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Jannik Sinner says it was “good news” for him personally not to miss any Grand Slam tournaments during his three-month doping ban.
World number one Sinner accepted the ban in February after reaching a settlement with the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) over his two positive tests last year.
His ban expired at midnight on Sunday, meaning he is able to compete at his home tournament – the Italian Open – in Rome this week.
“Of course when you go to court it can go both ways – nothing or a lot”, the 23-year-old told a packed interview room at the Foro Italico.
“I didn’t want to do it]agree a settlement] in the beginning, so it was not easy for me to accept it because I know what really happened.
” But sometimes we have to choose the best in a very bad moment, and that’s what we did.
“For me personally it’s good news that there are not the Grand Slams included”.
Sinner had previously been cleared of any wrongdoing by an independent panel after testing positive for the banned substance clostebol in March 2024.
Wada lodged an appeal against that decision with the Court of Arbitration for Sport, saying at the time it was seeking a “period of ineligibility of between one and two years”.
Wada ultimately entered into negotiations with Sinner’s legal team having come to the conclusion a ban of that length would constitute an “unduly harsh sanction”.
Some players have been critical of the length and timing of Sinner’s ban.
Three-time Grand Slam champion Stan Wawrinka posted he does not “believe in a clean sport any more” while 2022 Wimbledon runner-up Nick Kyrgios said fairness in tennis “does not exist”.
Sinner’s news conference took place just after he had arrived on site for the first time, allowing for little interaction with other players.
His answers instead focused on the Italian Open, which he considers a “very low expectation tournament”.
He also would not be drawn on if he was surprised neither Alexander Zverev or Carlos Alcaraz had overtaken him at the top of the world rankings in his absence.
“I am happy in the position I am but I would be happy even if I’m three or four in the world”, Sinner said.
Sinner says he did not watch any of the Masters 1000 events in Miami and Indian Wells in March, but was studying some of his rivals during recent TV coverage of the Madrid Open.
Sinner could start ‘ official training activity ‘ from 13 April and had some practice sessions with Britain’s Jack Draper on the Monte Carlo clay to keep his eye in.
During his ban, Sinner was unable to watch other professional sport in person. A banned athlete may not “participate in any capacity” at an event subject to the Wada code.
“The toughest part was that in the beginning I couldn’t watch any other sport really, in real life”, Sinner added.
“I don’t know how many know this but watching a simple football match in a stadium, I couldn’t go there to watch it.
” I wanted to support my friends in cycling or motorsport – I couldn’t go there. “
The administration of US President Donald Trump says it is going to pay $1,000 to undocumented immigrants in the United States who return to their home countries voluntarily as it pushes forward with its plans for mass deportations.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said in a news release on Monday that it’s also paying for travel assistance and people who use an app called CBP Home to tell the government they plan to return home will be “deprioritized” for detention and removal by immigration enforcement.
“If you are here illegally, self-deportation is the best, safest and most cost-effective way to leave the United States to avoid arrest. DHS is now offering illegal aliens financial travel assistance and a stipend to return to their home country through the CBP Home App,” Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said.
The stipend and airfare for people who voluntarily depart would cost less than an actual deportation, the agency said. The average cost of arresting, detaining and deporting someone without legal status is currently about $17,000, according to the DHS.
Trump took office in January pledging to deport millions of people but so far has trailed deportations under his Democratic predecessor Joe Biden. Biden’s administration faced high levels of undocumented immigration and quickly returned many people caught crossing the border.
The Trump administration has deported 152,000 people since it took office on January 20, according to the DHS, lower than the 195,000 deported from February to April last year under Biden.
Trump’s administration has tried to encourage migrants and asylum seekers to leave voluntarily by threatening steep fines, trying to strip away legal status, and deporting people to prisons in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and El Salvador.
Trump previewed the stipend plan in April, saying the US would consider allowing migrants and asylum seekers to return.
“If they’re good, if we want them back in, we’re going to work with them to get them back in as quickly as we can,” he said.
Three police officers have been killed and at least four others injured after gunmen opened fire on traffic police in southern Russia’s Republic of Dagestan, according to regional authorities.
The attack took place on Monday in the capital, Makhachkala, when police attempted to stop a car, Dagestan leader Sergei Melikov said.
The shooting began at about 14: 20 local time (11: 20 GMT), the Interior Ministry confirmed.
