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Six people killed, 46 injured in Brazil highway bus crash

At least six passengers ⁠have been ⁠killed in a bus crash on a ⁠highway in southeastern Brazil and ⁠another 46 people sent to hospitals for treatment.

In a post on X, the Sao Paulo state fire department said the accident took place early on Monday on the BR-153 highway near the city of Marilia. The conditions of the injured passengers ⁠were not immediately known.

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Local ⁠newspapers, quoting statements from Brazil’s Federal Highway Police, said the bus was carrying farm ⁠workers from the northeastern state of Maranhao to Santa ⁠Catarina state in the south to harvest apples.

The vehicle skidded off the roadway and flipped over after ‌its left rear tyre burst, causing the driver to lose control, ‌the Brazilian newspaper ‌Folha de S.Paulo said.

Deadly road accidents are common in Brazil.

In early February, at least 16 people died when a bus veered off the road on a curve and overturned in Alagoas state in the northeast. In October, 17 people died in the northeastern state of Pernambuco when a driver lost control of a bus.

More than 10,000 people died in traffic accidents in Brazil in 2024, according to the Ministry of Transport.

This handout photo provided by the Alagoas State government shows rescue officers working at the site of a deadly bus accident on state highway AL-220 in the city of Sao Jose da Tapera, Alagoas state, Brazil, on February 3, 2026. A bus accident in northeastern Brazil killed at least 15 people on February 3, including three children, state officials said in a statement. The bus had been carrying about 60 people taking part in a pilgrimage when it overturned in the rural interior of Alagoas state.
The site of a deadly bus accident earlier this month near the city of Sao Jose da Tapera, Brazil [File: Handout/Alagoas state government via AFP]

Barcelona to continue hosting F1 races until 2032

Steve Sutcliffe

BBC Sport journalist

Barcelona will continue to host Formula One races until 2032 after striking a deal that means it will alternate with the Belgian Grand Prix.

While the Circuit de Catalunya has been replaced as the host of the Spanish Grand Prix by the Madring, it remains on the calendar for 2026 and will hold a renamed Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix in June.

The future of track as an F1 circuit had been in doubt but it will also stage races in 2028, 2030 and 2032.

The races in Barcelona will be in rotation with the Grand Prix at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, which will take place in 2026, 2027, 2029 and 2031.

Formula 1’s chief executive Stefano Domenicali said: “Barcelona is an incredible city, and the Formula One fans there always welcome us with such passion.

“I am delighted that we will continue to race at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya for years to come.

“The team have invested heavily in the circuit and hosted fantastic fan festivals in recent years so we look forward to seeing how they continue to develop the experience, both for attendees at the race and for the city as a whole.”

The extension follows significant investment at the circuit in recent years.

This includes the construction of the Circuit Rooftop, a new hospitality space overlooking turns nine, 10 and 11 and the entrance of the main straight, as well as the installation of solar panels throughout the circuit.

The Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya was originally built in 1991 and held the Spanish Grand Prix that year with its construction being part of the development programme for the 1992 Barcelona Olympics.

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    • 23 January 2024
    Cars on the track during the Spanish Grand Prix in 2023

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‘Golazo!’- why one of football’s most iconic intros has returned

Daniel Austin

BBC Sport senior journalist
  • 16 Comments

Competition between sports broadcasters is serious business.

Purchasing the rights to show tournaments and leagues on television can be very expensive, and with (hopefully) plenty of viewers watching at home, quality of coverage must be top-notch to avoid being pilloried by fans and outdone by rivals.

But that does not mean broadcasters cannot admire – and even celebrate – the work of their peers.

Football fans were pleasantly surprised to see that BBC Alba’s brand new coverage of Italy’s Serie A – appearing on free-to-air TV in the UK for the first time since 2008 – brought the back the theme tune and graphics from Gazzetta Football Italia, the hugely popular Italian football show broadcast by Channel 4 between 1992 and 2002.

Watch the Serie A intro sequence on BBC iPlayer

Watch on iPlayer

‘It was a no-brainer to bring it back’

When BBC Alba struck the deal for its Serie A rights – eight games featuring Scottish players before the nation’s return to the World Cup this summer – staff in Scotland worked with colleagues at production company Sunset Vine to build a plan for the best coverage possible.

They decided that bringing back the iconic intro, complete with the cry of ‘Golazo’ at the end of the theme tune, was the best approach.

When the title sequence played before kick-off between Bologna and Torino on Sunday evening, it was met with a hugely popular reception online.

“It was a no-brainer to bring back the branding – we would have done people a disservice if we hadn’t thought about it,” said Margaret Cameron, director of content at Alba.

“It was a very deliberate choice to put out a well-timed nostalgia bomb.”

Scott McTominay looks on before a Napoli match in Serie A at the Stadio Diego Armando MaradonaGetty Images

Neil Paterson, commercial, rights and business affairs manager at the BBC, said: “I’m 42, so I loved the Channel 4 show and wanted it to be a nod to that.

