Archive November 4, 2025

Rap star dead after suffering brain aneurysm

His son, Young Bleed, confirmed in an emotional Instagram video that he had passed away at the age of 51.

A prominent rap star has died aged 51 after suffering from complications due to a brain aneurysm, it was revealed today. Young Bleed, whose real name was Glenn Clifton Jr, passed away on Saturday after being taken to hospital days earlier following a collapse in Las Vegas.

The young artist, whose gold-certified debut album was a Top 10 US hit, developed his rhyming abilities in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, from the age of nine. He is credited with producing hits like How Ya Do That, which was a soundtrack to the 1997 film I’m Bout It.

The star’s son Ty’Gee Ramon Clifton confirmed that his father had died in an Instagram video, captioned: “RIP to the biggest legend I know.” Addressing followers in the clip, he said: “As of November 1st, my dad gained his wings. This is a tough topic for me – not sure how it’s going to go. But I am here to clear up a lot of false narratives.”

“I know that all of the people who knew about him were concerned because he was a legend around the world, and they weren’t sure what they heard.” Therefore, I’m happy to confirm that he has gained his wings as his eldest child.

When this occurred, my father was 51 years old. These are just life chapters, not the real issues that My Dad had. I hope that those going through grieving moments will find comfort in this video.

He added: “My dad like most as you get in [older] in age take had high blood pressure. He would take his medicines… Once he collapsed he did pass from the aneurysm, the bleed to the brain.”

One tribute to the star read, “RIP Young Bleed Thank you for everything,” and more than one wrote: Another responded, “Sorry about your dad man. He is unquestionably a legend. You now have to carry the torch”!

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A third person called your father, who had it on the microphone, “a real icon.” You and your family are in deep sorrow at this difficult time, and I’m sorry for it.

Arrest of ‘Abu Lulu’ does little to distance RSF from Sudan massacre

The face in the photo has become well-known in Sudan. The fighter, with his medium-length hair framing a bearded face, has appeared in numerous videos. Sometimes he smiles, even as he kills unarmed people.

This is Abu Lulu. But the photo of him released last Thursday by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), the group he purported to represent, showed him with handcuffs on after being arrested.

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The arrest is part of RSF’s efforts to distance itself from atrocities committed in the Darfur city of el-Fasher, which its forces took control of on October 26 after 18 months of siege. At least 1,500 civilians have been killed since the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) fled the town, and the RSF rampaged through, according to the Sudan Doctors Network.

Abu Lulu, also known as Brigadier General al-Fateh Abdullah Idris, has come to symbolise Sudan’s descent into cruelty since the war between RSF and the SAF began in April 2023.

Over the past year, Abu Lulu has been linked to a series of killings across Sudan. His alleged crimes, witnesses say, were not random acts of violence but deliberate performances meant to intimidate, inflame ethnic tensions, and project a grotesque image of power.

In al-Jaili, north of Khartoum, footage appeared of him killing two prisoners of war. In Omdurman’s city’s Al-Salha neighbourhood, he is reported to have participated in the killing of 31 civilians. In West Kordofan state’s Al-Khuwair locality, he is reported to have executed more than 16 captured soldiers, with witnesses alleging his motives were driven by racial hatred.

And in el-Fasher, he was filmed confronting an unarmed restaurant owner, asking for his tribe, and shooting him dead after the man replied that he was from the non-Arab Berti tribe. The victim’s desperate pleas for mercy were ignored.

On October 27, 2025, more footage circulated online, appearing to show Abu Lulu’s forces killing dozens of civilians in el-Fasher. The massacre, filmed and shared on social media, led to widespread outrage, and the man behind it seemed to relish the attention.

A ‘psychopathic’ mindset

Dr David Holmes, a criminal psychologist who reviewed the footage for Al Jazeera, described Abu Lulu as “a narcissistic psychopath”, whose personality starkly differentiates him from his accomplices. “He is proactive in killing unarmed victims,” Holmes said.

Holmes noted that Abu Lulu’s method of killing often involved repeated, random shooting rather than the use of a single bullet. “[There is a] callous use of weapons to maim and kill with no attempt to execute [using a] single bullet to [the] head,” Holmes said of the videos Abu Lulu appeared in, adding that the fighter appeared to “enjoy indiscriminate shooting”.

Holmes added that Abu Lulu’s demeanor on camera suggests that he views himself as a kind of celebrity. “He is pleased with his position and poses as if he thinks of himself as some kind of celebrity for the public,” Holmes said.

Indeed, Abu Lulu has frequently broadcast his actions online. In one live TikTok session, he boasted about killing “2,000 people” and admitted he had “lost count”. The session attracted both applause and alarm among RSF-affiliated users, some praising him as a “hero” and others urging him to stop filming.

