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Sports Jun 01, 2026

Rugby League Broadcaster and Coach John Kear Dies at 71

John Kear, a renowned rugby league broadcaster and former Challenge Cup-winning coach, has died at …
The Passing of a Rugby Legend John Kear, the rugby league broadcaster and former Challenge Cup-winning coach, has died at the age of 71. The Rugby Football League announced that Kear died suddenly on Sunday on his return from covering Wigan’s Challenge Cup victory at Wembley for the BBC. A Coaching Career Spanning Decades Kear led nine clubs across a coaching career lasting more than 700 matches, masterminding a shock win for Sheffield Eagles in 1998 and then steering Hull FC to glory in 2005. Tributes from the Rugby Community Nigel Wood, chair of the RFL said: “On behalf of the whole sport, our thoughts and condolences are with John’s wife Dawn, his family and with those who played or worked alongside him over the last 50 years. Coached England in the 2000 World Cup, Wales in the 2017 and 2021 World Cup Oversaw Challenge Cup victories at Sheffield Eagles and Hull FC Took Batley Bulldogs to the Championship Grand Final A Legacy in Broadcasting and Coaching Kear, who played for a decade as an outside back at Castleford before his long spell in the dugout, retired from coaching in 2025 after a second stint at Batley. The Yorkshireman also tried his hand at international level, coaching England, Wales and France over the course of his career. Reaction from Hull FC Hull FC’s chief operating officer Tony Sutton joined the tributes, adding: “He was a true rugby league man through and through, with a deep knowledge of the game, who always had time to stop for a chat whenever you saw him.
#John Kear #Rugby League #BBC
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Economy Jun 01, 2026

The Common Good Economy: Mariana Mazzucato's Vision for Economic Transformation

Economist Mariana Mazzucato's new book 'The Common Good Economy' proposes a radical rethinking of e…
The LeadWhen Keir Starmer won a landslide Labour majority promising to pursue five governing "missions", the high-profile leftwing economist Mariana Mazzucato was credited as an inspiration. Two years on, her bracing new book helps shed light on why Labour in power has struggled to project the sense of direction that "mission-led government", as Mazzucato calls it, requires.A New Framework for Economic PolicySynthesising and extending her earlier work, here she proposes "a new economics of collective action around the common good". From this perspective, the economy is not a concatenation of rapacious independent forces, to be contained and offset by public policy, but a project – or rather a series of projects – with direction and purpose.The Five Principles of Common Good EconomicsThe "compass" in the title is really a set of five principles, all of which Mazzucato says such an economy should have: purpose and "directionality"; co-creation by citizens; collective learning; reward sharing; and accountability. Each of these principles is set out in detail. Co-creation implies grassroots participation in designing and redesigning government programmes, for example – because, "when people help define a problem and develop and implement solutions, they see them as theirs rather than something imposed on them".Reward Sharing and PredistributionReward sharing means ensuring the creators or rightful owners of economic value stand to benefit: from Indigenous people whose homes lie near raw material deposits, to social media users whose data fuels Big Tech's profits. That implies radical tax reform – including greater use of wealth taxes – and the robust use of conditions in public contracts, to make sure workers and taxpayers get their fair share: an approach she calls "predistribution".Critique of Labour's Economic ApproachAccording to Mazzucato's definition, Labour's attempt at mission-led government badly missed the mark. Its first and overriding goal – "kickstart economic growth" – cannot be a "mission" at all, because it lacks the necessary purpose. What, in other words, is that economic growth meant to be for? While her scope in this ambitious book is global, the analysis also dismantles Starmer's claim to be pursuing national "missions", by setting out just how radical – and radically different – that would look in practice.Practical Examples and Global Applications"The seeds of transformation are everywhere," she says, citing inspiring projects that range from delivering healthy and sustainable school meals in Sweden to the EU's mission to support cities to become climate-neutral, to the international Nagoya Protocol on sharing the benefits of genetic resources and traditional knowledge. Echoes of Mazzucato's mindset are detectable in some Labour policies – from using the threat of legislation to cajole pension funds to invest more in UK assets, to writing conditions on youth training into clean energy contracts.The Future of Economic DirectionEconomies work best, she believes, when they pursue grand collective goals – developing and distributing a vaccine for a pandemic; or confronting the climate emergency (or, though she doesn't lean on the example here, tooling up for a new and more frightening geopolitical era). We should ask, she says, "not which market failure do we want to be fixed, but what direction do we want the economy to sail in".
#Mariana Mazzucato #Labour Party #Economic Policy
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Sports Jun 01, 2026

