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Sports May 28, 2026

French Open 2026: Sinner, Osaka, Sabalenka and Gauff in action on day five

The French Open 2026 continues on day five with several high-profile matches. Jannik Sinner, Naomi …
Day Five of the French Open 2026The fifth day of the French Open 2026 promises to be exciting, with several top players taking to the court. The day begins with a match between Naomi Osaka and Donna Vekic, while Iva Jovic meets Emma Navarro.Key MatchesJannik Sinner takes on Juan Manuel CerúndoloNaomi Osaka faces Donna VekicAryna Sabalenka and Coco Gauff are also in actionPlayer HighlightsMoise Kouame, the 17-year-old local boy who stunned Marin Cilic in round one, looks to continue his impressive run against Adolfo Daniel Vallejo. Other players in action include Amanda Anisimova, Madison Keys, and Felix Auger-Aliassime.
#French Open #Jannik Sinner #Naomi Osaka
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Sports May 28, 2026

Neymar's Calf Injury Puts World Cup Participation in Doubt

Neymar's World Cup hopes are hanging in the balance as the Brazilian star missed the national team'…
The LeadBrazil's World Cup preparations have been thrown into uncertainty as star forward Neymar missed the national team's first training session to undergo medical tests on his injured right calf. The 34-year-old's place in the squad for the upcoming tournament now hangs in the balance as medical staff assess the extent of his injury.The Event DetailsThe Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) confirmed that Neymar, who is recovering from a calf injury, did not participate in the closed training session at Granja Comary facilities. Instead, he was referred to a private clinic in Teresopolis for imaging tests. The CBF stated in a formal announcement that "no further information will be released until the Brazilian national team's medical staff have completed their assessments."Brazil is scheduled to hold three additional training sessions at Granja Comary before their friendly against Panama at the Maracana this Sunday. Manager Carlo Ancelotti is already dealing with absences as defenders Gabriel Magalhaes and Marquinhos, along with forward Gabriel Martinelli, are involved in Saturday's Champions League final between Arsenal and Paris Saint-Germain.The Impact AnalysisNeymar's recall to the national team last week generated widespread excitement, particularly as he had not featured in Ancelotti's plans during the Italian's year in charge. Brazil's all-time leading scorer with 79 goals in 128 appearances, Neymar has not played for his country since 2023. His return comes after years of injury troubles and an underwhelming spell back at Santos.The timing of this injury could hardly be more critical. After facing Panama, Brazil will meet Egypt in Cleveland in their final friendly before opening their World Cup campaign against African champions Morocco on June 13 in New Jersey. Brazil and Morocco have been drawn in Group C alongside Haiti and Scotland.Ancelotti has previously made it clear that reputation alone would not secure Neymar's place, stating that his selection would be "strictly based on fitness and form, not sentiment." This injury test that stance and puts the manager in a difficult position regarding team selection and strategy.The PredictionWhile the full extent of Neymar's injury is still unknown, the timing of this setback raises serious questions about his World Cup participation. Even if he recovers quickly, the lack of match fitness could impact his effectiveness on the world's biggest stage. Brazil will likely proceed with contingency plans, but the absence of their most recognizable name and creative force would be a significant blow to their title aspirations.The medical verdict in the coming days will be crucial not just for Neymar's personal World Cup dreams but for Brazil's campaign as they seek to add to their five world titles. The nation and football world alike will be watching anxiously as assessments continue and decisions about the tournament approach.
#Neymar #Brazil #World Cup
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World Wide May 28, 2026