“The BBC has blanket music agreements with a company called BMG, and the theme song was included in that, so it was pretty straightforward.

“I get on well with Channel 4’s head of sport, so it was a case of calling them as a courtesy to let them know what we were planning. They were really pleased and excited about it.”

Seven Scottish players, including Napoli’s Ballon d’Or nominee Scott McTominay, are playing in Serie A this season.

“We became aware towards the end of last season that DAZN, which owns the UK rights for Serie A, were willing to sublet some international rights,” said Cameron.

“We have been thinking about this since then because we want to capitalise on what is a really big moment in Scottish sporting history – going back to the World Cup with some great players who are playing in one of Europe’s best leagues.”

While some broadcasters buy TV rights in order to sell subscriptions to sports packages and advertising slots, the BBC does so in order to offer licence-fee payers the best value for money.

BBC Alba is a partnership between the BBC and MG Alba, meaning the channel’s output is funded by both the licence fee and the Scottish government. It broadcasts content in Gaelic, with co-commentary on Serie A matches featuring both Gaelic and English.

“Sport is really important to us. It’s a good way to tap in to audiences in Scotland that are underserved and offer them something which is normally behind a paywall,” said Cameron.

Bologna captain Lewis Ferguson carries the ball in midfield during Bologna's Serie A match against LazioGetty Images

The theme song is a remix of 1992 dance anthem I’m Stronger Now by Definitive Two with added football lingo and commentary.

Social media posts about the title sequence generated thousands of interactions online.

“It’s been really nice to see the big, positive reaction”, said Grant Philips, executive producer at Sunset+Vine, which works with BBC Alba on projects across many sports.

“It evokes all those memories so many people have from back then.”

In the 1990s and early 2000s, Serie A was the world’s leading football league. Its clubs spent the most money, boasted the best players and attracted the attention of fans around the globe.

Broadcaster James Richardson sits outside an Italian cafe with a newspaper while presenting Gazzetta Football ItaliaChannel 4

The programme featured live coverage of matches presented by broadcaster James Richardson, whose intellectual and elegant approach was a hit.

“I still meet people who used to watch it, and they have such nice things to say about it – how much they enjoyed watching,” Richardson told World Football Index last year.

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Europe’s Israel policy faces a democratic test

More than 457,000 European citizens have signed a petition calling for the full suspension of the European Union’s partnership agreement with Israel within the initiative’s first month.

Launched on January 13 as a formally registered European citizens’ initiative, the petition must reach 1 million signatures from at least seven EU member states by January 13 next year to trigger formal consideration by the European Commission. It is not a symbolic appeal. It is a mechanism embedded within the EU’s democratic framework, designed to translate public will into institutional review.

The speed and geographic spread of this mobilisation matter. The demand to suspend the EU-Israel Association Agreement is no longer confined to street demonstrations or activist circles. It has entered the EU’s formal democratic architecture.

The petition calls for suspension on the grounds that Israel is in breach of Article 2 of the association agreement, which conditions the partnership on respect for human rights and international law. As the initiative states, “EU citizens cannot tolerate that the EU maintains an agreement that contributes to legitimize and finance a State that commits crimes against humanity and war crimes.” The text further cites large-scale civilian killings, displacement, destruction of hospitals and medical infrastructure in Gaza, the blockade of humanitarian aid and the failure to comply with orders of the International Court of Justice.

As of Monday, the initiative had gathered 457,950 signatures, more than 45 percent of the required total in just one month. Signatories come from all 27 EU member states without exception. This is not a regional surge. It is continental.

The distribution of signatures reveals more than raw numbers. France alone accounts for 203,182 signatories, nearly 45 percent of the total. That figure reflects the country’s longstanding tradition of solidarity mobilisation, sustained mass demonstrations throughout the genocidal war on Gaza and the clear positioning of major political actors, such as La France Insoumise. France has emerged as the principal engine of this institutional push.

Spain follows with 60,087 signatures while Italy stands at 54,821, a particularly striking figure given the presence of a right-wing government that openly supports Israel. Belgium has registered 20,330 signatures from a population of roughly 12 million, reflecting high relative engagement. In the Nordic region, Finland with 12,649 signatures, Sweden with 15,267 and Denmark with 8,295 show sustained participation. Ireland has reached 11,281 signatures from a population of just over five million.

Several of these countries have already exceeded their required national thresholds under EU rules. France, Spain, Belgium, Finland, Ireland, Italy and Sweden have all surpassed the minimum number needed for their signatures to count towards the seven-member-state requirement. This is a critical development. It means the initiative is not merely accumulating volume but is also already satisfying the geographic legitimacy criteria built into the European citizens’ initiative mechanism.

The Netherlands, with 20,304 signatures, is approaching its national threshold. Poland, at 22,308 signatures, reflects engagement that extends beyond Western Europe. Even in smaller states such as Slovenia with 1,703 signatures, Luxembourg with 900 and Portugal with 4,945, participation is visible and measurable.

