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Archive April 30, 2025

Ukraine says it is poised to sign minerals deal with the US

As both parties finalized the details of their deal, Ukraine is expected to sign a long-awaited minerals deal with the United States, according to Prime Minister Denys Shmygal.

US President Donald Trump has referred to the agreement as “money back” for the US’s wartime aid, which would see Washington and Kyiv work together to develop Ukraine’s mineral resources.

On Wednesday, Shmygal said on national TV, “This is truly a good, equal, and beneficial international agreement on joint investments in the development and recovery of Ukraine.”

He continued, “I hope the agreement will be signed in the near future, within the next 24 hours, and we will take the first step.”

Washington did not respond right away.

Negotiations between Ukraine and the US were supposed to be done a few weeks ago, but a tense exchange between Trump and Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the White House temporarily slowed things down.

According to Al Jazeera’s Alan Fisher, who is a White House correspondent, “It seems there are still some details to work out.” However, that agreement is anticipated to be signed in the coming 24 hours.

Joint fund

Any agreement to stop Russia’s three-year invasion has been pushed by Ukraine for security guarantees.

In the event of a ceasefire, the Trump administration has argued that strengthening US business interests in Ukraine will help deter Russian aggression.

If the deal included any security guarantees for Ukraine, it was unclear.

According to a senior source in the Ukrainian presidency, the agreement will not be related to any “debts” for previous aid Kyiv has received, creating a “50/50” joint fund for Kyiv and Washington, according to the AFP news agency.

It guarantees the parties’ equality. To support reconstruction, a new investment fund will be established. Both the United States and us are anticipated to contribute, the statement continued.

According to a draft draft of the agreement, Washington will be credited with contributing to the joint fund when it provides new military aid.

However, the draft does not specify how the joint fund’s revenues will be spent, who receives benefits, or who controls spending decisions.

According to the draft, the United States or other designated parties will have preferential access to new permits, licenses, and potential investment opportunities in the field of Ukrainian natural resources, according to the draft. Existing agreements are not included.

Sources with knowledge of the situation claimed earlier this month that the deal would include Ukraine’s most valuable asset, which had been stated in earlier iterations of the negotiations.

Draper beats Paul to reach Madrid Open last eight

EPA

With a convincing 6-2, 6-2 victory over Tommy Paul, a dependable Jack Draper won the Madrid Open’s quarter-finals.

In the third and seventh games, the British number one served out in love to win the first set in 32 minutes, breaking American records.

Paul’s serve was under more of a strain, and Draper broke Paul’s love in the fifth game to make it 3-2 up while saving two break points in the third game of the second set.

Draper comfortably won the next game on his serve to win the match in an hour and seven minutes after a stunning forehand down the line.

Draper told Sky Sports, “I felt really good out there.” I had to be a part of Tommy’s game from the beginning because he is a great player. I felt well.

“I believe that most players who are from the UK or who don’t play on this surface frequently enter it with the impression that they won’t be that good at it, which will help them advance.”

“I am aware of my ability to play well on this surface, and this year, I have set out to demonstrate this.” I am aware of the importance of being a top player.

Draper’s powerful forehand was in good working order the entire time as he hit 13 of his 20 match winners with it. He did not experience a break point during the contest.

Paul only won the contest, and he only managed seven victories, committing 31 errors on average against his foe.

Draper, who ranks sixth in his career, is the fifth-seeded player at the Madrid Open and the final player with the highest ranking.

One of the strangest matches I’ve ever played, I think.

Iga Swiatek, the women’s draw’s defending champion, defeated Madison Keys 0-6 6-3 6-2 in their quarter-finale after going down in the first set without winning a game.

American Keys, who won the Australian Open for the first time earlier this year, won the first set before four-time French Open champion Swiatek made a comeback to earn a semi-final spot.

It was one of the strangest matches I’ve ever played, according to Poland’s Swiatek, “to be honest.”

“I didn’t think the first set was that bad,” I thought. The ball just went incredibly long, and I felt good about it. The momentum eventually changed as a result of my attempt to play a bit shorter and with some mistakes made by Maddy. I’m pleased I succeeded.

After beating Mirra Andreeva 7-5 6-1, Swiatek will face Coco Gauff in the final four.

Before gaining the upper hand and winning, Gauff faced two set points in the opening set.

