Archive September 6, 2025

Thailand’s PM-elect names veterans to cabinet in bid to ‘bring confidence’

A former member of the finance, energy, and foreign ministries, Anutin Charnvirakul, the newly elected prime minister of Thailand, has appointed a top oil and gas executive and diplomat.

Anutin made the announcements on Saturday, saying that a nation that is rife with political and economic unrest would gain confidence from his first cabinet picks.

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He described diplomat Sihasak Phuangketkeow, energy executive Auttapol Rerkpiboon, and economist Ekniti Nitithanprapas as “top executives in the organizations they will be responsible for”.

While Auttapol helmed the nation’s largest company, the state-owned energy firm PTT Group, Ekniti is a finance ministry official who was once seen as a potential candidate for governor.

As a fragile truce with neighboring Cambodia is in place, former permanent secretary Sihasak will step down as minister as a result of a five-day conflict that resulted in at least 43 deaths in July.

A day after Anutin was elected as prime minister, outperforming the most successful political party in Thailand’s history, the appointments were made official.

The ruling Pheu Thai party, the populist juggernaut of powerful billionaire Thaksin Shinawatra, who left Thailand late on Thursday for Dubai, where he spent the majority of his 15 years of self-imposed exile, was humiliated by Anutin’s victory over rival contender Chaikasem Nitisiri on Friday.

Anutin’s withdrawal from Pheu Thai’s alliance in June caused the political crisis, which was followed by last week’s dismissal by a Thai court of Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra, Thaksin’s daughter and protege.

Following Thaksin’s return from exile in August 2023, the Supreme Court will rule on his hospital stay, which some analysts predict will result in his jail sentence. The Constitutional Court last month cleared Thaksin of a royal insult case, promising that he would go back to Thailand for the verdict.

Anutin, a conservative with a power transcending party lines, gained control of parliament after forging an alliance and a pact with the progressive opposition and the People’s Party, the largest force in the chamber, and promising to hold a referendum on constitutional amendment amendment and hold an election in four months.

He urged people to unite late on Friday, saying that the government would “strictly enforce the law” and that all parties needed to “move our country forward in the manner that could compensate the opportunities that were lost.”

There won’t be any offering assistance to anyone, it won’t be used to hurt anyone, and no one will seek retribution for it.

Scotland on course for England tie after defeat by Canada

Images courtesy of Getty

Canada (19) 40

Hunt, penalty try, Tuttosi 2, Kassil, DeMerchant Cons: De Goede 4.

Scotland (5) 19

After Canada regained their composure in an intriguing contest in Exeter, Scotland could face hosts England in the women’s rugby world cup quarter-final.

After coming home from defeat to Wales and Fiji, the Scots were on a high when they were able to secure a last-eight spot in Pool B. They also excelled against the world number two team, before eventually succumbing to defeat.

A penalty try from McKinley Hunt, a hooker from McKinley Hunt, and Rhona Lloyd’s score gave the Scots a 14-point lead at the break.

Scotland’s chances of a comeback were thwarted by Evie Gallagher’s superb try, which brought them back within a score early in the second half. However, Francesca McGhie crossed for a late consolation with a second effort from Tuttosi and scores from Brittany Kassil and Olivia DeMerchant.

Later on Saturday, England and Australia will face the winner of Pool A.

Canadian power and speed overshadow the issue.

Hunt fired over from close range to start the scoring for Canada early on.

Scotland slammed at the Canadian line without success after acknowledging the necessity to be patient with how few chances did.

They fought back, but they eventually found an opening in Chloe Rollie’s corner and remained patient.

Canada remained unaffected and raised the pressure accordingly. Gallagher received a yellow card as the Scots’ line-protection grew more desperate.

The referee found that the Scots had illegally halted the momentum and had awarded a penalty try after Canada had destroyed a scrum under the Scottish sticks.

The world number two team were starting to shift after a fairly level opening half-hour.

The Exeter hooker crossed the whitewash in her home ground to give her side a 19-5 lead at the break, despite Scotland’s triumfantry.

