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Hamas confirms killing of senior commander in Israeli strike in Gaza

Hamas has confirmed the killing of its senior commander Raed Saad in an Israeli attack in Gaza in the highest-profile assassination of a senior figure in the Palestinian group since the October ceasefire deal.

The Israeli military had said on Saturday it had killed Saad in an attack near Gaza City. At least 25 people were wounded in the latest Israeli attack in Gaza.

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Hamas’ Gaza chief Khalil al-Hayya in a video statement on Sunday accused Israel of violating the October ceasefire agreement.

“In the wake of Israel’s continued violations, including the latest assassination of a Hamas commander just yesterday, we call on the mediators and especially the US administration and US President Donald Trump as the main guarantor of the agreement, to force Israel to respect the ceasefire deal and to implement it,” he said.

Since the ceasefire started in October, Israel has continued to attack Gaza daily – reaching nearly 800 times and killing at least 386 people – in a clear breach of the agreement, according to authorities in Gaza.

Australia police respond after gunshots reported at Sydney’s Bondi Beach

Police in Australia say they are responding to a developing incident at Sydney’s Bondi Beach after media outlets reported a shooting incident.

The Sydney Morning Herald reported shots at the beach on Sunday, saying multiple people had been injured. Television networks Sky and ABC aired footage showing people lying on the ground.

The New South Wales (NSW) police said two people were in custody, adding that the operation was ongoing.

“Anyone at the scene should take shelter,” they posted on X, calling on the public to avoid the area.

A spokesperson for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the government was aware “of an active security situation in Bondi”.

“We urge people in the vicinity to follow information from NSW Police,” said the spokesperson.

Mikaelian beats Jack to regain WBC title

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Noel Mikaelian beat Badou Jack by a unanimous points decision in Los Angeles to regain the WBC cruiserweight title.

Mikaelian had been narrowly beaten by Jack in May and lost the belt, but the German earned a convincing win on Saturday as the three judges scored the fight 115-111, 116-110, 116-110 in his favour.

The bout was a scrappy affair in which Mikaelian, 35, was deducted a point in the seventh round for a punch to the back of his 42-year-old Swedish opponent’s head.

A point was then taken off Jack in the eighth for punching after the bell, with officials and both corners having to step into the ring to separate the pair as they continued to fight.

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Brown University shooting: What we know so far

A manhunt is under way for the perpetrator behind a shooting attack at Rhode Island’s Brown University in the United States that killed two people and wounded nine, eight of them critically.

A shelter-in-place order was in effect early Sunday on the campus of the prestigious Ivy League university and surrounding neighbourhoods in Providence, as law enforcement searched for the assailant.

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Here’s what we know so far.

What happened?

On Saturday afternoon, a suspect with a firearm entered Brown’s Barus and Holley building, home to the school of engineering and the physics department, where students were taking exams.

Two people were killed and eight critically injured when the attacker opened fire, with a ninth sustaining injuries from bullet fragments, officials said. The victims are yet to be publicly identified, although the university president, Christina Paxson, has said she was told they were students.

University authorities became aware of the shooting at about 4:05pm local time (21:05 GMT), when emergency responders received a 911 call, Providence Mayor Brett Smiley said.

Seventeen minutes later, the university issued its first emergency update, warning that there was a gunman near the engineering building and advising those present to silence their phones and hide.

Law enforcement swept the building, but the suspect had left the scene.

Who is the shooter?

Officials have released a video of the as-yet unidentified suspect, a male possibly in his 30s and dressed in black.

The Providence deputy police chief, Timothy O’Hara, said the attacker might have worn a mask, but officials were not certain.

Smiley said officials did not believe there was any “specific, ongoing threat” posed by the attacker, who is believed to have fled along a usually busy street of restaurants and coffee shops.

What do we know about the manhunt?

More than 400 law enforcement personnel have been deployed in the hunt, canvassing the local area while a lockdown order remains in place on the campus and surrounding neighbourhoods.

Agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives have been drawn into the effort, working alongside local and state police.

Police said investigators had retrieved shell casings from the scene of the shooting and were also looking into why the target was selected as part of the investigation.

What has President Donald Trump said?

The US president told reporters at the White House that he had been briefed on the “terrible” situation.

“All we can do right now is pray for the victims and for those that were very badly hurt,” Trump said.

He published a retraction on his online platform, Truth Social, after erroneously posting that a suspect had been detained, echoing a similar incorrect claim by the university in the early hours after the attack.

What is there to know about the university?

Brown, a member of the prestigious Ivy League of elite private universities in the northeastern US, is one of the oldest universities in the country.

Defining day of destiny awaits St Mirren & Celtic at Hampden

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It’s a game which means so much to so many, and for so many reasons.

