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Israel, Iran Launch Fresh Attacks As War Spreads

Israel pounded Lebanon early Thursday and said it intercepted missiles from Iran as a widening war launched by the United States and Israel also brought fresh turmoil to Iraq.

An airstrike in the pre-dawn hours struck a Beirut suburb, a stronghold of Hezbollah, the Tehran-backed force that has vowed to avenge the death of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in the war’s first moments Saturday.

Israel, which had warned residents to flee, also said it was working to intercept a new barrage of missiles fired by Iran, even though the US military had boasted of crippling the Islamic Republic’s capacities.

Iran has vowed to exert a heavy price for the attacks and has fired missiles across the region, and its elite Revolutionary Guards claimed Wednesday to have closed the Strait of Hormuz, the chokepoint into the Gulf through which a fifth of the world’s crude oil flows.

“The Americans’ mischief and deceit could lead to the collapse of the entire military and economic infrastructure of the region,” the Iranian military command warned in a statement.

Oil tanker transits through the strait have plunged by 90 per cent, energy market intelligence firm Kpler said.

Britain’s maritime agency reported a large early-morning explosion near Kuwait, with oil spilling into Gulf waters.

Nearby Iraq was hit by a total electricity blackout though it was not clear if it was connected to the war, with the electricity ministry blaming a sudden drop in gas supplies to a key plant.

Iran struck on Wednesday in northern Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish area, killing a member of an exiled Iranian Kurdish group, a representative said amid reports that the United States was looking to arm the guerrillas to infiltrate Iran.

“Separatist groups should not think that a breeze has blown and try to take action,” said Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council. “We will not tolerate them in any way.”

Two pro-Iran fighters were killed in a separate strike on their base inside Iraq.

Iranian warship torpedoed 

The United States said that one of its submarines sank an Iranian warship off the coast of Sri Lanka, the nation’s first torpedoing of a vessel since World War II.

The IRIS Dena frigate had been on a friendly visit to India when it was hit.

The ship “thought it was safe in international waters,” US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth told reporters.

Hegseth, who has previously boasted that the war would not be “politically correct”, called the strike “quiet death” and said of the United States, “We are fighting to win”.

The United States killed at least 87 people in the strike, Sri Lankan officials said, with 61 remaining missing. The island nation rescued 32 sailors, many of them wounded, Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath said.

Iran’s official IRNA news agency said 1,045 military personnel and civilians had been killed since the war began, a toll AFP could not independently verify.

Iran says more than 150 people, many of them children, died in a strike on a school on Saturday in the southern town of Minab, with state television showing a large crowd of mourners over bodies in white shrouds.

AFP reporters could not independently access the site to verify the toll.

US authorities say six soldiers have died in the war.

Missile over Turkey

In another first, a missile launched from Iran was destroyed by a NATO air defence system while heading towards Turkey’s airspace, drawing condemnation from Ankara and NATO.

A Turkish official told AFP that Turkey was not the target of the missile, which had been aimed at a British base in Cyprus and “veered off course”.

Turkey, which has criticised the war, summoned the Iranian ambassador, and its Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan told his Iranian counterpart Abbas Araghchi in a telephone call that “any steps that could lead to the spread of conflict should be avoided”.

Iranian strikes have caused fear and damage in Gulf cities such as Dubai and Riyadh, which have long taken pride in their safety from the tumult of the region.

The UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar all said they had intercepted Iranian missiles on Wednesday, including a drone set to hit the Saudis’ huge Ras Tanura refinery.

Kuwait has also been struck, with the health ministry announcing the death of an 11-year-old girl after she was hit by falling shrapnel.

Thirteen people, seven of them civilians, have been killed in countries around the Gulf since the war began, and air travel has been severely disrupted.

The United States said it sent its first charter flight to bring back Americans after urging them to leave the region, following similar moves by France and Britain.

– Warning on Lebanon –

In Lebanon, which Hezbollah dragged into the war by firing rockets on Israel, Israeli strikes have killed 75 people and displaced more than 83,000 since the start of the new round of fighting, officials said Wednesday.

Israel urged people to leave the section of Lebanon south of the Litani river — an area of hundreds of square kilometres — as the army was “compelled to take military action”.

Israeli air strikes also hit a hotel in Hazmieh, the first reported attack on the predominantly Christian area in Beirut’s suburbs, which is near the presidential palace and several foreign embassies.

The strikes revived memories of previous long-term Israeli occupations in Lebanon, and AFP video footage showed what appeared to be two Israeli tanks amid residential buildings in Khiam, about six kilometres into Lebanon.

French President Emmanuel Macron, in a telephone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, warned Israel against a ground offensive and to “preserve Lebanon’s territorial integrity”,

It was Macron’s first conversation since last year with Netanyahu, who had voiced anger over France’s historic recognition of a Palestinian state.

The French leader also said he spoke to Lebanese leaders to urge them to press Hezbollah to cease its attacks.