The Scots needed the next score to resurrect their momentum as they were now playing with a stiff breeze at their backs.

After Helen Nelson’s strong carries put them on the front foot, Gallagher ran a brilliant line to cut through the Canada defense and advance to the line in the score.

The Scots were back within seven points of the match when Tuttosi launched a quick attack over the edge to score her second try of the match.

After side-stepping to the line and gathering the ball at the tail of the line-out, Nelson appeared to have reacted, but a TMO review determined that the try had been rejected for offside.

As Canada marched down the other end and powered over the line through substitute Kassil, it was a bitter blow that Scotland would not be able to recover from.

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  • Scottish Rugby
  • Rugby Union

Scotland on course for World Cup knockout with England after Canada loss

Images courtesy of Getty

Canada (19) 40

Hunt, penalty try, Tuttosi 2, Kassil, DeMerchant Cons: De Goede 4.

Scotland (5) 19

After Canada regained their composure in an intriguing contest in Exeter, Scotland could face hosts England in the women’s rugby world cup quarter-final.

After coming home from defeat to Wales and Fiji, the Scots were on a high when they were able to secure a last-eight spot in Pool B. They also excelled against the world number two team, before eventually succumbing to defeat.

A penalty try from McKinley Hunt, a hooker from McKinley Hunt, and Rhona Lloyd’s score gave the Scots a 14-point lead at the break.

Scotland’s chances of a comeback were thwarted by Evie Gallagher’s superb try, which brought them back within a score early in the second half. However, Francesca McGhie crossed for a late consolation with a second effort from Tuttosi and scores from Brittany Kassil and Olivia DeMerchant.

Later on Saturday, England and Australia will face the winner of Pool A.

Canadian power and speed overshadow the issue.

Hunt fired over from close range to start the scoring for Canada early on.

Scotland slammed at the Canadian line without success after acknowledging the necessity to be patient with how few chances did.

They fought back, but they eventually found an opening in Chloe Rollie’s corner and remained patient.

Canada remained unaffected and raised the pressure accordingly. Gallagher received a yellow card as the Scots’ line-protection grew more desperate.

The referee found that the Scots had illegally halted the momentum and had awarded a penalty try after Canada had destroyed a scrum under the Scottish sticks.

The world number two team were starting to shift after a fairly level opening half-hour.

The Exeter hooker crossed the whitewash in her home ground to give her side a 19-5 lead at the break, despite Scotland’s triumfantry.

The Scots needed the next score to resurrect their momentum as they were now playing with a stiff breeze at their backs.

After Helen Nelson’s strong carries put them on the front foot, Gallagher ran a brilliant line to cut through the Canada defense and advance to the line in the score.

The Scots were back within seven points of the match when Tuttosi launched a quick attack over the edge to score her second try of the match.

After side-stepping to the line and gathering the ball at the tail of the line-out, Nelson appeared to have reacted, but a TMO review determined that the try had been rejected for offside.

As Canada marched down the other end and powered over the line through substitute Kassil, it was a bitter blow that Scotland would not be able to recover from.

related subjects

  • Rugby Union of Scotland
  • Scottish Rugby
  • Rugby Union

One year on, family of US citizen killed by Israel still seeking justice

Washington, DC – Aysenur Ezgi Eygi’s husband, Hamid Ali, claims confusion and sorrow still grip him. One year ago, Israeli forces killed American citizen.

“Seeing the impact it has had on her father and her family, it’s been very difficult to adjust to life without Aysenur, an empty house.” Ali told Al Jazeera, “The word I’d use to sum up is confusing.

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On September 6, 2024, Israeli forces fatally shot Ezgi Eygi, whose first name is Aysha-nour, while protesting an illegal settlement outpost in the occupied West Bank.

Violence in the West Bank has increased as Israel continues to attack Gaza. Since 2022, Israeli soldiers and settlers have killed at least 10 US citizens.

While Washington has continued to give Israel billions of dollars in military aid, the presidents Joe Biden and Donald Trump have ignored requests from Ezgi Eygi’s family for a US-led investigation into her death.

