Editor's Picks
Opinion
Travel & Tourism
Why this mattersMost people still support the right to seek asylumResettlement numbers decrease massively Misinformation has not eroded public compassionThe Refugee Convention marks 75 years of protectionUnveiling new data on Tuesday, the UN refugee agency, UNHCR,…
Most Read
Share It!
World News
Why this mattersMost people still support the right to seek asylumResettlement numbers decrease massively Misinformation has…
World News in Brief: Aid deliveries to Gaza restricted, UN prepares El Nino response, El Salvador eliminates disease
Reporting from a recent aid convoy mission, WFP Country Director for Palestine Shaun Hughes said that…
Features
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.
Health & Fitness
Trending Now
To understand the new politics stance and other pro nationals of recent times, we should look to Silicon Valley and…
Latest Articles
UAE Team Emirates – XRG’s Slovenian rider Tadej Pogacar cycles to the finish line to win the 10th…
Jordan Pickford of England speaks to the media on July 13, 2026 in Kansas City, Kansas. (AFP) England goalkeeper Jordan Pickford has faced World Cup penalty shootouts, semi-finals and some of the biggest names in football during his record-breaking career, but there is one challenge that has eluded him until now.When England take on Lionel Messi and reigning champions Argentina in Wednesday’s World Cup semi-final in Atlanta, Pickford will come up against the eight-times Ballon d’Or winner for the first time.For a player who broke Peter Shilton’s record for most England World Cup appearances when he started his 18th match in the quarter-final against Norway, the occasion carries a sense of history.The 32-year-old Everton player was eight when England last met Argentina, during the group stage of the 2002 World Cup.”I remember being sat in school on the floor watching when the teacher wheeled in the TV, so I’ll never forget that moment,” Pickford told reporters on Monday.”He’s scored so many goals and he’s contributed to so many goals all his career, and it’s great to be able to finally come up against him after so long and watching him as a kid,” Pickford said of the 39-year-old Messi, who is playing in his sixth World Cup.The goalkeeper warned, however, about treating Argentina as a one-man team. “We all know how good Messi is, but we also know how good Argentina are, Pickford said. “We’ve got our thoughts on their other strengths as well, and the other weaknesses we can take advantage of.”England arrived among the favourites and have navigated numerous pressure situations, including a 10-man win over Mexico, throughout the tournament, which Pickford said underlined a resilience that has become a defining characteristic of Thomas Tuchel’s side.”I’ve always said the togetherness gets you there. Then the ability shows as well,” he said. “But the togetherness, if you’ve got that togetherness like we have, that’s a great tool to have.”DARK ARTSArgentina’s run to the semi-finals has been accompanied by complaints over refereeing decisions and the team’s mastery of football’s so-called “dark arts”, but Pickford said England would not be distracted by anything. “Throughout the tournament, you’ve seen our desire to win titles. We’ve not got into any scuffles or anything, we’ve been very well respected within the game,” he said. “Decisions go our way, they don’t go our way. We just reset, and we let the football do the talking. “We’ve not had, apart from Jarell (Quansah, who was suspended for two games), any suspensions or anything like that. It shows the mentality we have, we don’t get wrapped up in things like that. We stay focused. We stay together.”Tuchel raised eyebrows after the Norway win when he angrily highlighted areas England needed to improve in, and Pickford agreed the team had not reached their peak.”Like the manager said, the mentality we have in abundance and the togetherness we have, but we’re not the finished article,” he said. “We hope the cream rises to the top. And we’ll always keep working harder to keep improving because you don’t want to think: the job’s done against Norway.”Pickford was England’s keeper during the last-16 shootout against Colombia in 2018, saving Carlos Bacca’s penalty before Eric Dier converted the winning spot-kick to secure England’s first World Cup shootout victory.Pickford said the players were determined to reward the faith of a nation daring to dream of World Cup glory for the first time since 1966.”You know how we feel, you see us after every game, and to have the nation behind us at home doesn’t go unseen. We know how much it means to them, but we also know how much it means to us, and we pay huge credit to them enjoying themselves. We’re doing it for them as well,” Pickford said.”That was the first goal, looking back at 2018 (under previous manager Gareth Southgate), it was about connecting the nation. Now we’re in the semi-final (again), and we know Argentina is going to be a tough game, but we want to put smiles on (supporters’) faces as well.” …
