Archive September 11, 2025

Canada’s Beukeboom drops to bench for Australia tie

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Canada’s most-capped player Tyson Beukeboom drops to the bench for their Women’s Rugby World Cup quarter-final against Australia on Saturday in Bristol.

Head coach Kevin Rouet has made three changes and one positional switch to the side that secured top spot in Pool B by comfortably beating Scotland last Saturday.

Courtney O’Donnell starts in the second row in place of the 34-year-old Beukeboom, with Caroline Crossley coming into the back row at blind-side flanker and Fabiola Forteza moving to number eight.

Saracens’ Sophie de Goede, who was player of the match in the 42-0 victory over Wales, starts alongside O’Donnell in the second row.

Rouet’s side are ranked number two in the world and defeated the Wallaroos, who finished second in Pool A, 45-7 in May.

Beukeboom is confident of going one step further than when she featured in the World Cup final defeat by England in 2014.

“In 2014 no-one was looking at us, we were the only ones that thought we could,” she told BBC Sport.

“Everyone is looking at us now, no-one has a choice not to. We’ve been incredibly successful over the last two years and building.

“Before it was, can we do it? Now it is will we?”

Australia head coach Jo Yapp has made only two changes to her starting team defeated by England in Brighton on Saturday.

Flanker Emily Chancellor and centre Cecilia Smith are recalled, while hooker Katalina Amosa and lock Ashley Fernandez come on to the bench.

Prop Lydia Kavoa is fit to start after departing the game early in Brighton with an ankle injury.

Women’s Rugby World Cup quarter-final: Canada v Australia

Saturday, 13 September at 16:00 BST

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Line-ups

Canada: Schell; Corrigan, Symonds, Tessier (capt), Hogan-Rochester; Perry; Pelletier; Hunt, Tuttosi, Menin, De Goede, O’Donnell, Crossley, Paquin, Forteza.

Replacements: Boag, Kassil, DeMerchant, Beukeboom, Royer, Senft, Apps, Seumanutafa.

Australia: Halse; Stewart, Friedrichs, Smith, Miller; Moleka, Wood; Kavoa, Talakai, Karpani, Leaney, Leonard, Duck, Chancellor, Palu (capt).

Match officials

Referee: Hollie Davidson (Scotland)

Assistant referees: Lauren Jenner (Italy) and Holly Wood (England)

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Countries struggled to respond to Israel’s killing of journalists: emails

A coalition of countries established to defend media freedom struggled to formulate a response to Israel’s killing of six Palestinian journalists in Gaza last month, emails reveal, with members of the group missing a deadline to join a statement condemning violence against media.

The Media Freedom Coalition did eventually issue a statement denouncing violence against journalists in Gaza on August 21, nearly two weeks after an Israeli drone strike killed four Al Jazeera journalists, including well-known correspondent Anas al-Sharif, and two other media workers.

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The coalition, which includes 51 member countries, did not mention the journalists by name in its statement, but decried the “deliberate targeting” of media workers and called for the investigation and prosecution of those responsible.

Emails obtained from Sweden’s Ministry for Foreign Affairs provide a new insight into the challenges the coalition faced formulating a joint response to Israel’s targeted killing of media workers amid the competing views of its members.

Al Jazeera obtained the emails from the Swedish government, which is a member of the coalition, under a freedom of information request.

While the Media Freedom Coalition’s secretariat asked member countries to respond by midday on August 20 if they wished to be included in the joint statement, only 16 did so by the deadline, the emails show.

In emails to the secretariat hours before the cut-off time, Swedish foreign affairs official Christina Linnarud wrote in an email that it “might be difficult” to meet the deadline and requested more time to make a “final decision” on whether the Swedes would add their name to the statement.

Linnarud also requested information on which other countries had signed on to the statement.

Tally Kapadia, project coordinator at the coalition’s London-based secretariat, responded that it “should be no problem” if Sweden confirmed its participation after the deadline had expired later that day.

Kapadia noted that other countries were “in the same position of not being able to have met the deadline” and said she expected the list of participants to grow.

It is not clear which countries met the deadline and which requested more time as their names were redacted in the emails before their release.

Ultimately, 21 countries, including Sweden, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and France, joined the statement that was released to the public.

But more than half of the Media Freedom Coalition’s members, including the United States, South Korea, Argentina, and the Maldives, did not put their names to the statement.

While the specific issues that may have divided the coalition’s members are unclear, Kapadia noted in email correspondence that we “tried our best to accommodate all red lines”.

