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Sports Apr 30, 2026

Melbourne Storm Coach Craig Bellamy Diagnosed with Neurodegenerative Disorder

Melbourne Storm coach Craig Bellamy has been diagnosed with an unspecified neurodegenerative disord…
The LeadMelbourne Storm coach Craig Bellamy has been diagnosed with an unspecified neurodegenerative disorder but will remain as coach in the immediate future, the club has confirmed. The 66-year-old recently underwent a series of medical tests, with the diagnosis coming 24 hours out from the Storm's NRL clash with the Dolphins in Brisbane.The Medical Diagnosis"Over recent weeks, in consultation with specialists, Craig has undergone a series of medical tests and has since been diagnosed with a form of neurodegenerative disorder," the club said in a statement on Thursday. "He is receiving the best possible medical treatment and has been advised by specialists that his diagnosis will not have an impact on his ability to coach the team in the immediate future."The Coaching LegacyBellamy has coached 614 NRL games, which puts him behind only Wayne Bennett and the retired Tim Sheens in the all-time coaching list. In February, he signed a new contract through until the end of the 2028 season, extending his remarkable tenure with the club. Bellamy has been at the helm of Melbourne Storm since 2003, making this his 24th season as coach.The Current SeasonThe Storm are enduring a difficult campaign, losing six successive matches for the first time since Bellamy took over as coach in 2003. A seventh straight loss in Brisbane would equal the all-time club record for consecutive defeats. The team's poor form stands in stark contrast to their usual dominance under Bellamy's leadership.The Club's ResponseMelbourne chair Matt Tripp expressed full confidence in Bellamy's ability to continue coaching at an elite level. "Despite our recent results, I firmly believe Craig is still coaching at an elite level and I have no doubt he is the right person to drive the club forward," Tripp said. "Craig has the full support of the board, players, coaches and staff to continue leading the club as he has done for the last 24 seasons."The Future OutlookBellamy was present at Storm training in Melbourne on Thursday, continuing his duties as coach. The club is also dealing with other health concerns, with players Eli Katoa (who underwent brain surgery last November) and Tui Kamikamica (sidelined after suffering a stroke and undergoing brain and heart surgery) both facing extended absences. The Storm organization remains committed to supporting Bellamy through his health challenges while maintaining their focus on improving on-field performance.
#Craig Bellamy #Melbourne Storm #NRL
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World Wide Apr 30, 2026

Pakistan Opens Road Trade Routes to Iran Amid Hormuz Blockade

Pakistan has opened six overland transit routes for goods destined for Iran, formalizing a road cor…
The Lead Pakistan has opened six overland transit routes for goods destined for Iran, formalizing a road corridor through its territory as thousands of containers remain stranded at Karachi port due to the US blockade of Iranian ports and ships trying to pass through the Strait of Hormuz. Pakistan's New Transit Routes The Ministry of Commerce issued the Transit of Goods through Territory of Pakistan Order 2026 on April 25, bringing it into immediate effect. The order allows goods originating from third countries to be transported through Pakistan and delivered to Iran by road. The six designated routes link Pakistan's main ports, Karachi, Port Qasim and Gwadar, with two Iranian border crossings, Gabd and Taftan, passing through Balochistan via Turbat, Panjgur, Khuzdar, Quetta and Dalbandin. The shortest route, the Gwadar-Gabd corridor, reduces travel time to the Iranian border to between two and three hours, compared with the 16 to 18 hours it takes from Karachi – Pakistan's biggest port – to the Iranian border. Economic Impact of the Blockade The current US-Iran war began on February 28, when US and Israeli forces launched attacks on Iran. In the weeks that followed, Iran restricted commercial navigation through the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which roughly a fifth of the world's oil and gas passes during peacetime, disrupting one of the most critical arteries of global trade. More than 3,000 containers destined for Iran have been stuck at Karachi port for several days, with vessels unable to collect the cargo. War-risk insurance premiums have surged from about 0.12% of a vessel's value before the conflict to roughly 5%, making shipping to the region too expensive for many operators. Shifting Regional Dynamics The corridor also signals a shift away from Afghanistan, whose relations with Pakistan have deteriorated sharply. The two sides engaged in clashes in October 2025 and again in February and March this year, with skirmishes continuing along the northwestern and southwestern borders. The Torkham and Chaman crossings have ceased to function as reliable commercial routes since tensions escalated, limiting Pakistan's overland access to Central Asian markets. “This is a paradigmatic shift. Pakistan's relations with the Afghan Taliban, the de facto rulers in Kabul, have no reset switch,” Iftikhar Firdous, cofounder of The Khorasan Diary, told Al Jazeera. Future Outlook The transit order appears to be a direct economic response to the impasse between the US and Iran. Pakistan brokered a ceasefire on April 8 and hosted the first round of direct US-Iran talks on April 11, in Islamabad. The negotiations lasted nearly a day but ended without a deal. Iran has ruled out direct negotiations with Washington while the blockade remains in place, though Araghchi told Pakistani officials that Tehran would continue engaging with Islamabad's mediation efforts “until a result is achieved”.
#Pakistan #Iran #Hormuz Blockade
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Entertainment Apr 30, 2026