For St Mirren, the objective is a straightforward one. Win the Scottish League Cup for only the second time in the club’s history. Be heroes. Legends. Deities of Paisley who will never have to buy a beer again.

In the other half, it’s about another trophy to add to the cabinet. But, it’s also about arresting a run of two straight defeats for new Celtic manager Wilfried Nancy with the deafening din of fan unrest bellowing towards the club’s board.

Robinson’s return to Hampden stage

St Mirren arrive at the national stadium with nothing to lose and everything to gain.

Any team who faces either half of the Old Firm in a cup final will know they are up against a huge task. Vastly higher amounts of resources, money, fans and quality set the bar high.

Yet, Stephen Robinson’s team will emerge from the Hampden tunnel on Sunday with a steely-eyed determination and a swagger of self belief.

It’s founded on both their own ethos and also the fortunes of their opponents.

St Mirren faced in-form Motherwell in last month’s semi-final, a game many tipped the Lanarkshire team to win given their heralded brand of intricate football. Instead, they were outfought, out-thought and outplayed by Saints on the way to a deserved 4-1 victory.

It was a tactical lesson from Robinson who masterminded the perfect game plan to nullify his old club.

During his time at Fir Park, he guided them to a final at Hampden twice in the one season. On both occasions, they came up short against Celtic.

This time, he’ll surely feel that it can be third-time lucky.

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The cause for concern for the 13,000 or so Saints fans going to Hampden will come from their form since beating Motherwell in that semi-final.

Five games have been and gone with just one win, albeit that came in their last game with a 2-0 victory over Dundee United.

St Mirren sit ninth in the league – although with two games in hand over some of their rivals – but Robinson is famous for his team being well drilled and hard to play against.

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St Mirren’s route to the final

Group D winners

St Mirren’s journey to Hampden began all the way back in July, in the group stages. After a goalless draw in their opener against Arbroath, who snatched the bonus point with a shootout victory, the Buddies beat Forfar 2-1 then skelped Annan 8-2, helped by a hat-trick from Mikael Mandron.

A 2-1 closing victory over Ayr, thanks to Killian Phillips’ double, earned top spot with 10 points from 12.

Second round: St Mirren 1-1 Hearts (5-4 on pens)

The Paisley side had their work cut out against high-flying Premiership leaders Hearts in round two.

Alex Gogic put Saints ahead before half-time, only for Oisin McEntee to level with just over 10 minutes to play. The tie went the distance and Shamal George’s save from Claudio Braga’s penalty in the shootout proved decisive as the Buddies squeezed through.

Quarter-final: Kilmarnock 2-2 St Mirren (3-5 on pens)

Yet again St Mirren had to progress on spot-kicks. Mandron and Jayden Richardson struck either side of Robbie Deas’ equaliser but a late penalty from Bruce Anderson took the tie to a shootout.

Malik Dijksteel capitalised on Kyle Magennis’ miss for the hosts to set up a semi-final against Motherwell.

Semi-final: Motherwell 1-4 St Mirren

The Buddies had no reason to fear as they cruised past Jens Berthel Askou’s highly-praised Steelmen and were two to the good at half-time thanks to Mandron and Dan Nlundulu.

Nancy’s steep learning curve intensifies

Nancy’s introduction to life in Glasgow as Celtic manager has been a challenging one, to say the least.

The former Columbus Crew head coach has two games and two defeats under his belt in what is a pivotal week for the defending Scottish champions.

Following the sudden resignation of Brendan Rodgers, Martin O’Neill was sworn in to take temporary charge.

Amid amusing anecdotes in press conferences, leaping about on the touchline and chat about stealing tracksuits as a souvenir of his second spell at Parkhead, a ship that was heading for trouble was steadied.

Rangers were defeated in the League Cup semi-final, a heroic showing in Rotterdam stunned Feyenoord, and the gap to league leaders Hearts was narrowed to three points before their visit to Glasgow last Sunday.

Wilfried NancySNS

Next was Thursday’s 3-0 Europa League loss to Roma, with the margin of defeat not reflective of the large gulf between the two teams on the night.

Discussion of whether Nancy should have been excused from taking charge across this hat-trick of games before beginning his era has raged across the air waves, column inches and social media pages.

Fan dissatisfaction at the club’s board also doesn’t help the backdrop to this one.

Already there is pressure on Nancy, there always is in this part of town. But what has gone in the last week, and even before he even set foot in Glasgow, has raised the tension level.

Winning the club’s 23rd League Cup will not cure Celtic of all its problems. Months of supporter frustration at league placing, a failed transfer window and a botched attempt at Champions League progression will take some undoing.

However, victory over St Mirren would provide a firm foothold for the Frenchman to dig into. It’s the chance for a first win on the board, an incredibly early shot at a first trophy at the club, and a platform on which to stabilise and build.

