the Formula 1 world title.READ MORE: How Norris achieved his lifetime's ambition by 'winning it my way'
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Europol Dec 8, 11:00

Operational Taskforce GRIMM: 193 arrests in 6 months tackling violence-as-a-service networks

Launched in April 2025, the taskforce has been focused on combating the emerging trend of VaaS, where criminals outsource violent acts, often relying on young, inexperienced perpetrators. These individuals are groomed or coerced into committing a range of violent crimes, from acts of intimidation and torture to murder.What began as a growing issue in Sweden has now spread across Europe, with criminal networks operating in multiple countries. In response, OTF GRIMM has brought together specialised investigators from Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom, alongside Europol experts and online service providers. This collaborative effort is aimed at disrupting the recruitment process, which predominantly takes place on social media platforms, and stopping the spread of murder-for-hire services.Key figures from the first six months of OTF GRIMM63 perpetrators arrested, directly preventing violent crimes40 enablers apprehended, halting their facilitation of violence-for-hire services84 recruiters detained, obstructing efforts to exploit vulnerable young people6 instigators arrested, including 5 High Value TargetsOTF GRIMM has mapped out the key players in the recruitment process. More details are available on the page, Instigator to Perpetrator: How Violence-for-Hire Services Operate.Recent casesThe cases detailed below, which were developed through OTF GRIMM, highlight the growing trend of violent acts being commissioned across borders.Attempted murder (Germany, the Netherlands)On 12 May 2025, an attempted murder took place in Tamm, Germany. Two suspects, aged 26 and 27, were arrested in the Netherlands on 1 October 2025.Triple shooting (the Netherlands, Sweden, Germany) On 28 March 2025, three people were killed in Oosterhout, the Netherlands. Three suspects were arrested in Sweden and Germany.Attempted murder (Spain, Sweden) On 1 July 2025, six suspects, including a minor, were arrested in Spain for planning a murder. The operation also led to the seizure of firearms and ammunition, preventing a potential tragedy.The road aheadThe fight against VaaS is ongoing. OTF GRIMM’s next steps include working to further disrupt the criminal service providers. The taskforce will continue to strengthen cross-border intelligence sharing to ensure timely, coordinated action. Closer cooperation with tech companies is equally important to detect and block recruitment activities on social media platforms, preventing young people from being exploited by these criminal networks.
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Sky News Dec 8, 10:47

Paramount launches hostile takeover bid for Warner Bros

Paramount has launched a $108.4bn (£81bn) hostile bid for Warner Bros, challenging Netflix, which had reached a $72bn (£54bn) takeover deal with the company.Paramount said on Monday that it was going straight to Warner Bros Discovery (WBD) shareholders with its cash offer for the entirety of the company, including its Global Networks segment, asking them to reject the deal with Netflix.
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Sky News Dec 8, 09:10

Tim Westwood denies rape and sexual assault

Former Radio 1 DJ Tim Westwood has pleaded not guilty to four counts of rape, nine counts of indecent assault and two counts of sexual assault.The 68-year-old arrived at Southwark Crown Court on Monday, wearing a black hooded jacket, a maroon shirt and dark trousers.Westwood stood with his hands clasped in front of him as he confirmed his name, before sitting down in the glass dock.He is alleged to have raped women, kissed them and touched their bodies without consent.The offences are said to have taken place against seven different women between 1983 and 2016.Three of the alleged indecent assaults are said to have taken place at the BBC studios in the 1990s.Westwood was granted bail, with the condition not to contact the complainants ahead of a pre-trial review hearing, scheduled for next December.Last month, Westwood returned to the UK from Nigeria to appear in court.He has attended five police interviews voluntarily since the investigation into the alleged offences began.Westwood has previously denied all allegations of sexual misconduct made against him.Charges against Westwood include an allegation of rape against a woman at a hotel in London in 1996, one count of rape from the early 2000s at an address in London, and two counts of rape at an address in London in the 2010s.He is further accused of four indecent assaults in London in the 1980s, three indecent assaults at the BBC in the 1990s, and two indecent assaults in the early 2000s.The former DJ is also alleged to have sexually assaulted a woman at a nightclub in Stroud, Gloucestershire, in 2010.Be the first to get Breaking NewsInstall the Sky News app for free
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BBC World Dec 8, 08:38

