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Filipina star Alexandra Eala enjoyed a strong start to her Madrid Open campaign Wednesday, moving past Russian qualifier Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 6-3, 6-3 to reach the second round at the event for the third straight year.The 44th-ranked lefty needed one hour and 31 minutes to dismiss Pavlyuchenkova, who was a semi-finalist in the Spanish capital in 2021.The 34-year-old Pavlyuchenkova, a former French Open runner-up currently ranked 116 in the world, is 0-6 in tour-level main draw matches so far this season.Eala saved all four break points she faced and broke Pavlyuchenkova twice in a tightly-contested 54-minute opening set.The 20-year-old phenom briefly lost her advantage in the second set but swept eight points in a row to regain her lead and book a clash with 19th seed Elise Mertens.’I feel really great. I love Madrid, it's an amazing tournament,’ said Eala, who has been training at the Rafa Nadal Academy in Mallorca for almost eight years.’Every time I come here, I feel very comfortable, I feel like I'm at home.’Pavlyuchenkova, who was playing with a heavily-strapped right upper thigh, committed close to 40 unforced errors in what was her first meeting with Eala.’Every match at this level is a battle, all of us players we fight until the end and she's been on the tour for many years. So I'm really happy with this win. She's a great player and I'm really happy to be in the next round,’ Eala added.In ATP action at the Caja Magica, 2021 Madrid finalist Matteo Berrettini crashed out to Croatian qualifier Dino Prizmic 6-3, 6-4.’It's definitely a big thing for me and it's a pleasure to share the court with him,’ said the 20-year-old former Roland Garros junior champion. Prizmic will next take on American fourth seed Ben Shelton.Meanwhile, former US Open champion Marin Cilic claimed his first Madrid Open win since 2022 with a hard-fought 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 performance against world number 44 Zizou Bergs.It was the 37-year-old Croatian's first top-50 victory on clay in four years and it earned him a second-round meeting with Brazilian teenager Joao Fonseca. Source link
Taiwan has become a “super-aged society” for the first time, with 20% of its shrinking population aged 65 or older in 2025, government data showed yesterday. The island of more than 23mn people faces a looming demographic challenge, with its population falling overall as well as ageing. There were 4,673,155 people aged 65 or older in Taiwan in 2025, or 20.06% of the population, according to the interior ministry. That means it met the World Health Organisation’s criteria for a super-aged society, with one in every five citizens aged 65 or more. The number of people aged 0-14 accounted for 11.51% of the population. Source link
Iran was largely cut off from the outside world yesterday after authorities blacked out the Internet to curb growing unrest, and video showed buildings aflame in anti-government protests raging in cities across the country.Rights groups have already documented dozens of deaths of protesters in nearly two weeks and, with Iranian state TV showing clashes and fires, the semi-official Tasnim news agency reported that several police officers had been killed overnight. In a televised address, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei vowed not to back down, accusing demonstrators of acting on behalf of emigre opposition groups and the US, and a public prosecutor threatened death sentences.Iran’s Ministry of Information and Communications Technology said the decision to shut down the Internet was made “by the competent security authorities under the prevailing circumstances of the country.”The protests pose the biggest internal challenge in at least three years to Iran’s rulers amid a dire economic situation and after last year’s war with Israel and the US.While the initial protests focused on the economy, with the rial currency losing half its value against the dollar last year and inflation topping 40% in December, they have morphed to include slogans aimed directly at the authorities.Iranian rights group HRANA said yesterday it had documented the deaths of at least 62 people, including 14 security personnel and 48 protesters, since demonstrations began on December 28. The Internet blackout has sharply reduced the amount of information flowing out of the country. Phone calls to Iran were not getting through. At least 17 flights between Dubai and Iran were cancelled, Dubai Airport’s website showed.Images published by state television overnight showed what it said were burning buses, cars and motorbikes as well as fires at underground railway stations and banks.Videos verified by Reuters as having been taken in the capital Tehran showed hundreds of people marching.Iranian rights group Hengaw reported that a protest march after prayers in Zahedan, where the Baluch minority predominates, was met with gunfire that wounded several people.A video posted on social media purported to show demonstrators in the southern city of Shiraz as they chanted,Authorities have tried a dual approach — describing protests over the economy as legitimate while condemning what they call violent rioters and cracking down with security forces.Last week, President Masoud Pezeshkian urged authorities to take a “kind and responsible approach”, and the government offered modest financial incentives to help counter worsening impoverishment as inflation has soared.But with unrest spreading and clashes appearing more violent, the Supreme Leader, the ultimate authority in Iran, above the elected president and parliament, used much tougher language yesterday”The nation came to power through the blood of hundreds of thousands of honourable people. It will not back down in the face of vandals,” he said, accusing those involved in unrest of seeking to please US President Donald Trump.Tehran’s public prosecutor said those committing sabotage, burning public property or engaging in clashes with security forces would face the death penalty. Source link
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has pledged to “unconditionally support” all of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s policies and decisions, Pyongyang’s state media said today. North Korea has dispatched thousands of troops to fight for Russia, according to South Korean and Western intelligence agencies, as Moscow presses ahead with its nearly four-year invasion of Ukraine. In a letter shared by the North’s state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), Kim said he felt “true comradely relations” from Putin and regarded their ties as the “most precious ones”. “Close cooperation” between the two countries “will continue in various spheres in the future”, Kim wrote. – Source link
Residents of Ashrafieh neighbourhood queue to receive aid after days of clashes, in Aleppo, Syria, January 9, 2026. REUTERS/Karam al-Masri…