Denial and disavowal

Following the uproar, multiple sources within the RSF claimed that Abu Lulu was not formally part of the paramilitary group, but rather led a “coalition force” allied with it since the war’s outset.

“He does not belong to the RSF,” one senior RSF military source, who did not wish to be named, told Al Jazeera. “He leads a group fighting alongside us, but he will be held accountable for his actions. He does not represent the RSF.”

The RSF’s official spokesperson, al-Fateh al-Qurashi, later echoed the same line, denying that Abu Lulu was part of their command structure. RSF leader Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, widely known as Hemedti, acknowledged the crimes committed by his troops in recent weeks and announced the formation of an investigation committee, promising that “there will be accountability”.

But scepticism runs deep, even after Abu Lulu’s arrest. Rights organisations and analysts say the RSF’s repeated pattern of distancing itself from field commanders implicated in atrocities has become a familiar tactic, one that allows the force to preserve its image while maintaining operational ties to local militias.

Roots of a paramilitary empire

The RSF traces its origins to the government-backed/linked militia known as the Janjaweed, Arab tribal fighters mobilised by the Sudanese government during the Darfur war in the early 2000s, and accused of widespread massacres, rape and ethnic cleansing.

In 2013, then-President Omar al-Bashir formally restructured the militia under the RSF banner, appointing Hemedti as its commander. Though nominally part of the Sudanese military structure, the RSF developed into an autonomous power bloc, amassing vast economic resources from gold mining, broader control and mercenary contracts abroad.

Sudan’s civil war erupted after the RSF refused to be integrated into the SAF within the timeline the latter wanted. The conflict allowed the paramilitary force to leverage its deep field networks and urban warfare experience to seize large parts of Khartoum, Darfur, and Kordofan states.

The same tactics used in Darfur – targeting civilians based on ethnicity and perceived loyalties – resurfaced across the country, leaving thousands dead and millions displaced.

Calls for justice

It is within that milieu that Abu Lulu has gained notoriety.

But as footage from el-Fasher’s massacre spread globally, calls grew for the United Nations and the International Criminal Court to investigate Abu Lulu’s crimes for violations of international humanitarian law.

Human rights lawyers argue that his documented killings constitute clear evidence of war crimes.

For survivors and families of victims, however, justice feels distant.

“He murdered people in front of cameras,” said Khalid, a survivor of the el-Fasher massacre, who did not wish to give his full name. “He wanted fame.”

The public actions of Abu Lulu, coupled with the widely available footage of the killings committed in el-Fasher, have further damaged the credibility of the RSF, which has in recent months attempted to present itself as a respectable force. In July, the group announced the formation of a parallel government to administer the areas of Sudan under its control, with a presidential council chaired by Hemedti.

But such efforts have fallen by the wayside when compared with the el-Fasher killings and the actions of fighters like Abu Lulu.

Whether acting independently or under RSF coordination, Abu Lulu has also become a symbol of Sudan’s brutal unraveling.

World ‘very likely’ to exceed 1.5C climate goal in next decade: UN

Global climate commitments are on track to limit global warming by as much as 2.5 degrees Celsius (4.5 degrees Fahrenheit) this century, far below what is needed to tackle the climate crisis despite a raft of pledges, the United Nations has warned.

In its annual Emissions Gap Report on Tuesday, the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) said the world would exceed the 1.5C (2.7F) mark – an internationally agreed-upon target set under the Paris Agreement – “very likely” within the next decade.

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If countries do as they have promised in their climate action plans, the planet will warm 2.3 to 2.5C (4.1 to 4.5F) by 2100, the report said. However, with the policies currently in place, Earth is expected to be 2.8C (5F) hotter in that time span.

“Nations have had three attempts to deliver promises made under the Paris Agreement, and each time they have landed off target,” said UNEP Executive Director Inger Andersen.

“While national climate plans have delivered some progress, it is nowhere near fast enough, which is why we still need unprecedented emissions cuts in an increasingly tight window, with an increasingly challenging geopolitical backdrop.”

The findings come just days before world leaders are set to converge for a UN climate conference in Brazil, COP30, where the global failure so far to tackle the crisis will loom large.

Global emissions grew 2.3 percent in 2024 compared to the previous year, an increase driven by India followed by China, Russia and Indonesia, Tuesday’s report found.

But wealthy and powerful Group of 20 (G20) economies accounted for three-quarters of global emissions, and of the six largest polluters, the European Union was the only one to cut greenhouse gases last year.