Syrians share their thoughts one year on from the fall of Assad

Watch: Syrians share their thoughts one year on from the fall of AssadOne year ago today, Bashar al-Assad's 24-year rule came to an end, bringing a close to 13 years of brutal civil war.On 8 December 2024, Assad stepped down as Syria's president and fled to Russia, marking one of the most significant political shifts in the Middle East in decades.Twelve months on, the dust has begun to settle but the country is still grappling with the immense social, political and emotional toll left behind.While Syria's interim government has promised to protect all its citizens, not just the majority population of Sunni Muslims, hundreds of people from the country's Alawite and Druze minorities have been killed in sectarian attacks, including by members of the government's forces.The BBC's Middle East correspondent, Hugo Bachega, is in Syria's capital, Damascus, speaking to Syrians about how life has changed since the revolution. 1 day agoMiddle EastDamascusSyrian civil warBashar al-AssadSyriaShareSaveBethlehem Christmas tree illuminated for first time since Gaza war beganHundreds gathered in Manger Square to bask in the festivities that included music, dancing and Santas bearing sweet treats.Middle EastPopemobile becomes a mobile health clinic for Gaza childrenThe vehicle had transported the late Pope Francis on a visit to Bethlehem in 2014.Middle EastGazan babies will die without aid - UN humanitarian chiefAbout 14,000 babies will die in 48 hours if aid does not reach them, a UN humanitarian chief warns.Middle East'We want to raise our children': Life in Gaza after hostages and prisoners releasedThe United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) says over 80% of all buildings in the territory are destroyed or damaged.Middle East'Indescribable happiness' as detainees return to GazaIsrael says it has released 1,968 prisoners and detainees as part of a ceasefire deal with Hamas.Middle East'It will be a golden age for the Middle East' - TrumpThe US president was speaking at the Israeli parliament after the release of all 20 living hostages from Gaza.Middle EastWatch: Palestinian prisoners released in West Bank to rapturous crowdsIsrael is releasing 250 Palestinian prisoners as part of the ceasefire deal with Hamas.Middle EastWatch: Emotional reunions as freed hostages return to IsraelVideo released by the Israeli military shows Mor smiling and embracing two relatives. Middle EastFreed hostages shown in first video from IDFThe footage shows Alon Ohel and Guy Gilboa-Dalal speaking to Israeli soldiers after being freed from Hamas captivity in Gaza.Middle EastWatch: Emotional moment mum video calls hostage son ahead of reunionEinav Zangauker, the mother of a hostage freed from Hamas captivity and brought to Israel, spoke with him via video call for the first time in two years.Middle EastIsraeli crowds cheer at news of first hostages released in GazaLarge numbers of people packed out Hostages Square in Tel Aviv, where screens were erected to welcome home hostages freed from Hamas captivity.Middle EastWhat do people in the West Bank think about the ceasefire deal?Palestinians in the West Bank say they hope the deal could lead to a united Palestinian future. Middle EastBBC correspondents share their memories of 7 OctoberThe BBC's Middle East Correspondent Yolande Knell and Gaza Correspondent Rushdi Abualouf talk about their memories of 7 October.Middle EastHopes and fears in Gaza and Israel over potential ceasefireHopes are growing of an end to the Israel-Gaza war, but it remains to be seen if the two sides can agree a ceasefire.Middle EastWalk-out and loudspeakers near Gaza: See how Netanyahu's UN speech unfoldedDozens of officials and diplomats staged a walk-out as he took to the podium, leaving large parts of the hall empty. Middle East'Order in the hall': Dozens walk out as Netanyahu begins speech at UNDozens of people filed out of the room in protest at the United Nations General Assembly in New York.Middle EastRecognition of statehood 'rewards Palestinian people' says Iraqi presidentThe Iraqi President Abdul Latif Rashid has rejected Washington’s argument that the move is a reward for Hamas.Middle EastWatch: Keir Starmer says UK recognises Palestinian statePrime Minister Starmer says the move will "revive the hope of peace" but Israel says it is "nothing but a reward for jihadist Hamas".Middle EastIsrael demolishes more high-rise towers as Gaza City offensive ramps upBBC Verify's Merlyn Thomas looks at the latest Israeli strikes on buildings in Gaza City city over the weekend.Middle EastFootage shows second claimed attack on Greta Thunberg Gaza flotillaBBC Verify analyses footage of the suspected drone attacks and images of a device found after the incident.Middle East
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Europol Dec 8, 08:00

New report explores use of robotics and unmanned systems in the fight against crime

The report underscores the rapid advancement and integration of unmanned systems in various sectors, including law enforcement. As these technologies become more sophisticated and widespread, they offer new opportunities for law enforcement operations and operational support. However, they also introduce new security threats – such as misuse by criminal and terrorist groups – and regulatory challenges that law enforcement agencies must address to ensure public safety and maintain trust.Catherine De BolleEuropol Executive DirectorThe integration of unmanned systems into crime is already here, and we have to ask ourselves how criminals and terrorists might use drones and robots some years from now. Just as the internet and smartphones presented significant opportunities as well as challenges, so will this technology. Our new report by Europol’s Innovation Lab explores the future operating environment for European law enforcement agencies and suggests actions needed today in order to effectively combat crime while upholding public trust and fundamental rights tomorrow.One chapter of the report highlights the role of war as a driver for innovation in unmanned systems. Recent conflicts, such as the ongoing Russian war of aggression against Ukraine, have accelerated the development and deployment of advanced unmanned systems. The lessons learnt from these conflicts are invaluable for law enforcement agencies in Europe as they prepare for the future operating environment.Some of the key topics covered in the report include:Increasing use of unmanned systemsUnmanned systems are becoming increasingly useful, affordable and widely available, with applications in both public and private sectors. Law enforcement agencies across Europe are scaling up adoption of such systems, including drones and robots, to enhance situational awareness, improve safety and extend operational reach. These systems are employed for a range of tasks, such as monitoring, crime scene mapping, search and rescue operations, and the disposal of explosive ordnance, among others. Converging technologies present a significant opportunity for a breakthrough in the capabilities of unmanned systems.Technical and regulatory challengesThe report highlights significant technical limitations and regulatory gaps that hinder the effective use of unmanned systems in law enforcement. Issues such as limited autonomy, dependence on industrial suppliers and the lack of clear guidelines for autonomous operations pose substantial challenges.Security threatsCriminal and terrorist groups are rapidly adopting unmanned systems for illicit activities. The report warns of the potential for these systems to be used for criminal surveillance, smuggling and even attacks. The increasing accessibility and versatility of drones, in particular, present serious security concerns.Public trust and regulationPublic trust is crucial for the legitimacy of law enforcement capabilities. The report emphasises the need for transparency, accountability and public engagement in the deployment of unmanned systems. Current regulations, while advancing, still have gaps, particularly in addressing non-compliant or criminal use.Future operating environmentThe future of law enforcement will require policing in a three-dimensional space, as unmanned systems operate in the air and on the ground, as well as on and under water. This shift will necessitate new strategies, technologies and training for law enforcement agencies.RecommendationsThe report provides a set of recommendations for European law enforcement agencies, including the development of a strategic direction, the establishment of a competency hub and the integration of unmanned systems into existing information systems. It also calls for investments in training, education and public trust-building initiatives.The report is available for download on the Europol website and includes detailed insights, case studies and recommendations for law enforcement agencies, policymakers and other stakeholders.
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BBC World Dec 8, 07:08

