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Entertainment

Ryan Seacrest, 47, and girlfriend Aubrey Paige, 24, hit the gym in NYC

Ryan Seacrest and Aubrey Paige have been an item for more than a year after being spotted together in the posh New York neighborhood of The Hamptons.

And despite Seacrest’s busy schedule, the 47-year-old TV host set aside time to hangout with the 24-year-old model in New York City on Wednesday.

The couple, rocking their athletic wear of choice, were spotted moments after hitting the gym together.

Quality time: Despite his busy schedule, Ryan Seacrest set aside time to hangout with his girlfriend Aubrey Paige in New York City on Wednesday

Gym rats: The couple, rocking their athletic wear of choice, were spotted moments after hitting the gym together

Quality time: Despite his busy schedule, Ryan Seacrest set aside time to hangout with his girlfriend Aubrey Paige in New York City on Wednesday. The couple, rocking their athletic wear of choice, were spotted moments after hitting the gym together

Seacrest, 47, completed his afternoon workout in black drawstring shorts and a black t-shirt that paid homage to the hit Fox series Gotham.

He also donned a pair of black running sneakers and a baseball cap over his short brown hair.

Looking equally sporty, Paige, 24, flaunted her toned figure in skintight black leggings and a white crop top.

She also wore gray and blue running sneakers and pulled her long brown locks back off her face and into a ponytail.

All-black: Seacrest, 47, completed his afternoon workout in black drawstring shorts and a black t-shirt that paid homage to the hit Fox series Gotham.  He also donned a pair of black running sneakers and a baseball cap over his short brown hair

All-black: Seacrest, 47, completed his afternoon workout in black drawstring shorts and a black t-shirt that paid homage to the hit Fox series Gotham. He also donned a pair of black running sneakers and a baseball cap over his short brown hair

Fit: Looking equally sporty, Paige, 24, flaunted her toned figure in skintight black leggings and a white crop top

Fit: Looking equally sporty, Paige, 24, flaunted her toned figure in skintight black leggings and a white crop top

The Emmy-winning producer has famously been known as one of the busiest men in show business, who can pose a problem when it comes to relationships.

Along with his co-hosting duties on Live With Kelly And Ryan, Seacrest also plays host on American Idol, his radio shows American Top 40 and On Air with Ryan Seacrest, as well as E! Live From The Red Carpet and the Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve.

On top of all that, he also has the shows he works with through his production company Ryan Seacrest Productions and the Ryan Seacrest Foundationwhich is a non-profit organization that ‘dedicated to inspiring today’s youth through entertainment and education focused initiatives.’

Putting in the work: The model is seen regularly coming put from the gym

The results: Paige likes to showcase the results of all the hard work she puts into her workouts on Instagram

Socializing: Paige frequently shows off her fab figure on her social media platforms

Most people marvel at his work ethic, and how he’s able to be able to multi-task with so many endeavors on his plate.

‘I work pretty fast and efficiently. Consolidation is something I’ve learned,’ he revealed during an interview with GQ, adding, ‘I’ve got a lot of things in the same place. For instance, I’ve got the radio show, but then I can walk across the hall to the TV studio.’

He continued, ‘Another thing that allows me to stay on top of things is that I’ve got a great team. I try to find an expert in each of the places I’m working, and I keep updated through them. It’s a puzzle every day, and at the end of the day I get an email brief of everything that happened in every division.’

Social media butterfly: And while Paige and Seacrest like to keep their romance on the down low, she does post photos of the couple on social media on occasion

Social media butterfly: And while Paige and Seacrest like to keep their romance on the down low, she does post photos of the couple on social media on occasion

Seacrest went on to reveal that he wakes up about 5 in the morning, and has made his workouts a priority in order to keep his stamina as high as possible.

‘There were times in my life when I wasn’t getting it done, and it’s because I wasn’t making it a priority on my schedule,’ he said his gym time. ‘So now, I treat all of my workouts as if they are an executive meeting. Once they’re in the schedule, they’re locked in. But the time can float.’

Seacrest and Paige were first linked together romantically in June 2021, according to Us Weekly. But they only made their red carpet debut on June 8 at the Tribeca Festival premiere of Netflix’s rock-doc Halftime starring Jennifer Lopez.

Going strong: The couple have been an item for more than a year, but only made their red carpet debut at the Tribeca Festival in New York City on June 8

Going strong: The couple have been an item for more than a year, but only made their red carpet debut at the Tribeca Festival in New York City on June 8

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Sports

All Blacks make four changes to starting XV for test against Springboks in Mbombela

All Blacks coach Ian Foster has begun his fight for survival by making four changes to his starting team for the test against the Springboks in Mbombela, South Africa on Sunday morning (NZT).

