Archive November 9, 2025

Strictly Come Dancing fans say star was ‘stitched up’ by ropey performance

Strictly Come Dancing viewers were left disappointed when they felt that one fan-favourite performer was ‘stitched up’ for their latest effort on the show

Strictly Come Dancing fans have claimed that one star of the show was “stitched up” after their “ropey” performance. Viewers were left disappointed when they saw Karen Carney, 38, perform her Charleston alongside Strictly professional Carlos Gu on Saturday.

Karen and Carlos, 32, danced to the soundtrack of a mash-up of Upside Down by Diana Ross and Think by Aretha Franklin. Their efforts saw them finish mid-table with 35 points, but viewers weren’t too convinced by what they had seen.

Taking to X to share their disappointment in the display one wrote: “She’s been stitched right up with that song choice. Sure not a 10, the lifts were pretty ropey.” A second scathed: “How to ruin a Charleston – make them dance to totally inappropriate music …”

A third viewer commented: “Karen such an energetic dance and so well done just hated the song choice.” A fourth posted: “I’ve no idea what the dance was like, the music put me right off, tho what I did see was fast and a tad messy.”

A fifth social media user shared: “No idea what that was but the music was awful and it just did not gel together at all.” The judges however, didn’t agree, with the routine winning praise from them.

While Karen is best known for her fancy footwork on the field as a professional footballer, she has actually got past dance experience. Fans saw the former England Lioness go to the top of the leaderboard when she performed an incredible jive.

The TV pundit has admitted in the past that she trained as a dancer before she followed her passion for football.

She admitted to the FA in a resurfaced chat: “I enjoyed football when I was a kid and had loads of kickabouts but I didn’t join my first club until I was 11. Until then, it was all about dancing for me.

“We did loads of different routines and genres of music.” She then confirmed she would train for as much as three hours on Saturdays before competing in “big events” on Sundays while she was still interested in dancing.

Karen then admitted that when it came down to it and she had to choose between the two activities, it was football that really held her interest and she quit dancing to focus on that.

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She explained: “When I got a bit older and my football matches switched to a Sunday, I had some choices to make.

“I decided to give up dancing when I was 15. My agility, my strength, my power and how I move my feet during a match are all definitely down to dancing, 100 per cent. I was quite little but I was quite strong and that was because all the dancing made my muscles stronger.”

‘Total star’ Wu beats Higgins for first title

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China’s Wu Yize powered past John Higgins 10-6 in the International Championship final to win his first ranking title.

The 22-year-old home favourite hit four centuries in Nanjing, including a 137 break, in a superb display which lifts him into the world’s top 16 for the first time.

Four-time world champion Higgins, 50, hit a 101 break in the third frame but the Scot could not keep up as he looked to become the first player to win a ranking title in five different decades from their teens to 50s.

Wu impressed to seal the win with another century break of 108 and become the 80th player to win a professional ranking event title.

“Honestly, it feels unbelievable,” said Wu.

“Deep down I always believed I had the ability to win a title. Every day I kept thinking about it. I had a strong will to lift a trophy. That belief carried me through this week.”

Higgins said: “I was nowhere near good enough all day. He was striking the ball beautifully. He was by far the better player. It reminded me so much of playing Paul Hunter – the way he gets through the ball and gets so much action on it. He is a brilliant player.

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Button has ‘no regrets’ after final race

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Former Formula 1 world champion Jenson Button says he has “no regrets” after the final race of his career in motorsport.

The 45-year-old left F1 in 2017 and finished 16th for Cadillac in the 8 Hours of Bahrain race on Saturday.

Button won the 2009 F1 title for Brawn and also raced for Williams, McLaren and BAR among others in a 17-year career.

He moved on to racing in various other disciplines including the endurance of Le Mans, supercars, Extreme E and rallycross.

He said: “I have no regrets at all. I’ve done everything I wanted to do in my career and more.

“It’s the right time to stop. Racing takes a lot of commitment – travel, preparation, the mental load – and I want to spend that energy elsewhere now.

“My kids are growing up fast and I don’t want to miss those moments.

“I don’t feel like I’ve left anything on the table. I’m content with what I’ve achieved.”

‘One of the leading lights of his generation’ – analysis

Button retired from Formula 1 at the end of the 2016 season as a world champion, a 15-time winner, and one of the leading lights of his generation.

His post-F1 career, dabbling in all sorts of racing but most prominently in endurance racing, has not featured the same highlights. No Le Mans win for Button, for example, unlike his former McLaren team-mate Fernando Alonso.

Also unlike Alonso, Button will not be remembered as an all-time F1 great. But that’s not to say he was not capable of greatness – he very much was.