The Strip Club Drama 'Tender' Explores Infinite Pleasure and Vulnerability

The play 'Tender' by Dave Harris explores themes of sex, masculinity, and vulnerability in a failin…
The Lead The play 'Tender' by Dave Harris is a drama that explores themes of sex, masculinity, and vulnerability in a failing strip club. The show aims to challenge societal norms and encourage open conversations about pleasure. Exploring Masculinity and Pleasure Harris, who has always been obsessed with sex, created 'Tender' to explore how infinite pleasure can be and how stifled people are in understanding it. The play presents the idea that masculinity is performed rather than fixed. The Event Details The story revolves around a failing strip club, the Dancing Bears Club, where the characters' rigid ideas about sex and power are challenged. The club's owner sends in his daughter, B, played by Jessie Mei Li, to turn the club's luck around. The Impact Analysis The play aims to create a safe space for discussions about consent and pleasure. Harris and the cast, including Dex Lee and Kwami Odoom, have been working to create an immersive experience, with the audience being handed paddles to indicate their comfort level with interactive scenes. The Prediction Harris predicts that audience members will leave the show feeling vulnerable, turned on, and possibly wanting to call their parents. The play runs at Soho Theatre in London until June 6th.
#Tender #Dave Harris #Soho Theatre
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Business Apr 30, 2026

Disney+ Secures Live Men's Champions League Games in Major European Markets

Disney+ has secured live rights for men's Champions League matches in several European countries, i…
The Champions League Rights Auction Disney+ has secured live rights for men’s Champions League matches for the first time, with Uefa attracting a new buyer in the auction of broadcast packages for its flagship club competition. Disney has been named as the preferred bidder in several European countries, one of which is understood to be Sweden, in the auction of 19 TV markets for the 2027-31 cycle that concluded this week. Disney's Growing Interest in Football Rights Disney’s success is significant for the industry because it will be the first time the US company has bought Champions League rights and demonstrates the widening appeal of the competition to broadcasters and streamers. Disney’s interest in football rights has been building for some time, and is likely to grow. The company holds exclusive pan-European rights for the women’s Champions League until 2030 and Europa League and Conference League rights in Sweden and Denmark. The Financial Impact of Champions League Rights Uefa and UC3 last year secured increases of between 20% and 30% on their existing deals in the auction for the biggest five European markets of the UK, Spain, Germany, Italy and France, and are understood to have achieved further double-digit growth in the current round of sales. Uefa is projecting that the total value of its TV rights will exceed €5bn (£4.3bn) a year when the tenders are concluded, and as the Guardian reported this month it also expects to bring in more than €1bn annually through commercial deals. The Future of Sports Broadcasting This outcome will be welcomed by the clubs and domestic leagues because it demonstrates the increasing demand for football rights and will not divert resources from major rights holders such as Sky Sports, TNT Sports or Dazn. The recent auction was for Champions League rights in Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Central America, Czechia, Denmark, Finland, Mexico, Norway, Poland, Portugal, the Republic of Ireland, Romania, Slovakia, South America, Sweden, and Switzerland.
#Disney+ #UEFA Champions League #Uefa
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World Wide Apr 30, 2026

