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Commentisfree Apr 14, 2026

Sudan’s Three‑Year Conflict Spirals Into Deeper Humanitarian Disaster Amid Stalled International Action

Three years after Sudan’s generals toppled the civilian government, the war has intensified, leavin…
"Bloody unacceptable" – those were the words of UN humanitarian chief Denise Brown as she condemned the failure to halt a war that has now entered its fourth year. The conflict, which began with rival generals overthrowing Sudan’s civilian leadership, has eclipsed global crises in Ukraine, Gaza and Iran, yet remains largely ignored. The Berlin‑hosted international conference aims to inject urgency into a situation where tens of thousands have been killed, four million have fled abroad, and millions more are internally displaced. Roughly 30 million Sudanese – more than half the population – now face acute food insecurity, and large swathes of Khartoum lie in ruins. Violence has not abated. The paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), led by Gen. Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, have established a rival administration in western Sudan. In the siege of El Fasher, an estimated 10,000 civilians were massacred – a UN mission described the atrocity as bearing the hallmarks of genocide. Both the RSF and the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) under Gen. Abdel Fattah al‑Burhan have deliberately targeted civilians, carried out summary executions, tortured detainees and increasingly employed drones to devastate urban areas. Gen. Burhan, whose government enjoys international recognition, refuses any compromise, insisting the RSF must first disarm and retreat to camps before any national dialogue. The RSF, meanwhile, demands a new federal system and the removal of Islamist elements – a stance that directly challenges Burhan’s coalition. In September, a US‑led mediation team that included Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt outlined a tentative roadmap: a humanitarian truce leading to a cease‑fire and subsequent political talks. Yet the United States has shown little appetite to prioritize Sudan, and the plan sidestepped the most contentious issues. The deeper scandal, according to diplomats and analysts, is the role of external actors in sustaining the war. Despite denials, the UAE is widely reported as the principal backer of the RSF, while Saudi Arabia and Egypt back Burhan’s forces. Recent Yale research points to Ethiopian collusion with the RSF, raising fears of a broader regional conflagration. European states, which previously funded Sudanese security to curb migration, have inadvertently strengthened the RSF and supplied weapons now used on the battlefield. The ongoing Iran‑Israel conflict further hampers relief efforts, inflating costs and limiting aid deliveries. Community kitchens that once fed countless families are disappearing – more than 40 % have closed in the past six months. The Berlin delegates must therefore boost support for Sudan’s grassroots mutual‑aid networks, but humanitarian assistance cannot replace a durable peace. Pressure on the UAE and other geopolitically motivated actors is essential if the international community hopes to halt the suffering of millions of Sudanese.
#sudan #uae #egypt
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Sports Apr 14, 2026

Javier Mascherano Steps Down as Inter Miami Head Coach After Historic MLS Triumph

Former Argentina midfielder Javier Mascherano resigns as Inter Miami manager months after guiding t…
Javier Mascherano announced his resignation as Inter Miami’s head coach, ending a brief but landmark tenure that delivered the franchise’s inaugural MLS Cup. In an official club statement, Mascherano cited “personal reasons” for his departure and confirmed that his entire coaching staff would also leave the organization. Inter Miami named sporting director Guillermo Hoyos as the interim head coach, tasking him with stabilising a side that has already shown signs of strain. “First and foremost, I would like to thank the club for the trust they placed in me, every employee who is part of the organization for the collective effort, but especially the players, who made it possible for us to experience unforgettable moments,” Mascherano said. “I will always carry with me the memory of our first star, and wherever I am, I will continue to wish the club all the best moving forward.” Mascherano arrived ahead of the 2025 season with limited senior‑team experience, having only coached Argentina’s youth national sides. Nevertheless, he and former Barcelona teammate Lionel Messi steered Inter Miami to a 2‑1 victory over the Vancouver Whitecaps, securing the club’s first MLS title. The defending champions have stumbled early in the new campaign: they have drawn their first two matches at the brand‑new Nu Stadium and recorded three wins in five league fixtures. The most glaring setback came in the Concacaf Champions Cup, where Miami were eliminated by Nashville SC in the Round of 16. Off the pitch, Mascherano inherited a roster in transition. Long‑time stalwarts Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba retired, while Luis Suárez has been relegated to the bench following the high‑profile signing of Germán Berterame, who has yet to find his scoring rhythm.
#Javier Mascherano #Inter Miami #MLS Cup
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Sports Apr 14, 2026