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‘My bleach blonde days are over– Cat Deeley’s blonde trick made me look so much younger’

Take this as your opportunity to copy me and become more “lived in bronze,” says Mirror’s Michelle Darlow. What exactly should you ask your colorist for, exactly?

Cat Deeley was Michelle’s hair inspiration (Image: ITV)

My bleach blonde has always been my signature, my comfort zone, and a habit I’ve never really put a halt to. Every month, I’d want to be back in the salon chair for a full head of highlights in the hope of regaining that youthful, vibrant blonde that I once believed would look polished. But in reality? I spent the majority of the year detesting my grown-out color because the maintenance was so expensive.

My hair would grow a thick line of regrowth that would leave it looking greasy and dull even when it was clean the moment my roots started to show (usually within a few weeks). It always crept back when I tried to cover it with dry shampoo or clever partings. Additionally, it was draining my bank account at upwards of £150 per visit for maintenance appointments.

Between juggling my two jobs and my two kids, it was impossible for me to follow the six-to-eight-week cycle. I feared going to the salon because I knew I would leave loving the color, but the dark roots started to show up the following week or so.

That’s when I caught a glimpse of Cat Deeley on This Morning one weekday – and suddenly, the clouds parted. Her hair is this effortless, sun-kissed bronde – glossy, dimensional and grown-up – and the best part? Her roots were visible, but they looked intentional. Natural. Chic. I knew instantly that was the hair colour inspo I’d been waiting for. This exact colour also has a name: ‘lived in bronde’.

even better ? It’s the most popular color trend for 2025.

READ MORE: “Most powerful hair growth supplement” makes hair “thicker and healthier”

READ MORE: The ‘Teddy’ bronde is the hottest hair color trend for 2025 that will transform blondes who have lost their shine.

Michelle looks back on her blonde colour, left, and wishes she's gone for a low maintenance bronde, right, earlier
Michelle looks back on her blonde colour, left, and wishes she’s gone for a low maintenance bronde, right, earlier(Image: Michelle Darlow)

How do I request a “lived in Boston”?

The key is to come in with a crystal clear idea of the type of “live-in” bronde you want if you’re considering switching. I went to *GA Salons in South Kensington, took a screenshot of Cat Deeley from the show, and said I wanted something soft, easy-to-maintain, and natural-looking. She suggested using lowlights and carefully placed highlights to blend my darker roots into a warmer bronde.

I also added warmer caramel and honey tones to my complexion, which were too much of a tanner for my skin. The overall effect is more complex because it perfectly captures the light and matures beautifully without any discernible regrowth. This means there is now a three or four month difference between appointments. My colorist also suggested applying glossing treatments between tones so that the color would stay vibrant without having to apply full dye.

This tone is also known as a “honeyed and buttery blonde” and has “subtle gold highlights, reminiscent of ’90s blonde tones made famous by Jennifer Aniston,” according to Gennaro Dell’Aquila, art director and founder of GA Salons.

What’s the other nice thing about this shade that’s 90s-inspired? My hair feels much healthier. My ends were prone to snapping and had been brittle for years due to bleaching, but since dialing back and adopting a more natural color, my hair has become noticeably healthier and shinier. It also has better styling, and a quick air-dry makes it look more polished than it did before.

Michelle's new Cat Deeley-inspired bronde
Michelle’s new Cat Deeley-inspired bronde(Image: Michelle Darlow)

Important lessons can be learned: A brighter blonde does not necessarily mean a more recent appearance.

The difference it has actually made is beyond my comprehension. Friends keep asking if I’ve “done something different” or taken a vacation. The warmer tones brighten my face and soften my features in a way that the stark blonde never did, which is why they are so flattering. I appear younger, more rested, and overall look better. I regret not doing it sooner. Don’t be afraid to ask for warm tones, ladies, I want to tell any blondes who are worried about it. Ashy hair reigned supreme in the days we lived in, but to be honest, is it really doing that for you? For me, it wasn’t.

Let Cat Deeley serve as your inspiration if you’re feeling stuck in a color rut or fed up with high-lift blonde maintenance. The lived-in bronde is flattering, sympathetic, and fantastically low-effort, which is what we all require at the moment.

How to maintain your home’s color while cutting down on salon costs

    Use a purple shampoo only once per week at most, but ideally once per month. Your hair may become more brittle and dull-looking as a result of a buildup of purple shampoo. Top Tip: Always use a nourishing shampoo after a purple shampoo for a second wash.