Following the 32-22 defeat to Ireland in Wellington last month, which confirmed a 2-1 series loss and resulted in assistants John Plumtree and Brad Mooar being dismissed, the All Blacks are likely to have to win at least one of their two Rugby Championships tests in the Republic to prevent Foster being sacked by NZ Rugby.

Sky Sports

Jeff Wilson urges All Blacks coach Ian Foster to be bold against South Africa as he fights for his job.

With lock Brodie Retallick unavailable because of a fractured cheekbone, Foster was always going to have to tinker with his combinations in the forwards.

He has made three changes to the pack that started against Ireland in Wellington.

Scott Barrett, who was a late withdrawal from the third test because of injury and had to be replaced by Akira Ioane at blindside flanker, starts at lock.

Samisoni Taukei’aho will start at hooker in place of Codie Taylor, and Angus Ta’avao comes in at tighthead prop ahead of Nepo Laulala. Taylor and Laulala have been dropped since the match-day 23. It will be the first run-on start of the season for Taukei’aho and Ta’avao.

Foster has also brought Caleb Clarke on to the left wing, in place of Sevu Reece. Clarke wasn’t considered for the Ireland series because of a hamstring strain.

Samisoni Taukei'aho will start at hooker for the All Blacks against the Springboks.

Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

Samisoni Taukei’aho will start at hooker for the All Blacks against the Springboks.

The reserves bench has also had a makeover. Ethan de Groot, Tyrel Lomax, Tupou Vaa’i, Shannon Frizell, Finlay Christie and Quinn Tupaea have been added, with Dane Coles and Richie Mo’unga the only survivors from the Wellington test.

Loose forward Dalton Papalii, halfback Folau Fakatava and midfielder Roger Tuivasa-Sheck – all were in the substitutes in Wellington – are notable absentees. There is also no room for lock Patrick Tuipulotu, with Vaa’i to provide back-up for Barrett and Whitelock.

Caleb Clarke will start on the left wing for the All Blacks when they play the Springboks on Sunday morning (NZT).

Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

Caleb Clarke will start on the left wing for the All Blacks when they play the Springboks on Sunday morning (NZT).

Although contracted through to next year’s World Cup in France, Foster is clearly on thin ice with his paymasters at NZ Rugby. Four losses from the last five matches, an all-time low of No 4 in the World Rugby rankings, are an indication of how far the All Blacks’ standards have declined.

A win in Mbombela would go some way to helping Foster convince NZ Rugby that he should be retained. The second test will be played in Johannesburg next weekend.

Jason Ryan has replaced John Plumtree as the All Blacks forwards coach.

Hagen-Hopkins/Getty Images

Jason Ryan has replaced John Plumtree as the All Blacks forwards coach.

Following the departures of Plumtree and Mooar, Jason Ryan was added to the coaching group. Ryan, who had assisted Scott Robertson at the Crusaders for six years, has filled Plumtree’s position as forwards coach and Foster has taken over Mooar’s backline attack portfolio.

With less than two weeks to familiarize himself with the All Blacks’ environment, Ryan is likely to have been cautious about overloading himself and his forwards with too much information.

One of his most important tasks will have been to analyze why Ireland was able to score two tries off rolling mauls, and then fix the problem.

“What a great way to start this year’s Rugby Championship,” Foster said. “It’s always an exciting tournament to be part of. This year’s draw means we have a massive challenge of two games here in the South Africa.

“We have settled in well in Mbombela and are preparing for what is always an intense game against our old foe. Many of our squad are here in South Africa for the first time. This gives us another opportunity to add new experiences and grow our game.”

The Springboks have predictably selected a massive pack loaded with experienced physical specimens, and with Malcolm Marx at hooker, they will aim to use his bulk and power to hunt for tries off attacking lineout drives.

All Blacks coach Ian Foster is under immense pressure to keep his job.  The All Blacks have lost four of their last five tests.

Hagen-Hopkins/Getty Images

All Blacks coach Ian Foster is under immense pressure to keep his job. The All Blacks have lost four of their last five tests.

Experienced locks Eben Etzebeth and Lood de Jager and flanker Pieter-Steph du Toit are likely to be Marx’s main lineout targets, with Jasper Wiese and Siya Kolisi also providing options.

The Springboks have also stacked their bench with six forwards, a clear indication they will want to use brute force to break down the All Blacks in the second half.