West Brom Faces Potential Points Deduction and Relegation After Season Ends

West Bromwich Albion could face a points deduction and relegation from the Championship after the s…
West Bromwich Albion is facing a potential points deduction that could lead to their relegation from the Championship after the season has ended. The club is contesting charges of breaching the English Football League's (EFL) profit and sustainability (P&S) rules, specifically an alleged breach of the £39m loss limit in the three-year period culminating in the 2024-25 season.The EFL's sanctioning guidelines state that any punishment for a P&S breach must be applied in the campaign after it took place. However, the rulebook does not provide a definitive cutoff point for the end of the season, creating uncertainty about when the punishment would be applied.West Brom's situation is complicated by their current relegation battle in the Championship. With four games remaining, they are two points clear of third-bottom Oxford United. A small points deduction could send them down to League One.The EFL has until the end of the season to conclude the case, but the exact timing is unclear. Possible dates include the final round of league games on May 2, the Championship playoff final on May 23, or even the publication of next season's fixtures on June 25.In a similar case, Derby County was fined £100,000 and later docked 21 points for P&S breaches and entering administration, resulting in relegation. West Brom insists it has complied with P&S rules despite recorded combined losses of £55.6m since 2022.The dispute centers on the treatment of interest payments on loans taken out during the sale process of the club. West Brom is determined to fight the charges, and any sporting sanction imposed would likely lead to an appeal with significant legal ramifications.
#efl #championship #football
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Sport Apr 14, 2026

Evan Williams, Welsh Grand National Trainer, Jailed for Three Years for Assault

Evan Williams, a renowned Welsh Grand National-winning trainer, has been sentenced to three years i…
Evan Williams, a 55-year-old horse racing trainer from Wales, has been jailed for three years for attacking a dog walker, Martin Dandridge, 72, with a hockey stick on his land in Llancarfan, south Wales, in December 2024.Williams, who has had significant success in horse racing, including winning the Welsh Grand National with Secret Reprieve in 2020, repeatedly struck Dandridge, causing him serious injuries, including a fractured arm. The incident led to Williams being convicted of causing grievous bodily harm with intent by a unanimous jury at Cardiff Crown Court in March.The judge, Recorder Angharad Price, criticized Williams for taking the law into his own hands, stating, “It is never acceptable to take the law into your own hands. This sentence will be a lesson to you that it is always better to call the police if you think a crime is being committed.” Williams had previously experienced a threatening incident with poachers on his land six weeks before the assault.Williams's barrister, David Elias KC, noted that “If he isn’t there, there is no business,” suggesting that Williams's imprisonment could jeopardize his training business. Williams established Evan Williams Racing in 2003 and has been one of Wales's most successful trainers, achieving top-four finishes in five consecutive Grand Nationals at Aintree between 2009 and 2013.
#williams #you #dandridge
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Sports Apr 14, 2026

‘Away From Home’ Exhibition Sheds Light on Women’s Football Fandom and Ongoing Gender Bias

A new pop‑up exhibition, Away From Home, at Sunderland’s Beacon of Light showcases the untold stori…
“You can be the thickest bloke and still think you know more about football than a woman,” declares Jo, a Newcastle supporter, in the opening section of the Away From Home: The Untold Stories of Women Football Fans exhibition. The line sets the tone for a showcase that confronts the stereotype that only men can truly understand the game.Curated by Professor Stacey Pope, a leading sociologist of women’s football, and Durham University’s David Wright, the exhibition occupies the Beacon of Light pop‑up beside Sunderland’s Stadium of Light. It chronicles the presence of women on the terraces of the North‑East since the 1950s, using archival footage, hand‑sewn silk scarves and newly commissioned soundscapes to recreate match‑day rituals.The display is anchored by 22 recorded interviews with Newcastle and Sunderland fans, complemented by a broader research base of 200 interviews conducted over two decades. Pope notes that while the last thirty years have seen a “feminisation of sports fandom,” true gender parity remains elusive.Recent data underscore the exhibition’s relevance. In a survey of 2,000 male fans, three‑quarters expressed overt or covert misogynistic attitudes toward women in football. Moreover, the anti‑racism charity Kick It Out reported that sexist incidents at matches have doubled from the start of the season to the end of February compared with the previous campaign.Beyond statistics, the exhibition explores structural barriers: stadium designs that prioritize male comfort, safety concerns on public transport, and societal expectations that push women out of the stands after marriage or motherhood. As Pope explains, “football is sexist, what do you expect?” – a reality the exhibit seeks to expose and challenge.Visitors can experience mixed‑media installations that blend personal anecdotes with broader themes of loss, renewal, and the collective euphoria of a match. One soundscape, for example, transforms complaints of cold, mud, and hunger into the roar of a crowd as the game begins, illustrating how football has resonated with women for generations.The exhibition runs until the end of the season and is also available online for a wider audience.
#football #women #you
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World Apr 14, 2026