Man found guilty of Australian beach murder after hiding in India for years

Man found guilty of Australian beach murder after hiding in India for years2 days agoShareSaveTiffanie TurnbullSydneyShareSaveQueensland Police ServiceThe murder of Toyah Cordingley prompted an outpouring of grief across the state of QueenslandA former nurse has been found guilty of the high-profile murder of Toyah Cordingley, whose body was found on a popular tropical beach in Australia seven years ago.Toyah Cordingley was stabbed at least 26 times while out on a Sunday afternoon walk with her dog in October 2018.The 24-year-old's body was discovered by her father, half-buried in sand dunes on Wangetti beach between the popular tourist hotspots of Cairns and Port Douglas.Rajwinder Singh, 41, fled to India the day after Ms Cordingley's body was found and spent four years on the run. After a month-long trial, he was found guilty by a jury on Monday, eliciting cheers and tears from members of the public gathered in court.It is the second trial for Singh, after a trial in March ended in a hung jury.A health store worker and animal shelter volunteer, Ms Cordingley was well known, and well loved, by the local community and her death caused an outpouring of grief across the state of Queensland.Ms Cordingley was "repeatedly" stabbed with a sharp object and put in a shallow sandy grave with "little or no hope of surviving", the Cairns Supreme Court heard.Singh - originally from the Indian state of Punjab - had been living in Innisfail at the time of the killing, a town about two hours south of the crime scene. Detectives had quickly zeroed in on him as a suspect, but he had already flown out of the country, leaving his wife, three children and parents behind, the trial heard.GettyRajwinder Singh fled to India the day after Toyah Cordingley's body was found.Prosecutors alleged this was an indication of his guilt. Though circumstantial, their case would show the evidence pointed to Singh "and eliminated others", the court heard.That evidence included DNA recovered from a stick at the scene which was 3.8 billion times more likely to have come from Singh than a random member of the public. They also said the movements of Ms Cordingley's phone matched the movements of Singh's car in the moments after the attack.Singh will return to court for a sentencing hearing on Tuesday.Will reward help find Toyah Cordingley's killer?Jury in high-profile Australian trial visit beach where murder victim foundAustralia
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BBC World Dec 8, 06:00

Jeremy Bowen: Syria feels lighter without the Assads' crushing weight - but now there are new problems