The two teams haven’t played each other in South Africa since 2018 because of the pandemic.

Last year they played each other twice in Australia. They shared the spoils, winning one match a piece, but it was the All Blacks who claimed the championship title.

All Blacks: Jordie Barrett, Will Jordan, Rieko Ioane, David Havili, Caleb Clarke, Beauden Barrett, Aaron Smith, Ardie Savea, Sam Cane (captain), Akira Ioane, Scott Barrett, Sam Whitelock, Angus Ta’avao, Samisoni Taukei’aho, George Bower. Reservations: Dane Coles, Ethan de Groot, Tyrel Lomax, Tupou Vaa’i, Shannon Frizell, Finlay Christie, Richie Mo’unga, Quinn Tupaea.

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Australia

Assistant Commissioner tells of ‘significant’ cultural issues within Queensland police force impacting domestic violence response

There are “significant” cultural issues within the Queensland Police Service (QPS) affecting how officers respond to domestic violence, the state’s most senior officer in charge of domestic violence investigations has told an inquiry.

The commission of inquiry, which began on May 30, is examining the police response to domestic and family violence cases.

Headed by Judge Deborah Richards, it is also probing the over-representation of Indigenous people in the criminal justice system and the way corrupt conduct and complaints against police are handled.

The inquiry heard today from Assistant Police Commissioner Brian Codd, the head of the state’s domestic violence and vulnerable persons command, who gave his take on the evidence heard in the public hearings so far.

Counsel assisting the commission Ruth O’Gorman said the issues raised included officers avoiding DV call-outs, showing “disinterest” when attending call-outs, conducting “insufficient investigations” and misidentification of the victims and perpetrators.

“There are significant issues of police culture at play here that need to be addressed,” Assistant Commissioner Codd told the inquiry.

“We may have some members, albeit I hope very few, who do have some deeply misogynistic attitudes”

“I do accept that there are significant areas of concern that have been raised… that certainly will require us to look… beyond just isolated incidents.”

‘Pockets of issues’ around police culture

Assistant Commissioner Codd said he accepted “the majority” of evidence given relating to police culture was “unchallenged”.

“There’s very clearly in my view … pockets of issues of poor performance … behaviors and attitudes across our organization — aspects of culture that are impacting on our performance of our duty in DV,” Assistant Commissioner Codd told the inquiry.

“I certainly accept that the evidence provided has highlighted a range of concerning aspects of culture.

“It’s far from, in my humble opinion, the majority.

“But that doesn’t matter to a point, because whilst there’s still victims and people who need our help … [there’s a need for] focus and improvement.

“I do accept that there are significant areas of concern … that certainly will require us to look beyond just isolated incidents. There’s been too many consistencies in too many places.”

A policeman knocks on a front door while his partner checks a clipboard
The inquiry heard inexperience, lack of training and officer burnout were contributing to poor police culture.(AAP: Dan Peled)

However, Assistant Commissioner Codd told the inquiry he did not believe cultural issues were “widespread” or “systemic” within the Queensland Police Service (QPS).

“I’d avoid the term ‘systemic’ because that suggests it’s absolutely through every part of our organization,” he said.

“I guess the observation I’d like to make though is the term about ‘widespread’ or ‘endemic’ that’s tied to it.

“I’m wary that almost every one of the witnesses, or certainly a number [of them,] …also made the point that it wasn’t their experience with every officer.”

He told the inquiry “a range of complex factors” were contributing to issues with police culture, including inexperience, lack of training and officer burnout.

Strangulation cases more than double in five years

Assistant Commissioner Codd also told the inquiry domestic violence strangulation had “progressively increased” from 1,060 reported occurrences in the 2016/2017 financial year to 2,145 in 2022/2023, according to QPS data.

He said domestic violence reports had also climbed from 89,458 in the 2016/2017 financial year to 138,551 in 2022/2023.

The inquiry heard breaches of domestic violence orders (DVOs) were another area of ​​concern, increasing from 25,771 in the 2016/2017 financial year to 46,601 in 2022/2023.

“There’s been a significant increase there but, by the same token, it is perhaps a measure of us being better at identifying them,” he told the inquiry.

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Categories
US

80-year-old store owner shoots suspect who attempted to rob Riverside County convenience store, authorities say

The Riverside County Sheriff’s Department said deputies were called to the business on Sunday around 2:47 am following a report of an attempted armed robbery.

Surveillance video obtained by CNN shows a man entering the Norco Market & Liquor store and pointing a rifle at the owner behind the counter. The owner then reaches for a firearm and shoots the suspect.