IFAB Introduces Landmark Rule Changes for World Cup 2026

The International Football Association Board (IFAB) announced a suite of new laws that will debut a…
The IFAB Blueprint: New Laws Set for the 2026 World CupThe international self‑regulatory body for football, IFAB, revealed on Sunday a package of rule changes that will be enforced from the 2026‑2027 season and, for the first time, at a major tournament – the 2026 FIFA World Cup.Pierluigi Collina, FIFA Chief Refereeing Officer, described the amendments as a way to "tackle discrimination, cut time‑wasting, enhance match tempo and improve both the player and fan experience."Concrete Rule Shifts: What Players and Officials Must Now FollowRed card for mouth‑covering in confrontations: Players who hide their mouths with hands, arms or shirts during disputes will be sent off.Red card for leaving the pitch in protest: Any player or team official who incites a walk‑off will be dismissed, and the team may forfeit the match.Five‑second visual countdown for throw‑ins and goal‑kicks; failure hands possession to the opposition.Ten‑second substitution window: Substituted players must exit within 10 seconds or the replacement can only enter after a minute‑long stoppage.One‑minute off‑field treatment for injured outfield players after medical staff intervene.Expanded VAR scope: Review of clear‑cut red‑card errors, mistaken identity, incorrectly awarded corner kicks and pre‑restart fouls.Three‑minute hydration break in each half, timed around the 22nd minute.Goalkeeper injury timeout: No players may leave the field while a goalkeeper receives on‑pitch treatment.Numbers Behind the Changes: Quantifying the ImpactRed‑card offences now cover mouth‑covering and field‑walk‑offs, potentially adding 2–3 dismissals per match.The 5‑second countdown reduces average throw‑in and goal‑kick delays by an estimated 4–6 seconds per set piece.Substitution timing cuts player‑exit time from the current average of 15 seconds to 10 seconds.Mandatory 3‑minute hydration breaks add 6 minutes of total stoppage time per game, balanced by faster restarts elsewhere.Why These Rules Matter: Shaping the Future of the Beautiful GameBy criminalising mouth‑covering in heated moments, IFAB directly addresses recent incidents of alleged racial abuse, signalling zero tolerance for discrimination. The walk‑off sanction deters teams from using protest as a tactical weapon, preserving match integrity. Countdown timers and stricter substitution windows accelerate play, catering to broadcasters’ demand for a faster‑paced product and enhancing spectator engagement. Expanded VAR usage aims to reduce critical errors, restoring confidence in officiating decisions.Looking Ahead: Potential Ripple Effects Beyond 2026If the 2026 World Cup demonstrates smoother flow and fewer disciplinary controversies, the new laws are likely to become permanent fixtures in domestic leagues worldwide. Critics may argue that the stricter enforcement could increase red‑card counts, prompting a review of disciplinary thresholds. Moreover, the broader VAR remit could set a precedent for further technological integration, such as AI‑driven off‑side analysis, reshaping the officiating landscape for the next decade.
#IFAB #FIFA #World Cup 2026
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World Wide Jun 01, 2026

Iran's IRGC Launches Retaliatory Strike Against US Forces

Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) launched a retaliatory strike on a US base in respo…
The Retaliatory Strike Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) says it launched a retaliatory strike on a base used by US forces that it claims was used for an attack on an Iranian communications tower. The IRGC Aerospace Force fighters targeted the airbase where the aggression originated, and the predicted targets were destroyed. The Escalation The attacks come after the United States said it carried out strikes on Iran this weekend in response to 'aggressive Iranian actions that included the shootdown of a US MQ-1 drone that was operating over international waters.' US fighter aircraft swiftly responded by eliminating Iranian air defenses, a ground control station, and two one-way attack drones that posed clear threats to ships transiting regional waters. The Fragile Ceasefire The attacks, the latest in several exchanges of fire in recent days, come as indirect negotiations between the US and Iran to formalize a fragile ceasefire that took effect in April continue. There have been mixed signals about whether the two sides are close to an agreement to extend the fragile truce. The Potential Memorandum of Understanding The two sides have reportedly been reviewing a potential memorandum of understanding (MoU) that would extend the ceasefire for a further 60 days and begin negotiations to end the war permanently. The MoU will state that shipping through the Strait of Hormuz is to be 'unrestricted,' meaning there will be no tolls, no 'harassment,' and that Iran will have 30 days to remove all sea mines. Iran's Response Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil ‌Baghaei said on Monday that any delay ⁠in ⁠the diplomatic process to end the war can ⁠be explained by a lack of trust, ⁠Washington's contradictory positions and Israel's attacks on Lebanon. Negotiations have started amid severe suspicion and mistrust, and the exchange of messages is taking place in ⁠this atmosphere. Trump's Statement US President Donald Trump said in a statement on his Truth Social platform late on Sunday, Tehran 'really wants to make a deal' and that whatever deal is reached will 'be a good one' for the US 'and those that are with us.' He lashed out at domestic critics for 'negatively 'chirping'' about his handling of the war but made no mention of the US strikes on Iran.
#Iran #US #IRGC
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Politics Jun 01, 2026

