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Israeli hostages get heartfelt tribute at Tel Aviv drag festival

Israeli hostages get heartfelt tribute at Tel Aviv drag festival
Images of Israeli hostages held in Gaza since the Oct. 7, 2023 attack by Hamas, are displayed on an installation set up on a square outside the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, now informally called the “Hostages Square,” in Tel Aviv on Jan. 21, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 23 January 2025

Israeli hostages get heartfelt tribute at Tel Aviv drag festival

Israeli hostages get heartfelt tribute at Tel Aviv drag festival
  • “I think we can continue our lives, we can continue celebrating,” said the show’s host, Kimberly Swan
  • “But the most important thing right now in our country is to bring our hostages back home“

TEL AVIV: Yellow ribbons of solidarity with Israel’s Gaza hostages featured alongside colorful performances at Tel Aviv’s drag festival that opened this week, days after a ceasefire brought hope of the captives’ return.
The ceasefire between Israel and Gaza’s Hamas militant group came into effect on Sunday, with the first three hostages released in exchange for 90 Palestinian prisoners. Some 30 more of the 94 hostages who remain in the enclave are meant to be freed over the next five weeks.
“I think we can continue our lives, we can continue celebrating,” said the show’s host, Kimberly Swan. “But the most important thing right now in our country is to bring our hostages back home.”
The Gaza war was triggered by Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel, in which 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies. It was the country’s deadliest day and the pain it inflicted on Israelis still endures.
“It always feels like something is missing,” said performer Joanna Russ. “Like our brothers and sisters are not next to us.”
Israel’s 15-month offensive in Gaza has killed more than 47,000 Palestinians, health authorities there say, and laid waste to the enclave. Israel has faced fierce international criticism, including among artists around the world, for its campaign.
Some performers at the festival in freewheeling Tel Aviv said they hoped to rekindle ties with drag performers abroad. “We are here to say we miss the queens and we hope they don’t have a stigma about us,” performer Nona Chalant said.


Aquabike World Championship final set to roll on Doha Bay in Qatar

Aquabike World Championship final set to roll on Doha Bay in Qatar
Updated 34 sec ago

Aquabike World Championship final set to roll on Doha Bay in Qatar

Aquabike World Championship final set to roll on Doha Bay in Qatar
  • Qualifying for the Qatar International Cup and a session for non-qualified Runabout GP2 riders opens Saturday morning’s action

DOHA: Qatar returns to the 2025 sporting calendar to host the final round of the UIM-ABP Aquabike World Championship this weekend.

Aquabike Promotion and the Doha Marine Sports Club (DMSC) will host the three-day event at Old Doha Port Grand Prix of Qatar on Doha Bay. The event will act as the final round of the World Championship and the stand-alone Runabout GP2 Asian Continental Championship.

The provisional entry features 90 riders from 19 nations, with 28 competing in Runabout GP1, 23 in Ski Division GP1, 13 in Ski Ladies GP1 and a staggering 12 in Freestyle. In addition, 14 will compete in the Asian Continental section of the weekend.

François Medori heads to Doha with a maximum 100 points for winning four successive Runabout GP1 Motos. The Corsican will be aiming to defend a 16-point advantage over Jeremy Perez, with current World Champion Samuel Johansson somehow retaining third in the rankings, despite picking up just three points from the second of the recent heats in Sardinia.

 All the major protagonists are among the 28-rider field and they include Pierre-François Savelli, Robin Laforge, György Kasza, Andrzej Wisniewski, Martin Doulik and Linus Lindberg. The host nation will be represented by Khalid Al-Mohannadi and Waleed Al-Sharshani and the Emirati trio of Khalid Al-Maazmi, Khalifa Belsalah and Mohammed Mohsin boost the regional entry.

The Qatar event also sees the dramatic return of five-time world champion Yousef Al-Abdulrazzaq and fellow Kuwaiti riders, Rashed Al-Dawas and Ahmad Al-Khadhari.

Dane Oliver Koch Hansen arrives in Doha with an 11-point lead over Jéremy Poret in the battle for the Ski Division GP1 world title. The leading racers on the planet battled it out in three gripping Motos in Sardinia two weeks ago with a pair of victories for Belgian Quinten Bossche sandwiching a lone win for Mickael Poret.

Reliability issues have plagued defending champion Bossche this season, however, and three Moto wins have been coupled with three non-finishes. That was left the Ostende racer languishing in sixth in the standings behind Koch Hansen, Jéremy Poret, Japan’s Toshi O’Hara, Mickael Poret and young Belgian Yoni Hamelin.

All of the title contenders will be present in Doha where they line up against the likes of former champion Kevin Reiterer, Anthony Beernaut, Morgan Poret, Benjamin Scharff and Axel Courtois. Nizar Abuljadayel represents the Kingdom of ֱ and is the only GCC entrant in the field.