Kapadia also told members that while the statement did not “cover everything”, it should still be viewed as “an important step forward as a collective”.

The statement had stuck to “core issues” – rather than specific events – given the pace of developments in Gaza and the “likelihood of our statement not reaching consensus quickly enough to react to the news in a timely way”, Kapadia said.

Kapadia also noted that members had been given less time to sign up than usual because many countries were “extremely keen to get this out as soon as possible”.

In response to a request for comment about the deliberations described in the emails, the Media Freedom Coalition’s secretariat said that multilateral statements “require agreement among many governments, and expectedly, that process takes time”.

“The Media Freedom Coalition’s priority is to deliver strong, united positions that carry maximum impact in defending and advancing media freedom,” the secretariat said.

Established in 2019 at the initiative of the UK and Canada, the Media Freedom Coalition has issued statements expressing concern about media freedom in numerous countries and jurisdictions, including Russia, Turkiye, Hong Kong and Venezuela.

Last year, the coalition expressed concerns about Israel’s shutting down of Al Jazeera’s operations in the occupied West Bank.

But the coalition’s statement on the killing of journalists in Gaza last month was its first concerning the enclave since the start of Israel’s war in October 2023.

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) says almost 200 media workers have been killed in Israeli attacks in Gaza during that time.

Israel’s August 10 slaying of the six journalists, including Al Jazeera correspondents Mohammed Qreiqeh and al-Sharif, as well as camera operators Ibrahim Zaher and Mohammed Noufal, prompted an outpouring of condemnation from governments and media freedom groups, including Reporters Without Borders and the CPJ.

Kate Middleton leaves fans stunned as they spot incredible detail with her hair

While on an engagement at a textile factory in Kent, the Princess of Wales performed an amazing act with her long hair that have left fans in awe

The Princess of Wales has stepped out for a series of engagements, with royal watchers catching a glimpse of her performing an apparent magic trick with her hair that has left fans amazed.

Kate took a tour of the Sudbury Silk Mills in Suffolk before later stopping by at Marina Mill in Cuxton, Kent. She put Britain’s textile industry in the spotlight with the visit to the mill in Suffolk, a family-run weaving firm that has been creating jacquard fabrics for more than 300 years.

From there, the princess continued her tour with a trip to Marina Mill in Cuxton, Kent, where she donned an apron to get involved in the fabric making process.

READ MORE: Prince Harry statement reveals true feelings on UK trip visit but has glaring omissionREAD MORE: ‘I found King Charles on the floor wearing a silk robe and covered in salad dressing’

Kate during a visit to Marina Mill in Cuxton, Kent, today(Image: POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

Kate was shown how the fabric is dried and then transferred, before she got her hands dirty to print her own fabric.

After covering her outfit with an apron, Kate pulled her long tresses back and tied up her hair, without using a hair bobble or clip. It seems the princess pulled her hair into a bun before wrapping it around itself, effortlessly securing it firmly in place with no hair tie in sight.

The video of Kate’s hair trick quickly went viral on social media, as one royal watcher shared the clip of the moment on X with the caption: “Just the Princess of Wales effortlessly putting her hair into a bun with no hair ties or clips at all today.” The post welcomed a flood of comments, with one person writing: “I would never do this properly and so perfectly.”

Another wrote: “My bun would have fallen out 0.2 seconds later,” while someone else added: “Looks like this is something she does all the time. And it doesn’t look messy.”

Princess Kate
Princess Kate has stunned her royal fans with a simple hair trick(Image: Mirror)
Princess Kate
While at a textiles factor, Kate put her hair up into a bun without a hair bobble or clip(Image: Mirror)

One other fan wrote: “She’s done that a few times!” while another requested: “Someone needs to do a slow-mo tutorial featuring her so I can learn it. Mine just keeps falling! She’s a pro.”

In the days before her trip to the textile factories, Kensington Palace said the princess’s visit would “celebrate the unique skill, creativity and craftsmanship of British textile manufacturers” and the “joy found in working in the creative industries”.

It said Kate has “long been passionate about the importance of the British textiles industry and its role as part of the UK’s cultural and creative voice”. Kate’s paternal ancestors were the owners of the woollen manufacturer and merchant William Lupton & Co, which was based in Leeds.

Princess Kate
Kate at fist wore her hair down as she visited the two textiles manufacturers(Image: PA)

The outings for Kate come as she is expected to play a huge role when US President Donald Trump comes to the UK next week for his unprecedented second state visit.

