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Sting steps out for first public event after cancelling multiple concerts

Sting made his first public appearance on Tuesday, attending The Wayuu Taya Foundation’s Spring Gala with his wife, Trudie Styler, after he had to cancel several concerts because of health issues.

The 73-year-old had to delay multiple performances in January, later revealing on Instagram that the cause was a short-term throat infection. The couple, married for 33 years, arrived at the charity event together, with Sting and Trudie walking side by side. Trudie, 71, looked effortlessly stylish in a white midi dress and black boots as they entered the venue.

The Wayuu Taya Foundation works to support indigenous communities, primarily in Latin America, by providing vital aid such as water, food, medicine, and education. He shared: ‘ Thanks so much for all of the well wishes. I am steadily improving from a temporary throat infection which has prevented me from singing, though I’m looking forward to resuming my performances and rescheduled shows soon. Love, Sting. ‘

Sting stepped out for his first public event in weeks on Tuesday, joining his wife, Trudie Styler, at The Wayuu Taya Foundation’s Spring Gala (Getty Images for The Wayuu Taya)
Sting, whose real name is Gordon Sumner, became well-known in the 1970s as the lead singer and bassist of the rock band The Police
Sting, whose real name is Gordon Sumner, became well-known in the 1970s as the lead singer and bassist of the rock band The Police (Getty Images)

Sting, whose real name is Gordon Sumner, became well-known in the 1970s as the lead singer and bassist of the rock band The Police. After the band split in 1984, he went on to have a successful solo career, releasing popular songs like Fields of Gold and Shape of My Heart. Over the years, Sting has won numerous awards, including Grammys, and is also known for his work as a philanthropist, supporting various charitable causes. He has had three number one albums in the UK chart and three top 10 singles with tracks All For Love (with Bryan Adams and Sir Rod Stewart), When We Dance, and Rise And Fall (with Craig David).

Due to illness earlier this year, he postponed shows in Phoenix, Arizona, and Wheatland, California, as well as a performance at a record label’s concert, which had all been scheduled for this month. A post to his social media said: “On advisement from his doctor, due to illness, it is with sincere regret that Sting must cancel his appearance at the Bass Magazine Awards this Thursday and postpone his STING 3.0 concerts in Phoenix, AZ (originally scheduled for January 24) to June 1 and Wheatland, CA (originally scheduled for January 26) to May 28 as well as his performance at the Cherrytree Music Company’s 20th anniversary, now taking place May 29”.

“Fans should retain their tickets for the postponed shows, as they will be honoured on the new dates. Sting sincerely apologises for any inconvenience and extends his gratitude to the fans for their understanding”. The news came as shock to fans of the singer who is known for his fitness regime. The musician also follows a macrobiotic diet, which consists of many vegetables and grains and avoiding toxins and processed food that contains preservatives. The diet also centres around low consumption of meat, dairy and sugar.

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Can House Republicans cut $880bn without slashing Medicaid?

The prospect of deep cuts to Medicaid, the United States government programme to provide healthcare to low-income people, has become a flashpoint in Congress as leaders of both parties accuse their counterparts of lying.

Hakeem Jeffries, the Democratic Party leader in the House of Representatives, said on February 27 that a Republican budget measure would “set in motion the largest cut to Medicaid in American history” and Republicans are hiding the consequences.

“The Republicans are lying to the American people about Medicaid”, Jeffries&nbsp, said. “I can’t say it any other way. Republicans are lying. Prove me wrong”.

Republicans said Democrats were distorting the Republican budget. Congressman Steve Scalise said: “The word Medicaid is not even in this bill”.

House Speaker Mike Johnson said on CNN that Republicans don’t want to cut Medicaid “and the Democrats have been lying about it”.

Republicans are looking for massive budget savings to meet their goal of fully extending President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cuts. This is a separate process from Congress’s need to pass a continuing resolution to keep the government running by Friday or else face a federal government shutdown.

Here’s what we know so far about potential Medicaid cuts.