The sheriff’s department said the owner fired a single round from a shotgun, which caused the suspect to flee.

“A lawfully armed member of our community prevented a violent crime and ensured their own safety, while being confronted with multiple armed suspects,” the department said.

The owner, who did not want to be identified to protect his privacy, told CNN he had seen an armed man approaching the store moments before he entered.

Surveillance footage outside the store shows another armed man get out of a parked SUV and move toward the store just before the injured suspect runs back to the vehicle, apparently screaming “he shot my arm off.”

Authorities said one suspect was later found at a Southern California hospital suffering from an apparent shotgun wound. He remains hospitalized in critical, but stable condition, the sheriff’s department said, noting he will be booked into jail after he is released from medical treatment.

Three other people in the SUV were arrested and booked on robbery and conspiracy charges, the department said, adding authorities found multiple stolen firearms inside the stolen vehicle.

They were arraigned in court Wednesday and entered pleas of not guilty, a spokesperson for the Riverside County District Attorney told CNN.

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Categories
Business

Ministers to put environment back into energy market rules in landmark move for renewables

finley solar farm

State and federal energy ministers are poised next week to put environment back into the country’s National Electricity Objective in what will be a landmark move to underpin the shift from fossil fuels towards 100 per cent renewables.

The lack of environment in the NEO – mysteriously dropped at the last minute by the Howard government as the rules of the current system were finalized more than two decades ago – has hamstrung the shift to renewables because it has stymied key rulings made by regulators and rule makers.

Its inclusion is likely to lead to a rethink of key rules and regulations, and their interpretation, and pave the way for tens of billions of dollars in new infrastructure, generation and storage that will fast-track the shift from coal and gas to a renewables -based grid.

The exclusion of environment from the NEO has obliged regulators to make some clearly absurd decisions, such as endorsing new diesel generators rather than a storage option at Broken Hill, mainly because they were forced to consider only narrow economic factors.

See: Regulatory madness promotes dirty diesel over renewable mini grid at Broken Hill

It has also led to poor outcomes in assessing the net worth of new transmissions projects, causing delays that have left the country short of grid capacity even as the new government assumes the country will somehow reach 82 per cent renewables by 2030.

The issue has come to a head in the redesign of the market rules being managed by the Energy Security Board, particularly in its proposal for a so-called “capacity mechanism” that even its own modeling shows will favor existing dirty thermal generators over new clean firming technologies.

A proposal to put environment into the NEO has been worked on by the ACT government since last September, and at the last energy ministers meeting there was a general agreement on the move, but not the how.

This will be formally put to other state ministers ahead of a joint meeting next week, the ACT climate minister Shane Rattenbury confirmed after the first publication of this story.

“Reflecting emissions reduction goals in the NEO is important for ensuring emissions intensity of generation is considered and reducing emissions is prioritized. I am pleased that this work has progressed well and will be discussed at the upcoming Energy Ministers Meeting this month,” he said in a statement.

“We cannot deny the need to decarbonise our energy supply. We need to act quickly if we are to have any chance of meeting Australia’s net zero emissions by 2050 target, and this means rapidly reducing emissions from the energy sector.

“Reflecting the net zero emissions goal in the NEO will help to ensure an efficient and coordinated national approach to decarbonisation, so that we can make this transition as smooth as possible.”

See also: ACT to quit gas by 2045, shift to all-electric homes and businesses

RenewEconomy understands that the proposal has the overwhelming support of all energy ministers.

The move follows a plea from the ESB itself – in response to the controversy over the nature of its capacity market proposals – for guidance from ministers on whether emissions should play a part in its considerations.

The answer to that is of course it should, given the country has a soon-to-be legislated net zero target for 2050, and a 43 per cent emissions reduction target for 2030 that will need to be lifted in coming years.

“There’s many, many capacity markets around the world, many of which have been implemented to manage the transition, which tend to have the complementary emissions reduction mechanisms that go with them,” Anna Collyer, the head of the Australian Energy Markets Commission, said last month

“So that’s what we would like to get further advice on, so that we can do that in a deliberate way and build out what we see that we need, in terms of that right mix of resources.”

The inclusion of an environmental, and even an emissions target, will also make it easier for important planning blueprints such as the Australian Energy Market Operator’s objective Integrated System Plan, which has already accelerated its central scenario to “step change” and could lift this to “hydrogen superpower” next time round.

A similar proposal was advocated by a Greens-led Senate inquiry in 2016, and put forward by Victoria, but rejected by the then Coalition government because it said it would be “too complex.”