Meanwhile, the United States under President Donald Trump has moved away from its climate commitments, and the country’s planned withdrawal from the Paris Agreement will be official early next year.

The Trump administration’s policies, which range from rolling back environmental regulations to hindering green energy projects, will add back a tenth of a degree of warming, UNEP said in its report.

The UN agency also said the rest of the world must cut an additional two billion tonnes a year of carbon dioxide to make up for what the report projects is growing US carbon pollution.

‘Every tenth of a degree’ matters

Scientists are in broad agreement that warming above 1.5C (2.7F) relative to pre-industrial times risks catastrophic consequences, and every effort must be made to stick as close as possible to that safer threshold.

At 1.4C (2.5F) above pre-industrial times, the Earth is already too warm for most tropical coral reefs to survive, while ice sheets and the Amazon rainforest could suffer severe and lasting changes below 2C (3.6F), with consequences for the entire planet.

“Every tenth of a degree has ramifications on communities, on ecosystems around the world,” said Adelle Thomas, vice chair of a separate UN scientific panel that calculates climate impacts.

“It is particularly important for those vulnerable communities and ecosystems that are already being impacted,” she told The Associated Press news agency.

“It matters in heatwaves. It matters in ocean heatwaves and the destruction of coral reefs. It matters long term when we think about sea level rise.”

In its report, the UN said only 60 parties to the Paris Agreement – accounting for 63 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions – had submitted or announced new mitigation targets for 2035 by an end-of-September deadline.

It urged world leaders to make “decisive, accelerated” reductions in their greenhouse gas emissions to minimise the projected overshoot of 1.5C (2.7F).

“Scientists tell us that a temporary overshoot above 1.5 degrees is now inevitable – starting, at the latest, in the early 2030s. And the path to a livable future gets steeper by the day,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a statement on the report.

“But this is no reason to surrender. It’s a reason to step up and speed up.[Achieving] 1.5 degrees by the end of the century remains our North Star. And the science is clear: this goal is still within reach. But only if we meaningfully increase our ambition.”

All Blacks out to preserve 120-year record v Scots

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New Zealand arrive in Edinburgh on a high after taking care of Ireland in Chicago and the goal at Murrayfield on Saturday is to preserve a 120-year record of having never lost to Scotland.

In the 32 meetings between the sides, the All Blacks have won 30 and drawn twice, and the current squad do not want to be remembered as the ones who allowed the spell to be broken.

“Any test for the All Blacks, you’re massively motivated to make sure you win, but the history and the legacy behind that, those numbers are pretty massive”, said All Blacks assistant coach Jason Holland.

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In years gone by, when the Scottish team was far weaker than it is now, the Edinburgh leg of the All Blacks ‘ autumn European tour was where they would give their big guns a rest for the tougher assignments to come.

While there will inevitably be some shuffling of the deck after their efforts in Chicago last Saturday – Scott and Jordie Barrett have both been ruled out through injury – and a trip to Twickenham still to come, recent meetings would suggest the Scots will not be taken lightly.

The past three meetings have all been decided by winning margins in the single digits rather than the one-sided blowouts that tended to be the case when the All Blacks arrived in the Scottish capital.

“The growth around Scottish footy over the last couple of years has been massive”, said Holland.

“Massive occasion for them, obviously, with the 100 years]of Murrayfield]. It’s going to be a massive battle up front.

“coming here as favorites”: New Zealand

In the most recent Rugby Championship, New Zealand lost to Argentina in a surprise defeat, which was the biggest defeat in their history.

Some people now think the All Blacks’ aura may be waning and that this is Scotland’s best chance to win the game, but Scotland wing Darcy Graham claims they are still as strong as ever.

No, that doesn’t completely slip. Graham, who equaled Duhan van der Merwe and Graham for Scotland’s record try scorer, said, “we know the challenge that’s coming on Saturday.”

They’re world class, they can switch boys in and out, and they’ve got that quality across their entire team.

You always wanted to play against the All Blacks growing up. It will be special because you won’t have any bigger occasions. The atmosphere will be incredible, especially at Murrayfield.

It’s exciting because there will be real buzz throughout the entire week.

They are a fantastic team thanks to their history. They will be the favorites to be visiting here.

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Bake Off’s Prue Leith says ‘it’s a pity’ after ‘terrible’ decision with husband

Prue Leith, the Great British Bake Off judge, and her husband John Playfair recently changed their ways of living, but the outcomes were radically different.

The Great British Bake Off judge Prue Leith has revealed details about a lifestyle transformation she and her husband, John Playfair, recently embarked upon. The 85-year-old culinary expert disclosed that she and John started using Mounjaro – also referred to as Tirzepatide – a drug approved for Type 2 diabetes treatment that has gained popularity for weight loss.