Kuwait's Crackdown on Free Speech: Journalist Detained Over Friendly Fire Reporting

The detention of a prize-winning international journalist, Ahmed Shihab-Eldin, in Kuwait has raised…
The arrest of Ahmed Shihab-Eldin, a Kuwaiti national and US-born journalist, has sparked fears about the erosion of free speech in Kuwait and the wider Middle East. Shihab-Eldin, who has worked for prominent outlets like PBS, HuffPost, and Al Jazeera English, was detained on March 3 during a visit to Kuwait. Shihab-Eldin's reporting focused on a friendly fire incident on March 2, where Kuwaiti air defenses shot down three US planes, fortunately without any pilot casualties. He published footage of a US F-15E Strike Eagle crashing in al Jahra, west of Kuwait City, and described local residents assisting the crew in a civilian truck. Campaigners worry that Shihab-Eldin might face charges under new security laws being introduced in Kuwait, possibly in a new security court. These laws have been criticized for restricting publicity about attacks on infrastructure and allowing the government to label certain reporting as terrorism. The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has expressed concern over Shihab-Eldin's detention, highlighting a broader trend of escalating censorship of journalists and news outlets across the world related to the Iran war. Sara Qudah, CPJ's Middle East regional director, stated, 'We are seeing escalating censorship of journalists and news outlets across the world in relation to the Iran war... He must be freed immediately.' Kuwait has recently passed laws that define terrorism broadly and propose significant fines and sentences for publishing statements that could weaken confidence in military entities. The country has also been using citizenship laws to expel alleged dissidents and has withdrawn visas for Iraqi citizens following protests. The detention of Shihab-Eldin and these new laws reflect a wider crackdown on dissent in Kuwait and the Gulf region. Critics argue that these measures are transforming Kuwait into a police state that suppresses dissenting opinions and imprisons those who express them.
#kuwait #iran #war
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World Economy Apr 14, 2026

IMF Warns of Global Recession Risk as Iran War Escalation Threatens Economic Stability

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) warns that an escalation of the Iran war could trigger a glob…
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has issued a stark warning that a further escalation in the Iran war could lead to a global recession, spiralling inflation, and a sharp backlash in financial markets. The Washington-based fund cited the economic damage from the Middle East conflict as steadily rising, prompting it to cut its growth forecasts for 2026.In its half-yearly update, the IMF predicted that the UK would suffer the sharpest growth downgrade and joint highest inflation rate in the G7 this year. Even if the fallout from soaring energy costs can be contained by the middle of 2026, the fund warned of a close call for a global recession under a worst-case 'severe scenario'.This severe scenario, involving a drawn-out war and persistently higher energy prices, would see the world face a global recession for only the fifth time since 1980. Oil prices jumped back above $100 (£74) a barrel on Monday amid choppy trading in global markets. The IMF's chief economist, Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, noted that despite a temporary ceasefire, some damage is already done, and downside risks remain elevated.The IMF set out three possible scenarios for the war in its World Economic Outlook (WEO), including a central 'reference forecast' based on the assumption that disruption to the world economy from the war fades by mid-2026. This forecast predicts global growth would fall from 3.4% last year to 3.1% in 2026, a downgrade of 0.1 percentage points.Under the adverse scenario, with the global oil price remaining at $100 this year before falling back to $75 in 2027, growth would fall to 2.5% this year, and inflation would rise to 5.4%. In the severe scenario, with a lengthier, intensive war keeping the oil price above $110 into 2027, global growth would collapse to about 2%, a threshold widely seen as equivalent to a worldwide recession.The IMF urged countries to stage a coordinated response to the economic fallout from the war and called on central banks to remain vigilant. It also advised governments to focus on temporary and targeted measures to support businesses and households.
#imf #iran #recession
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Sports Apr 14, 2026

From Champion Hurdler to Flat Star: Nicky Henderson Guides Constitution Hill Through a Jumping Crisis