Jeremy Bowen: Syria feels lighter without the Assads' crushing weight - but now there are new problems2 days agoShareSaveJeremy BowenInternational EditorShareSaveBBCA year ago, the war that President Bashar al-Assad seemed to have won was turned upside down.A rebel force had broken out of Idlib, a Syrian province on the border with Turkey, and was storming towards Damascus. It was led by a man known as Abu Mohammed al-Jolani, and his militia group, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS). Jolani was a nom-de-guerre, reflecting his family's roots in the Golan Heights, Syria's southern highlands, annexed by Israel after it was occupied in 1967. His real name is Ahmed al-Sharaa.One year later, he is interim president, and Bashar al-Assad is in a gilded exile in Russia. Syria is still in ruins. In every city and village I have visited this last 10 days, people were living in skeletal buildings gutted by war. But for all the new Syria's problems, it feels much lighter without the crushing, cruel weight of the Assads.Getty ImagesSyria is still in ruins. In cities and villages, many people are living in skeletal buildings gutted by warSharaa has found the going easier abroad than at home. He has won the argument with Saudi Arabia and the West that he is Syria's best chance of a stable future.In May, the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia arranged a brief meeting between Sharaa and US President Donald Trump. Afterwards, Trump called him a "young attractive tough guy".At home, Syrians know his weaknesses and the problems Syria faces better than foreigners. Sharaa's writ does not run in the north-east, where the Kurds are in control, or parts of the south where Syrian Druze, another minority sect, want a separate state backed by their Israeli allies. On the coast Alawites – Assad's sect – fear a repeat of the massacres they suffered in March.AFP via Getty ImagesTrump called him a 'young attractive tough guy'A year ago, the new masters of Damascus, like most of the armed rebels in Syria, were Sunni Islamists. Sharaa, their leader, had a long history fighting for al-Qaeda in Iraq, where he had been imprisoned by the Americans, and then was a senior commander with the group that became Islamic State.Later, as he built his power base in Syria, he broke with and fought both IS and al-Qaeda. People who had travelled to Idlib to see him said that he had developed a much more pragmatic set of beliefs, better suited to governing Syria, with its spectrum of religious sects. Sunnis are the majority. As well as Kurds and Druze, there are Christians, many of whom find it hard to forget Sharaa's jihadist past.Image of a man who outgrew his jihadist rootsIn the first week of December last year, it was hard to believe that the HTS offensive was moving so fast. It took them three days to capture Aleppo, Syria's northern powerhouse.Compare that with the tortured years between 2012 and 2016, when the regime's army and rebel militias had fought for control of the city: that had ended in victory for Assad after Russia's president Vladimir Putin deployed his air force and artillery to add decisive firepower to the regime's ruthless tactics.When I visited the former rebel strongholds in eastern Aleppo a few weeks after they had fallen to the regime, large areas were devastated by Russian bombing. Some streets were blocked by rubble that went up to first-floor balconies.But by the end of 2024, across the country, government troops had melted away. Both reluctant conscripts and regime loyalists were no longer prepared to fight and die for a corrupt and cruel regime that repaid them with poverty and oppression.AFP via Getty ImagesOne year ago - celebrations marking the dawn of a new era for SyriaA few days after Assad fled with his family to Russia, I interviewed Syria's victorious new leader in the presidential palace.It perches high on a crag overlooking Damascus, designed as an ever-visible reminder for the city's citizens of the all-seeing power of the Assads. By then Jolani had discarded his name, along with his combat fatigues.Sharaa sat down in the chilly halls of the unheated palace wearing a smart jacket, pressed trousers and shiny black shoes. He told me that the country was exhausted by war and was not a threat to its neighbours or to the West, insisting that they would govern for all Syrians. It was a message that many Syrians and foreign governments wanted to hear.Israel dismissed it, however. And jihadist hardliners branded Sharaa as a traitor, selling out his religion and his own history.Watch: BBC speaks to Syrian rebel leader Ahmed al-SharaaI had packed in a hurry to report on a war, never expecting the regime to crumble so fast. My formal attire was back at home in London. After the interview one of his aides complained that I should have worn a suit to interview a national leader.His grumble was about more than my sartorial choices. It was the continuation of a long campaign that had started years earlier as Sharaa built up his power in Idlib. The campaign was designed to present him as a man who had outgrown his jihadist roots to become a worthy leader of all Syria, a leader the rest of the world should take seriously and treat with respect.A weakened IS in SyriaSharaa took power amid huge uncertainty about what he might do, and what might be done to him by his enemies. Among them were dark fears that jihadist extremists of the Islamic State, still existing in sleeper cells, could try to kill him, or cause chaos with mass casualty attacks in Damascus.Jihadists rage on social media about Sharaa's charm offensive in the west. After he agreed to join the US-led coalition against Islamic State, prominent voices online branded him an apostate, a Muslim who had turned on his own religion. Extremists could take that as a licence to kill.The reality is that IS in Syria is weak. Its attacks this year have been mostly against Kurdish-led forces in the north-east.That has changed in the last few weeks, leading up to the anniversary of the fall of the Assad regime.Getty ImagesThe war that President Bashar al-Assad seemed to have won was turned upside down one year agoAs security forces have raided IS cells, the jihadists have killed three soldiers and two former Assad operatives in cities controlled by the government, according to data collected by Charles Lister, a leading commentator on Syria, and published in a newsletter Syria Weekly. IS social media channels monitored by the BBC continue to tell Syrian Sunnis that Sharaa has betrayed them.Without producing any proof, they have posted claims that he has been an agent of the US and UK, working to undermine the jihadist project.Winning over Trump and the westSharaa's overtures to the west have been remarkably successful.Within two weeks of taking power in Syria, he received a delegation of senior American diplomats. Immediately, the Americans scrapped the $10 million bounty the they had put on his arrest.Since then, sanctions imposed on Assad's Syria have been steadily reduced. The most swingeing, the Caesar Act, has been suspended and could be repealed by the US Congress in the new year.A major milestone came in November when Sharaa became the first Syrian president to visit the White House.APTrump sprayed Sharaa with cologne, before presenting him with his own supply to take homeTrump's welcome in the Oval Office was relaxed. He sprayed Sharaa with Trump-branded cologne, before presenting him with his own supply to take home for his wife, jokingly asking him how many he has. "One," Sharaa answered, as he blinked away clouds of fragrance.Away from the larking around for the cameras, Saudi Arabia as well as western governments see Sharaa as the best bet – the only one – to stabilise a country that sits at the heart of the Middle East. If Syria slipped back into civil war, there would be zero chance of reducing the violent turbulence in the region.One senior western diplomat told me that the conditions for civil war still exist. That is because of the lasting scars of half a century of dictatorship and 14 years of a war that started as an uprising against the Assads' oppressive rule and turned into an increasingly sectarian fight.AFP via Getty ImagesMany western governments see Sharaa as the best bet to stabilise Syria. His minister for foreign affairs, Assad al-Shaibani is front rightSharaa is a Sunni Muslim, Syria's largest religious group. His government does not control the whole country. In the last year he has not been able to persuade, or force, Kurds in the north-east and Druze in the south to accept the authority of Damascus. On the coast, the Alawite community is nervous and restive.The Alawites are a sect that originated in Shia Islam, with their heartland on Syria's Mediterranean coast. The Assads are Alawites.The founder of the regime, Bashar's father Hafez al-Assad, built his power on the Alawite minority, around 10% of the population. Just the sound of the Alawite accent, especially coming from a man in uniform – or worse, a leather-jacketed operative from one of the regime's intelligence agencies – used to make other Syrians nervous.Syria will not recover if sectarian killing continues. Stopping more serious outbreaks of violence in the next 12 months is the government's most serious challenge.The slow pace of justiceJust before