Washington Proposes De-escalation Roadmap as Israel Deepens Lebanon Offensive

Washington has proposed a de-escalation roadmap for Lebanon amid Israel's deepest military push int…
The Lead: US Intervention Amid Escalating Conflict Washington has put forward a proposal to de-escalate hostilities in Lebanon, a United States official has told Al Jazeera, adding that Secretary of State Marco Rubio has held separate talks with Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The statement comes as Israel's military has taken over the medieval Beaufort Castle just north of the Litani River in southern Lebanon, conducting its deepest push into the country in decades. The US De-escalation Proposal: Conditions for Ceasefire The US official told Al Jazeera on Sunday that under the proposed "roadmap", Hezbollah would halt all attacks on Israel in exchange for Israel refraining from further escalation in the Lebanese capital, Beirut. The US proposal aims to create a conducive environment for a gradual de-escalation and a complete, comprehensive cessation of all hostilities, the official added. Human Cost of Escalation: Casualties and Displacement More than one million people have been forcibly displaced across Lebanon since the fighting between Hezbollah and Israel escalated on March 2. According to the latest figures from the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health, more than 3,412 people have been killed and 10,269 wounded in Israeli attacks since March 2. Israeli forces killed at least 12 people and wounded 35 in more than 36 attacks across southern Lebanon on Sunday alone, according to an Al Jazeera tally. International Response: Global Condemnation Countries across the world have slammed Israel's escalation of its offensive on Lebanon. French President Emmanuel Macron said "nothing justifies" it. United Kingdom Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper called on Israel to halt its military activity in Lebanon, saying its escalation had "eroded space for diplomacy". Qatar condemned Israel's continuing attacks on Lebanon and the expansion of its ground offensive in the south, describing the campaign as a serious escalation and violation of international law. Path Forward: Mixed Signals and Continued Tensions Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who promised to push deeper into Lebanon and called Sunday's operation a "dramatic shift" in the campaign against Hezbollah, ordered the military on Monday to attack targets in Beirut's southern suburbs, known as Dahiyeh, a stronghold of the Lebanese group. The US official placed responsibility for the current round of fighting squarely on Hezbollah and accused it of following Iran's directives without regard for Lebanese interests. "The quickest way to protect civilians and reduce escalation is for Hezbollah to cease fire immediately," the official said, adding that Washington does not expect Israel to tolerate continued attacks on its civilians.
#Marco Rubio #Benjamin Netanyahu #Hezbollah
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Lifestyle Jun 01, 2026