Australia charges woman with alleged ISIL links after return from Syria

Australia has charged a 34-year-old woman with alleged links to the ISIL group after she returned f…
The Charges and Investigation Australia has charged a woman with alleged links to the ISIL (ISIS) group after she returned from Syria, as authorities intensify investigations into nationals repatriated from detention camps. Police said the 34-year-old arrived in the country in September alongside another woman and is due to appear in a Melbourne court on Thursday. She faces charges of being a member of a “terrorist” organisation and entering a declared conflict zone. Federal police Assistant Commissioner Hilda Sirec said both offences carry potential sentences of up to 10 years in prison. The Woman's Background and Detention Sirec said the woman travelled to Syria in 2013 or 2014 and was later detained by Kurdish forces in 2019 before being held in al-Hol camp along with her family. Authorities announced the charges as more women and children returned to Australia this month after years in Roj camp in northeast Syria, where families of ISIL fighters have been held since 2019 without a formal legal process. Additional Charges and Investigations Among the latest arrivals, three women face additional charges, including crimes against humanity. Police have also charged Kawsar Ahmad and Zeinab Ahmad, a mother and daughter who arrived earlier this month, with enslavement-related offences. Another returnee, Janai Safar, has been charged with entering a declared conflict zone and joining ISIL. The Repatriation Debate The repatriations have caused political debate, with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese saying the government did not assist their return and warning, “If you make your bed, you lie in it.” Advocacy groups argue Australia must uphold the right of its citizens to return, particularly for children who, they say, should not bear responsibility for their parents’ actions.
#Australia #ISIL #Syria
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Sports May 28, 2026

Bosnia's Unexpected Journey to World Cup 2026

Bosnia and Herzegovina's surprising qualification for the 2026 World Cup, their journey under coach…
Bosnia's Unexpected World Cup JourneyBosnia and Herzegovina's qualification for the 2026 World Cup comes as a surprise to many observers. A team that had managed only four wins in their previous 19 matches across two qualification cycles reached a turning point when Sergej Barbarez took over in 2024. The campaign that followed was chaotic, emotional and occasionally irrational, which still feels like the most authentic description of Bosnian football itself. Barbarez's side somehow found a way through it all, eliminating Wales and Italy in dramatic playoffs and reaching the World Cup for only the second time in the country's history.The Barbarez RevolutionThe former captain had waited years for the job, so long that he had not coached anywhere in the meantime. He played professional poker and enjoyed retirement before the Bosnian FA finally got in touch. He gathered close friends and former teammates around him: Emir Spahic became sporting director, while Sasa Papac and Zlatan Bajramovic joined the coaching staff. In Barbarez's first year, 16 players made their debuts, most of them raised and developed abroad, from Sweden and Germany to Austria and the United States. That became the foundation of this new Bosnia side.Group B Fixtures12 June v Canada, Toronto (3pm local, 8pm BST)18 June v Switzerland, Los Angeles (noon local, 8pm BST)24 June v Qatar, Seattle (noon local, 8pm BST)The Coach's PhilosophyBosnia do not play especially beautiful football under the coach and systems change regularly – usually between 4-2-3-1 and 4-4-2 – but formations quickly become secondary once matches turn emotional, and with Bosnia they usually do. The team's identity is built around aggressive defending, direct football and quick transitions. Barbarez may have gone winless in his first eight matches and come under heavy criticism, but he insisted that he first needed to rebuild the squad's mentality.The Poker Coach Who Became a National HeroSergej Barbarez spent years criticising the way Bosnian football was run and had almost stopped expecting the call from Sarajevo altogether, having first expressed an interest in the role in 2009. Fifteen years later he took charge of the national team – with no previous coaching experience – for the first team against England at the age of 52. A former captain and cult figure, Barbarez arrived promising honesty, emotional connection and a complete reset after years of dysfunction around the national team. After playoff victories over Wales and Italy, his status only grew further; the win against Italy transformed him from poker-playing outsider into one of Bosnia and Herzegovina's most important ever sporting figures.The Veteran Leader: Edin DzekoThere are normal footballers and then there is Edin Dzeko. Even at 40, everything still somehow revolves around Edin. Bosnia and Herzegovina's captain remains the country's greatest footballer, their all-time leading goalscorer and the reference point of an entire generation. Younger players in the squad speak about him with a reverence bordering on disbelief. Dzeko no longer dominates matches physically the way he once did at Wolfsburg or Manchester City, but his understanding of space, timing and pressure moments remains elite. During the playoffs he again delivered when Bosnia needed him most. "As long as I feel I can help, I'll be here," he said recently. Bosnia would not be at this World Cup without him.The Rising Star: Kerim AlajbegovicKerim Alajbegovic, at 18, may already be the most naturally gifted attacking talent Bosnia and Herzegovina have produced since Miralem Pjanic. The midfielder, who spent a season with Red Bull Salzburg before Bayer Leverkusen triggered a buyout clause, is arriving at the tournament with the fearless attitude some players have at that age. It is not only his technique that stands out, but his personality too. Barbarez trusted the 18-year-old to take penalties in both playoff shootouts – and Alajbegovic responded with complete calmness. Elegant between the lines and fearless in possession, he feels like the face of Bosnia's next generation.The Unsung Hero: Tarik MuharemovicBosnia and Herzegovina spent years producing centre-backs who defended first and worried about the football later. However, Tarik Muharemovic feels like the first one shaped by an entirely different mindset. Born in Slovenia and developed in Austria before moving through Italian football with Juventus and Sassuolo, the left-footed defender has quietly become one of the players Barbarez trusts most. He is not especially loud, aggressive or dramatic, which, for a defender, normally makes people in Balkan football suspicious. Instead Muharemovic solves problems calmly, carries the ball forward and gives Bosnia something they lacked for years – composure.Tournament OutlookBosnia are unlikely to dominate many matches in Group B – against Canada, Switzerland and Qatar – but they have enough quality, emotional energy and unpredictability to become one of the tournament's more uncomfortable teams. With a blend of experienced leadership in Dzeko and emerging talent in Alajbegovic, Barbarez has created a squad that embodies the chaotic yet passionate spirit of Bosnian football.
#Bosnia and Herzegovina #World Cup 2026 #Sergej Barbarez
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Entertainment May 28, 2026