Iran’s military threatened to target Israeli embassies worldwide if Israel were to attack Tehran’s mission in Lebanon.

NDLEA Arrests ‘UK-Wanted Drug Lord’ After 15 Years On The Run

In a significant blow to international drug trafficking networks, the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency said it has arrested a 58-year-old alleged fugitive drug lord, Uzoma Valentine Ilomuanya, who it said had been on its wanted list and that of the British authorities for over 15 years.

Ilomuanya was apprehended at a location in Lagos on Monday, 23rd February 2026, following a high-stakes, well-coordinated operation by officers of a Special Operations Unit of the Agency, according to a Wednesday statement issued by the Director, Media & Advocacy, NDLEA, Femi Babafemi.

​According to the statement, his arrest ended a long-standing cat-and-mouse game with the law following his alleged long history of drug-related crimes across Nigeria and the United Kingdom, which highlights a persistent involvement in the global narcotics trade.

​“He was first arrested in February 2003 and convicted in the United Kingdom for drug trafficking; sentenced to nine years, but was later released after two years in jail upon appeal. Not done with crime, he was again arrested in the UK in July 2011 for drug-related offences. He was granted administrative bail but jumped jurisdiction and fled to Nigeria.

“Typical of a recidivist, Ilomuanya was in November 2018 arrested in Nigeria by NDLEA operatives following the discovery of two clandestine methamphetamine laboratories in his Obinugwu, Orlu LGA country home in Imo state and at his No. 3 Barrister Declan Uzoma Close Lagos house where officers recovered 77.960 kilograms of methamphetamine and extensive production equipment.

“He was subsequently charged before a Federal High Court, Lagos after which he jumped court bail and has been on the run since then”, the statement read in part.

READ ALSO: OpenAI Tops $25bn In Annualised Revenue

​Reacting to the successful operation leading to Ilomuanya’s arrest, the Chairman/Chief Executive Officer of NDLEA, Brig. Gen. Mohamed Buba Marwa (Rtd) described the development as a significant breakthrough in the Agency’s relentless war against drug cartels.

​According to him, “This arrest serves as a stern warning to those who think they can hide behind borders to escape justice. Whether you jump bail in London or set up clandestine labs in your village, the long arm of the NDLEA will eventually catch up with those who choose to undermine the health, security, and future of our nation.

“We remain committed to our international collaborations to ensure that Nigeria is not used as a sanctuary for global drug lords. The NDLEA under our watch will continue to strengthen intelligence-led operations, deepen international cooperation, and ensure that those involved in the illicit drug trade are brought to justice.”

‘We always knew he had elite potential’

BBC Sport charts the rise of exciting young forward Mateus Mane – from his childhood in Portugal, to moving to Manchester and now making waves with Wolves

WATCH: Wolves score late winner to shock Liverpool in Premier League

Why are celebrities buying stakes in football clubs?

Daniel Austin

BBC Sport senior journalist
  • 3 Comments

When KSI announced he had purchased a 20% stake in Dagenham & Redbridge earlier this week, he became the latest in an increasingly long line of celebrities taking a financial interest in lower-league football clubs.

Last month American rapper and Swansea City shareholder Snoop Dogg was well-received by fans at their Championship match against Preston while former NFL quarterback Tom Brady is part-owner of Birmingham City and Wrexham’s attention-grabbing rise up the divisions under actor-owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney could lead to promotion to the Premier League at the end of the season.

Now KSI, a YouTuber, streamer and musician who has gone from uploading video game streams in his childhood bedroom to running a business empire including a drinks brand, production company and boxing promotion firm, is dreaming of taking the Daggers to the top flight too.

“The idea of it just excites me so much,” the 32-year-old said when announcing the move in a video which has earned tens of millions of views online.

“I want the place to be pumping. I want it to be an event when people come here. I want do the unthinkable and get to the Premier League.

“Everyone here is hard-working and I want to be the man who affects things on the pitch as well as off the pitch.”

A celebrity has now purchased shares in English clubs at a rate of one per year since 2020, excluding 2021.

What is in it for the clubs?

“The game is evolving and so are we,” wrote Daggers chairman Anwar Uddin on social media after the news was announced.

“Looking forward to writing the next chapter of our history together.”

For clubs like Dagenham, playing in the National League South after reaching as high as League One in the 2010-11 season, the appeal of celebrity investment is the powerful combination of enormous wealth and popularity.

“The celebrities have the ability to move things into a totally new space, particularly in terms of making things go viral online,” explains Dan Plumley, principal lecturer in sport finance at Sheffield Hallam University.

“In our age of digital content, influencers’ platforms are where kids are nowadays and they’re following individuals as much as teams and brands.

“There will be people interested in the celebrity, particularly the younger generation, who will begin taking an interest in a club they might have never even heard of before.

“For the club it’s about how they leverage that, including maybe doing some things for publicity that might not always be popular with everyone.”

Trends in football ownership often move in cycles, as has been the case with influxes of investment from sovereign states and American holding companies. And now it’s celebrities coming in a quick flurry.