His world title with Brawn in 2009 is one of F1’s great fairytales.

The team looked set for the scrapheap when owners Honda pulled out of F1 at the end of 2008. But team boss Ross Brawn knew the car they had built was a good one, and he fought to keep the team alive over the winter.

Six wins in the first seven races followed, and although Button had a major wobble in the second half of the season, and did not win again, he got himself together in time to clinch the title with a superb comeback drive in Brazil.

Button had the courage and confidence to move to McLaren for 2010 to take on Lewis Hamilton, and acquitted himself well, scoring more points over their three seasons together, even if Hamilton was undoubtedly the superior driver on balance.

It was in that era that Button’s greatest performances came, most famously his remarkable win in Canada in 2011, when he came from last to first in the final 30 laps of the longest grand prix in history.

There were other times when he was on a level beyond his rivals, most often in mixed conditions, when he had an almost supernatural feel for the changing grip levels.

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    • 24 November 2016
    Jenson Button in 2009

Israel receives remains of soldier killed in Gaza in 2014

Israel has received the body of a soldier held in Gaza for more than a decade after he was killed in an ambush by Hamas fighters in 2014 during the last major ground assault on the Palestinian enclave.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said on Sunday the remains were handed over to Israeli forces in Gaza by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) after Hamas transferred the body to the aid organisation.

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Formal identification of Lieutenant Hadar Goldin, 23, was confirmed by Israeli forensics teams.

At the start of a weekly cabinet meeting, Netanyahu said holding the body for so long has caused “great agony for his family, which will now be able to give him a Jewish burial”.

“Lieutenant Hadar Goldin fell in heroic combat during Operation Protective Edge,” Israel’s leader said.

The Qassam Brigades, Hamas’s military wing, said the body was retrieved on Saturday from a tunnel in the Yebna refugee camp in Rafah in southern Gaza.

Goldin was killed on August 1, 2014, two hours after a ceasefire took effect and ended that year’s war between Israel and Hamas. He was part of an Israeli unit tasked with locating and destroying Hamas tunnels.

Another Israeli soldier, Oron Shaul, was also killed in the six-week war, and his body was returned earlier this year.

There are now four deceased abductees remaining in Gaza to be returned under the terms of a ceasefire that began last month. Hamas has so far released 20 living captives and 24 bodies.

For each body returned, Israel has been releasing the remains of 15 Palestinians. Ahmed Dheir, director of forensic medicine at the Nasser Medical Complex in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis, said 300 bodies have now been returned and 89 identified.

Israeli attacks continue

Israel has also released nearly 2,000 living Palestinian prisoners since the October 10 truce began. Palestinian authorities said more than 10,000 people still remain in Israeli detention.

Gaza’s Ministry of Health said 241 Palestinians have been killed and 619 wounded since the ceasefire began and 528 bodies have been recovered from under rubble and at attack sites.

Despite the truce, Israel’s military continues to carry out attacks across the Gaza Strip. On Sunday, one man was killed in the Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza, and two died in separate assaults in the north and south, the Health Ministry said.

In the occupied West Bank, Israeli forces killed a Palestinian man in the Far’a refugee camp near Tubas while Israeli settlers attacked Palestinian farmers in several areas, according to local reports.

According to Israeli authorities, Palestinian armed groups captured 251 people during Hamas’s attacks on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, and killed at least 1,139 people.

Israel began its war in Gaza on the same day. It has killed at least 68,875 Palestinians and wounded 170,679, according to the Health Ministry.

Anambra Election: Gov Nwifuru Congratulates Soludo

Governor Francis Nwifuru of Ebonyi State has congratulated Chukwuma Soludo on his re-election as Governor of Anambra State.

Nwifuru described Soludo’s victory as a reaffirmation of the people’s confidence in his leadership and achievements in office.

READ ALSO: It’s Soludo! Governor Wins Anambra Election By Landslide

In a statement issued on Sunday by his Chief Press Secretary, Monday Uzor, the Ebonyi governor said the outcome of the November 8 governorship election was a clear endorsement of Soludo’s sterling performance during his first term in office.

The All Progressives Congress (APC) governor stated that victory at the polls confirmed the confidence the people of Anambra have in the visionary leadership, intellectual depth, and tireless commitment of the former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) governor to the progress of ‘Ndigbo’ and the Nigerian nation.

Governor Nwifuru expressed confidence that Soludo’s re-election would further consolidate democratic ideals, promote good governance, and strengthen the Igbo-centric development agenda aimed at uplifting the South-East region.

“As a fellow governor and brother in the service of our Igbo region and nation, Nigeria, I look forward to deeper collaboration between Anambra and Ebonyi States in our shared pursuit of regional integration, economic transformation, and the uplift of our people,” he added.