Germany presents a revealing contrast. Despite being the EU’s most populous member state and the site of some of the largest demonstrations against Israel’s genocidal campaign in Gaza, the petition has gathered 11,461 German signatures, only 17 percent of Germany’s national threshold of 69,120. This gap between visible street mobilisation and formal institutional participation highlights the particular political and legal environment in Germany, where pro-Palestinian expression has faced restrictions and where successive governments have maintained near-unconditional support for Israel as a matter of state policy. The relatively low percentage does not signal absence of dissent. Rather, it illustrates the structural constraints within which dissent operates. That more than 11,000 citizens have nevertheless formally registered their support indicates that institutional engagement is occurring even under conditions of political pressure.

Taken together, these patterns reveal something deeper than a petition’s momentum. Over more than two years of genocidal war, ethnic cleansing and the systematic destruction of civilian life in Gaza, solidarity across Europe has not dissipated. It has moved from protest slogans and street mobilisation into a formal democratic instrument that demands institutional response.

Petitions do not automatically change policy. The European Commission is not legally bound to suspend the association agreement even if the initiative ultimately reaches 1 million signatures. But the political implications are significant. A successful initiative would formally compel the commission to respond to a demand grounded in the EU’s own human rights clause. It would demonstrate that the call for suspension is rooted in broad and measurable public support across multiple member states.

The European Union has long presented itself as a normative power committed to international law and human rights. Article 2 of its partnership agreements is foundational. If hundreds of thousands, and potentially more than a million, European citizens insist that this principle be applied consistently, EU institutions will face a credibility test.

This petition is not merely a count of signatures. It is an index of political will. It shows that across France, Spain, Belgium, Italy, Ireland, the Nordic states and beyond, citizens are invoking the EU’s own democratic mechanisms to demand accountability.

Whether the initiative ultimately reaches 1 million, one reality is already established. The demand to suspend the EU-Israel partnership has entered Europe’s institutional bloodstream. It can no longer be dismissed as marginal rhetoric. It is embedded within the union’s formal democratic process, and that marks a significant development in Europe’s response to the genocide in Gaza.

Mandhana named BBC Indian Sportswoman of the Year

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World Cup-winning cricketer Smriti Mandhana has been named BBC Indian Sportswoman of the Year for 2025.

Mandhana, 29, was India’s vice-captain as they won the 2025 ICC Women’s World Cup, scoring 434 runs across the tournament.

Also nominated for the award were India captain Harmanpreet Kaur, chess champion Divya Deshmukh, shooter Suruchi Singh and hurdler Jyothi Yarraji.

Accepting the award, Mandhana reflected on a “special year” for women’s cricket

“Thank you BBC for giving me the award for Best Sportswoman of the Year,” she said.

“I’m happy I could contribute and help India win matches.”

Mandhana was chosen by a distinguished grand jury comprising Grand Slam tennis champion Leander Paes, Paralympic medallist Deepa Malik and World Championship long-jump medallist Anju Bobby George.

Mandhana made her debut for India aged 16 and has scored 17 international centuries across the three formats of the game – a record she shares with Australia’s Meg Lanning.

Deshmukh, Pal and Bhagwat pick up ISWOTY awards

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Three other trailblazing female athletes were also honoured at the ISWOTY awards ceremony at the Taj Palace hotel in Delhi.

Chess champion Divya Deshmukh was named BBC Emerging Player of the Year after winning the Women’s World Cup at the age of 20.

Divya is just the fourth Indian woman to become a chess grandmaster.

Preethi Pal was named BBC Para Sportswoman of the Year after winning two medals at the 2025 World Championships in New Delhi.

The 25-year-old from Uttar Pradesh had previously won two bronze medals at the 2024 Paralympic Games.

Shooter Anjali Bhagwat was given the BBC ISWOTY Lifetime Achievement award.

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Praising the athletes’ achievements and reaffirming the BBC’s commitment to spotlighting Indian women’s sport, CEO of BBC News Jonathan Munro said: “Congratulations to this year’s winners, who showcase the very best in sporting excellence.

“The BBC World Service is committed to bringing such stories of human endeavour and outstanding success to audiences across India and around the world.”

The ceremony also celebrated ‘Star Performers’ and ‘Changemakers’ whose contributions continue to redefine the landscape of Indian sport.

BBC Star Performers of the Year 2025

BBC Changemakers of the Year 2025

BBC ISWOTY is managed and produced by Collective Newsroom.

Rupa Jha, editor-in-chief and co-founder of Collective Newsroom said: “Sport belongs to everyone, and its true power lies not only in victories but in the opportunities it creates.

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Was Tullis-Joyce’s ‘tactical injury’ a smart move? Fara thinks so

Fara Williams suggests that Phallon Tullis‑Joyce’s ‘tactical injury’ was a clever move, as it gave Manchester United players the chance to receive instructions – guidance that subsequently contributed to their goal in the 2–1 victory over London City Lionesses.

Watch the Women’s Football Show on BBC iPlayer