Dance Festival Immersion: From Terrified Novice to Weekend Warrior

A first-time dancer chronicles their experience taking multiple dance classes at Melbourne's Rising…
The Dance Challenge: A Weekend Immersion As I wait for my first Cuban salsa class to begin, I have the distinct feeling that I am poorly prepared. I'm wearing heavy jeans, a bulky woollen sweater and boots. I have never done a dance class in my life – or any kind of exercise class. I don't know anything about salsa, Cuban or otherwise. Standing alone, I notice that everyone has come with at least one friend, and begin to suspect that it takes two to Cuban salsa. This year, Rising festival – Melbourne's winter arts offering – has consolidated its longstanding dance focus into a mini-festival: the inaugural Australian Dance Biennale, showcasing Australian and international work. There's also a series of dance classes, romantically titled The Land of 1000 Dances, held in the romantically decrepit Flinders Street Ballroom. Running daily until 7 June, with classes costing $29 a pop, the diverse schedule includes Afro-fusion, ballroom, voguing, waltz and K-pop for teens and tweens. From Salsa to Shuffle: A Dancer's Journey As an audience member, I am an avid appreciator of dance; as a participant, I can most kindly be described as "curious" but uncoordinated. What if I went to a bunch of dance classes and then wrote about it? Precisely 24 hours before my first class, the misgivings begin – doing my first dance class while dressed for the show I'm seeing directly afterwards sounds like a bad idea. At the ballroom, I am briefly reassured: the crowd is a diverse mix of ages, genders and bodies, and hardly anyone is wearing dance-appropriate clothing. But the class itself is a blur – sometimes literally – as I try to learn and enact the cucaracha, the guapo and other basic Cuban salsa moves; attempt to locate the beat, my hips, any sense of coordination at all. Every time I feel as though I'm starting to get the hang of something, the instructor adds a new step. Then he corrals us into pairs – and a series of new moves, yelling "change partners!" every three minutes. Going solo, it turns out, is fine: everyone is friendly; many seem as unsure as I am. Some are nailing it but there's a sense of camaraderie: we're all in this together. That said, we're all a bit too sweaty to be holding each other. The Social Dynamics of Dance Classes I move from absolute befuddlement, through occasional moments of triumph, to a sense of quiet despair. A move that involves a 360-degree rotation to an eight-count almost breaks my spirit and I consider quitting. To my surprise, this awakens a latent fighting spirit: screw the rules, I'm doing it my way. I experience brief elation. Then we change partners and I find myself in a cursed duet involving four left feet. The elation shrivels. The class ends and I run to the theatre feeling like a dank, demoralised biohazard. I spend the next hour watching a show by the Irish choreographer Oona Doherty featuring a mix of professional, student and untrained dancers – and I mentally salute them all, with a newfound appreciation for the dark art of dance. Finding Joy in Movement I approach my next class, Melbourne shuffle, with a sense of dread. Not only do I now know how bad I am but I have agreed to be photographed. And I made the choice without knowing anything about the Melbourne shuffle, mistakenly assuming it was somewhere in the ballpark of the city's other great cultural tradition. This feeling I am experiencing, I discover, is known as "endorphins". The physical exertion, the mental focus required, the social connection – it all combines to create a chemical cocktail that makes the experience worthwhile despite the occasional humiliation. By the end of my dance weekend, I haven't become a dancer, but I've gained a profound respect for those who are. The Australian Dance Biennale and The Land of 1000 Dances offer not just entertainment, but an invitation to participate, to challenge oneself, and to discover new dimensions of movement and expression.
#Rising Festival #Australian Dance Biennale #Melbourne
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Lifestyle Jun 01, 2026

Norwegian Children’s Books Break Taboos from IVF to Incest

Norwegian authors are publishing children’s books that confront topics like IVF, adoption and inces…
How Norway’s Children’s Books Are Redefining TabooSwedish‑born author Anna Fiske and fellow illustrators are publishing picture books that openly discuss subjects traditionally considered off‑limits for young readers, from assisted reproduction to sexual abuse. The approach has earned them awards, strong sales, and, in some markets, fierce opposition.Anna Fiske’s ‘How Do You Make a Baby?’ Triggers International ControversyFiske’s 2019 title Hvordan Lager Man en Baby? (How Do You Make a Baby) illustrates IVF, insemination and the mechanics of intercourse. Distributed in English‑speaking territories by a New Zealand publisher, the book attracted death threats in Canada, was labeled pornographic in the US and banned from several school libraries, yet it also sparked vital conversations about sexual education.Sales Milestones and Awards Highlight Market Reception100,000+ copies sold of Fiske’s “How to” series in Norway.2025: Fiske receives the Honorary Brage award, one of Norway’s top literary honors.Norwegian festival of literature in Lillehammer showcases dozens of titles on exclusion, bullying, queer literature, climate, mental health and forced migration.State Support and Cultural Attitudes Fuel Literary FreedomNorway’s publishing model purchases a large stock of every new title for national libraries, insulating authors from pure market pressure. Government grants further enable writers to experiment without fearing commercial failure. Culturally, Scandinavian views treat children as autonomous individuals, encouraging open dialogue about risk and hardship.Global Publishers May Follow Norway’s ModelAs controversy in North America highlights the limits of censorship, the Norwegian example suggests a viable path for other markets: combine public funding with a cultural ethos that respects children’s capacity to engage with difficult topics. If other countries adopt similar policies, we could see a surge in globally distributed children’s literature that tackles previously taboo subjects.
#Anna Fiske #Svein Nyhus #Lillehammer Literature Festival
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Sports Jun 01, 2026

