Archive September 29, 2025

Calvin Harris to deliver huge Hits Radio Live 2025 performance – everything to know

With a bigger lineup than ever and performances from some of the biggest names in music at the events in Manchester and Birmingham, HITS Radio Live returns for 2025.

In a few weeks, Harris, Calvin and the Sugababes will play at Hits Radio Live. Birmingham and Manchester will once again host the annual event, and the venue’s organizers have done everything to make it one of the biggest music nights.

Previous years have seen the likes of Rita Ora, Calum Scott, Tom Grennan, Perrie, Leigh-Anne and Joel Corry. But this year, things have stepped up a notch. Across both nights, huge musicians will be performing their most famous hits at Manchester’s Co-op Live and Birmingham’s bp pulse LIVE.

But who is speaking? Look no further because we’ve got every detail covered, from the lineup to the price of the tickets to the big events.

Birmingham

For Hits Radio Live Birmingham, Harris, Calvin will make his first appearance there in ten years. The mega DJ, who is known for his nine Official UK Number 1 tracks, will undoubtedly deliver his most well-known hits, including Where Have You Been?, Drinking from the Bottle, One Kiss, and Miracle.

But who will he be joined by? Other artists include a former girl band star and a record-breaking female solo artist. Hits Radio Breakfast Show hosts, Fleur East, Will Best and James Barr will be hosting on the night and will be getting the party started. Here’s the full line-up for Birmingham:

  • Harris, Calvin
  • Jade
  • Myles Smith
  • Jess Glynne
  • Walker, Alex
  • Cian Ducrot
  • Sonny Fodera

On Friday, November 21, at bp pulse LIVE, hits Radio Live Birmingham will be broadcast.

But who will be heading to Manchester? The line-up promises to be filled with energy with a chart-mauling girlband, a top DJ and producer and two former X Factor stars. Hitmaker Jones, Jax will be one of the biggest names at the Manchester event, but who will join him at Co-op Live?

Manchester

  • Jones, Jax
  • Sugababes
  • Tinie Tempah
  • Ella Henderson
  • Olly Murs
  • Craig David
  • Myles Smith

On Saturday, November 22, Hits Radio Live Manchester will host Co-op Live. Fans have struggled to hold their excitement ever since the lineups were announced, with one saying, “What a lineup. Additionally, every ticket includes a donation of £1 to us. A second person commented, “@hitsradiouk Manchester phenomenal line up.”

A third continued to type, “Can’t believe how amazing this line-up is, me and my kids have tickets to Manchester.” “I’m so excited about this!” Can’t wait, cried a fourth time. The best line-up for this has ever been said by a fifth overjoyed fan.

But when do Hits Radio Live tickets go on sale, and how can you get them? Thankfully, tickets are currently available for purchase through the Hits Radio website. Depending on the location in the arena, tickets for this year vary in price.

The Hits Zone Package, which allows you to stand directly in front of the stage and be closer to the artists, is the most expensive ticket in Manchester. Meanwhile, seated tickets range from £88.95, £77.50, £65.95 and £54.95.

Continue reading the article.

In Birmingham, the Hits Zone Package is priced at £182.50, while seated tickets range from £77.40 to £66.20. However, those who have the money can enjoy the luxury of the bp pulse Showdeck experience.

The exclusive members’ lounge, a private entrance, a premium seat, a private bar, locally inspired cocktails and beverages waiting for you, post-showdown downtime in the lounge, private restrooms, on-site parking, and access to official merchandise are provided here (subject to availability).

Fortune throws huge world record in World Para win

Images courtesy of Getty

At the World Paralympics in New Delhi, Sabrina Fortune broke a new world record by taking the gold in the women’s shot put F20.

Fortune, 28, has won four Paralympic gold medals from Paris 2024 and four other world titles to her name.

In Paris, Fortune set a record for 15.12 million, before extending it to 15.75 million in Birmingham last month.

She won gold by almost three meters after smashing that first throw in India with a massive first throw of 16.75m.

She claimed to BBC Sport, “The first throw was a lot of fun!”

We were hoping for around 16 meters, which is what I didn’t anticipate. Another world record is never something I wanted.

“My brain is off, and I have a learning disability, which requires me to spend a lot of time learning new things. On days when I can’t concentrate, my brain shuts off.

“But India has been amazing, and I’m picking up both the language and culture.”

Melanie Woods also won her first medal of the year in the women’s 800-meter T54 with bronze.