The fight for honors in Ski Ladies GP1 promises to be a classic and 13 riders are making the trip to Qatar for the three-Moto finale. Estelle Poret has a seven-point cushion over Benedicte Drange with defending champion Jasmiin Ypraus a further point adrift in third. Naomi Benini and Virginie Morlaes are tied for fourth, albeit 35 points behind the leading French girl.

Drange has taken four wins from six Motos but suffering a costly retirement from the third Moto in Indonesia. Poret has never been off the podium and won one heat, while Ypraus had a win and four podium finishes before engine issues plagued her before the last of the Motos in Sardinia.

The Estonian’s No. 1 ski failed to start and she was forced to turn to her back-up machine which misfired its way around the course to pick up just 10 points. Could that have been the moment when Ypraus lost the world title?

Jessica Chavanne suffered a miserable weekend in Sardinia and the new European champion will be hoping for better fortune on Doha Bay, where she lines up alongside the likes of Sofie and Jonna Borgström, Héloïse Delcluze, River Varner, Joana Graça, Janina Johansson and French newcomer Emy Garcia.

The Freestyle category has attracted  12 entrants, although the defending European champion and current World Championship leader Roberto Mariani tops the field from defending champion and title rival Rashid Al-Mulla from Abu Dhabi. The pair are separated by 10 points heading into the final two Motos of the season with Massimo Accumolo three points further behind in the bronze medal position. Portugal’s Paulo Nuñes is fourth.

There are six Qatari entrants in the provisional field: Abdulaziz Al-Abdullah, Nayef Al-Nama, Salem Al-Kubaisi, Issa Al-Assi, Abdulrahman Al-Sulaiti and Bader Al-Abdullah will be hoping for success in front of home crowds. They will be joined by Kuwait’s Aziz Al-Armeli and ֱ’s Nizar Abuljadayel.

Four of the Runabout GP2 Asian Continental Championship entrants will represent Qatar, with five from the UAE, four from ֱ and one from Kuwait. Mahmoud Abumaali, Khalaf Al-Kuwari, Waleed Al-Ibrahim and Waleed Al-Sharshani will fly the Qatari flag with Abdullah Al-Fadhel lining up for Kuwait.

Registration and scrutineering formalities take place on Wednesday. A hectic Thursday timetable sees the free practice sessions for the Runabout GP2 Asian Continental Championship fire into life from 09.30hrs and precede nearly two hours of practice for the Ski Ladies GP1, Ski Division GP1, Runabout GP1 and Freestyle competitors. The afternoon is dominated by the various qualifying and pole position sessions.

The first Runabout GP2 Asian Continental Championship Moto kickstarts Friday’s action from 10 a.m. and is followed by opening Motos for Ski Ladies GP1 and Ski Division GP1. The second of the Motos follow in the afternoon before the Runabout GP1 and Freestyle contenders take part in their first heats.

The evening’s action will be rounded off by a Parallel Slalom competition and a Freestyle night show to entertain spectators in the Old Port area on Doha Corniche.

Qualifying for the Qatar International Cup and a session for non-qualified Runabout GP2 riders opens Saturday morning’s action. Further free practice follows before a Moto for the Qatar International Cup to round off the morning.

The third Runabout GP2 Asian Continental Championship Moto is first on the agenda in the afternoon and precedes the final Ski Ladies GP1 and Ski GP1 Motos that will decide the outcome of the World Championship.

Runabout GP1 and Freestyle contenders then take to the water for their second Motos that will draw a curtain on the season’s UIM-ABP Aquabike Circuit Pro World Championship.


Ohtani has one place he doesn’t want to hear the ‘We don’t need you!’ chant — at home

Ohtani has one place he doesn’t want to  hear the ‘We don’t need you!’ chant — at home
Updated 7 min 56 sec ago

Ohtani has one place he doesn’t want to hear the ‘We don’t need you!’ chant — at home

Ohtani has one place he doesn’t want to  hear the ‘We don’t need you!’ chant — at home

LOS ANGELES: Shohei Ohtani said there’s one place he doesn’t want to hear the “We don’t need you!” chant — at home from his family.

A day before the World Series resumes with Game 3 at Dodger Stadium, the two-way Los Angeles superstar smiled and laughed about the derisive chant directed at him late in Toronto’s opening win Friday. Blue Jays fans remain stung he signed with the Dodgers in December 2023 rather than their team.

“It was a really great chant, and my wife really appreciated it,” he said Sunday through a translator following the Dodgers’ workout.