the anniversary of Assad's fall, the UN human rights office (OHCHR) expressed serious concern about the slow pace of justice. A spokesman said, "While the interim authorities have taken encouraging steps towards addressing past violations, these steps are only the beginning of what needs to be done."Some Syrians have taken matters into their own hands, along, at times, with government forces. The OHCHR said that hundreds have been killed over the past year "by the security forces and affiliated groups, elements associated with the former government, local armed groups and unidentified armed individuals".They added: "Other reported violations and abuses include sexual violence, arbitrary detentions, destruction of homes, forced evictions, and restrictions on freedoms of expression and peaceful assembly."Alawite, Druze, Christian and Bedouin communities were mainly affected by the violence, the OHCHR said, which has been fed by rising hate speech both on- and offline.Anadolu via Getty ImagesA graduation ceremony for general security personnel last monthA big risk for 2026 is a repeat of last March's sectarian violence in Alawite areas.In the security vacuum that followed the fall of the Assad regime, the new government attempted to stamp its authority on the Syrian coast with a series of arrests. An investigation by OCHCR found that "pro-former government fighters responded by capturing, killing, and injuring hundreds of interim government forces".Damascus responded harshly and lost control of militant armed factions that carried a systematic series of deadly attacks on Alawites.The UN found that some 1,400 people, predominantly civilians, were reported killed in the ensuing massacres. The vast majority were adult men, but victims included approximately 100 women, the elderly and the disabled, as well as children.The Sharaa government cooperated with the UN investigation. Some of its forces managed to rescue Alawites and it has put some of the ringleaders of the massacres on trial. ReutersThe UN found that some 1,400 people, predominantly civilians, were reported killed during sectarian violence in Alawite areas in MarchThe UN Syria Commission of Inquiry confirmed it had found no evidence the authorities had ordered the attacks. But the concern then and for the future was that the Damascus government could not control armed Sunni groups that had supposedly joined its security forces.In July in the southern province of Suweida, serious violence between Druze and Bedouin communities shook the Sharaa administration to its roots. The Druze religion developed out of Islam around a thousand years ago, and its followers, who some Muslims believe are heretics, amount to around 3% of Syria's population.When government forces entered Suweida, supposedly to restore order, they ended up fighting Druze militias. Israel, which has its own Druze community that is fiercely loyal to the Jewish state, intervened. Its airstrikes included the near destruction of the ministry of defence in Damascus. It took a rapid American intervention to force a ceasefire that stopped a spiral down into much worse violence. Tens of thousands of people were driven from their homes and remain displaced.Getty ImagesA UN inquiry found no evidence the authorities had ordered the attacks in March. But the concern was that the Damascus government could not control armed Sunni groupsThe Israel questionIt is still not clear whether Sharaa and his interim government are strong enough to survive another crisis as serious as that. Israel remains a looming and dangerous presence to Syrians.After the fall of Assad, the Israelis launched a series of major air strikes to destroy what was left of the old regime's military capacity. The IDF advanced out of the occupied Golan Heights to take control of more Syrian territory, which it still holds.The Israelis were taking advantage of the chaos in Syria to weaken a country it saw as hostile, destroying weapons it said might be turned in its direction.More from InDepthThe battle over Gaza's future: Why no-one can agree on the rebuildRussia's attacks have ramped up - Ukraine is fighting to hold on through another winterMysterious drones have been spotted at night at airports across Europe. How worried should we be?Attempts by the US to broker a security agreement between Israel and Syria have stalled in the last two months or so.Syria wants to return to an agreement originally negotiated by Henry Kissinger when he was US Secretary of State in 1974. Netanyahu wants Israel to stay in the land it seized and has demanded that Syria demilitarises a large area south of Damascus.In the last month Israel has intensified its ground incursions into Syria. Syria Weekly, which collects data on violence, calculates that there were more than twice as many as the monthly average for the rest of the year.We visited the border village of Beit Jinn, which was raided by IDF troops on 28 November. The IDF said they were arresting Sunni militants who were planning attacks. Local men fought back, wounding six Israelis as the raiding party was forced into a hurried retreat, abandoning a military vehicle that they later destroyed with an airstrike. The Israelis killed at least 13 local people and wounded dozens, state media reported.It was a sign of how hard it will be to broker a security deal between Syria and Israel. The Damascus government called it a war crime. Calls for retaliation intensified.Dia Images via Getty ImagesThe border village of Beit Jinn was raided by IDF troops on 28 NovemberIn Washington, Trump was clearly worried by the raid. He posted on his Truth Social platform that he was "very satisfied" with Sharaa's efforts at stabilising Syria.He warned that it was "very important that Israel maintain a strong and true dialogue with Syria, and that nothing takes place that will interfere with Syria's evolution into a prosperous state".In Beit Jinn I met Khalil Abu Daher on his way back from hospital, his arm in plaster after surgery for a bullet wound. He invited me to his home, which is close to where the Israelis were exchanging fire with village men.Khalil told me he was here with his family when the Israelis entered the village at 3:30 am. They tried to find a safe place."I was in my house with my children. We went from one room to another. They shot at my two daughters. One was hit, and the other died instantly. When I picked her up, I was shot in the hand."The dead girl was 17-year-old Hiba Abu Daher, who was shot in the stomach. They sheltered, Khalil said, alongside Hiba's dead body for two hours before they were rescued and taken to hospital.When I visited, Khalil's nine-year-old daughter was lying on a blanket on the sofa, recovering from surgery to take a bullet out of her hip.Khalil's nine-year-old daughter lying on the sofa, recovering from surgery to take a bullet out of her hipThe girls' mother, Umm Mohammad, sat with the women of the family, desperately worried about the future."We want peace of mind," she told me. "We want to live in our homes, and we want a clinic and medical staff because we don't have one."We also want a doctor because there isn't one in Beit Jinn, nor is there a pharmacy. We want security."'We go to sleep and wake up afraid'A year after the end of Assad's rule, Syria's new rulers have scored some important achievements. They are still in power, which was not guaranteed when they took Damascus. President Trump has become Sharaa's most important backer. Sanctions are being lifted. The economy is showing signs of life and business deals are being done, including modernising oil and gas installations and privatising the airports in Damascus and Aleppo.But deals that are in the pipeline have not yet changed the lives of most Syrians. The government has no rebuilding fund. Reconstruction is up to individuals. Sectarian tensions are unresolved and could ignite again. The US-mediated dialogue with Israel has stalled.NurPhoto via Getty ImagesThe government has no rebuilding fund. Reconstruction is up to individualsBenjamin Netanyahu insists that Damascus might demilitarise a large area of southern Syria and shows no signs of ordering the IDF to pull back. Both points amount to a major violation of Syrian sovereignty. The Beit Jinn raid makes it harder for Damascus to offer concessions.Government in Damascus is centred on Sharaa himself, assisted by the foreign minister Asaad al-Shaibani and a few trusted associates. No serious attempt seems to be happening to create an accountable framework of government.Syria without the Assad family is a better place. But Umm Mohammad summed up the feelings of far too many Syrians."The future is difficult. We have nothing, not even schools. Our children are living in hell here. There is no safety for them. How will we live?"We want safety. We go to sleep and wake up afraid."Top picture credits: AFP via Getty Images and Anadolu via Getty ImagesBBC InDepth is the home on the website and app for the best analysis, with fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions and deep reporting on the biggest issues of the day. You can sign up for notifications that will alert you whenever an InDepth story is published - click here to find out howDamascusBashar al-AssadAleppoSyria
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BBC World Dec 8, 05:05