Ezgi Eygi’s sister Ozden Bennett said she is aware that justice may not be in sight, but that this does not undermine the family’s resolve to preserve the activist’s body.

Even if it doesn’t happen right away or perhaps ever, we’re committed to the long-haul journey of finding meaning in the process. Bennett told Al Jazeera, “I’m optimistic it will.”

Because it’s the right thing to do and my sister deserves it, “I see us fighting on.” Israel should be commended for every life it has taken without meaning.

Aysenur Memorial

When Ezgi Eygi died, she was 26 years old and had Turkish ancestry. Those who knew her described her as empathetic and joyful.

She was deeply moved by injustices in the US and abroad because she had been active since she was a young child. She is almost “childlike” in her compassion and playfulness, according to Ali and Bennett.

According to Bennett, “She always had that kind of childlike essence to her, that curiosity, that silliness.” I just miss her so much because she was such a special, sweet, and occasionally obnoxious sister.

Ali thinks that her activism was motivated by that authenticity.

He told Al Jazeera, “She had to live by her values and beliefs, and she had to express her feelings.”

“So she was the kind of person she was, and that’s exactly why she believed that doing the activism she did in the [United] States wasn’t enough. She thought that going to the West Bank would be her best course of action.

Since Ezgi Eygi was shot, at least two more US citizens have died in the West Bank.

Sayfollah Musallet, 20, was shot to death by settlers in Florida in July. Khamis Ayyad, a father of five and former resident of Chicago, was killed in a second settler attack less than three weeks later.

The families in both cases are calling for a US-Israel Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty and other applicable laws that would allow for such an investigation.

Israel has been asked to look into its own abuses by the Trump administration, but that is all it has done. Israel’s forces’ actions toward Palestinians and their supporters are rarely deemed to be wrong.

Similar to the incident’s death last year, the administration of then-President Biden requested an investigation into it, but it opted to ignore it.

The hypocrisy is “stunning.”

A consistent pattern is that there is no accountability. No criminal charges have been brought against the alleged killers in all ten cases of Americans who have been killed by Israeli settlers and soldiers since 2022.

Shireen Abu Akleh, a veteran Al Jazeera reporter, was shot in the head while dong a bright blue jacket with the tagline “press.”

The inaction, according to rights advocates, constitutes impunity for Americans who kill Americans abroad. They trace the pattern back a number of decades, dating back to the 2003 incident where an Israeli bulldozer struck activist Rachel Corrie in Gaza.

At the time of her death, she had been attempting to prevent the demolition of a Palestinian home.

Corrie, who was also a native of Washington state, is a prominent figure in the West’s support for the Palestinian cause. No one is still held accountable for her murder.

Ali’s wife’s passing and Corrie’s passing are analogous, Ali said.

He said, “This isn’t anything new, because it was the same as Rachel Corrie, and that was 20+ years ago.”

“We recognize the pattern, but it’s also frustrating and incredibly hypocritical.”

In an effort to keep the case alive, Ezgi Eygi’s family members have been bringing their demands to US lawmakers and officials despite their frustration.

The top US diplomat, according to Ali and Bennett, showed an inability to seek justice when they met with the then-Secretary of State Antony Blinken last year.

Following the killing of US-Israeli captive Hersh Goldberg-Polin in Gaza, the US Department of Justice filed charges of “terrorism, murder conspiracy, and sanctions-evasion” against Hamas leaders days before Ezgi Eygi’s death.

The US approach’s contrast is obvious to Bennett. She told Al Jazeera, “It sends a message that not all American lives are equal.”

The US-based rights organization DAWN’s Raed Jarrar, who is in charge of advocacy, claimed that Washington “values Israeli impunity more than American lives” because of the US’s failure to hold accountable Ezgi Eygi and other US citizens who were killed by Israel.

“The hypocrisy is awe-inspiring.” The US government uses every diplomatic, economic, and military tool at its disposal to demand accountability and justice when Americans are killed by anyone else, according to Jarrar.