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Celtic’s route to the final

Second round: Celtic 4-1 Falkirk

Celtic kicked off their trophy defence under Brendan Rodgers back in August, beating Falkirk 4-1 at home with Daizen Maeda, Alistair Johnston and Dane Murray on target along with a Liam Henderson own goal.

Quarter-final: Partick Thistle 0-4 Celtic

They followed that up by swatting aside Partick Thistle 4-0 in the quarter-final at Firhill. Sebastian Tounekti scored his first goal for the club and Yang Hyun-jun, Liam Scales and substitute Luke McCowan also netted.

Semi-final: Celtic 3-1 Rangers AET

By the time of the semi-final against Rangers, Rodgers had resigned and former manager Martin O’Neill was back in charge as a stop-gap measure.

Questions were raised about the 73-year-old’s return but O’Neill kept the momentum going as Celtic sailed to a 3-1 win after extra time over their fierce rivals.

What they said

St Mirren manager Stephen Robinson: “There will be a nervous energy, of course. We aren’t Celtic who get to every cup final or every other cup final.

“So we have to embrace the day and enjoy the day but most of all what I coin it with is have faith over fear. Really believe in the system, in each other, in the staff, and the stuff we’ve put on in preparation.

“We see all the photographs of the teams that have been very, very successful here and won trophies and they’re held in such high regard. What I try and do is to tell the players ‘We want your names there, we want your pictures there’.

“They’ve got their pictures up for the European achievements, for the top-six achievements, now we want them up [for winning the cup]. We want them to be remembered, we want them to be recognised everywhere they go for the rest of their life.”

St Mirren defender Marcus Fraser: “In 10, 20 years, people will probably still be talking about it [a win] and you can obviously write your own chapter in the club’s history.

“So I think that’s one of the key aspects that we want to do, really grab the opportunity with two hands and if we can get up on that wall, then in a few years’ time, when you walk by it, that would be a great feeling.”

Celtic manager Wilfried Nancy: “Yes, I would like to win the trophy. I’m pretty sure that, if we don’t win it, it’s going to be difficult, because when we lose, this is painful.

“But, again, I am optimistic as a person. So hopefully we’re going to do it. And also if it’s going to validate what we are doing. But, if not, I don’t want to think about this because, for the moment, I want to stay positive and this is the way I think.

“I’m going to have many, many other times to show, to do my stuff and to convince the fans that I am the right guy.”

Celtic midfielder Luke McCowan: “We’re disappointed as a team with the last two results and we need to get on top of it.

“We have to [stick by Nancy], there’s no way around it. He’s the manager, he’s got his staff with him, we’re players at this club. He’s the one that’s going to lead us into victories with whatever style and whatever management the way he wants.

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England airport incident with cameraman ‘not ideal’

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An incident between a member of England’s security staff and a TV cameraman “wasn’t ideal”, according to Brendon McCullum.

Australian network Seven accused the member of the tourists’ backroom staff of a physical confrontation following Saturday’s events at Brisbane Airport.

As England prepared to board a flight to Adelaide, the altercation was filmed and later broadcast on Seven’s TV and social channels.

“Hopefully it’s been dealt with and everyone’s able to move on,” said England head coach McCullum.

“I didn’t see it. I don’t know to what level it was. We have a security team that is trying to protect the players. I don’t know where on the line that sat.”

The back-and-forth at Brisbane Airport came at the end of England’s break in the Queensland beach town of Noosa, where they were regularly captured on camera, including by Seven.

The coverage followed a pattern of intense media scrutiny that has followed England around Australia.

Cricket Australia has previously issued reminders to all media that teams will not be available for interview in transit through airports, and all images should be captured from a respectful distance.

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Speaking on Sunday, McCullum said: “You know when you come to Australia, there’s a lot of eyeballs. There’s a lot of intensity and scrutiny on everything you do.

“I feel like we’ve managed ourselves pretty well throughout this tour. I thought the boys were outstanding over the last week we’ve had in Noosa.

“They’ve been engaging with a lot of locals and everyone was in good spirits. There was some good banter flying both ways and I think everyone treated that with the respect it deserved.”

Players being filmed in airports is a regular occurrence in Australia.

Last year, India star Virat Kohli took exception to being recorded at Melbourne Airport.

And Australia all-rounder Cameron Green said he had “sympathy” for the situation England find themselves in.

“You never like getting filmed, especially when you want to get away from it,” said Green.

“There’s always sympathy for anyone in life that’s getting filmed in public or in a private space. It’s never a nice feeling.

“That’s the expectation as a cricketer for Australia or England, you’re probably going have a fair amount of media scrutiny.

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