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A woman casts her ballot at a polling station during parliamentary elections in Algiers. AFP Algerians headed to the polls Thursday to vote for a new parliament in an election shadowed by fears of low turnout among the 25mn-strong electorate.Polling stations, which opened at 8am local time (0700 GMT) and were due to close at 7pm, were nearly empty in the capital Algiers as of early afternoon, an AFP journalist reported.However, images broadcast on national television showed people queuing up to cast their ballots in some parts of the country, including in the northwestern province of El Aricha.”We came to fulfill our duty, hoping for something good. That’s all I have to say,” Djammel Bouakkaz, a 74-year-old retiree, told AFP at a polling station in Algiers.Voter turnout had reached 11% nationwide as of mid-afternoon, and nearly 10% among those registered to cast ballots overseas, state TV reported, citing the election authority.The last parliamentary vote in 2021 saw a historic low turnout, while this year’s is taking place amid controversy over the government’s disqualification of roughly a third of would-be candidates.Some hopefuls have said they were blocked from competing for major constituencies, including Algiers.The ruling National Liberation Movement (FLN) was widely expected to still dominate the 407-seat National People’s Assembly, whose members are elected for five-year terms.President Abdelmajid Tebboune said the election was proceeding as expected, the state-run APS agency reported.Prime Minister Said Sayoud declined to comment on turnout but urged citizens to take part, according to news website TSA.”I call upon Algerian men and women to turn out in large numbers to vote,” Sayoud was quoted as saying.Algeria had seen record low turnout of 23% in the 2021 poll – the first since a major pro-democracy protest movement swept through the country in 2019.The Hirak movement erupted in February of that year and led to the resignation of president Abdelaziz Bouteflika two months later.Tebboune was elected later in 2019 and won a second term in 2024.Observers have expected little enthusiasm from the voters in Thursday’s poll.”Throughout this campaign, the crucial challenge has been to encourage citizens to turn out in large numbers,” wrote the local French-language daily *L’Expression. Related Story…
Youri Tielemans scored the latest winner in World Cup history as Belgium mounted an incredible comeback from two goals down to beat Senegal 3-2 and qualify for the last 16 of the World Cup on Wednesday.Senegal appeared on course for a first win in a World Cup knockout match since their 2002 debut after taking a 2-0 lead through strikes from Habib Diarra and Ismaila Sarr in Seattle.However, Belgium forced extra time as Romelu Lukaku and Tielemans scored in the final five minutes, before the Aston Villa midfielder completed a remarkable turnaround by converting a penalty in the 125th minute.”In football, anything is always possible as long as you believe in it,” said Belgium coach Rudi Garcia.Belgium go through to a potential meeting with the United States, who face Bosnia and Herzegovina later on Wednesday, but it will be a bitterly painful pill to swallow for Senegal.”We’re out – it hurts. We must congratulate the team, who gave it their all, but unfortunately we weren’t able to hold on to our two-goal lead,” rued Senegal coach Pape Thiaw.A defeat would surely have signalled the end of the road for the last remnants of Belgium’s golden generation – Lukaku, Kevin De Bruyne and perhaps Thibaut Courtois – but instead they live to fight another day.After a 5-1 win over New Zealand that clinched top spot for Belgium in Group G, Garcia named an unchanged side with Atalanta forward Charles De Ketelaere leading the attack and Lukaku on the bench.Thiaw made three changes to the Senegal side that thrashed Iraq 5-0, which allowed them to squeak through as the last of the eight best third-place teams.Pape Gueye started after scoring twice as a substitute in that match, while Pathe Ciss and Everton winger Iliman Ndiaye came into the line-up.Senegal nearly went ahead through the in-form Sarr, who hit the post after Courtois inadvertently diverted a cross into the Crystal Palace forward’s path.The Lions of Teranga did take the lead, however, when Sarr’s header from Sadio Mane’s cross came back off the same post, with Diarra reacting quickest to turn the rebound home.Belgium’s best chance of the half fell to Maxim De Cuyper, whose curling effort from outside the area drew an outstanding full-stretch save from Mory Diaw.Diaw was again filling in for Edouard Mendy, who returned to Saudi Arabia for tests on a knee injury he suffered in Senegal’s second game of the tournament.Belgium unsurprisingly turned to their all-time leading scorer at the interval, with Lukaku having already proven his value as a substitute against Egypt and New Zealand in the group phase.But