US-Iran Conflict May Become Protracted 'Frozen' War

The US and Iran conflict may become a protracted 'frozen' war, with both sides engaging in a low-in…
The US-Iran Conflict Escalation Two months since the US and Israel launched a joint surprise attack on Iran, negotiations appear deadlocked, as competing blockades of the Strait of Hormuz continue to disrupt global energy supplies, and the future of Iran's nuclear programme remains unresolved. The Frozen Conflict Scenario All military options remain on the table, despite a ceasefire in force since April 8 having paused the conflict. Qatar's Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Tuesday cautioned against the possibility of a 'frozen conflict', where the critical waterway is used as a pressure card amid the possibility of violent flare-ups. The Cost of a 'Frozen' War The war between the US and Iran can already be described as 'frozen', but this no-war-no-deal scenario comes at too high a cost for both parties, Mehran Kamrava, an expert on Iran at Georgetown University in Qatar, told Al Jazeera. The American foreign policy think tank Quincy Institute estimated that Washington's costs incurred over the first month of the war were between $20bn and $25bn. A large-scale ground operation in Iran similar to that of Iraq in 2003 would require at least 500,000 personnel and some $55bn a month, or more than $650bn a year. Prolonged versus Protracted Conflict In Trump's initial projection, the war in Iran was intended to last 'four to five weeks'. Two months into the conflict, Chandler Williams, researcher at the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO), says the prolonged conflict has lasted longer than forecast. The Impact of a Protracted Conflict Washington is betting on sustained economic and diplomatic pressure backed by Trump's constant threat to renew strikes to see if it can 'finish what air strikes alone cannot achieve', Williams said. For its part, Iran is aware of the US's military superiority and has opted for leveraging the Strait of Hormuz until the US decides that a negotiated settlement is preferable. 'Mowing the Grass' in Iran On Tuesday, the US Department of Defense requested $53.6bn for autonomous drones for the 2027 fiscal year, a roughly 24,000 percent increase from last year. If the tactics of the conflict shift towards drone warfare and towards a low-intensity conflict, this has lower costs for the attacker but a higher impact for the recipient as we've seen in the conflict between Ukraine and Russia, Michael Kerr, a historian and political scientist at King's College London, told Al Jazeera.
#US #Iran #Middle East
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Sports Apr 30, 2026

PSG‑Bayern showdown fuels debate over Premier League’s attacking identity

A 5‑4 Champions League semi‑final between PSG and Bayern Munich sparked fresh criticism from Claren…
The 5‑4 thriller that reignited the style debateOn Tuesday night Paris Saint‑Germain edged Bayern Munich 5‑4 in a Champions League semi‑final that left pundit Clarence Seedorf warning that “football is also control and defence”. The high‑scoring spectacle highlighted the technical and physical peaks of two “single‑issue superclubs” built to peak in April.Seedorf’s defensive doctrine after the Paris clashSeedorf, speaking on Amazon Prime, praised structure over pure entertainment, arguing that “football is not conceding four goals at home”. His Dutch‑inspired, almost Lutheran, emphasis on defensive solidity contrasted sharply with the open‑play spectacle that delighted many fans.Financial muscle and squad depth: the numbers behind the hype5‑4 scoreline – a rare defensive lapse for both sides.Bayern have been averaging four goals a game since March, a statistic enabled by deep pockets and elite recruitment.Chelsea, the ninth‑richest club in the world, are flirting with relegation, underscoring that wealth alone does not guarantee league success.Premier League clubs like Arsenal and Manchester City face a “twice‑weekly churn”, limiting player recovery and creative expression.Why English clubs resist the hyper‑attacking modelThe Premier League’s competitive balance and relentless schedule push managers toward “pillbox” tactics. Clubs prioritize consistency over the risk‑taking required to produce the kind of free‑flowing football seen from PSG and Bayern. Additionally, domestic league structures treat most weekends as “high‑end practice”, allowing superclubs to fine‑tune for a spring peak.Future outlook: could the Premier League adopt a PSG‑Bayern style?For English sides to emulate the Paris‑Bayern spectacle, they would need to restructure revenue sharing, reduce fixture congestion, and embrace a recruitment model focused on elite attacking talent rather than depth. Until then, the league is likely to remain a “brutally competitive” arena where defensive resilience trumps flamboyant offense.
#Paris Saint-Germain #Bayern Munich #Premier League
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Politics Apr 30, 2026

Trump Maintains Iran Blockade, Tehran Threatens 'Practical' Action

US President Donald Trump has vowed to maintain the naval blockade on Iran until a nuclear deal is …
The Standoff Between US and Iran President Donald Trump says the United States will continue its naval blockade of Iran until a nuclear deal is reached with Tehran. The US president told Axios on Wednesday that he does not want to end his blockade on Iranian ports, apparently rejecting the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz so that US-Iran talks could proceed. Iran's Response to the Blockade Iran has set lifting the siege as a precondition for returning to the talks. According to several media reports, Iran offered a limited deal this week that would end its own blockade on Hormuz in exchange for the end of the siege on its ports. Trump's comments on Wednesday indicate that he turned down the Iranian proposal. Economic Impact of the Blockade The blockade has sent oil prices soaring, fuelling energy inflation in the US, where the price of one gallon of petrol has surpassed $4.22 ($1.11 per litre) – up from less than $3 ($0.79 per litre) before the war. The international benchmark Brent crude oil futures jumped to more than $119 per barrel on Wednesday as Washington and Tehran escalated their rhetoric. Future Outlook Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said on Wednesday that the US is trying to “activate economic pressure and internal division” in the country “to weaken or even collapse us from within”. He promised that Iranians “will defeat this deceptive plan of the enemy” and “achieve a brilliant victory” in the war. Separately, an unidentified senior security source told Iran’s state-owned Press TV that the blockade will soon be met with “practical and unprecedented action”.
#Donald Trump #Iran #US Blockade
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Theatre Apr 30, 2026