White South Africans divided on US refugee offer

White South Africans divided on US refugee offer2 days agoShareSaveClaire MawisaBBC Africa Eye, Free StateShareSaveBBCMarthinus has applied to move to the US fearing for his family's safetyThe 4m-high (13ft) electric steel gates, capped with spikes, creak open as Marthinus, a farmer, drives through in his pick-up truck. Cameras positioned at the entrance track his every move, while reams of barbed wire surround the farm in the rural Free State province in the heart of South Africa."It feels like a prison," he says as the gates clank shut behind him. "If they want to come and kill us they can. At least it will take them time to get to me."The fear of being attacked is very real for the white Afrikaner, who manages a farm with his wife and two young daughters. He did not want us to use his full name.His grandfather and his wife's grandfather were both murdered in farm attacks, and he lives a two-hour drive from where the body of 21-year-old farm manager Brendan Horner was discovered five years ago, tied to a pole, with a rope around his neck.Marthinus says he can't take a chance with his own family and, in February, they applied for refugee status in the US."I'm prepared to do that to get a better life for my wife and children. Because I don't want to be slaughtered and be hanged on a pole," he says."Our Afrikaner people are an endangered species."Not all white South Africans agree that they're being targeted and black farmers are also victims of the country's high crime rate.Marthinus will be leaving his farm behind if he moves to the USIt's estimated that thousands of Afrikaners - who are mostly white descendants of early European settlers - have begun the lengthy process of applying for refugee status in the US since President Donald Trump signed an executive order earlier this year, although the figures haven't been made public.Despite announcing in October that the US would reduce its yearly intake of refugees from 125,000 to 7,500, Trump has made the resettlement of Afrikaners a priority.A presidential document posted to the official daily journal of the US government stated that those accepted would "primarily" be Afrikaner South Africans and "other victims of illegal or unjust discrimination in their respective homelands".For Marthinus it's a way out."I will give my whole life just so that my wife and my kids can be safe. Living in fear, you know? Nobody deserves a life like that."Violent crime in South Africa is endemic.The latest crime figures released in November for the first quarter of 2025 show there was an average of 63 murders every day. While this was a decrease on the same period in 2024, South Africa's homicide rate remains one of the highest in the world. Farmer Thabo Makopo is also worried about being targeted by criminalsBlack farmers are also victims.On the outskirts of Ficksburg, a town at the foot of Free State's Imperani Mountain, Thabo Makopo has a small farm of 237 acres (96 hectares), where he tends sheep and cattle. Like Marthinus, the 45-year-old says farm attacks are his biggest problem."They are young men. They are armed and dangerous. Whether they will lose their life or take yours, they are going to take those livestock," he says.Thabo believes all farmers in the province, regardless of their race, are at risk of attack."It's all of us. I could be attacked today - it could happen to any of us."Police response rates to reports of crime are notoriously low, something the police here acknowledge but have said publicly that they are working on.In the meantime, South Africans are becoming increasingly dependent on private security. According to the official regulatory body for the private security sector in South Africa, there are more than 630,000 active security guards. That is more than the police and army combined.Morgan Barrett rejects the idea that there is a white genocideMany farmers, like Morgan Barrett, who is white, employ their own security guards, if they can afford it. He owns a 2,000-acre farm which has been in his family for six generations.Wrapped up in a thick jacket and hat, he climbs into his car to begin a night patrol. Between Morgan and his neighbours, they are out almost every night. Six of his cattle were stolen the previous week."You can call the police, and they may turn up two or three hours later, by which time the thieves will have run away," he says.Like Thabo, he doesn't believe he is targeted because of the colour of his skin."I don't buy that narrative that in this area the attacks are against whites only.""If they thought that the black guy had 20,000 rand ($1,200; £880) sitting in his safe, they'd attack him just as quickly as they'd attack the white guy with 20,000 [rand] in the safe."Asked about what he thinks of people claiming there is a "white genocide" in South Africa, he says he thinks they "have no real understanding of what a genocide is"."What happened in Rwanda is genocide. What is happening to white farmers is very bad, but I don't think you can call it genocide."Viewers outside the UK can watch the BBC Africa Eye documentary here on YouTube.Viewers in the UK can see more on Global Eye at 19:00 on BBC Two on MondayTrump has repeated the widely disputed claims there is a genocide against white farmers, while South African-born billionaire Elon Musk, has accused South African politicians of "actively promoting" a genocide.The government here has vehemently denied that Afrikaners and other white South Africans are being persecuted.The country does not release crime figures based on race, but in May, in order to debunk these claims, Police Minister Senzo Mchunu gave a breakdown of killings on farms.Mchunu said that between October 2024 and March 2025, there were 18 farm murders across South Africa. Sixteen of the victims were black, while two were white.Despite these statistics, the theory that white people are being persecuted for their race, once an idea confined to far-right groups in South Africa, continues to be propelled into the mainstream.Systematic racial persecution is something black people in South Africa, who make up more than 80% of the population, faced for decades.Under the apartheid system that lasted for 46 years from 1948, the white-minority government legally separated people based on the colour of their skin.It built on already existing discriminatory legislation.The right to vote, buy land and work in skilled jobs was reserved for white people. Millions of black South Africans were removed from their land and forced to live in segregated neighbourhoods where education in schools was restricted to maintain racial hierarchy.The regime was enforced through violence and repression.Even though apartheid ended in 1994, the profound racial inequalities continue to exist more than 30 years later.The post-apartheid government did introduce affirmative action policies to try and redress some of the issues, but these have been criticised by some for not being effective and introducing "race quotas".Nevertheless, 72% of private farmland is still in white hands, according to the government's 2017 Land Audit report. That's despite white people making up just 7.3% of the population.A land reform programme - based on the principle of willing-seller willing-buyer - has hardly moved the dial. A new law this year does give the state the power to expropriate some privately owned land without compensation for owners, but this is only in rare circumstances, according to legal experts who spoke to the BBC.And while white farmers own more private land than any other group in the country, victims of farm attacks span across all races. The political spotlight is on white farmers, yet crime and violence on the ground is indiscriminate.Nthabiseng Nthathakana's husband died when criminals attacked their small shopIn Meqheleng, a township on the outskirts of Ficksburg where black South Africans were forcibly relocated during the apartheid regime, Nthabiseng Nthathakana owns a small general store.On 15 January this year, there was a robbery while her husband, Thembani Ncgango, was closing up. He managed to run to a neighbour's house but his attackers threatened to kill them if they opened the door.Nthabiseng found Thembani's body on the ground outside."He had bullets everywhere and stab wounds. They had stabbed him and hit him with rocks," she says.No-one has been arrested for his murder.Nthabiseng is now the sole provider for her four children."The kids ask questions: 'Mama who killed dad?' And you don't know what to say," she says.Two hour's drive from Ficksburg, Marthinus and his family have just found out their refugee application to the US has been successful.They're busy planning the big move, waiting to hear when their flights will be allocated.He maintains white people are being persecuted in South Africa."A lot of people believe that it's a political thing to get rid of us as white farmers or white people in this country, so they can have this land for themselves and this place for themselves."I'm really grateful to be getting away from this feeling of fear. I'm thankful to almighty God for answering our prayers."Additional reporting by Isa-Lee Jacobson and Tamasin FordMore from BBC Africa Eye:Ahead of the G20, is Johannesburg's city centre in ruins?Hunting down those who kill people to sell their body parts for 'magic charms'BBC reveals horrific exploitation of children in Kenya sex tradeCaught in the crossfire - the victims of Cape Town's gang warfare‘Terrible things happened’ - inside TB Joshua’s church of horrorsGetty Images/BBCGo to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafricaBBC Africa podcastsFocus on AfricaThis Is AfricaSouth AfricaAfrica
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BBC World Dec 8, 00:49