Prue admitted that while she’s observed changes in her husband’s body, this isn’t the case for her when she gave an update on their journey.

“I took it for two months, lost my appetite completely and didn’t shed an ounce – nothing,” she told The Times.

“Every day after I took the scales, I still weighed exactly the same as before. I detested the “b****y” thing, and I was constantly exhausted, presumably because I wasn’t eating.

She mentioned that her husband remained convinced that she had slimmed down despite personally experiencing no results.

She made up jokes that “John said I looked thinner, which I believe means my face is old and scraggy round the face.”

Prue chose to stop what she described as the “expensive” injection despite his observation, saying: “It was terrible for me.”

However, since using Mounjaro, John has shed an impressive two stone. Prue disagrees with one consequence of the transformation, however.

She said, “He hardly drinks now, and I’m a great boozer.” He’ll only have half a glass of wine, which he probably won’t finish, despite the fact that I only have two or three glasses of wine each night. It’s a pity”.

After being introduced through mutual friends, Prue and John have been married for nine years.

She remembered John coming to see her once more at her front door the day after they first started dating, and their relationship blossomed.

Through their recent collaboration on Prue Leith’s Cotswold Kitchen, viewers recently gained insight into their marriage.

Prue acknowledged that John initially didn’t fully understand the television production process.

She recalled on Lorraine that when we did the first show together, John didn’t pay attention to what the director said.

“John, you see that girl,” I said to him, so I said. The director is she. She directs, and you follow your orders, which is the name of the song. He doesn’t follow directions.

The Great British Bake Off judge revealed that she has since learned to accept his natural spontaneity.

He does what he does, and I’ve given up on it. What do you know, exactly? She continued, “It works.”

John plays a practical role in Prue Leith’s Cotswold Kitchen, demonstrating his knowledge of the countryside and offering advice on how to pick fruits and vegetables.

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He also encounters local farmers, growers, and meat producers, which highlights the origin stories of the produce featured on the program.

Gbajabiamila Reaffirms President Tinubu’s Commitment To Health Sector Reforms

Femi Gbajabiamila, President Bola Tinubu’s chief of staff, has reiterated the president’s commitment to reforms in the healthcare system, including the national healthcare delivery system’s revitalization.

He made this statement on Tuesday when he met with Haruna Mamman, the president of the National Association of Nigerian Nurses and Midwives, in his office at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

The Commonwealth Nurses and Midwives Federation Conference (West Africa Region), which is scheduled for April 20 through April 24th, 2026, will be hosted by the association after it has secured the organization’s hosting rights. The conference will be held in Nigeria, the first African country.

Gbajabiamila reaffirmed the Tinubu administration’s unwavering support for healthcare reforms, noting that the government still prioritizes health.

He cited a number of recent accomplishments, including the revitalization of primary healthcare facilities, the expansion of Nigeria’s 20 million to 60 million coverage, and increased investment in building up new health infrastructure and human resources.

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The association received a first hosting right in West Africa thanks to a clear implementation plan, which the president’s chief of staff stressed. ‎

“Thank you for coming in and explaining your plans to us.” Congratulations, he said, “I’m delighted that you’re organizing this first of its kind Commonwealth event in April of this year.”

“We wish you the very best, and government undoubtedly will assume any and all of your roles as appropriate.” ‎

I believe it is crucial if this office has a clear idea of where you are, the course of action for April, what you’ve accomplished, and how you intend to carry it out.

For seamless coordination, he further demanded synergy between the association, Prof. Muhammad Ali Pate, the Coordinating Minister of Health, and the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare. ‎

Haruna Mamman, the national leader of NANNM, pleaded for the government’s assistance in facilitating the success of the Commonwealth Nurses and Midwives Federation Conference.

He claimed that Nigeria’s participation in the West African regional CNMF conference would benefit and demonstrate its leadership in the healthcare sector. ‎

The Commonwealth Secretary-General, Hon. Mamman, will also be present at the event, which will feature nurses and midwives from 56 Commonwealth nations. . . . Shirley Botchwey ‎

According to him, the conference supports the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Tinubu and encourages international cooperation and professional excellence in the health sector. ‎

He requested that the Federal Government grant him financial assistance, visa facilitation, and CNMF executive sponsorship. ‎

Mamman also requested that the CNMF leadership make a courtesy visit to Tinubu in order to officially kick off the conference in April 2026. ‎

We have no doubts about Mr. President’s political will, which will help make Nigeria a popular destination for other people. We think that this conference will give Nigeria a sense of pride, according to Mahman. ‎