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Two Palestinians were killed and several others wounded in an Israeli occupation strike on Gaza City early Saturday, according to local medical sources.Medical officials in the enclave said that a woman and a child were killed and a number of other people were injured when an Israeli strike hit a residential apartment on Al Thalathini Street in Gaza City. Medical teams transferred the bodies of the two victims to Al Shifa Hospital in the western part of the city, while the wounded were taken for treatment.The death toll from the Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip since Oct. 7, 2023, has risen to 73,018 people killed and 173,273 wounded.The cease-fire agreement between Hamas and Israel, which it said took effect on Oct. 10 of last year, has not spared Gaza residents from daily attacks, displacement and systematic starvation. Instead, the living conditions have become increasingly difficult amid severe shortages of basic necessities. Related Story Source link
Henry Nicholls’s superb unbeaten century saw New Zealand into an utterly dominant position against England in the second Test at the Oval on Friday.New Zealand were 252-3 in their second innings at stumps on the third day in south London — a huge overall lead of 352 runs — with Nicholls 119 not out.The Black Caps, looking to level this three-match series after a 115-run defeat in the first Test at Lord’s, had been faltering at 28-2 on Friday when Nicholls was joined in the middle by Rachin Ravindra.But the two left-handers restored New Zealand’s grip on the game with an excellent third-wicket partnership of 161 in 33 overs that only ended when Ravindra was lbw for 76 to Jacob Bethell deep into the final session.New Zealand led by exactly 100 runs on first innings after Matt Henry took five wickets as England were dismissed for 291 earlier on Friday.England then had a glimmer of hope when New Zealand captain Tom Latham and fellow opener Devon Conway both fell cheaply.RAVINDRA REPRIEVEAnd the Black Caps were almost 48-3 when Ravindra was dropped on just seven by James Rew, the struggling debutant England wicket-keeper failing to hold a diving left-handed chance off Josh Tongue.Nicholls was given the unenviable task of replacing Kane Williamson at No 3 after arguably New Zealand’s greatest batsman of all time shocked the cricket world by retiring from international duty following the first Test rather than waiting until the end of the series.But the 34-year-old Nicholls, out for just 24 in the first innings, demonstrated plenty of grit and concentration second time around, while still scoring briskly.The elegant Ravindra, following his reprieve by Rew, was largely untroubled by England’s quicks repeatedly bowling bouncers on a good pitch during a 79-ball fifty featuring 11 fours.Stand-in England skipper Joe Root deployed seven bowlers in total, including his own part-time off-spin, during the day’s play.It was Bethell’s left-arm spin, however, that proved Ravindra’s undoing when the batsman was given out lbw after missing a sweep to leave New Zealand 189-3.But the resolute Nicholls completed the 11th century of his 59-Test career when he pulled Bethell for four — his 14th boundary in 136 balls faced. HENRY GRABS FIVE WICKETSEarlier, fast-medium bowler Henry returned fine innings figures of 5-80 in 24 overs.An England team showing five changes from Lord’s and missing captain Ben Stokes, omitted after breaking a team curfew, would have been in an even worse position but for tailender Matt Fisher’s 50 not out — his maiden Test half-century.Fisher, on his Surrey home ground, was supported in a last-wicket partnership of 53 by Sonny Baker, one of three England debutants, after they came together with the hosts in dire straits at 238-9.England had resumed play on 222-6 on Friday morning beneath sunny blue skies — seemingly ideal conditions for batting.Debutant Jordan Cox added just five runs to his overnight was 22 when a clip off Henry was well-caught at short midwicket by a diving Latham.Henry, troubled by back spasms at Lord’s, then dismissed Jofra Archer (eight) after a top-edged cut was brilliantly caught by wicket-keeper Tom Blundell, standing up to the stumps.Tongue’s miscued drive off Henry was well-held one-handed, at the second attempt, by a back-pedalling Nathan Smith at mid-on to give the 34-year-old paceman his seventh five-wicket haul in 35 Tests.BRIEF SCORES New Zealand 391 and 252 for 3 (Nicholls 119*, Ravindra 76) lead England 291 (Gay 53, Fisher 50*, Henry 5-80) by 352 runs Related Story Source link
Rachin Ravindra admits it will take a collective effort from New Zealand’s batsmen to replace Kane Williamson after his shock decision to retire from international cricket.Williamson brought the curtain down on his illustrious New Zealand career following the first Test defeat against England at Lord’s, leaving New Zealand with a huge hole in their line-up when the second Test starts at the Oval on Wednesday.The 35-year-old is New Zealand’s all-time leading run scorer across all formats with 19,346 runs, including 48 centuries and six double hundreds, in 378 appearances between 2010 and 2026.Williamson, who captained New Zealand on 206 occasions, scored 9,515 runs at an average of 54.06 in 110 Tests for the Black Caps.New Zealand all-rounder Ravindra conceded it will be impossible for one player to produce the wealth of runs amassed by Williamson.Instead Ravindra hopes New Zealand’s overall batting depth can help fill the void.”I don’t necessarily see it as pressure. Whenever a great moves on there is always a hole in the team,” Ravindra told reporters on Monday.”But the strength and quality in our depth in our team is what we pride ourselves on. We have Henry Nicholls and obviously Will Young is here as batting back-up.”We all share responsibility within our batting unit. It’s not on one guy, it’s pretty hard to fill in that gap and unfortunately I don’t think many people can. So it will be a collective effort.” NO COMPLAINTSRavindra said New Zealand’s squad had no complaints about Williamson’s decision to step away in the middle of the three-Test series.”It’s always tough when probably our greatest player calls time. We were all so supportive of his decision,” he said.”Kane is such an amazing player but more than that he’s such an amazing bloke and has contributed so much to New Zealand.”Personally I have looked up to him for a long time now. He’s one of my biggest idols. I was very lucky to share the crease with him and enjoy some cool partnerships.”Sharing the crease, he is in a zen zone. He’s such a great mentor. Kane has done things in his own way and decided the time is right. He has been so giving to the group.”New Zealand will look to bounce back after being thrashed by 115 runs at Lord’s, where they found it difficult to cope with a treacherous pitch that made it hard for the batsmen.”We take learnings from everything, whether it is success or failure. There were some balls keeping low and seaming around at Lord’s. We do know it is a fresh start,” Ravindra said.”This will be a different surface, different conditions. We haven’t played a Test at the Oval for a long time.” Related Story Source link