However, when Israel murders Americans, the US accepts Israeli “investigations” and justifications, provides additional weapons, shields Israel from international scrutiny, and accepts them.

Israeli investigation is “Irrelevant.”

According to an initial Israeli military report following Ezgi Eygi’s death, she was most likely killed by “indirect and unintended” fire. However, witnesses claim that a sniper struck her in the head.

No public announcements about the results of the investigation’s findings, despite reports that a wider Israeli investigation into the incident has been launched.

Al Jazeera’s request for comment was not received by the Israeli government’s Foreign Press Department.

Bennett claimed that the family is not anticipating an Israeli investigation’s release of any kind of accountability.

According to us, the Israeli investigation is irrelevant because it is inappropriate or acceptable for Israel, the murderer, to conduct an internal investigation.

If Ezgi Eygi’s memory can contribute to the Palestinian people’s liberation, Ali said, it would ease his sense of loss. Justice for Ezgi Eygi may seem elusive to him.

Kerry Katona’s Celebs Go Dating boyfriend Paolo shares gushing birthday tribute to star

Paolo Margaglione, her boyfriend, gave her adoring compliments as she celebrated her 45th birthday on Celebs Go Dating, where she met him.

Kerry Katona and boyfriend Paolo Margaglionehave been celebrating her birthday(Image: @margafitness/instagram)

Kerry Katona’s boyfriend Paolo Margaglione has shared a touching tribute to her on her birthday.

The former Atomic Kitten star turned 45 on Saturday, with her beau, who she met while filming Celebs Go Dating, sharing a series of pictures of them together on Instagram to wish her a happy birthday. Paolo, 33, shared one picture of himself posing with Kerry, placing a “Queen” crown emoji above her head in the snap and writing “Happy Birthday beautiful.”

He added the soundtrack to Sil & Dan’s Isn’t She Lovely to the image of Kerry kissing him on the cheek. In a third photo, the pair were seen posing in a lift as Kerry praised his writing as “Kind, caring, and beautiful.” adding a number of love heart emojis, and hoping you get the day you deserve.

READ MORE: Kerry Katona reprimanded by police after holding up traffic in £250k car for fan selfieREAD MORE: Kerry Katona has last laugh over men who ‘took advantage’ of her

Kerry Katona and Paolo Margaglione
Paolo shared a series of pictures of him and Kerry(Image: @margafitness/instagram)
Kerry Katona and Paolo Margaglione
In the captions, the personal trainer raved about her.

After splitting from her ex-boyfriend Ryan Mahoney, Kerry decided to join Celebs Go Dating in an effort to find her ideal match. After working together for six years, she parted ways with her personal trainer, 36. Kerry and Kerry both cited a “breach of trust” in their separation at the time.

Eight weeks after meeting while filming the reality dating show, it was reported that Kerry and Paolo were already living together.

It seemed only natural for him to move in because Paolo and Paolo are already living together 24/7. Between them, things are really going well.

A source has claimed that, while they’re totally “smitten” with each other, Kerry is nervous about putting yet another relationship in the public eye. “Kerry is being very cautious with this romance,” they told the Mirror.

She has been very cautious about making public about her relationship with Paolo. She’s previously pursued high-profile, public relationships, and she wants nothing to happen to this one.

Kerry hasn’t changed her mind about her new relationship, though. Kelly doesn’t want any outside drama to interfere with her worries, according to the source, who added: “Some tense moments have occurred as a result.”

Paolo is simply extremely happy to be with her, despite not overthinking it. He says to her not to worry and that they should just enjoy what they have. “They’re great together.

On the most recent episode of Celebs Go Dating, Kerry’s search for love and meeting Paolo have been intertwined. Kerry acknowledged that she initially signed on the show for a “great pay cheque, a bit of exposure, and some therapy” despite the show’s main goal being to connect celebrities with their ideal match.

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She confessed on Good Morning Britain: “For me, you get experts like that to give you therapy, and I love therapy and working on myself…so when you get an opportunity like Celebs Go Dating to go and work with these people why would you not take it?”