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Novak Djokovic admitted even he was surprised by his ability to out-last Felix Auger-Aliassime in a five-set epic that ranked as the longest quarter-final in Wimbledon history. Djokovic is 14 years older than Auger-Aliassime and had to battle a calf injury throughout a Centre Court classic lasting five hours and 15 minutes in sweltering temperatures. The 39-year-old Serb somehow summoned up the energy, focus and will-power to beat the Canadian third seed 7-6 (12/10), 3-6, 6-3, 6-7 (4/7), 7-6 (10/4), booking a blockbuster semi-final against defending champion Jannik Sinner. Djokovic appeared out on his feet at times in the final set, which was only settled in a nerve-shredding tie-break that finished just minutes before the 2200 GMT curfew that would have halted play for the night. Refusing to accept defeat, the indefatigable Djokovic delivered one of the most tenacious performances of a glittering career that has brought him a record-equalling 24 Grand Slam titles. Djokovic has often tested the limits of his endurance with marathon victories in the past, but he conceded this was an extra special effort at an age when most of his contemporaries have retired. “I guess yes, at this stage that I’m still able to battle these young guys that have 15 years less than me, that I’m able to beat them at the tightest possible scoreline. Of course, in a sense, it is really a nice surprise,” he said. “I try to also enjoy the moments like this. I think it was a really thrilling experience for us players, but also the crowd. I’m sure also a lot of people watching on TV. Glad to be part of another historic match.” Djokovic rated his astonishing victory alongside his 2019 Wimbledon final against Roger Federer, which the Serb won in five sets over four hours and 57 minutes, as among the best of his career. “It’s exciting to be part of such an epic match that was played over five hours, whatever it was,” he said. “Just one of the best matches I was honestly part of in Wimbledon. Maybe the Wimbledon final in 2019 comes close in terms of time. “The crowd was up on their feet, particularly the last 30 minutes. They recognised how special the moment was. Just very proud to come out as a winner.” ‘AS GOOD AS A FINAL’ Djokovic had spoken earlier in the tournament about his use of cutting edge technology to keep his body in condition to compete against younger opponents. He has used hyperbaric and cryo chambers, cold immersions and red light and pulse therapies to stop father time ruining his bid for a record-equalling eighth Wimbledon title. The treatments have clearly done their job as Djokovic is the oldest man to reach a Wimbledon semi-final since Ken Rosewall in 1974. He has advanced to a 15th Wimbledon semi-final and 55th at the Grand Slams. Djokovic is into the Wimbledon last four for an eighth consecutive time, setting a new record for the longest streak of men’s semi-final appearances at the All England Club. But the only question that matters for Djokovic now is whether he can recover in time to beat Sinner. “I don’t know what tomorrow brings. To be honest, let’s see. I’m still in the tournament,” he said. “I still want to go at least one more step further. But this was as good as a final for me. I gave it all that I had.” Djokovic, who last won Wimbledon in 2022, beat Sinner in five sets in the Australian Open semi-finals in January, but was thrashed by the Italian in the last four at Wimbledon 12 months ago. “Now I have Sinner. Another great, historic run for me at the Grand Slams. This is what counts the most, honestly,” Djokovic said. “I still try to prove to myself and others that I’m able to compete with the best players in the world and beat them in the biggest stage.” Related Story Source link
A Palestinian man has died and five others have been injured after a fire broke out in a tent housing displaced people in Gaza City, Palestinian officials said.In a separate incident, a young girl was killed in another tent fire at Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip.According to the Palestinian news agency, the first fire erupted inside a displacement tent set up at Yarmouk Stadium in Gaza City. One person was killed and five others suffered varying degrees of burns. The injured were taken to hospital for treatment. Wafa added that the second incident involved a child who was living in a tent at Nuseirat camp. The fire reportedly broke out under similar circumstances linked to prevailing weather conditions. The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, said earlier this week that around 235,000 people in Gaza were affected by severe weather conditions between December 10 and 17, after a storm known as Byron caused building collapses and damage to displacement shelters. Since the onset of winter weather in December, at least 18 Palestinians, including four children, have died in weather-related incidents, according to Palestinian sources. About 90 percent of displacement shelters have reportedly been flooded, affecting families whose homes were destroyed during the conflict. Source link
India’s postponed six?match white?ball cricket tour of Bangladesh will take place in September, Bangladesh’s Cricket Board said Friday.The series, including three one-day and three T20 matches, originally due to be played in August 2025, was delayed after both countries’ boards “mutually agreed to defer” the series.India will now play three ODIs and three T20s between September 1 to 13.The postponement last year came as political relations between India and neighbouring Bangladesh turned frosty, after a mass uprising in Dhaka in 2024 toppled then prime minister Sheikh Hasina.Hasina fled to India, where she has remained, straining relations between Dhaka and New Delhi.Bangladesh has repeatedly requested Hasina’s extradition.She was sentenced to death in absentia in November for orchestrating a deadly crackdown on the uprising.But New Delhi is also closely watching the upcoming elections on February 12, the first vote in the South Asian nation of 170 million people since the uprising.On Wednesday, India’s Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar visited Bangladesh to attend the funeral of former leader Khaleda Zia, the most senior visit by an Indian official since the overthrow of Hasina.Zia’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) is widely seen as a frontrunner in elections, and her son Tarique Rahman, who returned last month after 17 years in exile, is seen as a potential prime minister if it wins a majority.Bangladesh will also host series against Pakistan, New Zealand, Australia and the West Indies, across all three formats. Source link