Then Labor energy spokesman Mark Butler said at the time the rules of the market were not fit for purpose because of the absence of environment objectives, and meant that implementing policies, such as the renewable energy target, “end up feeling like trying to bang a square peg into a round hole.”

It is understood current federal climate and energy minister Chris Bowen supports the move. And he needs to, if Labor is to deliver anywhere near that 82 per cent renewable target it is now loudly promoting after securing the reluctant support of the Greens for the more modest 43 per cent emissions reduction target.

Clean energy investors hope that putting environment, and an emissions objective, into the considerations of the rule makers and the regulators will help change their current thinking about the design of capacity markets and other key rulings such as locational pricing.

Simon Corbell, the former ACT energy minister who now heads the Clean Energy Investment Group, which includes many of the biggest renewable and storage investors in Australia, says the environmental reform would be a landmark event.

He says the CEIG – among others – has been lobbying ministers and departments for an environmental and emissions outcome, and it will be a landmark moment if approved as expected next week.

The CEIG’s latests survey of its members shows a bleak outlook for investment in the short term, despite the need to mobilize tens of gigawatts of new capacity to meet the scenario of 80 per cent renewables painted by the federal Labor government and the Australian Energy Market Operator .

Corbell says the current crisis engulfing Australia’s energy markets could and should be the last – if the country can shift to renewables and storage – but it will require a wholesale reform of the market and its governance.

“The latest Clean Energy Investor Survey reveals how much work the new federal government must do to repair investor confidence that has been degraded by years of policy uncertainty and market risk,” he says.

“Ministers have to provide a clear signal to urgently reform governance of the NEM and direct the market bodies to accelerate transformation,” he says.

“If Australia establishes a sound framework to become self-sufficient from our vast clean energy resources, that would ensure this is the last energy crisis Australia faces.”

Bruce Mountain, from the Victoria Energy Policy Centre, says bringing emission reduction objectives into the NEO will be a giant leap forward.

“And not a moment too soon,” he said. “But it is not a panacea and it is not easy. For example, how should regulators’ be required to translate economy-wide emission reduction targets into their energy sector regulations?

“But at the very least it will bring about much greater transparency and save us from the sort of out-of-touch nonsense when, in the midst of a climate crisis, the ESB touts “technology neutral” solutions, as if this is a good thing.”

Corbell believes an environmental and emissions objective would help address some of the key issues his investors are focused on, the capacity mechanism and locational pricing.

On capacity, Corbell – along with nearly all other industry players – wants the issues over managing coal retirements and incentivising new flexible capacity treated separately, because the hybrid solution currently on the table from the ESB “does neither well.”

Coal retirements, various analysts suggest, could be handled through bonds, auctions or other mechanisms, as long as there is transparency, Corbell says.

On locational pricing, Corbell says that the NSW state government has the right idea in the design of its renewable infrastructure roadmap, which includes the sale of access rights that more or less protects wind, solar and storage projects from excess curtailment.

But he says that still does not address what happens to projects located outside of renewable energy zones, and a national scheme was needed to solve this issue. But this was difficult as long as key agencies held unrealistic views around the pace of change and the likely closure of coal generators.

“If Australia establishes a sound framework to become self-sufficient from our vast clean energy resources, that would ensure this is the last energy crisis Australia faces,” Corbell says.

“The latest Clean Energy Investor Survey reveals how much work the new federal government must do to repair investor confidence that has been degraded by years of policy uncertainty and market risk.

“It gives energy ministers a clear signal to urgently reform governance of the NEM and direct the market bodies to accelerate transformation.”

Categories
Technology

Oppo A77 seems like a phone that Oppo forgot to launch in 2020

Oppo launched its latest phone Oppo A77 in India silently. The phone has been launched at a price of Rs. 15,499.

This is an offline-centric phone, which means you will not find the best chipset available on the budget phone. And this phone from Oppo will not be competing with the likes of Realme or Redmi in the market. The result of it is that the phone looks outdated, even though it is a brand new model on the market.

Oppo A77: pricing and availability

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Entertainment

Chrissy Teigen announces pregnancy: ‘I’m feeling hopeful and amazing’ | Chrissy Teigen

Chrissy Teigen and her husband John Legend are expecting another child nearly two years after the couple suffered a pregnancy loss.

Teigen made the announcement Wednesday on Instagram, where she posted two photos of her baby bump. She wrote that joy has “filled our home and hearts again” after a miscarriage in 2020, which she documented in intimate detail in its aftermath.

