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Cheering fans gave Switzerland’s World Cup football squad a heroes’ welcome as they returned home on Tuesday after reaching the quarter-finals for the first time in 72 years.Supporters gathered in the Turbinenplatz square in Zurich to greet the “Nati” following their exploits in the United States and Canada, full of pride at what a team from a small country, ranked 19th in the world, had achieved on the biggest stage.Switzerland is on a hot streak, having also reached the last two European Championships quarter-finals.The players and manager Murat Yakin, wearing red t-shirts that said “History”, were welcomed onto a stage in in front of a backdrop reading “We are Switzerland”, in the country’s four official languages: German, French, Italian and Romansh.”We would have loved to stay for another week,” Yakin told the crowd.”But of course it’s also lovely to be able to return home to our own fans like this.”We’re extremely proud of what the entire staff and all the players have achieved.”Fans joined in with the players as they danced about on the stage, with many supporters dressed in red shirts and baseball caps with the Swiss cross.”It’s a bit hard to fully grasp what we’ve achieved,” said captain Granit Xhaka.”Overall, it was a good tournament. We can be really proud of what we accomplished.”Unfortunately, it wasn’t quite enough in the end. With a bit of luck, we might have gone even further. But that’s part of the game, and we accept it.”Switzerland were beaten 3-1 by Argentina after extra time in Kansas City on Saturday, equalising in the second half shortly before striker Breel Embolo was sent off in tears after simulating a foul with a theatrical dive.The Swiss had had Lionel Messi’s defending champions on the back foot for much of the match -then had to defend valiantly once reduced to 10 men.For fans packed into bars and fan zones in Switzerland, the match finished shortly before 6:00am, with people streaming home in broad daylight after a long, long night.There was plenty of support for Embolo at the Zurich homecoming party, with one youngster holding up a placard asking for his signature.Another home-made sign read: “Dear Breel Embolo, you’re innocent.”Goalkeeper Gregor Kobel said the team’s defining characteristic was “the resilience everyone showed” throughout the tournament.”The way everyone gave it their all, the way everyone kept going right to the end,” he said.”That was huge for every single one of us.”Switzerland topped Group B, drawing 1-1 with Qatar before beating Bosnia-Hercegovina 4-1, and then co-hosts Canada 2-1 in Vancouver.In the knock-out stages, Switzerland downed Algeria 2-0, then beat Colombia 4-3 on penalties after a goalless draw, before losing to Argentina.”It was nice to celebrate here with all the fans, and to welcome the team, which was a joy to watch,” said supporter Roman, who came from the Zurich suburbs.”We know they should have gone through, but it was great that we were able to celebrate them.”Jernnine, who came from Basel with her family, said they had woken up early to watch the rollercoaster quarter-final.”It was emotional; it was cool!” she told AFP. Related Story Source link
Unidentified attackers hijacked an oil tanker yesterday off the coast of Yemen in the Gulf of Aden and directed it towards Somalia, the Yemeni coast guard said.According to the agency, the tanker EUREKA was seized off Yemen’s Shabwa province by a group who “boarded, took control of it, then steered it… in the direction of the Somali coast”. The coast guard, which is affiliated with Yemen’s internationally recognised government, vowed to investigate the attack.“The location of the tanker has been determined, and work is under way to monitor it and take the necessary measures in an attempt to recover it and ensure the safety of its crew,” it said, without identifying the crew’s numbers or nationality. According to the website Marine Traffic, the EUREKA is a Togolese-flagged oil products tanker that was reported to have been in the UAE port of Fujairah in late March.Piracy was rampant off the coast of Somalia in the 2000s, peaking in 2011 with hundreds of attacks, but was significantly reduced by international naval deployments and new tactics by commercial shipping.However, in recent weeks attacks have increased again, according to a report by the European Union naval mission deployed off the shores of the troubled east African country. Since February 28, shipping in the region has also been disrupted by the US-Israeli war against Iran, but there was no immediate indication that yesterday’s hijacking was related to the ongoing conflict. Source link
The Israeli military said yesterday that its forces damaged a “religious building” in south Lebanon, drawing condemnation from a Catholic charity, which identified it as a convent and denounced the “deliberate” targeting of a place of worship. The military said troops operating in the village of Yaroun had damaged a structure inside a religious compound while dismantling what it described as “terrorist infrastructure” in the area. “It was determined that during the forces’ operations to destroy terrorist infrastructure, one of the houses located in a religious compound was damaged,” the military’s Arabic-language spokesman, Colonel Avichay Adraee, said on X. “There were no visible signs indicating this was a religious building,” he continued. “Once clear identifying features were observed on another building in the compound, the forces acted to prevent any further damage to the compound.” Adraee justified the presence of troops in the area by citing multiple rocket attacks launched by Hezbollah from within the compound toward Israeli territory, as fighting continues in spite of a ceasefire. The French Catholic charity L’Oeuvre d’Orient said the troops had “destroyed” a convent belonging to the Salvatorian Sisters, a Greek-Catholic religious order with which the charity is affiliated.“L’Oeuvre d’Orient strongly condemns this deliberate act of destruction against a place of worship, as well as the systematic demolition of homes in southern Lebanon aimed at preventing the return of civilian populations,” it said in a statement. However, Israel’s foreign ministry denied that the site – which it described as “a monastery” – had been destroyed, saying on X that the site was “intact and safe”, posting a photograph of a two-storey house. The incident comes days after the military jailed two soldiers for 30 days for desecrating a statue of the Christ in the Christian village of Debl in south Lebanon, near the border with Israel. Israel has kept up deadly strikes on Lebanon despite the April 17 ceasefire that sought to halt more than six weeks of war between it and Hezbollah.The ceasefire text grants Israel the right to act against “planned, imminent or ongoing attacks”. Israeli soldiers are operating inside a “Yellow Line” running some 10km deep inside Lebanon’s border, where they are carrying out wide-scale detonations and demolitions of buildings. Related Story Source link
Fatima al-Safadi sits in her house with her grandchildren whose father was detained by Israel, in the southern…
A Palestinian was martyred Sunday after being shot by Israeli occupation forces east of Gaza City.Israeli occupation forces continued to violate the ceasefire agreement by carrying out shelling and opening fire in various areas across the Gaza Strip.Israeli occupation artillery shelled Al-Tuffah neighborhood east of Gaza and renewed its targeting of areas in the eastern part of the city, while Israeli military vehicles opened heavy fire in the same area.The artillery shelling also struck the town of Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip, as gunfire and shelling continued in the eastern parts of Khan Younis in the south and in central areas of the Strip.Earlier today, a Palestinian child was martyred from injuries sustained when he was targeted by an Israeli drone in Khan Younis in southern Gaza.The death toll from the Israeli occupation offensive on the Gaza Strip since Oct. 7, 2023, has risen to 72,608 martyrs and 172,445 wounded. Source link