23///*Guinea has world’s largest reserves of bauxiteVillagers living near mine report air, water pollutionFarmers say yields are lower and they are losing outTala Oury Sow has to wash her kitchen utensils and clothes in brown, murky water in the village of Koussadji in Guinea’s western Kindia region.”Do you think we can cook and wash with this? We have no other choice,” the 28-year-old farmer said, gesturing to the water she collected from a nearby river, 500 metres from her home in the Telimele prefecture of the West African nation.Sow blames the state of the water on the Indian mining company Ashapura Minechem, which opened a bauxite mine about 2km from Koussadji in 2019.Bauxite, the raw material in aluminium, is in high global demand because it plays a key role in enabling the clean energy transition, and Guinea holds the world’s largest reserves.But the people of Koussadji and nearby villages say they are not benefitting from the bauxite boom, but instead suffer from the environmental consequences of large-scale mining, including water and air pollution.Their complaints resonate across Africa, where many governments and activists are pushing for more domestic control — and economic benefits — of the critical minerals vital for the energy transition away from polluting fossil fuels.Aluminium is used in solar panels, wind turbines and electric vehicles, as well as energy-efficient appliances and insulation materials in greener buildings.”Look at this water, look at the gift they’ve given us. With this water, do you think life is possible?” said Sow, who grows rice, cassava, groundnut and cashews and blamed her falling crop yields on pollution.Ashapura did not respond to three emails requesting comment on the villagers’ allegations of pollution.The company did build a borehole in the nearby village of Bembou Silaty a year ago, but the water does not cover people’s needs, according to Souleymane Bah, a teacher from the village.Ashapura has also faced allegations of environmental pollution in India.In Bembou Silaty, Tokpa Fehand, a nurse working at the Poste de Sante health centre, said the village is adversely affected by mining activity, both in the dry and wet seasons.”There are respiratory illnesses from the dust, the village is surrounded by the mine, and the machinery hardly ever stops working,” he said.A 2023 community audit of the environmental and social impacts of mining in the nearby region of Boke linked bauxite mining to water pollution, a drop in agricultural productivity and a rise in air pollution.Oumar Totiya Barry, executive director of the independent Guinean Observatory for Mines and Metals, said the problems experienced in Bembou Silaty were typical.”Bauxite waste contains heavy metals and acid; in cases of pollution, it is sedimentation linked to drainage during the rainy season,” he said.JUST TRANSITION?Guinea exports some 3.7mn tons of bauxite per week and produced about 146mn tons last year.The country ships most of its exported bauxite to China.The military-led government, which took power in a 2021 coup, is pushing foreign mining companies to add more value to bauxite before shipping the ore overseas for processing.As part of this drive, it has revoked licences and pressed mining companies to build alumina refineries, joining countries from gold producer Mali to oil-rich Nigeria that are looking to boost domestic refining capacity in recent years.Despite a push by several African countries at November’s COP30 UN climate talks, the issue of a just transition for communities in resource-rich countries was not addressed in the final text.China and Russia, among others, opposed any explicit reference to minerals, participants said.”Talk of a just transition rings hollow so long as governments ignore the minerals required by the energy systems of the future,” said Antonio Hill, an advisor at the policy organisation Natural Resource Governance Institute.”By looking the other way, governments are feeding delay, forfeiting leadership and forsaking the chance to anchor equity and justice at the heart of the global energy transition,” he said in a statement after the talks. In the meantime, Guinea is taking unilateral action. Mamady Doumbouya, the general, has acted to force companies to add value to bauxite in Guinea.Mines Minister Bouna Sylla said in November the country would fast-track the development of alumina refineries and iron ore pellet plants to end decades of raw ore exports.NEW APPROACHBauxite mines, which involve surface level or “strip” mining, can contaminate rivers and streams by removing vegetation and facilitating erosion, Human Rights Watch said in a 2021 report on aluminium production and mining that also referenced Guinea.Barry said the noxious consequences of mining is a factor driving young Guineans to migrate, many opting for risky boat journeys to Spain’s Canary Islands.”(Guinea is) rich in resources, but has not managed to turn them into national wealth, rather into a tool used to consolidate state power,” he said, adding that mining revenues are used to pay policemen, soldiers and civil servants.He said legislation is needed to guarantee Guinean citizens a decent standard of living.The employment benefits are limited too, as many young people do not have the training needed to secure permanent jobs.The women of Allawalli, a farmers’ association in Bembou Silaty and Koussadji, said pollution from the nearby mines has decreased food production.Rice production in Telimele plunged by 90% between 2018 and 2022, according to data from Guinea’s national institute of statistics.Binta Boye, 35, grows rice, groundnuts and cassava in Bembou Silaty and is a member of Allawalli.”What I produced before was enough to feed my family. Now it’s not enough anymore. We’re in God’s hands, if we want this to change,” she said. Source link
Health authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo said that there was a noticeable decrease in the number of monkeypox cases recently. They said that the weekly number of new cases declined from 2,000 a week at the outset of the outbreak, to the current pace of between 250 to 300 cases a week Source link