For clubs looking for investment now, the potential advantage of becoming an early adopter of the celebrity model is not being left behind.

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What do celebrity investors stand to gain?

The potential for financial success on the celebrity investors’ part is far less certain and the investment is often treated more like a hobby.

“History tells us most investors in football clubs don’t tend to make money and some English clubs are carrying huge losses,” Plumley says.

“It’s more of a passion project thing for a lot of the celebrity investors, who have already made their money in their careers, with potential big returns only if their grand plans for the club come off.

“The global appeal of football still holds for investors, even in the lower leagues, and English football is uniquely placed because of the amount of clubs there are.

“The financial gap is huge between the leagues so it’s a massive job to rise up from where Dagenham are – and then to keep going beyond that towards the Premier League would cost hundreds of millions of pounds.

Actor Will Ferrell and musician Drake pose together on a red carpetGetty Images

What do fans think of celebrity investors?

While the positive transformation of some clubs’ fortunes – particularly Wrexham – and the beneficial impact on the wider community has earned praise for some celebrity investors, in some instances fans have criticised rises through the divisions earned thanks to heavily increased budgets provided by celebrity benefactors as artificial and unearned.

“It’s exciting for people and sounds very positive,” says Russell Elmes, chair of Dagenham & Redbridge Supporters Club.

“There is always a bit of wondering what’s going to happen because our last few different ownerships haven’t quite worked out as we all hoped, so hopefully better and brighter things are ahead for us in the future this time around.

“We want someone here for the long term who is going to make the club sustainable because it is going to take a long time to get back to where there fans want us to be.

Judge KSI poses during promotion for the 2026 series of ITV programme Britain's Got TalentGetty Images

Related topics

  • Dagenham & Redbridge
  • Wrexham
  • Football
  • National League

Meet GB’s first female Paralympic snowboarder

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Katie FalkinghamBBC Sport senior journalist and Sally HurstBBC Sport reporter

When Nina Sparks was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2021, she decided very quickly it was going to be the making of her.

“Diagnosed in March, classified to compete internationally in November,” she tells BBC Sport.

“It was a very quick upwards trajectory to being an athlete.”

Now, history beckons. At this month’s Winter Paralympics, Sparks will become Great Britain’s first female Paralympic snowboarder.

“It’s taken me a while to adjust to the fact that it’s quite a big thing,” she says.

That love for the mountains blossomed the moment she first saw them. Adopted as a 10-month-old, her parents first took her skiing when she was five or six. She later switched to snowboarding at 13.

It is, to her, “the closest thing you can get to flying”.

But the sport was always just a hobby, a once-a-year trip. When Covid hit in 2020, she was working as a full-time peripatetic music teacher, and as learning moved online, she realised she was no longer tied to the UK.

And so she moved her life to the mountains, teaching piano, trumpet and saxophone her “side hustle”. But it was while she was living in Austria that she first noticed signs that something wasn’t right.

“I woke up and had a numb right foot. That spread up my right leg and then my left leg, and from about mid-November [2020] I got to the point where I couldn’t feel temperature very well.

“Going through diagnosis was really tough, and certainly for me – I was in Austria by myself.

“I just thought ‘let’s make something of this’. I always knew about the Paralympics, and I knew about Kadeena Cox, a very famous British Paralympian with MS.

Heading into the Milan-Cortina Paralympics, which start on Friday, Sparks is a four-time World Cup and two-time World Championship medallist across the LL2 snowboarding events, for athletes with a lower limb impairment with less activity limitation than their LL1 counterparts.

Because of her MS, a condition that affects the brain and spinal cord, she uses an orthotic to walk and competes with an ankle foot orthosis in her boot.

“The biggest thing for me is that I now need to nap, every day, without fail,” she says.

“We come in from the mountain and I’m straight to bed.

“Some days, I may be able to do five runs, some days I may be able to do 25 runs, maybe the next day I need an extra day off because I’m super tired. Quality over quantity, is what one of my coaches says a lot.”

Sparks is joined by fellow snowboarders James Barnes-Miller, Ollie Hill, Matt Hamilton and Davy Zyw in the 25-strong ParalympicsGB squad.

On 14 March, she will compete in the women’s LL2 banked slalom, a technical discipline raced against the clock on a course of tight turns.

“In our sport, a big thing is just showing up. We often have really small numbers in our competitions, just because worldwide there aren’t many women with disabilities involved in Para-snowboarding,” Sparks says.

“Certainly I’m not going to be the only woman making history for their nation at these Games. So showing up and giving it a go is half the battle.

Related topics

  • Winter Sports
  • Disability Sport

More on this story

    • 24 February
    • 24 February
    Davy Zyw

Video: Intense US-Israeli bombardment across Iran

NewsFeed

Intense US-Israeli bombardment sent flames and plumes of smoke into the night sky across Iran. Strikes hit Sanandaj near a media centre and across an expanse of the capital, Tehran.