House Republican budget plan seeks $880bn in cuts

Medicaid serves about one in five Americans. The healthcare programme is paid for by the federal government and partly by states. Louisiana, home to Johnson and Scalise, has one of the highest state proportions of Medicaid enrollees.

The House Republican budget plan adopted on February 25 opens the door to slashing Medicaid even though it doesn’t name the programme.

The plan directs the House Energy and Commerce Committee to find ways to cut the deficit by at least $880bn over the next decade.

The committee has jurisdiction over Medicaid, Medicare and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) in addition to much smaller programmes. CHIP offers low-cost health coverage to children in families that earn too much money to qualify for Medicaid.

Republicans ruled out cuts to Medicare, the health insurance programme for senior citizens, which leaders cut at their political peril. Medicare is about 15 percent of the federal budget, and Medicaid is about 8.6 percent.

When Medicare is set aside, Medicaid accounts for 93 percent of the funding under the committee’s jurisdiction, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found in a March 5 analysis. That means it is impossible for the committee to find enough cuts that don’t affect Medicaid.

“It’s a fantasy to imply that federal Medicaid assistance won’t be cut very deeply”, said Allison Orris, an expert on Medicaid policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a left-leaning think tank.

After Medicaid, the next largest programme under the committee’s jurisdiction is CHIP. Lawmakers don’t appear to be planning to wipe out CHIP, but even if they did, they would be only a “fraction of the way there”, said Joan Alker, an expert on Medicaid and CHIP at Georgetown University in Washington, DC.

If Medicare cuts are off the table, the only way to achieve $880bn in savings is through big Medicaid cuts, said Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at KFF, a health policy organisation.

Andy Schneider, a professor at Georgetown who served in former President Barack Obama’s administration as a senior adviser at the Centers for Medicare &amp, Medicaid Services, said even if the committee eliminated all other programmes entirely, it could achieve only $381bn in savings – about 43 percent of the target.

“In short, if they don’t want to cut Medicaid]or CHIP], and they don’t want to cut Medicare, the goal of cutting $880bn is impossible”, Schneider said.

The $880bn cut is not a done deal. House Republicans were able to pass their budget package, but Senate Republicans are taking a different approach and haven’t proposed such significant cuts.

Any finalised budget blueprint would need Senate Republicans ‘ buy-in. Senator Josh Hawley is among Republicans who have spoken against potential cuts. He told the HuffPost: “I would not do severe cuts to Medicaid”.

The numbers are starting points that may lead to negotiation among at least Republicans, Joe Antos, a healthcare expert at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, said. “We are a long way from final legislation, so it’s not possible to predict how much any programme will be cut”, he said.

“If the bill also includes extending the]Trump 2017] tax cuts, we are probably months away from seeing real language”, Antos said.

Once the House and Senate reach an agreement on language and the resolution passes both chambers, the committees would work on detailed cuts. To enact such cuts, both chambers would need to approve a separate bill and receive Trump’s signature.

Why eliminating fraud doesn’t solve the problem

Republican leaders have deflected concerns about Medicaid cuts by talking about a different target: Medicaid fraud.

“I’m not going to touch Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid. Now, we’re going to get fraud out of there”, Trump said in an interview on the Fox News channel on Sunday in keeping with his campaign rhetoric that he would protect those programmes.

At the same time, Trump praised the House resolution that would make cuts highly likely: “The House Resolution implements my FULL America First Agenda, EVERYTHING, not just parts of it”! he said in a social media post.

Would eliminating fraud solve the Medicaid problem? No.

On CNN, Johnson said cutting fraud, waste and abuse would result in “part of the savings to accomplish this mission”. He said the government loses $50bn a year in Medicaid payments “just in fraud alone”.

But Johnson conflated “fraud” with “improper payments”. The Government Accountability Office, the nonpartisan investigative arm that examines the use of public funds, found about $50bn in improper payments in Medicaid and the same amount in Medicare in 2023.

Those improper payments were made in an incorrect amount (overpayment or underpayment), should not have been made at all, or had missing or insufficient documentation. But that doesn’t mean there was $50bn in Medicaid fraud, which would involve obtaining something through wilful misrepresentation.