Jai Hindley Makes History with Giro d'Italia Podium Hat-Trick

Australian cyclist Jai Hindley has made history by becoming only the second Australian to achieve t…
Australian Cycling History Made at Giro d'ItaliaJai Hindley has roared again in the "pinnacle of cycling", making history as just the second Australian to enjoy three overall podium finishes in Grand Tours as he rode home for a valiant third place in the Giro d'Italia. As new champion Jonas Vingegaard confirmed his place among the sport's all-time elite in Rome by completing his set of the three Grand Tour triumphs and dominating the 109th Giro with five magnificent stage wins, Hindley underlined why he is one of Australia's greatest.Hindley's Remarkable Comeback JourneyThe 30-year-old had been ill during the race, needing to take antibiotics in the second of the three weeks, yet recovered spectacularly to complete his own set of Giro podium finishes, having won in 2022, been runner-up in 2021 and now third. Only the great former Tour de France winner Cadel Evans has had more Grand Tour podium finishes among Australians, with five.The often unsung Perth rider Hindley said on the eve of the race from Bulgaria that he and his Red Bull BORA-hansgrohe team "aren't here to lick stamps". That was his 2026 version of his famous but bewildering affirmation "we're not here to put socks on centipedes" in the year he won. The translation was that he and his team weren't once again there to mess around, and after he proved stronger over the race than his talented young co-team leader Giulio Pellizzari to assume the role of main man, Hindley lived up to his promise."The second week was very hard for me, I was really quite sick. I even had to take antibiotics, but I seem to be back in time," Hindley had smiled after a remarkable third-week resurgence saw him move into third place overall on the 19th of the 21 stages.Australian Cyclists Dominate Final StandingsOn Sunday, the largely processional ride into the capital ended with Italian Jonathan Milan winning the final-stage sprint and Vingegaard clinching his fourth Grand Tour, having twice won the Tour de France and last year's Vuelta, where Hindley had signalled he was recovering his best form with a fourth-place finish. Hindley did suffer a mechanical mid-race on Sunday but swiftly got back to the peloton. He ended 6 minutes 25 seconds behind Vingegaard, and 1:03 behind runner-up, Austrian Felix Gall."I haven't had a good result in a Grand Tour for a long time, and to be fighting for the podium again was really nice," said Hindley. "For me, the Grand Tours are the pinnacle of cycling, and being competitive in them is what I train for."It was only the second Giro in a decade in which there wasn't a stage won by an Australian, following the early abandonments of the luckless Kaden Groves and Jay Vine with crashes, but, impressively, there were four Australian finishers in the top 17. Michael Storer (Tudor Pro) finished a career-best seventh at 10:13 down, Ben O'Connor (Jayco AlUla) was 16th at 24:12 and Chris Harper (Pinarello Q36.5 Pro) 17th at 30:43.Elevating Australian Cycling on World StageHindley's achievement places him among the elite of Australian cycling history, with only Cadel Evans boasting more Grand Tour podium finishes. His consistent performances across multiple Grand Tours demonstrate the growing strength of Australian cycling on the international stage. The presence of four Australians in the top 17 of the Giro d'Italia further highlights the depth of talent coming from Australia.Future Prospects for Australian CyclingWith Hindley establishing himself as a consistent contender in Grand Tours and younger Australian riders like Pellizzari showing promise, the future looks bright for Australian cycling. The country's ability to produce multiple top-tier cyclists suggests that Hindley's historic achievement may be just the beginning of a new era for Australian cycling excellence on the world stage.
#Jai Hindley #Giro d'Italia #Cycling
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Politics Jun 01, 2026

The Guest Documentary Exposes Perils of Protecting Refugees in Poland‑Belarus Border Zone

The Guardian review of the documentary *The Guest* spotlights the perilous conditions faced by refu…
Lead: A Personal Tale of Shelter Amid a Militarised BorderThe Guest follows a Polish family who open their home to Alhyder, a 27‑year‑old Syrian refugee, illustrating the daily danger in the Poland‑Belarus “danger zone”. The film reveals how political decisions have turned a humanitarian corridor into a lethal exclusion area.Documentary Unveils the 3‑km Polish Exclusion ZoneSince 2021, the Polish government has enforced a 3‑km strip along the Belarus border where migrants are seized and deported back to Belarus. The documentary captures constant military patrols, the ban on NGOs, and the covert network of locals providing food, clothing, and translation.Location: Small town in Poland bordering BelarusKey figures: Zvika Gregory Portnoy and Zuzanna Solakiewicz (directors)Subject: Alhyder, Syrian refugeeNumbers that Frame the Crisis27‑year‑old refugee at the centre of the story3‑km exclusion zone established in 2021Film released on 5 June on True Story platformHumanitarian Impact and Ethical ConcernsThe film highlights the bravery of “good samaritans” but also raises ethical questions after showing a deceased refugee’s body without clear consent. By focusing mainly on victimhood, the documentary risks reducing displaced people to statistics rather than full human narratives.Looking Ahead: Policy and AwarenessAs the documentary reaches international audiences, it may pressure EU and Polish authorities to reconsider the exclusion zone policy and improve humanitarian access. Continued media attention could spur NGOs to negotiate limited access or push for legal challenges against forced deportations.
#The Guest #Zvika Gregory Portnoy #Zuzanna Solakiewicz
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