Tonight's TV Highlights: From Absurd Comedies to Political Documentaries

Tonight's television lineup offers a diverse range of programming from absurd comedy shows to polit…
The Comedy LineupChannel 4 presents 'Make That Movie' at 10pm, created and written by Sam Campbell and directed by Joe Pelling. This new comedy follows a director who turns ordinary people's movie ideas into reality, beginning with Mick's pitch about a man and woman who can turn into snakes, featuring real snake auditions and a creepy intimacy coordinator.Home Renovation DramaAt 8pm, Channel 4's 'George Clarke's Beautiful Builds' returns with architect George Clarke and garden designer Luke Millard helping people realize their renovation dreams. The premiere episode features couple Mitch and Elliot in Bromley, whose plans for a curve-arched kitchen are threatened by a house flood.Real-Life MysteryBBC One's 'Reported Missing' begins its fifth series at 9pm with the story of Larissa, a 16-year-old runaway from Glasgow living with bipolar disorder. The episode explores how lockdown has contributed to mental health issues among young people, as police try to track her down.Political ProfileBBC Two airs 'Putin: In Ten Pictures' at 9pm, a documentary that explores Russia's president through 10 key photographs. Observers and exiled former insiders psychoanalyse Putin, describing him as an overlooked weakling who vowed to change how the world saw him, with everything else being one long PR stunt.Period Drama ContinuesChannel 5's 'The Hardacres' at 9pm continues the story of Mary and Sam, whose house is put in quarantine due to fears Sam has caught the deadly Russian flu. As symptoms worsen, Lady Imelda sees an opportunity in this perfect dose of period drama.Music DocumentarySky Documentaries presents 'One to One: John & Yoko' at 9pm, a documentary covering 18 months in the lives of John Lennon and Yoko Ono after they moved to New York in 1971. The film mixes home movies, contemporary TV footage, and private phone calls to follow the couple as they engage with political causes, fashion, and their new life away from Britain.Live Sports CoverageSky Sports Cricket broadcasts the first match in a three-match Women's T20 cricket series between England and India at 6pm from Chelmsford.
#Television #Channel 4 #BBC
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Health May 28, 2026

