Skip to main content

Posts

Twelve people reported drowned off a Gaza beach trying to reach aid drop

Palestinian authorities say deaths resulted from attempts to recover crates that fell in water after parachutes went wrong Twelve people drowned trying to get to aid dropped by plane off a Gaza beach, Palestinian health authorities have said, amid growing fears of famine nearly six months into Israel’s military campaign. Video of the airdrop on Monday showed crowds of people running towards the beach, in Beit Lahiya in north Gaza, as crates with parachutes floated down, then people standing deep in water and bodies being pulled on to the sand. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/69zIMJb

‘I don’t feel pressure’: Sky Brown on her skating glory and surfing dream

Teenage skateboarding star and Olympic medallist displays maturity beyond her years and wants to excel in two events Over a breathless hour on Tuesday morning, Team GB’s 15-year-old skateboarding star, Sky Brown, lit up the London skyline with her dazzling repertoire of tricks – all from a floating half-pipe on the River Thames overlooking Tower Bridge. Commuters gawped. Schoolkids pointed. And while a drone buzzed constantly around her, capturing all her handplants, aerials and trademark Japan Air trick for a new campaign for Tag Heuer, she never missed a beat. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/EHWSu7e

The Guardian view on terror in Moscow: Putin’s cynical blame game should fool no one | Editorial

Baseless claims that Ukraine played a role in the assault on a concert hall should not distract from a failure to heed credible warnings The worst terrorist attack on their soil for two decades has left Russians in shock and looking for explanations. Over the weekend, survivors graphically conveyed the horror that unfolded on Friday evening inside the Crocus City Hall, in Moscow’s commuter belt. Hunted down by at least four gunmen, minutes before a rock concert was due to begin, 137 people have so far lost their lives. That death toll is almost certain to rise, given the number of seriously wounded. After an atrocity that recalls all too clearly the Islamic State attacks on the Bataclan nightclub in Paris and Manchester Arena , the world has mourned with Russia. But after terror has come obfuscation and disinformation. Though all available evidence suggests this murderous rampage was the work of a branch of IS based principally in Afghanistan, Tajikistan and Pakistan, the Kremlin i

Bath move up to second in Premiership after late flurry sees off Sale

Bath 42-24 Sale Finn Russell has hand in four of home side’s five tries Every point is going to count over the closing furlongs of the Premiership season and, on this evidence, Bath will have reason to thank Finn ­Russell when the playoff sums are done. Among the Scotland fly-half’s reasons for relocating to the west country was a desire to compete for silverware and, along with Joe Cokanasiga, he was among the key architects of a significant win which elevates his side to second in the table. A dominant last quarter from Bath’s forwards was also responsible for inflicting Sale’s sixth successive defeat in all competitions but ­Russell had a hand in four of his side’s five tries, kicked impressively from all angles and, for good ­measure, also landed first drop‑goal of his ­Premiership career off his weaker left foot. Two tries for ­Cokanasiga and one for England’s Ollie Lawrence also rammed home Bath’s overall superiority. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/2

Chelsea punish West Ham for misses to return to the WSL summit

Aggie Beever-Jones and Erin Cuthbert punished a resilient West Ham for their profligacy in the final third as Chelsea secured a 2-0 win to move back above Manchester City at the summit of the Women’s Super League table. It was not straightforward for the visiting Blues and, had Honoka Hayashi’s effort not been incorrectly flagged offside inside 15 minutes, it could have been a much more nervy affair. Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/tw6Qmdy

‘I cried, it was beautiful’: Sven-Göran Eriksson fulfils his Liverpool dream

Childhood fan, who is dying of pancreatic cancer, managed the home side to victory over Ajax at Anfield in a legends match Anfield was packed, the Liverpool squad boasted 985 caps and seven Champions League winners. The match was not the most competitive occasion the stadium will host this season but it was one of the most memorable on an emotional and perfect day for Sven-Göran Eriksson. The Swede watched on as Liverpool came back from two goals down to win a cerebral thriller 4-2. Eriksson listened to The Kop serenade the boyhood fan with “You’ll Never Walk Alone”, making an old man very happy. He might have wanted a crack at the Premier League with Liverpool but 90 minutes on a cold March day was more than enough for the former England manager who has less than a year to live after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer . Continue reading... from The Guardian https://ift.tt/jc4RJw7

The Guardian view on the Garrick: what the old boys’ club costs the rest of us | Editorial

The exclusion of women tells us something about the men who choose to be part of it Where does the establishment reside in the 21st century? One of its homes is 15 Garrick Street, London. The membership list of the Garrick Club, as reported by the Guardian this week, includes senior judges and lawyers, peers and ministers, along with the heads of thinktanks and companies, rock stars, actors, senior journalists, the heads of MI6 and the civil service, and King Charles – but not a single woman. Men in charge of modern courts, government, business and culture relish membership of an institution which is 19th century not only in origin but mindset. Private members’ clubs are inherently exclusive: joining is expensive, and applicants are vetted by those already inside. It is not a great surprise, then, that the Garrick is overwhelmingly white and generally aged as well as male-only. Members like to portray it as old-fashioned in another regard: a little snoozy, though faintly glamorous t