The system used to identify improper payments is not designed to measure fraud, so we don’t know what percentage of improper payments were losses due to fraud, Schneider said.

Georgian court hands former president Saakashvili new prison term

A court in Georgia has handed ex-president Mikheil Saakashvili a new nine-year prison sentence after finding him guilty of embezzlement.

The ruling, announced on Wednesday, extends the detention of the pro-Western former leader, who was already serving a six-year sentence. Opposition forces claim it illustrates that the government, which is accused of abusing democracy and pulling Georgia back towards Russia, is scared of Saakashvili.

Judge Badri Kochlamazashvili declared Saakashvili, a controversial reformist who was Georgian president from 2004 to 2012, guilty of misappropriating nine million Georgian laris ($3.2m) in state funds from 2009 to 2012.

He is accused of misspending money on luxury hotels, visits to cosmetic clinics and expensive clothing, among other things.

Former Special State Protection Service head Teimuraz Janashia, also accused, was fined 300, 000 laris ($110, 000), with the judge saying there was no evidence that Janashia spent any of the funds.

The sentence adds three years to Saakashvili’s imprisonment. Following a spell abroad, he was jailed in 2021 for six years for abuse of power after he returned to Georgia.

‘ Very afraid ‘

Georgian television showed scenes of commotion in the courtroom after the verdict was announced, with Saakashvili supporters calling the judge a “slave” of the Georgian Dream government.

“The regime is very afraid of Mikheil Saakashvili, as the main opposition figure. It does everything to ensure that Mikheil Saakashvili remains behind bars”, said Petre Tsiskarishvili, secretary-general of the United National Movement, which Saakashvili formerly led.

The former president took to social media to extoll his achievements during his time in office and accuse the authorities of engineering the verdict to keep him from mounting a political challenge.

“It was clear from the very beginning that the case was purely political”, he wrote, accusing Georgian Dream founder and de facto leader Bidzina Ivanishvili of ordering his conviction.

A deeply polarising figure, Saakashvili rose to power on a tide of popular acclaim in the 2003 Rose Revolution.

In office, he reoriented Georgia towards the West and embarked on an ambitious public sector reform programme that delivered rapid improvements in the South Caucasus country of 3.7 million.

However, the latter part of his tenure was marked by police brutality and a disastrous 2008 war with Russia.

In 2012, the UNM lost elections to Ivanishvili’s Georgian Dream, which has remained in power since.

After leaving office, Saakashvili moved to Ukraine, where he briefly served as governor of the southern Odesa region.

He was charged, in absentia, by a Tbilisi court to six years in prison in 2018 and was arrested on arrival back in Georgia three years later.

Georgian Dream, meanwhile, has tightened its grip on power, brutally putting down large protests and opposition in recent years.

The party’s latest election&nbsp, victory&nbsp, in October 2024 was marred by further accusations of abuse, especially concerning influence operations from Russia. The European Parliament rejected the results.

Protests have continued. Thousands of people demonstrated late last year as the government suspended negotiations to join the European Union.

Fubara Locked Out Of Rivers Assembly

A drama ensued at the Rivers State House of Assembly Quarters on Wednesday when Governor Siminalayi Fubara arrived at the venue but the entrance gate locked. &nbsp,

Our correspondents observed that the security personnel at the quarters locked the gates when the governor’s convoy arrived.

The action of the security personnel was hinged on the position that there was no official communication between the governor and the Assembly.

READ ALSO: Fubara’s Letter To Rivers Assembly Over S’Court Verdict ‘ Useless ‘ — Wike

However, Fubara said he communicated his coming to Speaker Martins Amaewhule through a letter and tried to call him on the phone since Tuesday.

Also, the Rivers State Government shared a letter notifying the House of the governor’s visit.

Fubara had said he would fully implement the February 28, 2025 judgment of the apex court and directed the Rivers State Independent Electoral Electoral Commission (RSIEC) to come up with modalities for the fresh election.

The electoral commission fixed August 9, 2025, to conduct a fresh local government poll in the state.