Aid Cuts and Climate Change Drive Deadly Malaria Surge in Zimbabwe

US funding cuts have disrupted key malaria control programs in Zimbabwe, leading to a surge in mala…
The Surge in Malaria CasesAcross Zimbabwe, malaria cases and deaths are surging after US funding cuts disrupted key malaria control programs. Precious Mvundura, a 37-year-old from eastern Zimbabwe, experienced firsthand the deadly impact of this crisis when she and her five-year-old son contracted malaria. While they both recovered after seeking treatment early, many others have not been as fortunate.Disruption of Critical Health ProgramsShortly after returning to office for a second term in 2025, US President Donald Trump slashed foreign aid funding, including programs backed by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). In Zimbabwe, these cuts disrupted tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS and malaria research, prevention and treatment programs. Among the affected initiatives were the Zimbabwe Entomological Support Programme in Malaria (ZENTO) at Africa University in Mutare and the Zimbabwe Assistance Programme in Malaria II (ZAPIM II), which had helped strengthen malaria diagnosis, treatment and prevention in high-burden districts.Rising Statistics and Human ImpactUSAID had disbursed $270m for health and agriculture programs in Zimbabwe in 2024. Since the funding cuts, malaria cases have jumped dramatically, reaching 65,399 between January and April 2026, up from 36,000 recorded during the same period in 2025 and 17,000 in 2024. Deaths have also risen sharply, reaching 174 between January and April 2026, compared with 85 during the same period last year and 34 in 2024.Resource Shortages and VulnerabilityThe disruption of donor-funded programs has led to critical shortages of mosquito nets, diagnostic kits, and treatment drugs in rural areas. Village health workers report that they no longer receive adequate supplies, forcing suspected malaria patients to travel long distances to clinics for testing and treatment. Zimbabwe's dependence on donor funding for essential medicines, diagnostic kits and mosquito-control supplies has left the country particularly vulnerable to such funding disruptions.Climate Change as an Aggravating FactorExperts note that climate change is also driving the spread of malaria and other vector-borne diseases across Africa. Rising temperatures are allowing malaria to spread into higher-altitude areas, which were once less vulnerable to outbreaks. Zimbabwe experienced El Niño between 2023 and 2024, followed by heavy rainfall in 2025 and 2026, creating ideal breeding conditions for mosquitoes. The current spike in malaria cases is closely linked to these heavy rains during the 2025–2026 season.Future Outlook and ChallengesZimbabwe aims to eliminate malaria by 2030, in line with the target set by the African Union. However, health experts warn that unless funding gaps are urgently addressed, Zimbabwe risks losing years of progress made in reducing malaria infections and deaths. The government needs to strengthen domestic health financing to reduce dependence on foreign donors, as external partners can withdraw financial support anytime should their interests shift. With climate change likely to continue creating favorable conditions for malaria transmission, the need for sustainable funding and robust prevention systems has never been more critical.
#Zimbabwe #Malaria #USAID
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Economy May 28, 2026