She remarked, “I’m very proud. I’ve had a good season of racing and was confident of a medal; however, I now see these girls as unbeatable.

This week, Woods will compete in the 400 and 1500 meters.

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South Africa’s 2026 World Cup hopes hit by forfeit

Images courtesy of Getty

After being fined for fielding an ineligible player, South Africa’s chances of winning the 2026 Fifa World Cup have suffered a significant blow.

Teboho Mokoena, 28, who was due to receive a suspension after accumulating two yellow cards, did not participate in the team’s 2-0 victory over Lesotho in March.

South Africa was found to have broken competition rules by a Fifa disciplinary panel, which resulted in a 3:0 forfeit.

The national football association (Safa) has received a fine of 10,000 Swiss Francs (12, 500, £9, 340), while Mokoena has received a warning.

With the decision, Group C of the African World Cup qualifying has officially opened up, with South Africa falling behind Benin in goal difference.

Only the group winners have a chance of winning the North and Central American tournament next year.

With both of those teams now three points clear of Benin and South Africa, it also gives Nigeria and Rwanda renewed hope of making it to the finals.

Before hosting Rwanda, South Africa will travel to Zimbabwe and Rwanda in the final two rounds of qualifying, which will take place between October 10 and October.

Group C’s impact on South Africa’s sanction

A graphic showing Group C in African qualifying for the 2026 World Cup, showing Benin and South Africa on 14 points and the latter second in the table on goal difference, Nigeria third on 11 points, Rwanda fourth on 11 points, Lesotho fifth on nine points and Zimbabwe sixth on four points

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ICC Women’s World Cup 2025: Teams, schedule, tickets, India vs Pakistan

Women’s cricket will take centre stage when eight nations compete in the International Cricket Council’s (ICC) Women’s World Cup 2025 in India and Sri Lanka from Tuesday.

Australia are the defending champions and record seven-time winners of the one-day international (ODI) competition , but in-form India are favourites to break their World Cup drought at home.

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Here’s everything you need to know about the tournament:

When are the first match and final of the Women’s World Cup?

The World Cup begins when India host Sri Lanka in Guwahati on Tuesday and will conclude with the final on Sunday, November 2.

Why will some World Cup games be played in Sri Lanka if India is the official host?

While India was confirmed as the tournament’s official host earlier this year, Sri Lanka was added as a neutral venue for games involving Pakistan.

It came as a result of an ICC-brokered agreement between India and Pakistan that allows both countries the option of playing their games at a neutral venue for a tournament hosted by either South Asian nation. The neighbours have not visited each other for a bilateral cricket competition in 13 years and shared an intense four-day military and aerial conflict in May.

Guwahati is set to host the first semifinal but the venue will change to Colombo if Pakistan qualify for the last four.

Navi Mumbai will host the second semifinal, which will be India’s designated last-four clash if they qualify.

The venue for the final can also be moved to Colombo should Pakistan enter their first Women’s World Cup final.

Where are the venues of the Women’s World Cup?

  • Dr DY Patil Sports Academy, Navi Mumbai, India
  • Barsapara Cricket Stadium, Guwahati, India
  • Holkar Stadium, Indore, India
  • Dr YS Rajasekhara Reddy ACA-VDCA Cricket Stadium, Visakhapatnam, India
  • R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo, Sri Lanka

Which teams are in the Women’s World Cup, and how did they qualify?

  • Australia
  • Bangladesh
  • England
  • India
  • New Zealand
  • Pakistan
  • South Africa
  • Sri Lanka

India qualified on the basis of their hosting rights, while Australia, England, New Zealand, South Africa and Sri Lanka qualified as the top five teams in the ICC Women’s Championship 2022-25.

Bangladesh and Pakistan entered the tournament by finishing first and second in the World Cup qualifiers.

Chamari Athapaththu will have her eyes on the prize when she leads Sri Lanka at the World Cup at home [Ishara S Kodikara/AFP]

When and where is the India vs Pakistan match in the Women’s World Cup?

The archrivals will face-off on Sunday at the R Premadasa Stadium in Colombo.

India have beaten Pakistan in all ODI matches played between the two nations since 2005, with their last win coming at the ICC World Cup 2022 in South Africa.

What’s the format and schedule of the Women’s World Cup?

The tournament’s main round will be played in the round-robin format between September 30 and October 26.

The top four teams at the end of the group stage will qualify for the semifinals on 29 and 30 October.