“We have another on the way,” wrote the 36-year-old model and cookbook author, who shares two children – Luna and Miles – with Legend. In the post, she wrote about her fertility journey, and being too nervous to unveil her pregnancy.

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“Every appointment I’ve said to myself, ‘OK, if it’s healthy today I’ll announce’, but then I breathe a sigh of relief to hear a heartbeat and decide I’m just too nervous still,” she wrote. “I don’t think I’ll ever walk out of an appointment with more excitement than nerves but so far, everything is perfect and beautiful and I’m feeling hopeful and amazing.”

In 2020, the couple made a heart-wrenching announcement after losing their son, Jack, at 20 weeks of her pregnancy. Teigen was hospitalized with excessive bleeding before the miscarriage.

The same year, Teigen wrote an essay explaining that doctors diagnosed her with a partial placental abruption. At the time, she urged people to share their stories and “please be kind to those pouring their hearts out”.

Teigen’s openness about the stillbirth was praised at the time for demystifying a common and heartbreaking experience.

Legend and Teigen were married in 2013.

Categories
Sports

Commonwealth Games 2022: athletics, cycling and more on day seven – live! | Commonwealth Games 2022

Key events

Cycling: Grace Brown of Australia now leads the time trial, 4.53s ahead of Henderson after 8.9km of Black Country slogging.

Athletics: Ofili of Nigeria wins the latest heat in the women’s 200m, 22.71 the time. Gina Bass of Gambia comes second.

Women’s hockey: New Zealand have beaten South Africa 4-1; in 12 minutes, England will play Wales.

Cycling: At the first timing point, 8.9km in, Anna Henderson of GB leads – though not everyone has reached it yet.

Athletics: Natalliah Whyte of Jamaica eases through the third 200m head, cruising home in 23.62.

Athletics: Hima Das of India wins the second 200m heat in 23.42; Rhoda Njobvu of Zambia and Jacent Nyamahunge of Uganda also qualify. Meantime, in the hammer, Camryn Rodgers, the favorite and silver-medalist in Eugene, ails a Games record of 73.48m in her first throw. Smack: laid down.

Hima Das of India wins his 200m heat.
Hima Das of India wins his 200m heat. Photograph: David Ramos/Getty Images

Cycling: The last racer is in the process of setting off in the women’s time trial; we’ll see how stuff shakes out as we move through the morning.

Athletics: Christine Mboma of Namibia, the Olympic silver medalist, wins the first heat of the women’s 200m in 23.20. She’ll fancy herself here, given Shericka Jackson, the world champ, has withdrawn, and Elaine Thompson-Herah, though she won the 100m last evening, is n’t in her best form.

Cycling: “It’s called the race of truth,” says Hayley Simmonds of the road race time trial – and she should know, having taken bronze in 2018. “In the end it’s just you and the pain in your legs and the thoughts in your head, ” she surmises quite beautifully.

Netball: Jamaica beat Australia 57-55! That was a great match, and what a performance from the Sunshine Girls! In the semis, they’ll meet whoever loses the evening match, between England and New Zealand; all four have what it takes to win gold.

Jamaica win an epic against Australia!
Jamaica win an epic against Australia! Photograph: James Ross/EPA

Athletics: Lindon Victor of Grenanda, the defending champion of the decathlon, finished fifth in Oregon, but he nails his 100m here, running a faster time than he did there – 10.76. But Australia’s Cedric Dubler, his main rival, comes second and is well in touch after one event.

Netball: Hello! Jamaica have pulled it back, and with three minutes left in Q4 lead Australia 53-52!

Hockey: South Africa have stabilized, but still trail NZ 3-0 and we’ve got 11.30 left in Q4.

Let’s have some Commonwealth musicfor I cannot stop listening to this – from Ghana, and King Promise’s new album.

Jeanette Kwakye is on BBC talking about last night. You could tell how much she loved it, and we cut to see Liz and Eilish enjoying the moment, again. Great stuff.

Cycling: The women’s time trial is away.

Netball: Australia have stretched away. At the end of Q3, the Diamonds lead 46-40.

Athletics: In this sesh, we’ve got the first three disciplines of the men’s decathlon which are – no cheating – the 100m, the long jump and the shot. We’ll also see the 200m heats for both men and women, so yes, we’ll get some Fast Elaine action, plus round 1 of the men’s 1500m women’s hammer qualifying and women’s high jump qualifying.

The cycle, then: the way it works is that each rider sets off on their bill – the men go for 37km, the women 29km – and whoever records the fastest time wins. Easy.

Netball: It’s still tight as, Australia leading Jamaica 34-32 with 10.30 left in Q3. It’s a terrific contest – get the telly on if you can.