UK Neets Set to Hit 1.25m by 2030s Without Urgent Action

The number of young people not in work or education in the UK could rise to 1.25 million by the ear…
The Looming Crisis of Youth Unemployment Britain risks a 25% rise in the number of young people not in work or education to 1.25 million by the early 2030s without urgent government action to avoid a “lost generation”, a landmark report has warned. Milburn's Call for Urgent Action Alan Milburn, the leader of the review into why so many young people are economically inactive, said the UK risked opening up a “generational fault line” between young and old without urgent steps to overhaul schools, the health service, the welfare system and the jobs market. The Data Behind the Crisis Experts have warned of a crisis in youth jobs, with official figures due on Thursday expected to show the number of young people not in education, employment or training (Neet) is close to breaking through a million – the highest level for more than a decade. Number of Neets could rise to 1.25 million by the early 2030s One in six young people could be Neet within five years Britain has the third-highest rate of 16 to 24-year-olds who are not earning or learning among rich European countries The Impact on the UK's Social Contract Milburn will warn that without urgent action the number could continue rising from one in eight young people who are classified as Neet to one in six within five years – representing 1.25 million young lives. He will say in his report that whoever leads the party into a general election against Nigel Farage’s Reform UK should make cutting youth unemployment a top priority, with a central mission to repair Britain’s increasingly broken social contract. The Road Ahead The government has faced fierce criticism from business groups who say Labour policy has fuelled the crisis in youth jobs. However, the government has welcomed Milburn’s report and is taking action to support young people.
#UK #Youth Unemployment #Alan Milburn
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Sports May 28, 2026

Teenage sensation Sooryavanshi smashes 97 runs, leads Rajasthan Royals to IPL playoffs

Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, a 15-year-old batting sensation, smashed 97 runs off 29 balls, including 12 s…
The Rise of Vaibhav Sooryavanshi Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, a 15-year-old batting sensation, has taken the Indian Premier League (IPL) by storm with his incredible performance. He smashed 97 runs off 29 balls, including 12 sixes, to lead Rajasthan Royals to a 47-run victory over Sunrisers Hyderabad in the eliminator. Sooryavanshi's Stellar Performance Sooryavanshi's 97 runs came off just 29 deliveries, with 12 sixes and 2 fours. He broke Chris Gayle's 12-year-old record for the most sixes in a single edition of the IPL, with a total of 65 sixes. His impressive performance helped Rajasthan Royals post a total of 243-8 in 20 overs. The Impact on the IPL Playoffs Rajasthan Royals' victory over Sunrisers Hyderabad has propelled them to the IPL playoffs. They will face Gujarat Titans in the next qualifier, with the winner advancing to the final against the Royal Challengers Bengaluru. The Future of Indian Cricket Sooryavanshi's impressive performance has caught the attention of cricket legends, including Sunil Gavaskar and Michael Vaughan. Vaughan has called for Sooryavanshi to be included in India's white-ball tour of England this summer, saying he is the "best T20 opener in the world".
#Rajasthan Royals #Sunrisers Hyderabad #Vaibhav Sooryavanshi
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Tech May 28, 2026

Remote Achieves 50% Revenue Growth per Employee with AI Adoption

Remote, a seven-year-old Amsterdam-based payroll service provider, has surpassed $300 million in an…
The Rise of AI-Powered Payroll Remote, a seven-year-old Amsterdam-based payroll service provider, has recently surpassed $300 million in annual recurring revenue and become cash-flow positive. However, the company's true achievement lies in its 50% increase in revenue per employee after adopting AI at every level of the organization. AI Adoption Across the Organization According to CEO Job van der Voort, the key to Remote's efficiency gains is AI adoption well beyond the CEO's office or engineering department. Employees across all functions have been launching apps in Remote Labs, an internal marketplace built on the company's own technology. The Data Behind the Growth Annual recurring revenue: over $300 million Revenue growth per employee: 50% Core payroll business growth: over 300% year over year Number of companies served: tens of thousands The Impact of AI on Remote's Business Remote's adoption of AI has not only increased revenue per employee but also improved the company's overall efficiency. The company has reduced its hiring plans and is instead focusing on upskilling its existing employees to use AI tools. The Future of AI in Payroll Remote is now opening up its AI capabilities to clients, allowing them to create custom workflows. The company has also launched Remote MCP, an interface based on the Model Context Protocol, which grants AI agents and external platforms direct access to payroll and compliance data. The Prediction As AI continues to transform the payroll industry, Remote is well-positioned to lead the charge. With its focus on AI adoption and innovation, the company is poised for continued growth and success in the future.
#Remote #AI Adoption #Payroll Startup
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