Japan is facing a dementia crisis – can technology help?

Japan is facing a dementia crisis – can technology help?2 days agoShareSaveSuranjana TewariAsia Business Correspondent, TokyoShareSaveBBCScientists at Waseda University in Tokyo are developing caregiving robotsLast year, more than 18,000 older people living with dementia left their homes and went missing in Japan. Almost 500 were later found dead.Police say such cases have doubled since 2012. Elderly people aged 65 and over now make up nearly 30% of Japan's population - the second-highest proportion in the world after Monaco, according to the World Bank. The crisis is further compounded by a shrinking workforce and tight limits on foreign workers coming in to provide care.Japan's government has identified dementia as one of its most urgent policy challenges, with the Health Ministry estimating that dementia-related health and social care costs will reach 14 trillion yen ($90bn; £67bn) by 2030 - up from nine trillion yen in 2025. In its most recent strategy, the government has signalled a stronger pivot toward technology to ease the pressure.Across the country, people are adopting GPS-based systems to keep track of those who go missing.Some regions offer wearable GPS tags that can alert authorities the moment a person leaves a designated area.In some towns, convenience-store workers receive real-time notifications – a kind of community safety net that can locate a missing person within hours.Robot caregivers and AIOther technologies aim to detect dementia earlier.Fujitsu and Acer Medical's aiGait uses AI to analyse posture and walking patterns, picking up early signs of dementia – shuffling while walking, slower turns or difficulty standing – generating skeletal outlines clinicians can review during routine check-ups."Early detection of age-related diseases is key," says Hidenori Fujiwara, a Fujitsu spokesperson. "If doctors can use motion-capture data, they can intervene earlier and help people remain active for longer."Meanwhile, researchers at Waseda University are developing AIREC, a 150kg humanoid robot designed to be a "future" caregiver. It can help a person put on socks, scramble eggs and fold laundry. The scientists at Waseda University hope that in the future, AIREC will be able to change adult nappies and prevent bedsores in patients.Toshio Morita (R) works at the Restaurant of Mistaken OrdersSimilar robots are already being used in care homes to play music to residents or guide them in simple stretching exercises.They are also monitoring patients at night - placed under mattresses to track sleep and conditions - and cutting back on the need for humans doing the rounds.Although humanoid robots are being developed for the near future, Assistant Professor Tamon Miyake says the level of precision and intelligence required will take at last five years before they are safely able to interact with humans."It requires full-body sensing and adaptive understanding - how to adjust for each person and situation," he says.Emotional support is also part of the innovation drive.Poketomo, a 12cm tall robot, can be carried around in a bag or can fit into a pocket. It reminds users to take medication, tells you how to prepare in real time for the weather outside and offers conversation for those living alone, which its creators say helps to ease social isolation."We're focusing on social issues... and to use new technology to help solve those problems," Miho Kagei, development manager from Sharp told the BBC.While devices and robots offer new ways to assist, human connection remains irreplaceable."Robots should supplement, not substitute, human caregivers," Mr Miyake, the Waseda University scientist said. "While they may take over some tasks, their main role is to assist both caregivers and patients."At the Restaurant of Mistaken Orders in Sengawa, Tokyo, founded by Akiko Kanna, people stream in to be served by patients suffering from dementia.Inspired by her father's experience with the condition, Ms Kanna wanted a place where people could remain engaged and feel purposeful.Toshio Morita, one of the café's servers, uses flowers to remember which table ordered what.Despite his cognitive decline, Mr Morita enjoys the interaction. For his wife, the café provides respite and helps keep him engaged.Kanna's café illustrates why social interventions and community support remain essential. Technology can provide tools and relief, but meaningful engagement and human connection are what truly sustain people living with dementia."Honestly? I wanted a little pocket money. I like meeting all sorts of people," Mr Morita says. "Everyone's different - that's what makes it fun."Getty ImagesSharp's Poketomo robot has been designed to give companionship to patientsAdditional reporting by Jaltson Akkanath ChummarSign up for our Tech Decoded newsletter to follow the world's top tech stories and trends. Outside the UK? Sign up here.AsiaJapanTechnology
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BBC Sport Dec 7, 20:00