The final will be played on November 2.

Which teams are favourites to win the Women’s World Cup?

  • Australia: The Southern Stars’ supremacy in women’s cricket is undeniable, with their record seven titles in the ODI World Cup and six in the T20 World Cup proof of their status as the world’s best team. Alyssa Healy’s team is packed with the world’s top batters, bowlers and all-rounders and will be the favourite to defend the title they won in South Africa.
  • India: The hosts came very close to lifting their first World Cup trophy in 2017, when they lost the final to England, and will look to go one better on home turf. India enjoy the services of arguably the world’s best batter in Smriti Mandhana, as well as some in-form bowlers and all-rounders. They have won 10 of their last 14 ODIs, including three against higher-ranked opponents.

Who are the players to watch at the Women’s World Cup?

  • Smriti Mandhana (India)
  • Deepti Sharma (India)
  • Chamari Athapaththu (Sri Lanka)
  • Sophie Ecclestone (England)
  • Megan Schutt (Australia)
  • Ellyse Perry (Australia)
  • Laura Wolvaardt (South Africa)
  • Amelia Kerr (New Zealand)
  • Sidra Amin (Pakistan)
  • Nahida Akter (Bangladesh)
CHANDIGARH, INDIA - SEPTEMBER 17: Smriti Mandhana of India celebrates after scoring a hundred during game two of the Women's ODI series between India and Australia at Maharaja Yadavindra Singh International Cricket Stadium on September 17, 2025 in Chandigarh, India. (Photo by Pankaj Nangia/Getty Images)
Smriti Mandhana has scored four ODI hundreds in 2025 [File: Pankaj Nangia/Getty Images]

Which are the five best group-stage matches of the World Cup?

  • India vs Pakistan on October 5 at 09:30 GMT
  • India vs Australia on October 12 at 09:30 GMT
  • India vs England on October 19 at 09:30 GMT
  • Australia vs England on October 22 at 09:30 GMT
  • Australia vs South Africa on October 25 at 09:30 GMT

Who are the past champions of the Women’s World Cup?

  • 1973: England
  • 1978: Australia
  • 1982: Australia
  • 1988: Australia
  • 1993: England
  • 1997: Australia
  • 2000: New Zealand
  • 2005: Australia
  • 2009: England
  • 2013: Australia
  • 2017: England
  • 2022: Australia

What’s the prize money for the Women’s World Cup?

  • Total prize money for the tournament: $13.88m
  • Champions: $4.48m
  • Runners-up: $2.24m
  • Losing semifinalists: $1.12m each
  • Fifth and sixth place finishers: $700,000 each
  • Seventh and eighth place finishers: $280,000 each.

How can I buy tickets for the Women’s World Cup?

Tickets for all group-stage games are available on the ICC’s ticketing website, and prices start at $1.

School children gather around the 2025 ICC Women's Cricket World Cup Trophy on public display at the outside of the Colombo Lotus Tower in Colombo on September 24, 2025. (Photo by Ishara S. KODIKARA / AFP)
Schoolchildren gather around the ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup 2025 Trophy in Colombo [Ishara S Kodikara/AFP]

BREAKING: FIFA Sanction South Africa For Fielding Ineligible Player In World Cup Qualifier

World football’s governing body FIFA announced on Monday that South Africa had forfeited a World Cup qualifying match against Lesotho for fielding an ineligible player.

In Group C of the African Zone qualifiers, South Africa is now trailing Benin on goal difference behind South Africa’s 2-0 victory on March 21 in Polokwane by a 3-0 defeat, leaving Lesotho in fifth place.

The FIFA Disciplinary Code’s disciplinary committee alleged that South Africa had violated Article 19 by playing Teboho Mokoena after the midfielder had received two yellow cards against Benin and then Zimbabwe.

Read more about Morocco’s participation in the 2026 World Cup’s first African qualifier.

Moldova election results: Who won and did the diaspora play a role?

Moldova’s ruling pro-West governing party won a majority in the country’s tense Sunday elections, beating pro-Russian parties by a wide margin amid reported attempts to violently disrupt the vote and allegations of interference by Russia.

Results from more than 99 percent of the polling stations counted by Monday noon showed the Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS) clearly in the lead, despite analysis and opinion polls before the vote suggesting that pro-Russian parties would come close and possibly upset the ruling party’s parliamentary majority.