Hungarian lawmakers Monday voted overwhelmingly to limit prime ministers’ terms in office to a maximum of eight years, a constitutional change that blocks nationalist Viktor Orban’s return.The amendment was a key campaign promise of pro-EU conservative Peter Magyar, who in April elections ousted Orban from office, promising sweeping reforms as part of a “regime change”.Magyar argued the possibility of limitless tenure can lead to power concentration, pointing to his predecessor as an example, whom critics accused of constantly tweaking Hungary’s political system to keep a tight grip on power.Orban’s party opposed term limits, arguing that it could possibly restrict popular will.The amendment passed parliament with 135 votes for, 50 against, and six abstentions. Under Hungarian law, such a measure can be passed by a two-thirds supermajority without needing a referendum.Some countries around the globe impose term-limits on their top leaders, with such restrictions usually placed on presidents.The tenure of Hungary’s president, whose role is largely ceremonial, is already limited: he can be reelected only once to a second five-year term.The adopted term limit does not completely rule out Orban’s return to power, however, as it could be revoked in the future by another constitutional change.This is the 16th time Hungary’s Basic Law has been changed since its adoption in 2011.The approved amendment also removed a provision stipulating the need for independent body to “safeguard” the country’s “constitutional identity”.This was done to prepare the ground for disbanding the Sovereignty Protection Office.The controversial agency, established under the previous government in 2024, was entrusted with broad investigative powers ostensibly to curb “foreign influence”.But it mainly targeted Orban’s critics, accusing independent media and NGOs like Transparency International of serving foreign interests for its scrutiny of the government.The agency has not released any official reports since Magyar won the election.Hungary’s parliament is set to vote on a bill for the agency’s dissolution at the end of June. Related Story Source link
Spain's ghosts of recent World Cup horror shows reappeared in Atlanta as the European champions were held 0-0 by debutants Cape Verde in their opening game on Monday. Lamine Yamal was left on the bench as the Barcelona superstar is eased back to fitness after nearly two months out with a hamstring injury and even his appearance as a second-half substitute failed to break down Cape Verde's dogged defence. Since winning the World Cup for the first time in 2010, Spain have not won a knockout game and their inability to make dominance of possession count was reminiscent of their meek exits in 2018 and 2022. ‘Reality has to sink in,’ said Spain boss Luis de la Fuente. ‘This is a World Cup. We know that some teams, on paper, they are not better than us and we thought that we were far better than them. But then it's a struggle to win.’ Blessed with what coach De la Fuente claimed is the best squad in the competition, Spain were considered among the pre-tournament favourites to go all the way and lift the World Cup on July 19. But the importance of Yamal and Nico Williams to their chances of success was underlined by a flat performance. Williams also had an injury-disrupted season at Athletic Bilbao and was not introduced until the 87th minute. Ranked 67 in the world, Cape Verde were making their debut on the global stage and did a nation of just over 500,000 people proud. In stark contrast to the searing temperatures faced by some other sides, Atlanta's state-of-the-art air conditioned stadium meant there was no excuses for the slow tempo of Spain's build-up. Indeed the mid-half hydration break was met by boos with fans frustrated at the break in play despite the cool conditions. It took until six minutes before half-time for Spain to seriously threaten. Marc Cucurella, fresh for sealing his move from Chelsea to Real Madrid, sent over a teasing cross that Ferran Torres turned onto the crossbar and Cape Verde goalkeeper Vozinha got back on his feet to turn Mikel Oyarzabal's looping header over the bar. Torres tested Vozinha again moments later before Aymeric Laporte's header from a corner was also clawed away by the Cape Verde number one just before half-time. The break came at a good time for the Blue Sharks and they comfortably held out in the second period until Yamal's entrance after the second hydration break. Billed as one of the stars of the tournament, the 18-year-old's appearance instantly lifted the crowd and injected life into the pedestrian Spanish attack. His first involvement set up a decent opening for fellow substitute Mikel Merino which was too close to Vozinha. Yamal also began the move that saw Oyarzabal's effort deflected over with Spain's best chance of the second half. Cape Verde nearly snatched a famous victory in the final minute of the 90 when Dani Borges planted a header too close to Unai Simon. But even without a winner, 40-year-old Vozinha was reduced to tears at full-time as Cape Verde produced the biggest shock of the tournament so far. ‘I've worked all my life for this, for this moment, for this dream,’ said Vozinha, who plays for Chaves in the Portuguese second division. ‘A lot of generations in the past dreamed of this, they didn't achieve it,’ he added. ‘The dream came true, for all of us.’ Spain's road to victory in 2010 also began disappointingly with defeat to Switzerland, but they have much to work on ahead of facing Saudi Arabia in Atlanta once more on Sunday. Cape Verde next take on Uruguay in Miami. Source link
Smoke rises from Edwards Air Force Base after the crash of a US Air Force B-52 bomber aircraft…