Driftwood review: Trinidadian tale of longing hits emotional high notes

Driftwood, a play by Martina Laird, tells the story of a fractured family in 1950s Trinidad, captur…
The Emotional Landscape of Driftwood The air hangs heavy in Alma, a drinking club in 1950s Port of Spain, Trinidad. Heat and rum bring their own kind of languor – but in Martina Laird's play, change is coming, both within a fractured family and in the wider world. Characters and Conflict Alma is managed by a mother and daughter. Ellen Thomas gives the indomitable Pearl a basilisk glare but not maternal instincts (“the only thing I done wrong is to make children dat not worth nothing”). Ruby (an exuberant, citrussy Cat White) runs a honeypot scam on tourists, but doesn’t intend to “stay here in downtown hell”. The Plot Thickens When Pearl's long-abandoned son Diamond arrives, tensions seethe. The RSC's content warnings flag up incest – so it's no surprise when Ruby and Diamond catch each other's glance. She stands in golden lamplight, and he draws close, moth to flame. Martins Imhangbe's towering Diamond moves in an unhurried, proprietary roll, teetering and then rising on his toes. Capturing a Nation on the Brink Laird captures a country on the febrile brink of change. Nationalist Eric Williams (later the independent island's first prime minister) is standing for election, urging voters to reject the claims of British rule and American economic encroachment. Calypsos with a satirical snap play between scene changes. A Critical Verdict Laird's first staged play, runner-up for the Verity Bargate award, still feels in need of another draft. Plot and emotion are dialled up to 11 but don't shake you as they might. A different production might ignite the dialogue's crackle; Justin Audibert's heavy-handed direction sloshes in music to underscore emotive speeches and ambles towards the flickering redemption that might break the cycle of personal and political history. Atmosphere and Performance Driftwood is steeped in atmosphere, enhanced by Simon Spencer's lighting: amber gliding over ink-blue walls, or dunking late night confessions in an eerie moss green. The best of Laird's writing is equally vivid: the tang of sour memory, the detail of dreams betrayed. At the Other Place, Stratford-upon-Avon, until 30 May. Then at Kiln theatre, London, 3 June-4 July
#Driftwood #Martina Laird #RSC
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Politics Apr 30, 2026

Senior UK Ministers Slam Rachel Reeves' Reported Year‑Long Rent Freeze Plan

Senior Labour ministers publicly rejected Rachel Reeves' rumored proposal to freeze private‑sector …
Senior ministers have poured scorn on the idea of a year‑long private‑sector rent freeze, just hours after the Guardian reported that Chancellor Rachel Reeves was considering the measure. The swift repudiation by Housing Secretary Steve Reed and Housing Minister Matthew Pennycook has amplified internal Labour tensions and sparked fresh market volatility. The Political Backlash to the Proposed Rent Freeze 28 Apr 2026: Steve Reed declares “we’re not doing it” during a press briefing. 28 Apr 2026: Matthew Pennycook labels the proposal “not a credible or serious policy proposition” and cites evidence from Sweden, Germany, San Francisco and Scotland. 29 Apr 2026: Keir Starmer praises Reeves but stops short of guaranteeing her tenure. 29 Apr 2026: Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch questions the government’s economic approach in the Commons. The swift denials have fueled speculation that Reeves could be reshuffled, especially after reports that Starmer may consider a post‑election cabinet overhaul. Market Reaction and Yield Spike Amid Policy Uncertainty Investors reacted sharply to the political turmoil: 10‑year UK gilt yields climbed to **over 5%**, the highest closing level since 2008. Yield spreads widened as analysts warned that a prolonged Middle‑East conflict could erode Reeves’ fiscal “headroom”. Jefferies analysts flagged the upcoming local elections as “the market can’t ignore”, noting potential pressure on bond prices. Implications for Labour’s Economic Credibility and Upcoming Elections The episode highlights deeper fractures within Labour’s economic team. While the party seeks to project fiscal responsibility, the rent‑freeze chatter suggests a tension between voter‑friendly populism and market‑oriented prudence. A reshuffle or perceived instability could: Undermine confidence among business groups and investors. Elevate borrowing costs for the UK government. Provide ammunition to opposition parties ahead of the local polls. What Lies Ahead for Reeves and the Treasury Given the market’s sensitivity, Downing Street reiterated full confidence in Reeves, emphasizing continuity until the next general election. However, the confluence of: internal Labour dissent, rising gilt yields, and looming local‑election outcomes, means a reshuffle cannot be ruled out. Analysts expect Reeves to maintain her position in the short term while the government navigates the dual challenges of fiscal stability and political cohesion.
#Rachel Reeves #Keir Starmer #Steve Reed
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