It's close in netball.
It’s close in netball. Photograph: James Ross/EPA

At 10am BST – so in 13 minutes from now – we start both the cycling time trials and the athletics. Not bad.

This has absolutely nothing to do with the Commonwealth Games, but it’s just too brilliant not to share.

Women’s hockey: NZ lead South Africa 3-0 with three to go in Q2; the look near-certs to move into the last four with Australia while, from the other pool, India and England are in control.

Netball: Australia lead Jamaica 15-13 at the start of Q2; whoever wins this wins the pool, with New Zealand and England waiting in the semis. Those two meet this evening, again to determine first and second place.

On the main BBC channel, we’re watching Canada’s Ryan Bester play Wales’ Daniel Salmon in the sectional bit of the men’s bowls. You may remember Salmon from Tuesday – he won gold in the pairs – but he’s just been nailed 21-10. He’s got another game later on, though, so all is not lost.

Preamble

Morning all and welcome to day seven of the Commonwealth Games!

I’ll level with you: I’m not even close to recovered from yesterday. Granted, Eilish McColgan celebrating gold with Liz is prime eyeball-sweating fodder for the middle-aged, but even if we ignore that aspect, the last 500m of that women’s 10,000 – the look on McColgan’s coupon, the pain she overcame, the way she dredged up that finish from the depths of her soul – was the absolute height of sport. “The race I always knew she had de ella in her de ella,” said her mum, eyes moist with naches. Just absolutely beautiful.

But today – ready or not, here it comes. We begin with the time trials of the men and women’s road races – Geraint Thomas, fresh off his Tour de France third-place, is in that – and also have some morning athletics, most particularly the start of the decathlon, then tonight we’ ll enjoy the final of the men’s 110m hurdles and women’s steeplechase among other things.

In the water, the swimming meet might be over but the diving is just getting going – Jack Laugher goes in the 1m springboard – and we’ve also got England v New Zealand in the cricket, winners to top the pool, just as we do in the netball. So stick with us as we coax you through it all!

Categories
Australia

‘We’re all responsible for Afghanistan’: confronting exhibition spotlights Australia’s 20-year war | Afghanistan

Front page newspaper stories and torn excerpts from a damning report into war crimes allegedly committed by Australian soldiers will play a feature role in a month-long exhibition in western Sydney about the 20-year occupation of Afghanistan.

The documents form the foundation of a confronting collection of protest collage artworks by Elyas Alavi, as he struggled to process the stark and shocking findings contained in the Brereton report into war crimes in Afghanistan.

Among the mediums used in the collection are washes of the artist’s own blood.

“As an Afghan Australian I struggled to imagine how Australian defense forces could do such crimes,” he told Guardian Australia.

“I have this paper called citizenship, I am safe, but in Afghanistan there are victims, and here there are families of victims.

“Afghanistan is so far away, the government says it’s a tragic country, there’s nothing more we can do, but Australia went there to help, and innocent people were killed by Australian soldiers. That is why I’m using my blood.”

Elyas Alavi in ​​his studio.
‘I struggled to imagine how Australian defense forces could do such crimes’: Elyas Alavi in ​​his study. Photograph: Courtesy Elyas Alavi

About 50,000 Afghans now living in Australia will mark the first anniversary of the Taliban moving into Kabul later this month.

More than one in five of those Afghan nationals, most who have arrived in Australia as refugees in the past 20 years, now reside in the greater Sydney area.

With the redacted version of the Inspector-General of the Australian Defense Force Afghanistan Inquiry Report, commonly known as the Brereton report, now in the public domain, these relatively new Australians are grappling with a disturbing truth about how their adoptive country treated their people.

Confronting Australia’s role as co-saviour, co-conspirator and co-offender is one of the dominant themes in Twenty Years: The War in Afghanistan, which officially opens on Thursday at the Leo Kelly Blacktown Arts Centre.

The program includes a series of forums co-ordinated by Maryam Zahid, founder of Afghan women on the Move, with speakers drawn from the Afghan community including public interest lawyer Lala Pordeli, SBS journalist Abdullah Alikhil, and exiled Kabul court judge Farah Altaf Atahee, who fled to Australia with her husband and three children shortly after the Taliban took control of the capital last August.

On 24 August the Afghan war crimes whistleblower David McBride will join an online forum discussing the future of Afghanistan and the social and political challenges Australia faces when dealing with a militant Islamist government.

McBride was one of the subjects in an exhibition of Hoda Afshar’s photographic portraits recognizing the work of whistleblowers, which toured earlier this year.