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The small country is located between Ukraine and Romania. One of Europe’s poorest states, it was part of the Soviet Republic until 1991. The breakaway, semi-autonomous region of Transnistria, which lies along the border with Ukraine, has traditionally supported ties with Russia.

As a result, in recent years, Moldova has emerged as a battleground for influence between Russia and the West.

In a September 9 speech at the European Parliament, Moldovan President Maia Sandu, founder of PAS, declared that this election would be “the most consequential” in the country’s history.

For Moldovans, the elections represented a crucial turning point. The small country with Russia’s war in Ukraine on its doorstep could either continue on its current path towards European Union membership, or it could fall back into the old fold of Russian influence.

Ultimately, despite reports of pro-Russian groups threatening violence, with at least three people arrested in Moldova, and several bomb scares reported at polling booths abroad, the Moldovan diaspora played a key role in delivering a pro-EU victory.

Igor Grosu, president of Moldova’s parliament and leader of the pro-EU Party of Action and Solidarity, speaks to the media after the parliamentary election, in Chisinau, Moldova, Monday, September 29, 2025 [Vadim Ghirda/AP]

What was the outcome of Moldova’s election?

Nearly all votes cast at polling stations had been counted by Monday. Some 1.6 million people cast their votes, making about 52.2 percent of eligible voters, which is higher than in previous elections.

The ruling pro-EU PAS, led by parliament president and PAS cofounder, Igor Grosu, won 50.16 percent of the vote and about 55 of the 101 seats in parliament, translating to a comfortable majority government, according to the country’s election agency.

The current prime minister, Dorin Recean, appointed by Sandu in February 2023, is expected to retain his position.

The pro-Russian Patriotic Electoral Bloc (BEP), an alliance of four parties led by former president and Russian ally Igor Dodon, came in a far second with 24.19 percent of the vote. The party won 26 seats in parliament. Two parties within the bloc, Heart of Moldova and Moldova Mare, were banned from participating in the election amid allegations they had received illicit funding from Russia.

In third place was the Alternative Party, which is also pro-EU with 7.97 percent of the vote, securing eight parliamentary seats.

Our Party, a populist group, and the conservative Democracy at Home party, respectively, won just more than 6 percent and 5 percent of the vote. That allowed them entry into parliament for the first time with 6 seats each.

What had polls predicted?

Opinion polls had suggested a much tighter race between the ruling PAS and the BEP, which was predicted to come a close second. That scenario would have disrupted PAS’s present control of parliament, potentially forcing it into an uncomfortable coalition with the BEP, and slowing down pro-EU reforms.

Before the Sunday polls, politicians and their supporters on both sides of the debate campaigned intensely on the streets and on TV, but also on online platforms such as TikTok, in an attempt to reach young people who make up about a quarter of the population.

What were the key issues?

EU accession was the single most important issue on the ballot this election. Under President Sandu, Moldova applied to join the EU in early 2022, just after Russia’s February invasion of Ukraine. Chisinau’s goal, alongside a better economy, has been to obtain security guarantees like its neighbour, Romania, which is a member of the EU and of the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance (NATO).

In July 2022, the EU granted Moldova – as well as Ukraine – candidate status, on the condition that democracy, human and minority rights, and rule of law reforms are made. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen at the time declared that the future of Moldova was in the EU.

However, while President Sandu’s PAS is eager to achieve Moldova’s EU membership by 2028 when her term expires, she has accused Moscow of attempting to scupper this plan in order to continue wielding influence over a country it once controlled.

Russia has considerable support in Moldova, and backs a breakaway, autonomous enclave – Transnistria, located along its border with Ukraine. About 1,500 Russian troops are present there, and the enclave’s government has requested Russian annexation several times.

In a referendum vote last October, just more than 50 percent of Moldovans voted “yes” to joining the EU, a tight margin of victory that was seen as a predictor of this week’s parliamentary elections.

At the time, President Sandu blamed “dirty interference” from Russia for her camp’s thin victory.

a WOMAN hols a Moldovan flag up
A woman holds Moldovan and EU flags during a pro-EU rally in Chisinau, Moldova, Monday, September 29, 2025, after the parliamentary election [Vadim Ghirda/AP]

Did Russia interfere in these elections?

During the run-up to Moldova’s election, the authorities have repeatedly accused Moscow of conducting a “hybrid war” – offline and online – to help pro-Russian parties to win the vote. Moscow denies meddling in Moldovan politics.

Russia is specifically accused of being behind a widespread “voter-buying” operation – through which voters are bribed to vote for particular parties – and of launching cyberattacks on Moldovan government networks throughout the year.