In makeshift homes lacking even the most basic necessities surrounded by piles of rubbish and flanked by dirt roads, thousands of Somalis in Yemen live in poverty in Aden's ‘Little Mogadishu’.Yemen is not a destination in itself for migrants but a way station for those leaving East Africa in the hopes of reaching the Gulf states and working in construction or as domestic staff.But with security along its borders tight, many struggle to make it out of Yemen.During the day, the men fan out across the city and line the roads looking for work in the de facto capital of government-controlled Yemen, where more than a decade of war has led to mass unemployment and food insecurity.To make ends meet, many search for odd jobs or scavenge rubbish heaps, looking for any food that can be salvaged to feed themselves and their families.’Some days we eat, some days it's up to God. That's life,’ said Abdullah Omar, a 29-year-old Somali father of four in Aden.Over a year ago, Omar decided to take his chances, shelling out $500 to traffickers to board a boat with his family in hopes of escaping Somalia's instability and finding a better life abroad.But in Yemen, it has only been misery.To survive, Omar washed cars, making the equivalent of just a few dollars a day. After years working in construction in Mogadishu, Omar had hoped to find better conditions and pay in Yemen — where he had passed through as a teenager en route to Saudi Arabia.But that was before years of civil war killed hundreds of thousands of civilians, destroyed vast amounts of infrastructure and left the country effectively partitioned between the Houthi fighters and Yemen's internationally recognised government.’Here I have nothing,’ he said, while explaining his decision to enrol in a UN programme that paved the way for his repatriation to Somalia.’There's no work, no money and no schooling for the children.’Despite the poor conditions roughly 17,000 Africans arrived in Yemen in October, mostly from nearby Djibouti and Somalia, an increase of 99% from the month prior, according to the UN.Somalis make up about 63% of the 61,000 registered refugees and asylum seekers in Yemen, UN data shows.Across Aden, where unemployment is already staggeringly high among Yemenis, African migrants are hard-pressed to gain a foothold.Nearly 19.5mn people in Yemen — more than half its population — are in need of humanitarian aid, including 4.8mn internally displaced people, according to early 2025 UN data.Somalia remains ravaged by its own civil war, with the insurgents of Al-Shabaab still in control of vast swathes of the country.But relative peace in the capital Mogadishu in recent years has brought a degree of stability and allowed a lucrative construction boom in parts of the city.According to a UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) survey, 56% of Somalis who are repatriated cited a ‘lack of income opportunities’ in Yemen as their main reason for returning home.’Many refugees want to go back to Somalia, but they can't afford smugglers or plane tickets,’ said Oweis al-Azzan, who oversees the head of the UN's voluntary return programme, which helps migrants.The programme provides families with free transportation and cash to help ease their transition once they are back home.The UN has repatriated more than 500 Somalis so far this year and plans three more flights by the end of the year carrying around 450 more people.Among those set to return is Somali contractor Ahmed Abu Bakr Marzouk, who came to Yemen 25 years ago, where he married twice and started a family.For years he prospered, sending money home regularly and financing the building of two homes in Mogadishu.Then came the war.’For the past three or four years, there's been no work,’ said the 58-year-old.With no relief in sight in Yemen, Marzouk said conditions in Somalia were now more favourable. ‘My brothers work in farming there. If peace returns, I'll come back,’ he told AFP.’If not, I won't.’ Source link
Masashi “Jumbo” Ozaki of Japan tees off the number one tee during the US Open Golf Championship in…
A scarcity of nuts has put Ivory Coast’s shea sellers under pressure. With nuts scarce as the shea season draws to a close, buyer Souleymane Sangare’s warehouses in Ivory Coast’s northern city of Korhogo are empty.In a country where shea production is modest and largely based in the north, sellers made up for the shortfall by sourcing from Mali and Burkina Faso.But last year, the neighbouring countries — among the world’s top shea crop producers — halted shea nut exports to boost local production.The shea tree is a symbol of the dry African savannah. Its fruit contains a nut that women collect and sell raw, or process into butter for skincare or the food industry.”Since they suspended exports, it has been hard to get nuts. And on top of that, this year Ivorian production has not been profitable enough,” said Sangare, a buyer at Korhogo market and vice-president of the Ivorian Shea Network.Gone are the mountains of nuts in his two warehouses — only a few sacks remain this year.”I normally have between 3,500 and 4,000 tons of nuts per season. This year, I haven’t even managed 500 tons, two months after the start of the season” from mid-August to October, he said.In January, Ivory Coast also suspended exports of its nuts to secure supply for its own industry. Women rely on making a…
His Highness The Amir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, sent a cable of condolences to Mohammed Al-Manfi, President of the Presidential Council of the sisterly State of Libya, on the death of the Chief of the General Staff of the Libyan Army, Lieutenant General Mohammed Ali Al-Haddad, and his companions, following the crash of their plane. Source link