Redken Colour Extend Blondage Shampoo, £11.51, is our favorite.

    Every week, apply a deep conditioning treatment, preferably using bond-building technology. Your ends will stay hydrated and less susceptible to breakage as a result of the combination of that and moisturizing and nourishing ingredients.

Olaplex No. is a favorite. 8 Bond Intense Moisture Mask, £22.40

  • Use hot tools without a heat protectant, which can cause your color to fade more quickly, just like UV rays from the sun. To maximize the benefits of your salon color, apply a good heat protectant after every wash and again before styling.
Continue reading the article.

Bumble and Bumble Thermal Protection Mist, 12

Kashmir attack: How India might strike Pakistan – what history tells us

Pakistan said on Wednesday that it had “credible intelligence” that India might launch a military strike against it within the next few days.

Meanwhile, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi led a series of security meetings on Tuesday and Wednesday, adding to speculation of an impending Indian military operation against its archrival, after the April 22 attack on tourists in Pahalgam in Indian-administered Kashmir in which 26 people were killed.

Since the attack, barely existent relations between the nuclear-armed South Asian neighbours have nosedived further, with the countries scaling back diplomatic engagement, suspending their participation in bilateral treaties and effectively expelling each other’s citizens.

The subcontinent is on edge. But how imminent is an Indian military response to the Pahalgam killings, and what might it look like? Here’s what history tells us:

What happened?

Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said in a televised statement early on Wednesday that Islamabad had “credible intelligence” that India was planning to take military action against Pakistan in the “next 24 to 36 hours”.

Tarar added that this action would be India’s response on the “pretext of baseless and concocted allegations of involvement” in Pahalgam. While India has alleged Pakistan’s involvement in the Pahalgam attack, Islamabad has denied this claim.

India and Pakistan each administer parts of Kashmir, but both countries claim the territory in full.

Tarar’s statement came a day after Modi gave the Indian military “complete operational freedom” to respond to the Pahalgam attack in a closed-door meeting with the country’s security leaders, multiple news agencies reported, citing anonymous senior government sources.

On Wednesday, Modi chaired a Cabinet Committee on Security meeting, the second such meeting since the Pahalgam attack, state-run Doordarshan television reported.

Meanwhile, as the neighbours continued to exchange gunfire along the Line of Control (LoC) dividing Indian and Pakistan-administered Kashmir, other world leaders stepped up diplomacy to calm tensions.

“We are reaching out to both parties, and telling … them to not escalate the situation,” a United States state department spokesperson told reporters on Tuesday, quoting US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who is expected to speak to the foreign ministers of India and Pakistan.

Also on Tuesday, the spokesperson for United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said that he had spoken to Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, offering his help in “de-escalation”.

What military action could India take?

While it is unclear what course of action India could take, it has in the past used a range of military tactics. Here are some of them:

Covert military operations

By design, they aren’t announced – and aren’t confirmed. But over the decades, India and Pakistan have each launched multiple covert raids into territory controlled by the other, targeting military posts, killing soldiers – and on occasion beheading the enemy’s troops.

These strikes are often carried out as a retaliatory step by a military unit whose personnel were themselves previously attacked, as a form of retribution.

But such raids are never confirmed: The idea is to send the other country a message but not force it to respond, thereby containing the risk of escalation. Public announcements lead to domestic pressure on governments to hit back.

Publicised ‘surgical strikes’

Sometimes, though, the idea is not to send subtle messages – but to embarrass the other country by making an attack public. It also doesn’t hurt politically.

India has in the past carried out so-called surgical strikes against specific, chosen targets across the LoC – most recently in 2016.

Then, after armed fighters killed 17 Indian soldiers in Uri, Indian-administered Kashmir, special forces of the Indian Army crossed the de facto border to attack “launch pads” from where, New Delhi alleged, “terrorists” were planning to strike India again. “The operations were basically focused to ensure that these terrorists do not succeed in their design of infiltration and carrying out destruction and endangering the lives of citizens of our country,” Lieutenant General Ranbir Singh, then the director-general of military operations for the Indian Army, said in a public statement, revealing the raid.

India claimed that the surgical strike had killed dozens of fighters, though independent analysts believe the toll was likely much lower.