Veteran trainer Nicky Henderson reflects on Constitution Hill’s meteoric rise, sudden loss of confi…
Nicky Henderson, 75, has spent nearly five decades shaping British racing, yet the saga of his star gelding Constitution Hill still makes him pause. After a sun‑lit afternoon in Lambourn, the trainer watched the usually placid horse stroll into his stable, a stark contrast to the drama that has defined the horse’s recent career.Henderson, speaking alongside owner Michael Buckley, emphasized the personal bond they share with the animal, calling him “more a pal than a beast” and noting his unique appeal to the public.Constitution Hill burst onto the scene with a ten‑race winning streak, highlighted by a dominant 2023 Champion Hurdle victory at Cheltenham. Experts briefly hailed him as one of the greatest hurdlers of all time, lauding his speed and precision over obstacles.That dominance vanished almost overnight. The gelding began to experience what Henderson likened to a golfer’s “yips”, falling in three of his last four hurdle races. Even a race at Punchestown where he stayed upright ended in a “disconcertingly tame display”, according to Timeform, which had previously ranked him the best hurdler of recent decades.Plans for a Cheltenham return were scrapped, and the team pivoted to flat racing. Constitution Hill delivered two striking victories at Southwell and Kempton in early 2026, drawing crowds of all ages. Henderson said the flat races felt like a “glorious celebration”, and the horse’s performance on the flat has been “brilliant”.His newfound flat success has sparked global interest. Henderson received invitations from racetracks worldwide, though he dismissed wild speculation about the Melbourne Cup as “the least likely of the lot”. Instead, a more measured approach is being considered, with the John Porter Stakes at Newbury on the agenda if the ground suits.“It’s not everybody’s idea of the most sensible race for him,” Henderson admitted, but added that a second year of racing could still be on the cards. He stressed that the horse’s safety and public enjoyment remain paramount.When asked why Constitution Hill lost his jumping confidence, Henderson cited several factors, including the introduction of new padded hurdles, which the horse disliked. He also mentioned a series of well‑meaning consultants—from Australian “gurus” to renowned equestrian coach Yogi Breisner—none of whom could reverse the decline.Despite the setbacks, the horse’s flat form has been a commercial boon. Henderson reported an 800% surge in ticket sales at Southwell compared with the previous year, illustrating the public’s fascination with the “ridiculous horse that can’t stand up”.Looking ahead, Henderson is entertaining a range of international options: the French Prix du Cadran, the Irish St Leger, and even potential programs in Germany and the United States. Yet he remains realistic about travel logistics, noting that Constitution Hill requires companion horses for long trips.In the trainer’s words, “You’ve got to have fun,” and with Constitution Hill’s current trajectory, the aim is to bring that joy back to racing while navigating the horse’s unique needs and the sport’s evolving landscape.
#Nicky Henderson #Constitution Hill #Champion Hurdle
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Books Apr 14, 2026

Michael Rosen Secures 2026 Hans Christian Andersen Award Amid Brexit Passport Snag

Renowned British author Michael Rosen has been honored with the 2026 Hans Christian Andersen Award …
Michael Rosen, celebrated poet and author of titles such as We’re Going on a Bear Hunt and Chocolate Cake, has been awarded the 2026 Hans Christian Andersen Award in recognition of his lifelong impact on children’s literature.The accolade makes him the fourth Briton to receive the honor, joining the ranks of Eleanor Farjeon, Aidan Chambers and David Almond.The International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY) praised Rosen’s work for echoing the rhythms of children’s language, blending playfulness with emotional depth and social awareness. IBBY highlighted his ability to foster empathy and spark conversations about history, family, loss, identity and society across poetry, novels and non‑fiction.The companion illustration prize was bestowed upon Chinese artist Cai Gao, whose distinctive visual language and high artistic quality expand the possibilities of children’s illustration. Past illustration laureates include Quentin Blake, who won in 2002.Rosen missed the award announcement at the Bologna Children’s Book Fair after being denied boarding on a flight from Stansted to Bologna due to post‑Brexit passport regulations. The rule requires UK passports to have been issued within the previous ten years and to retain at least three months’ validity on the day of departure.He later posted on X (formerly Twitter), noting the irony of being turned away because his passport was issued in March 2016 despite an expiry in August 2026, calling it a “Brexit benefit”.Despite the setback, Rosen received a call from an Italian woman informing him of his win, which he described as a “happy ending”.From a pool of 78 candidates across 44 countries, the jury evaluated the “distinctive literary and artistic qualities” of each entrant and their capacity to view the world through a child’s eyes. The formal award ceremony is slated for August in Ottawa.
#children #rosen #award
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