Belgium fell further behind six minutes into the second half when Sarr chested down Moussa Niakhate’s long pass over the defence before firing an emphatic finish beyond Courtois.De Bruyne and Jeremy Doku were hauled off as Belgium appeared to be heading out, but Lukaku — limited to barely an hour’s play with Napoli this season – grabbed his team a lifeline in the 86th minute.He swept home from a Thomas Meunier cross and, just three minutes later, Belgium were level. Diaw failed to deal with Leandro Trossard’s delivery into the box and Tielemans held off two defenders to nod into an empty net.Belgium substitute Dodi Lukebakio clipped the crossbar late in the second period of extra time as the match appeared destined for a penalty shootout.But there was one final twist when Tielemans went down under a challenge from Lamine Camara, prompting referee Said Martinez to award a penalty after a VAR review.Tielemans stepped up and dispatched with aplomb to cap a stunning fightback and break Senegalese hearts. Related Story Source link
Twelve players are poised to make their FIFA World Cup debut with Qatar as the national team intensifies preparations for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which will be held from June 11 to July 19 across the United States, Canada and Mexico.Qatar, drawn in Group B, will begin its campaign against Switzerland on June 13 in San Francisco, before facing Canada in Vancouver on June 18. The Asian champions will conclude their group-stage fixtures against Bosnia and Herzegovina in Seattle on June 24.Head coach Julen Lopetegui has placed his trust in a new generation of talent, naming 12 players who were not part of Qatar’s historic maiden World Cup appearance at Qatar 2022.The newcomers include goalkeepers Salah Zakaria and Mohammed Abunada, alongside Ahmed Al Janahi, Ahmed Fathi, Edmilson Junior, Al Hashmi Al Hussein, Ayoub Al Alawi, Tahseen Mohammed, Sultan Al Brake, Issa Laye, Mohammed Manai and Youssef Abdurisag.Their inclusion highlights Qatar’s strategy of blending experienced international players with emerging talent as the team aims to deliver a more competitive performance on football’s biggest stage.Many of these players played influential roles in Qatar’s successful qualification campaign, which culminated in securing a World Cup berth through the Asian playoff stage.Several members of the new generation also contributed to Qatar’s triumph at the 2023 AFC Asian Cup, helping the nation retain its continental crown after winning back-to-back Asian titles in 2019 and 2023.Having gained valuable experience through domestic and continental competitions, the players are expected to provide added depth, energy and versatility to the squad as Qatar seeks to make a stronger impact at the 2026 tournament.The team is currently holding its final training camp in the United States, following a friendly match against Republic of Ireland on May 28.Qatar will complete its preparations with one final warm-up match against El Salvador in Los Angeles on June 6 before turning its full focus to the World Cup challenge ahead. Related Story Source link
Israeli military says it will strike Beirut suburb if Hezbollah keeps up attacks on Israeli towns and citiesIsraeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered attacks on the Hezbollah-controlled southern suburbs of Beirut yesterday, signalling the risk of further escalation in a war that has complicated mediation towards resolving the US-Iran conflict.Iranian state TV later said a ceasefire agreed between Iran and the US was very likely to end if Israeli attacks persisted in Lebanon, where war has raged since Hezbollah entered the regional conflict on Tehran's side on March 2.People began fleeing Beirut's southern suburbs, known as Dahiyeh, in response to news of Netanyahu's order — the latest wave of displacement in a conflict that has uprooted more than 1 mn people in Lebanon.Having pounded Beirut's southern suburbs in the early weeks of the war, Israel has carried out only two strikes on the area since US President Donald Trump announced a Lebanon ceasefire on April 16, even as hostilities have raged in southern Lebanon. ‘There will be no situation in which Hezbollah attacks our cities and our citizens, and its headquarters in Beirut, in Dahiyeh, will remain out of bounds,’ Netanyahu said in a video statement.Netanyahu said Israel was continuing to deepen its ground activity in Lebanon, where Israeli troops have carved out a self-declared security zone in the south, saying they aim to shield northern Israel from Hezbollah attacks.The Israeli military later said it would strike targets in the southern suburbs if Hezbollah continued to launch rockets at Israeli towns and cities, and warned residents to leave the area.Hezbollah, established by Iran's Revolutionary Guards in 1982, said its fighters had fired a missile salvo targeting Israeli military infrastructure in the Israeli city of Tiberias at 1 a.m. on Monday, among other attacks it said were in response to Israeli ceasefire violations.On Sunday, Hezbollah said that it had fired rockets at Israeli military infrastructure in the city of Nahariya.Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said there would be no ‘calm’ in Beirut if there was no ‘calm’ in northern Israel.Lebanese authorities say more than 3,400 people have been killed in the country as a result of Israeli attacks since March 2, when Hezbollah opened fire at Israel as it came under U.S.-Israeli attack.Israel says 24 of its soldiers and four civilians have been killed over the same period.Hostilities intensified in the south over the weekend, with Israeli troops capturing the 900-year-old Beaufort Castle, located on a strategic ridge overlooking the border zone.’This is the third time since the ceasefire that we're going from place to place,’ said Naji Musulmani, 61, driving a pick-up truck full of mattresses through clogged Beirut streets away from the southern suburbs.Having fled the south in recent days, Musulmani said he would head to the city of Tripoli in northern Lebanon. Iran's foreign ministry spokesperson said that Israeli attacks in Lebanon were among factors delaying the diplomatic process to end the U.S.-Iran war, and reiterated that a Lebanon ceasefire was an integral part of any deal.Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi, writing on X after Netanyahu ordered the attacks on Dahiyeh, said a ceasefire in place between Iran and the US since April was ‘unequivocally a ceasefire on all fronts, including in Lebanon’.’Violation on one front is a violation of the ceasefire on all fronts. The US and Israel are responsible for the consequences of any violation,’ he wrote.Hostilities have continued in Lebanon despite a series of rare meetings between the Lebanese and Israeli governments, overseen by Washington.A US official said on Sunday that Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke with both Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and Netanyahu on the diplomatic negotiations between Israel and Lebanon and proposed a plan to allow for ‘gradual de-escalation’.As a first step, Hezbollah would stop all attacks on Israel and in return Israel would refrain from escalation in Beirut, the US official said.The official added that Aoun tried to advance the proposal and secure an agreement. However, they said Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, who claimed to ‘guarantee’ Hezbollah's commitment to a ceasefire, placed the burden on Israel to stop ‘shooting first’.Berri, a Hezbollah ally, in a comment reported by Lebanese media on Sunday, said he would guarantee ‘full and immediate commitment to a ceasefire’ by Hezbollah. ‘But the question is, who will compel Israel to stop its aggression?’ he said.A senior Lebanese source told Reuters that the US proposal had involved a halt to Hezbollah’s attacks on northern Israel in exchange for sparing Beirut and its suburbs further strikes, as a step towards a full ceasefire.The source said Berri, however, wanted a full and comprehensive ceasefire instead of a piecemeal approach. Source link
The International Atomic Energy Agency is offering the United Arab Emirates technical as well as moral support, IAEA chief Rafael Grossi said yesterday after a visit to the site of a nuclear power plant that came under a drone attack last month.Grossi said Emirati authorities had reacted very quickly to the attack at the Barakah Nuclear Power Plant by shutting down a reactor because of the loss of external power. The plant, the Arab world’s first commercial nuclear power station, came under a drone attack last month that the Gulf country said was launched from Iraq.The drone that penetrated the UAE’s defences hit an electric generator outside the inner perimeter of the plant, according to Emirati officials. It was one of three drones that were targeting the plant and only two were intercepted, according to the UAE’s defence ministry. The IAEA chief said a number of activities would take place to complete repairs at the plant. He told Reuters that it could be a “matter of weeks” for the repairs to be completed. Grossi said there was a need for physical repair and also maintenance to an external power line. “The repairs are under way already,” he said.After that drone strike, the UAE’s Federal Authority for Nuclear Regulation said the plant remained safe and that no radioactive material had been released due to the attack. While hostilities have mostly calmed since a ceasefire came into effect in April, drones have been launched from Iraq towards Gulf countries, including Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.Iraq is home to powerful militia groups that have claimed attacks against “enemy bases in Iraq and the region” during the US-Israeli war on Iran Source link
Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Rafael Mariano Grossi speaks during a press conference in Abu…