Furthermore, the Secretary to the State Government, Tammy Danagogo, in a letter dated March 7, 2025, sought a meeting with the lawmakers for March 10, 2025, to discuss the re-presentation of the 2025 budget and a peace talk.

Ramadan 2025: Which countries grow the most dates?

As the sun sets during the holy month of Ramadan, many Muslims break their fast with a sweet, brown dried fruit that has been cherished in the Middle East for centuries.

During the 29 or 30 days of Ramadan, observant and able-bodied Muslims refrain from eating, drinking, smoking, and sexual relations from dawn to dusk, seeking to deepen their taqwa, or awareness of God.

Breaking one’s fast with dates and water is rooted in the religious teachings of the Prophet Muhammad and is specifically mentioned in the Quran for its nutritional value.

What are the different varieties of dates?

Dates, fresh or dried, contain important vitamins, minerals and fibre. They are also high in antioxidants.

Given their high level of fructose, a natural sugar found in fruit, dates are a great source of energy, especially after a long day’s fast.

There are many different varieties of dates, with different tastes and textures:

Medjool: Known for their large size, sweet taste, amber colour and richness in flavour.

Mabroom: Less sweet than other kinds of dates with an elongated shape, reddish-brown hue and chewiness.

Ajwa: With a soft, fleshy, almost juicy feel, and a very sweet taste, Ajwa dates are valued the most by Muslims because they are grown in Medina, Saudi Arabia.

Deglet Noor: Medium-sized, lighter in colour and ideal for cooking and baking.

Piarom: Darker skin, rich flavour, slightly drier and known for their unique taste.

Interesting facts about dates

Dates have been cultivated for thousands of years. Date palm trees can be either male or female, and only the female plants produce&nbsp, fruit.

A date palm tree can live for more than 100 years if well maintained and a&nbsp, mature date palm can produce more than 100kg (220 pounds) of dates per harvest season – about 10, 000 dates.

The Ajwa date is the most expensive in the world.

Interactive_Ramadan_2025_dates2-02-1741767059

Top date producers

In 2022, according to Tridge, a food and agriculture database, about 10 million tonnes of dates were produced worldwide.

Date palms tend to thrive in countries with long, hot summers like those in the Middle East and neighbouring regions.

Egypt is the world’s top date producer, producing nearly 18 percent of the world’s dates, according to Tridge.

Saudi Arabia follows closely with about 17 percent of the global yield, with Algeria rounding off the top three at 13 percent.

The infographic below shows where most of the world’s dates come from:

Interactive_Ramadan_2025_dates2-01-1741767068

Call to boycott Israeli dates

Israel is one of the world’s largest exporters of dates, selling medjool dates worth $330m abroad in 2022, according to Tridge. During Israel’s war on Gaza, which has killed more than 61, 000 people, according to Gaza’s Government Media Office, several groups have called for a boycott of Israel-related products.

Interactive_Ramadan_2025_dates2-05-1741767001

One such group is the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions Movement (BDS), a Palestinian-led initiative that seeks to challenge international support for what it calls Israeli apartheid and settler colonialism. BDS has urged consumers to always check labels and not buy dates that are produced or packaged in Israel or its settlements in the occupied West Bank, which are illegal under international law.

They recommend avoiding the following brands:

  • Hadiklaim and its brands: King Solomon, Jordan River and Jordan River Bio-Top
  • Mehadrin
  • MTex
  • Edom
  • Carmel Agrexco
  • Arava

Fubara’s Letter To Rivers Assembly Over S’Court Verdict ‘Useless’ — Wike

The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, has described as “useless”, the letter written to the Rivers State House of Assembly by Governor Siminalayi Fubara seeking an audience with the lawmakers over the implementation of the verdict of the Supreme Court on the political affairs of the state. &nbsp,

Wike, the immediate-past governor of the oil-rich South-South state, made this known on Wednesday during a chat with journalists in Abuja.

The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) powerbroker said Speaker Martins Amaewhule and other lawmakers in the Rivers Assembly are not Fubara’s boys and should be accorded some respect.

Wike said instead of inviting members of the House through a public letter, Fubara should have called Amaewhule and his team via the phone and agreed on a date and time for a meeting.