The authorities have also claimed that Moscow illicitly funds pro-Russia political parties. Two pro-Russia parties – Heart of Moldova and Moldova Mare – were barred from the vote on Friday over allegations of illegal financing and vote buying.

According to researchers and online monitoring groups, Moldova was flooded with online disinformation and propaganda in the months leading up to the vote that attempted to tarnish PAS and raise doubts and concerns about the EU. Researchers found that these campaigns were powered by artificial intelligence (AI), with bots deployed in comment sections on social media or fake websites posting AI-generated content deriding the EU.

International security professor Stefan Wolff, from the University of Birmingham, told Al Jazeera that Russia had indeed tried to influence Sunday’s elections to bring Moldova back under its influence.

“There is very little doubt in my mind and quite convincing evidence that Russia has done basically two things: Tried to bribe Moldovans literally with cash to vote for anti-European parties, and it has exerted massive campaigns of disinformation about what a pro-European choice would mean,” he said.

Wolff added that Russia also attempted to “discredit” President Sandu and PAS’s parliamentary candidates. “This really was a massive Russian operation, but it also, I think, shows the limits of how far Russia can push its influence in the post-Soviet space,” he said.

Google, in a press statement last week, said it had noticed coordinated campaigns targeting the Moldovan elections on YouTube. “We have terminated more than 1,000 channels since June 2024 for being part of coordinated influence operations targeting Moldova.”

What other disruptions to the election were there?

Two brothers and a third man had been arrested in Chisinau on suspicion of planning riots during the election on Sunday, Moldovan police said. According to local media, the police found flammable material in the possession of the suspects.

Last week, police arrested 74 people during 250 raids of groups linked to alleged Russian plans to instigate riots during the vote. Authorities said the suspects, who were between 19 and 49, had “systematically travelled” to Serbia, where they received training for “disorder and destabilisation”.

How did the Moldovan diaspora vote?

Some 17.5 percent of the votes – 288,000 – were cast by Moldovans living abroad, mostly in Europe and the US.

Bomb scares were reported at polling units in Italy, Romania, Spain and the US. Some polling units in Moldova also reported similar scares. The elections agency did not break down how the diaspora voted.

Voters in the enclave of Transnistria – where many people hold dual citizenship with Russia – faced logistical challenges, as they had to travel to polling stations 20km (12 miles) outside Transnistria. Media reports noted long car queues at Moldovan checkpoints on Sunday morning.

Some pro-Russian voters from the enclave told reporters they had been sent back and forth between polling stations because of bomb scares.

How has PAS reacted to the election result?

Speaking to reporters at the PAS headquarters in Chisinau on Monday after the party’s win, PAS leader Grosu reiterated the allegations against Russia.

“It was not only PAS that won these elections, it was the people who won,” Grosu said.

“The Russian Federation threw into battle everything it had that was most vile – mountains of money, mountains of lies, mountains of illegalities. It used criminals to try to turn our entire country into a haven for crime. It filled everything with hatred.”

Prime Minister Dorin Recean also said Moldovans “demonstrated that their freedom is priceless and their freedom cannot be bought, their freedom cannot be influenced by Russia’s propaganda and scaremongering”.

“This is a huge win for the people of Moldova, considering the fully-fledged hybrid war that Russia waged in Moldova,” Recean added. “The major task right now is to bring back the society together, because what Russia achieved is to produce a lot of tension and division in society.”

Last November, Romania cancelled its own presidential elections after authorities alleged that Russian interference had helped a far-right leader win the polls. A second election was held in May this year, which was won by the centrist and pro-EU candidate Nicusor Dan.

pro-Russia protest
People attend a protest of the Russia-friendly Patriotic Electoral Bloc in Chisinau, Moldova, Monday, September 29, 2025, after the parliamentary election [Vadim Ghirda/AP]

What happens next?

The election result was immediately denied by BEP leader Dodon, who called for protests at the parliament building in Chisinau after claiming – without providing evidence – that PAS had meddled with the vote.

In an address on national TV late on Sunday before the results were declared, Dodon claimed his party had won the vote. He called on the PAS government to resign, and asked supporters to take to the streets.

“We will not allow destabilisation,” the politician said. “The citizens have voted. Their vote must be respected even if you don’t like it”.

On Monday, dozens of people gathered to protest the results. It is unclear if the politician will launch a legal challenge.