Ohtani is hitting .224 in 12 postseason games with six homers, 11 RBIs and one stolen base and is 2 for 8 with a two-run homer and a single in the Series. He is 2-0 with a 2.25 ERA in his pair of mound starts, striking out 19 and walking four in 12 innings.

“I do feel better at the plate recently,” the 31-year-old three-time MVP said. “I do everything in my power to make sure that I’m prepared as much as possible and being at the plate with the right mentality, but got to give some credit to the other side as well.”

Los Angeles and Toronto are tied at a game apiece in the best-of-seven matchup.

Ohtani will oppose Shane Bieber in Game 4 on Tuesday night with a chance to become the first pitcher to hit a World Series homer in 17 years. He wouldn’t mind if his unprecedented performances will lead to more two-way players.

“I like to encourage kids who are trying the two-way to do it as long as possible, as long as they’re allowed to, as much as their talent level could take them,” he said.

Growing up in Japan, he looked up to Hideki Matsui and Ichiro Suzuki, Japanese stars who had great success in Major League Baseball.

“It’s not like I could watch a lot of the games on TV, and so it was really those two players,”
Ohtani said.

Babe Ruth, the player Ohtani has been compared to, was never a fulltime pitcher and field player at the same time, cutting down his mound appearances in 1918 and ‘19 as he became more of an everyday outfielder and occasional first baseman.

Ruth pitched only five times from 1920 through the end of his career in 1935.

Ruth was 3-0 with a 0.87 ERA in three World Series starts for Boston, pitching 29 2/3 scoreless innings at one stretch and helping win titles in 1916 and ‘18. He was 1 for 10 at the plate in those starts, hitting a tiebreaking two-run triple in Game 4 in 1918 as he allowed two runs over eight innings.

Ohtani entered the Series following a standout performance in Game 4 of the NL Championship Series against Milwaukee, when he homered three times, pitched six shutout innings and struck out 10. Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred called it “probably the greatest game of all time.”

“He’s kind of like a super human,” fellow Dodgers starter Tyler Glasnow said ahead of his Game 3 outing.

Ohtani is 2 for 16 with a double, one RBI and six strikeouts against Bieber, a former Cy Young Award winner.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The World as We Know It’ by Peter Dear

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The World as We Know It’ by Peter Dear
Updated 12 min 48 sec ago

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The World as We Know It’ by Peter Dear

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The World as We Know It’ by Peter Dear

Science is the basis of our assumptions about ourselves and our world, from ideas about our evolutionary past to our conceptions of the vast expanses of space and the smallest particles of matter. In this panoramic book, acclaimed historian of science Peter Dear uncovers the roots of such beliefs, revealing how they constitute a natural philosophy that has been developed and refined over the course of centuries—and how the world as we have come to know it was by no means inevitable.

In a sweeping, multifaceted narrative, Dear describes some of the most breathtaking accomplishments in the advance of human knowledge, such as Isaac Newton’s laws of motion and gravitation, Carl Linnaeus’s taxonomy, Antoine Lavoisier’s new chemistry, Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution, and Albert Einstein’s theories of relativity. Challenging the notion that science is only about “making discoveries,” he shows how our world has been formed by people, institutions, and cultural assumptions, giving rise to disciplines ranging from biology and astrophysics to electromagnetism and the social sciences.


Pakistan's Babar has chance to answer coach's questions in South Africa T20 series

Pakistan's Babar has chance to answer coach's questions in South Africa T20 series
Updated 13 min 54 sec ago

Pakistan's Babar has chance to answer coach's questions in South Africa T20 series

Pakistan's Babar has chance to answer coach's questions in South Africa T20 series
  • Babar, who needs only 9 runs to break Rohit Sharma’s record of 4,231 runs in T20s, hasn't been selected in the format since December
  • The former Pakistan captain has 4,223 runs at an average of 39.83, but coach Mike Hesson had concerns over his strike rate of 129.22

RAWALPINDI: Babar Azam has an opportunity to answer all the questions from Pakistan coach Mike Hesson over his technique and skillset in Twenty20 cricket in three matches against South Africa from Tuesday.

Babar, who needs only nine runs to break Rohit Sharma’s all-time record of 4,231 runs in men's T20 internationals, hasn't been selected in the format since December. In that time, Pakistan has played 26 T20s.

Babar has 4,223 runs at an average of 39.83, but Hesson had concerns over his strike rate of 129.22. He also wanted improvement in Babar’s technique.

Since taking over in July, Hesson has favored Sahibzada Farhan, Saim Ayub and Fakhar Zaman for the top three batting slots.

Without Babar, Pakistan won a home series against Bangladesh before losing 2-1 in Bangladesh. Pakistan also won 2-1 against the West Indies and the tri-series in the United Arab Emirates before losing three times to India in the “no handshake” Asia Cup.