The statement added, “The governor commended Soludo for his dedication to infrastructural development, youth empowerment, and innovative governance, describing him as a visionary leader whose policies continue to inspire progress across the region.

“Governor Nwifuru reaffirmed his commitment to partnering with other South-East governors to strengthen unity, peace, and socio-economic growth across the region, noting that collective action remains key to the advancement of the Igbo people.”

INEC announced on Sunday that Soludo secured 422,664 votes to defeat his closest rival, Nicholas Ukachukwu of the All Progressives Congress (APC), who polled 99,445 votes.

Paul Chukwuma of the Young Progressives Party (YPP) came third with 37,753 votes, while John Nwosu of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) scored 8,208 votes.

The electoral umpire said that out of a total number of 2,788,864 registered voters, 598,229 were accredited for the election.

Egyptians set to head to the polls in Parliament vote

On Monday, Egyptians will head to the polls in the first of a two-phase process aimed at electing a new House of Representatives. Expatriates already voted on November 7 and 8.

Egypt has taken an increasingly proactive role regionally as of late, joining Qatar as a key negotiator for the ceasefire in Gaza. The country has also deployed Foreign Ministry representatives to Lebanon in recent weeks.

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The elections for the House come on the back of last year’s Senate elections and are expected to be the final elections in President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi’s third term.

So why is this significant? Read on, and find out.

(Al Jazeera)

What is happening?

Monday will see the start of voting for the 596-member House of Representatives.

Of those seats, 284 are individual seats, while another 284 are filled via a closed party list system. Twenty-eight more members are appointed by presidential decree. A quarter of the seats must be held by women.

There are 70 counting committees, and voting will be conducted across 5,606 polling stations, according to Egyptian media. Fourteen governorates vote in the first phase and 13 vote in the second.

Results for the voting may not be fully known before the end of December.

Phase one includes the governorates of Alexandria, Assiut, Aswan, Beheira, Beni Suef, Fayoum, Giza, Luxor, Matrouh, Minya, New Valley, Qena, Red Sea, and Sohag.

Phase two includes Cairo, Daqahlia, Damietta, Gharbia, Ismailia, Kafr El-Sheikh, Menoufia, North Sinai, Port Said, Qalyubia, Sharqia, South Sinai, and Suez.

Phase one results will be announced on November 18.

If phase one requires run-offs, voting will be held internationally over the first two days of December and then in Egypt on December 3 and 4, with results announced on December 11.

Phase-two voting for Egyptians abroad will take place on November 21 and 22. Voting inside Egypt will take place on November 24 and 25, with results announced on December 2.

In case of phase-two run-offs, voting will take place on December 15 and 16 abroad and 17 and 18 inside Egypt, with the final results announced on December 25.

Election phases
(Al Jazeera)

Who is running?

First, voting has to be broken down by “party-list constituencies” and individual candidates. Each group is competing for 284 seats.

The party-list constituencies in Egypt divide the country into four areas. Cairo and the Central and Southern Delta has 102 seats. North, Central, and South Upper Egypt has 102 seats. The Eastern Delta and Western Delta have 40 seats apiece.

Then, individual candidates are running for another 284 across 143 constituencies.

The electoral lists are closed, meaning that parties must be approved to run.

The current lists include 12 political parties plus the Coordination Committee of Parties’ Youth Leaders and Politicians, who will compete for the 284 party-list seats. The National List for Egypt, the Generation List, the Popular List, Your Voice for Egypt List, and the Egypt Call List are seen as some of the bigger parties running.

How did expat voting go?

Ahram Online reported that it went smoothly.

A total 139 electoral committees were set up in 117 countries. The Egyptian Foreign Ministry also set up 24-hour operation rooms in every mission to coordinate with the National Elections Authority in Cairo.

The round two vote is still set to take place in late November.

How long will House members serve?

Members of the House of Representatives serve five-year terms.

The current House was elected in late 2020 for a five-year term that expires in January 2026.

Egypt parliamentary elections at a glance
(Al Jazeera)

Why is this vote important?

President el-Sisi is in his third and, constitutionally, final term. In 2019, the Parliament of Egypt changed the constitution to allow him to serve until 2030, and there’s a widely held belief that Parliament could once again amend the constitution, allowing el-Sisi to extend his mandate.

In recent years, el-Sisi has worked to reshape Egypt by liberalising the economy, but many Egyptians are struggling with a rising cost of living and will likely be heading to the polls with the economy in mind.

Other important issues expressed by Egyptians include health and medical care, and a new rental law that threatens to evict millions living in rent-controlled properties.

Analysts say these elections could play a significant role in the country’s future, especially after the end of el-Sisi’s term.