The work of another exiled photojournalist, Najiba Noori, is featured in the Twenty Years exhibition. Noori was working for Agence France-Presse (AFP) as a video journalist based in Kabul until the Taliban took power a year ago. She is now based in Paris.

Endless Sorrow, a photograph by Najiba Noori.
Endless Sorrow, a photograph by Najiba Noori. Photographer: Najiba Noori

Noori told the Guardian last October that she feared for her family, friends and colleagues left behind. The new head of the University of Kabul, where her younger brother was a music student, had just called for the death of all journalists.

In February, the International Federation of Journalists reported that about half of media outlets in Afghanistan had collapsed in the preceding five months, and more than 70% of journalists who had fled or gone into hiding were women.

Journalist and film-maker Antony Loewenstein co-curated the extensive program with artist and writer Alana Hunt. He wants the exhibition to provoke, inspire outrage and prompt a wider section of the community to confront Australia’s role in the longest war in this country’s history.

Loewenstein spent time in Afghanistan in 2012 and 2015; he says while the US-led war there may be officially over, its grim legacy lives on.

“We’re all responsible as Australians for the current situation in Afghanistan,” he tells the Guardian. “We occupied the country for 20 years, committed war crimes against Afghan civilians and have very little [that’s] positive to show for our involvement.

“The war has fallen down the memory hole… our legacy there as a nation is tarnished,” he says.

Calls to put the focus back on Afghanistan

A federal government-funded Australian War Memorial project, launched in 2016 to investigate Australia’s military commitment in conflicts in Timor-Leste and the Middle East, is part of a controversial $500m expansion plan for the national war museum.

Australia’s official military historians, however, have not yet been granted access to the full, unredacted Brereton report, which may not be released until investigations are complete later this decade.

Loewenstein says the Afghan community is concerned that if historians are not granted full access to the report, the War Memorial exhibit will continue to present a glossed-over narrative on Australia’s 20-year presence.

The concerns are not without grounds. The existing exhibition documenting Australian forces in Afghanistan makes no mention of alleged war crimes, despite the fact that, as Guardian columnist Paul Daley pointed out almost two years ago, the Brereton inquiry was already at that stage 18 months old.

Loewenstein says organizers hope the Twenty Years exhibition and symposium will throw some of the media attention back on Afghanistan which, perhaps due to entrenched racism, has been left behind by the media and public policy. When Kabul fell, for instance, the Morrison government promised refuge to just 3,000 Afghan asylum seekers in its annual allotment of 13,000; meanwhile, more than 8,000 Australian visas for Ukrainian refugees have been issued since the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Both countries have roughly the same population, of around 40 million.

“All refugees should be treated equally and the new Australian government has an opportunity to repair the damage caused by [the occupation],” Loewenstein says. “Australia has a moral responsibility to help the Afghan people.”

Twenty Years: The War in Afghanistan is at the Leo Kelly Blacktown Arts Center until 3 September

Categories
US

Seth Meyers Roasts the Hell Out of Trump’s ‘Face-Melt’ Photo

Seth Meyers returned to late night this Wednesday after taking a week off to recover from his second bout of COVID. And while he couldn’t cover everything he missed while he was away, he was not going to let the opportunity go by to make some brutal jokes about a photo of Donald Trump looking a little worse for wear during his recent Saudi-sponsored golf tournament.

In the middle of an unrelated bit about Trump’s double “ERIC” endorsement in Missouri’s GOP Senate primary, Meyers noted that both Eric Greitens and eventual winner Eric Schmitt “bragged that they had been endorsed by Trump, a man who, again, is not only under multiple active criminal investigations for inciting a coup to overthrow American democracy, but is also starting to look less like a former president and more like the Nick Nolte mugshot.”

“I mean, is his head getting smaller or is his hat getting bigger?” the host asked. “It looks like his hat from him is some kind of organism feeding on his blood from him. Look how pale he is! He looks like he’s starring in the next Martin McDonagh film as the ghost of an Irish priest opposite Colin Farrell.”

But he still wasn’t finished. “Look, I know they say that all presidents age rapidly,” Meyers said, “but Trump looks like he’s halfway through a Raiders of the Lost Ark face-melt. It’s like they opened the Ark, his face started to melt, but then he slammed it shut real fast. But then his face just stayed that way.

It was only after Meyers did an extended Trump impression ranting about how he had to open the Ark of the Covenant to look for Hunter Biden’s laptop that he felt ready to return to more substantive news like the results of Tuesday’s primaries.

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