The absence of Zaman for the South Africa series has forced Hesson to “endorse” Babar at No. 3, a batting position where he has 1,166 runs in 35 T20s at an average of 44.84.

According to Hesson, Zaman wanted to play in first-class cricket to gear up for the one-day international series against South Africa in Faisalabad next month, and team management agreed to give the left-hander a break from T20s.

“It’s a great opportunity to get Babar back into the squad," Hesson said. "He’s likely to bat at three so it’s a role that I’m very confident that he’ll be able to do well, and it also gives our squad some options coming into the World Cup.”

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Babar has a strong fan base and he drew loud cheers in Lahore and Rawalpindi during the drawn Test series against South Africa. The moment Babar was out, large numbers of spectators left the stadiums.

Babar scored 131 runs in four Test innings against South Africa, falling to spinners three times. His top score of 50 was not enough to save Pakistan from an eight-wicket loss at Rawalpindi in the second test.

UNDERSTRENGTH SOUTH AFRICA

Injury to David Miller forced the Proteas to hand over the T20 captaincy to Donovan Ferreira, who recently endured a shocking four-wicket loss to Namibia in a one-off game. Miller strained his right hamstring during a training camp at home.

Fast bowler Gerald Coetzee was also ruled out of the white-ball tour to Pakistan because of a pectoral muscle injury he sustained against Namibia, where he was limited to 1.3 overs. Another promising fast bowler, Kwena Maphaka, was ruled out with a hamstring strain.

Matthew Breetzke, who will lead South Africa in the ODIs against Pakistan, and uncapped Tony de Zorzi were drafted into the T20 squad.

The series marks the return of Quinton de Kock in the white-ball format after the left-hander reversed his ODI retirement last month. He hasn’t played in the shortest format last year’s T20 World Cup final loss to India.

 


RSF detains Sudanese journalist Muammar Ibrahim in El-Fasher

RSF detains Sudanese journalist Muammar Ibrahim in El-Fasher
Updated 8 min 57 sec ago

RSF detains Sudanese journalist Muammar Ibrahim in El-Fasher

RSF detains Sudanese journalist Muammar Ibrahim in El-Fasher
  • Ibrahim was among the few journalists still documenting events from inside the city during 18-month siege
  • A video that first circulated on RSF social media groups on Sunday showed Ibrahim surrounded by RSF fighters

LONDON: Sudanese journalist Muammar Ibrahim was detained by the Rapid Support Forces on Sunday as the paramilitary group consolidated its advance in El-Fasher, the besieged capital of North Darfur.

Ibrahim, a freelance reporter and regular contributor to Al Jazeera Mubasher, was taken into custody just hours after the RSF announced it had seized control of the city, the last remaining Sudanese military stronghold in Darfur, which became the center of fighting in recent months as the RSF sought to consolidate control over the vast western region.

Described by fellow colleagues as “the last voice of Darfur,” Ibrahim was among the few journalists still documenting events from inside El-Fasher amid relentless airstrikes, a communications blackout, and a dire humanitarian situation that left over 200,000 civilians trapped since the onset of the RSF siege in April 2024.

A video that first circulated on RSF social media groups on Sunday showed Ibrahim surrounded by RSF fighters, identifying himself and confirming that he had been detained while attempting to leave the city.

In the clip, Ibrahim declares he is a neutral journalist, with loyalties to neither the Sudanese Armed Forces nor the RSF.

The Sudanese Journalists Syndicate and the Sudanese online community have called on the RSF to release him and said they will hold the RSF accountable for any harm done to Ibrahim.

Ataf Mohamed, editor-in-chief of local independent newspaper Al-Sudani, called on the international community “to take all necessary measures to secure his release.

“Muammar was only reporting the stark realities and tragic conditions faced by El-Fasher’s citizens, enduring hunger, thirst, death, and siege. Journalism is not a crime,” he said.

The Committee to Protect Journalists’ regional director, Sara Qudah, also called for his release on Monday, saying that Ibrahim’s abduction “exposes the group (RSF)’s blatant disregard for press freedom and human rights. It demonstrates the extreme dangers reporters continue to face in El-Fasher.”

Ibrahim’s detention coincided with intense fighting across El-Fasher and reports that the RSF had seized the Sudanese Armed Forces’ 6th Division base, its final stronghold in the region.

Medical groups reported dozens of civilians killed and the destruction of healthcare infrastructure during renewed violence in the city, where hundreds of thousands remain besieged and have endured severe deprivation for more than a year.

Sudan has been mired in conflict since April 2023, when longstanding tensions between the RSF and the military erupted into full-scale war.

The fighting has since claimed over 140,000 lives and created the world’s largest humanitarian crisis, with nearly 14 million people displaced — many forced to flee Sudan altogether.