Aerial strikes

In February 2019, a suicide bomber killed 40 Indian paramilitary soldiers in Pulwama in Indian-administered Kashmir, weeks before national elections in the country. This attack was claimed by the Jaish-e-Muhammad, an armed group based in Pakistan.

Amid an outpouring of rage, the Indian Air Force launched an aerial raid into Pakistan-administered Kashmir. India claimed it had struck hideouts of “terrorists” and killed several dozen fighters.

Pakistan insisted that Indian jets only hit a forested region, and did not kill any fighters. Islamabad claimed it scrambled jets that chased Indian planes back across the LoC.

But a day later, Indian and Pakistani fighter jets again engaged in a dogfight – this one ending with Pakistan downing an Indian plane inside territory it controls. An Indian fighter pilot was captured, and returned a few days later.

Attempts at taking over Pakistan-controlled land

Over the past few years, there have been growing calls in India that New Delhi should take back Pakistan-administered Kashmir. That chorus has only sharpened in recent days after the Pahalgam attack, with even leaders of the opposition Congress Party goading the Modi government to take back that territory.

While retaking Pakistan-administered Kashmir remains a policy objective of every Indian government, the closely matched military capabilities of both sides make such an endeavour unlikely.

Still, India has a track record of successfully taking disputed territory from Pakistan.

In 1984, the Indian Army and Indian Air Force launched Operation Meghdoot, in which they rapidly captured the Siachen glacier in the Himalayas, blocking the Pakistan Army from accessing key passes. One of the world’s largest non-polar glaciers, Siachin has since been the planet’s highest battleground, with Indian and Pakistani military outposts positioned against each other.

In the aftermath of the Pahalgam attack, the Indian Navy announced that it had carried out test missile strikes.

“Indian Navy ships undertook successful multiple anti-ship firings to revalidate and demonstrate readiness of platforms, systems and crew for long range precision offensive strike,” the navy said in a statement on April 27.

“Indian Navy stands combat ready, credible and future ready in safeguarding the nation’s maritime interests anytime, anywhere, anyhow.”

Many analysts have suggested that the trials were a show of strength, pointing to the Indian Navy’s ability to strike Pakistani territory if ordered to do so.

A full-blown military conflict

India and Pakistan have gone to war four times in the 78 years of their independent existence. Three of these armed conflicts have been over Kashmir.

Two months after the British colonial government left the subcontinent in August 1947 after carving it up into India and Pakistan, the neighbours fought their first war over Kashmir, then ruled by a king.

Pakistani militias invaded Kashmir to try and take control. The king, Hari Singh, pleaded with India for help. New Delhi agreed, and joined the war against Pakistan, but on the condition that Singh sign an instrument of accession, merging Kashmir with India. The king agreed.

The war finally ended on January 1, 1949, with a ceasefire agreement. India and Pakistan have both held parts of Kashmir since then.

In 1965, a clash between their border forces escalated into a full-blown war. Pakistani forces crossed the ceasefire line into Indian-administered Kashmir, while Indian forces crossed the international border into Pakistan’s Lahore and launched attacks. After thousands of casualties on both sides, a United Nations Security Council resolution helped the neighbours end the war.

In 1971, Pakistan and India were embroiled in an armed conflict over East Pakistan, where Indian forces helped liberate the territory, leading to the establishment of Bangladesh. In 1972, the two countries signed the Simla Agreement, which established the LoC.

BKFC retract banned ex-UFC fighter signing announcement

Images courtesy of Getty

Due to the current suspension of Jeff Molina, the Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship (BKFC) has withdrawn their announcement.

After admitting to being a part of an illegal betting scandal, American Molina was given a three-year suspension in March.

The 27-year-old was signed by KFC on Tuesday, but the company later made a U-turn about the announcement.

The bareknuckle promotion wrote on X that “the announcement regarding Jeff Molina’s signing was premature.”

“We respect the Athletic Boxing Commission’s] current suspension and adhere to their rules and suspensions,” the ABC stated.

After betting on fellow fighter Darrick Minner before losing to Shayilan Nuerdanbieke in November 2022, Molina, who has won all three of his UFC fights since making his debut in 2021, was sent off by ABC and the Nevada State Athletic Commission.

Before the fight, Minner concealed a serious injury that Molina was aware of prior to the fight.

American Minner, 35, was given a 29-month suspension for his involvement in the scandal.

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