Guehi scores late header to secure Crystal Palace win over Fulham

BBC HomepageSkip to contentAccessibility HelpYour accountHomeNewsSportBusinessInnovationCultureTravelEarthAudioVideoLiveMore menuMore menuSearch BBCHomeNewsSportBusinessInnovationCultureTravelEarthAudioVideoLiveClose menu BBC SportMenuHomeFootballCricketFormula 1Rugby UTennisGolfAthleticsCyclingMoreA-Z SportsAmerican FootballAthleticsBasketballBoxingCricketCyclingDartsDisability SportFootballFormula 1Gaelic GamesGolfGymnasticsHorse RacingMixed Martial ArtsMotorsportNetballOlympic SportsRugby LeagueRugby UnionSnookerSwimmingTennisWinter SportsFull Sports A-ZMore from SportEnglandScotlandWalesNorthern IrelandNews FeedsHelp & FAQsPremier LeagueScores & FixturesTableTop Scorers{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"VideoObject","name":"Premier League: Fulham 1-2 Crystal Palace highlights","description":"Crystal Palace captain Marc Guehi scores a late header for a 2-1 win against Fulham which moves them into the top four in the Premier League.","thumbnailUrl":["https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1920x1080/p0mm54bt.jpg","https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/1232x1232/p0mm54bt.jpg","https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/688xn/p0mm54bt.jpg","https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/images/ic/400xn/p0mm54bt.jpg"],"uploadDate":"2025-12-07T20:00:05.559Z","duration":"PT6M52S"}Guehi scores late header to secure Crystal Palace win over FulhamThis content is not available in your location.There was an errorCrystal Palace captain Marc Guehi scores a late header for a 2-1 win against Fulham which moves them into the top four in the Premier League.Shareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingRead descriptionExplore moreGuehi scores late header to secure Crystal Palace win over Fulham. Video, 00:06:52Guehi scores late header to secure Crystal Palace win over Fulham6:52Up Next. Fulham did not deserve to lose - Silva. Video, 00:04:57Fulham did not deserve to lose - Silva4:57Editor's recommendationsSlot 'no clue' if Salah has played his last Liverpool game. Video, 00:02:48Slot 'no clue' if Salah has played his last Liverpool game2:48'Winning made everything worth it' - Norris on world title triumph. Video, 00:02:46'Winning made everything worth it' - Norris on world title triumph2:46'Disrespectful' Salah comments threw club under bus - Rooney. Video, 00:01:35'Disrespectful' Salah comments threw club under bus - Rooney1:35'Salah's put his team-mates in jeopardy' - Coady. Video, 00:01:19'Salah's put his team-mates in jeopardy' - Coady1:19Villa could still go up another level - Sutton. Video, 00:01:43Villa could still go up another level - Sutton1:43'It can become hostile' - Savage on impact of fan abuse. Video, 00:02:52'It can become hostile' - Savage on impact of fan abuse2:52Tuchel reacts to England's 'difficult' World Cup group. Video, 00:02:37Tuchel reacts to England's 'difficult' World Cup group2:37'Bring it on' - Clarke reacts to Scotland's World Cup draw. Video, 00:00:48'Bring it on' - Clarke reacts to Scotland's World Cup draw0:48'Have I just outed Chelsea?' - Confession Cam. Video, 00:03:19'Have I just outed Chelsea?' - Confession Cam3:19'He wasn't happy' - Slot on Salah's reaction after being dropped. Video, 00:00:58'He wasn't happy' - Slot on Salah's reaction after being dropped0:58'Why would you do that?' - Sutton on Spurs fans booing. Video, 00:02:31'Why would you do that?' - Sutton on Spurs fans booing2:31'A boo-worthy performance' - Rodgers on Steelers' loss to Bills. Video, 00:00:47'A boo-worthy performance' - Rodgers on Steelers' loss to Bills
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