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William and Kate have been tasked with the initial royal meeting of Mr and Mrs Trump on the morning of September 17 in the grounds of the Windsor estate, when they will accompany them to meet the King and Queen for an open-air greeting.

Kate will also carry out a joint engagement with the First Lady the next day in Windsor, alongside Queen Camilla.

‘I don’t have anything to prove’ – Postecoglou

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Ange Postecoglou says he doesn’t “have to prove anything to anyone” as he starts his reign as Nottingham Forest’s new boss.

Postecoglou was appointed on Tuesday, with the club sacking Nuno Espirito Santo late on Monday after 21 months in charge at the City Ground.

The Australian returns to management three months after he was sacked by Tottenham following a dismal Premier League season, in which they finished 17th.

However, Postecoglou ended Spurs’ 17-year trophy drought by leading them to the Europa League title in May.

The 60-year-old was initially praised for the attacking style he implemented at Spurs, but he was forced to defend himself from criticism for sticking to his high-intensity principles as Spurs lost 22 of their 38 league matches last season.

Asked if he wanted to prove doubters wrong, Postecoglou said: “I don’t see it as a point to prove. I don’t have to prove anything to anyone.

“I do like my teams to play exciting football and score goals and get fans excited. I make no apologies about that, that’s just the way I am.”

He joked that he would find out “who the true Ange believers” are as he makes the switch from Spurs to Forest.

‘I might have to win trophy in first season’

Tottenham endured their worst-ever Premier League campaign last term, but the win over Manchester United in the Europa League final secured Spurs’ first major trophy since 2008.

It also backed up Postecoglou’s claim that he always wins a trophy in his second season at a club.

He won the Australian title with both South Melbourne and Brisbane Roar and the Japanese league with Yokohama F Marinos – all in his second season or second full season in charge. He also won trophies in both of his seasons at Celtic.

Asked about his second-season promise in his first news conference as Forest boss, Postecoglou pointed out that he has also won titles in his first season at a club.

“I won the double with Celtic in my first year. I may have to [win a trophy this season] to have a second year here,” he said.

“I’ve said already I want to win trophies and that’s what I’ve done my whole career and that’s what I want to do here.”

Postecoglou explained that he didn’t expect his time at Tottenham to come to an end after winning a trophy, but he said he “must have done something right”.

“There is no Spurs supporter I come across now who doesn’t want to hug me and take me home for dinner,” he said.

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Turkiye prosecutors seize media conglomerate as part of ‘fraud’ probe

Prosecutors in Turkiye have seized control of a 121-company conglomerate, which includes three major television stations, and ordered the arrest of 10 of its executives on fraud charges, according to media reports.

The arrest order on Thursday targeted management at Can Holding, which is known for its energy and education assets, and which last year acquired prominent TV channels including Haberturk, Show TV and Bloomberg HT, an affiliate of Bloomberg News.

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In a statement published in Turkish media, prosecutors in the Istanbul district of Kucukcekmece said they had uncovered evidence that “an organisation was established to commit crimes through companies operating under Can Holding … including fraud, tax evasion … and money laundering”.

It ordered the arrest of 10 people, including Can Holding’s owners, and placed the assets of its 121 companies under the charge of a third party, the TMSF (Savings Deposit Insurance Fund of Turkiye).

Bloomberg HT is the main Turkish-language channel focused on business and the economy.

In early morning raids, police detained Can’s three top executives, Mehmet Sakir Can, Kemal Can, and Kenan Tekdag, the private NTV channel said.

Tekdag is head of Ciner Media Group, which was acquired by the conglomerate in December, with Can saying he would be responsible for all of its media holdings.

Al Jazeera’s Sinem Koseoglu, reporting from Istanbul, said that a private university under the Can Holdings was also among those seized by prosecutors.

Our correspondent quoted the TMSF as saying that there will be “no disruption” in the companies, and that the channels and the educational institutions being taken over will continue to operate.

“Since there are media companies included, people are curious about what is going to happen, and how those media outlets are going to be operating,” she said.

The move comes as the government has tightened its grip over the media, drawing a warning from watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

“The operation targeting Can Holding, the owner of Haberturk & BloombergHT, may have its own justifications. The corruption in the sector is undeniable,” RSF’s Turkiye representative Erol Onderoglu said.

“However, the process may also serve an environment where control over media ownership is further tightened with the aim of establishing a single voice.”

Can Holding also has shares in the construction group, Tekfen Holding.