Two assailants were shot dead at the scene. Local officials identified the men, both born in 2000, but did not say how many others were involved. State media reported that additional attackers fled in a vehicle, prompting a wider manhunt.
Footage circulating on Telegram, verified by the Reuters news agency, showed bodies lying on the road beside a police car. Gunshots could be heard in the background as onlookers gathered at the scene.
At least two other attackers, alongside injured officers and civilians – including a 17-year-old girl – were taken to hospital. One later died, state media reported. Officials have launched a criminal investigation.
Dagestan, a majority-Muslim region bordering the Caspian Sea, has witnessed a number of deadly attacks in recent years.
In March, Russian security forces said they killed four alleged ISIL (ISIS) fighters who were planning to attack a local Interior Ministry office.
The latest violence in Dagestan follows a separate security operation last week, when Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) claimed to have killed a man suspected of planning bombings on the Moscow metro and a Jewish religious site in the capital region.
In June 2024, at least 20 people were killed after armed men attacked a synagogue, churches and police in the Dagestan region.
That attack came three months after at least 133 people were killed in a March 2024 attack on a concert in Moscow’s Crocus City Hall.
While the Afghanistan-based ISIL affiliate in Khorasan Province (ISKP)  , claimed responsibility for the worst attack to hit Russia in years, Moscow at the time claimed without evidence that Ukraine had a played role.
The 2023 presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Atiku Abubakar, has called for the release of popular rights activist and social media influencer, Martins Vincent Otse, also known as Verydarkman (VDM).
Otse was reportedly arrested by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on May 2, following some petitions it received against him.
He was said to be in the custody of the EFCC as of the time of filing the report.
His legal representative, Deji Adeyanju, who confirmed Otse’s arrest on X, said a team of policemen “arrested VDM at GTB” along with his friend, C Park.
However, Atiku, in a post on X, said the arrest and continued detention of the social media influencer and “outspoken critic” by the EFCC was “another blatant abuse of power by the Tinubu administration, which has made political repression a hallmark of its rule”.
The former vice president said it was more alarming that Otse remained in custody without any formal charges in a “flagrant violation of his constitutional rights”.
This, he said, was a “chilling reminder of the growing authoritarianism under this government”.
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Atiku said, “This latest episode is part of a disturbing pattern: the Tinubu regime’s relentless assault on the fundamental freedoms of Nigerians, particularly those who dare to speak truth to power or align with the political opposition.
“We must not allow state-sponsored repression to become the defining character of our democracy.
“While security agencies are quick to target dissenters and critics, often in complete disregard of due process, political loyalists with credible allegations of corruption walk free, trading sycophancy for immunity.”
The PDP chieftain also described the government’s systematic crackdown on opposition voices as disgraceful and an affront to democratic norms that must be fiercely condemned and resisted.
Scores of youths on Monday took to the streets of Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory, to protest the arrest of the activist.
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The protesters, who marched from the headquarters of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to the premises of a commercial bank where he was reportedly arrested, held placards with inscriptions such as “Release Very Dark Man,” and “Seyi Tinubu, Are You Involved?,” among others.
Jury selection began Monday in New York in the blockbuster federal sex trafficking trial of music mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs, who stands accused of years of harrowing abuse.
Combs, 55, has pleaded not guilty on all counts, insisting that any sex acts were consensual — but prosecutors say for years he coerced victims into drug-fueled sex parties using threats and violence.
At a recent hearing, his attorney Marc Agnifilo offered a preview of his team’s defense by describing the artist’s free-wheeling “swinger” lifestyle.
The prosecution said it had offered Combs a plea deal — the specifics were not disclosed — but that he had rejected it.
The high-profile trial attracted a long line of media and other court watchers early Monday hoping to get inside for jury selection, which is expected to wrap up in about a week.
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Opening statements are tentatively scheduled for May 12, and the proceedings will last an estimated eight to 10 weeks.
Combs faces one charge of racketeering conspiracy, the federal statute known by its acronym RICO that was once primarily used to target the mafia but in recent years has been wielded in cases of sexual abuse, including against the fallen R&B star R. Kelly.
It allows government attorneys to project a long view of criminal activity rather than prosecuting isolated sex crimes.
If convicted, the one-time rap producer and global superstar, who is often credited for his role in ushering hip-hop into the mainstream, could spend the rest of his life in prison.
Over the decades, Combs — who has gone by various stage names including Puff Daddy and P. Diddy — amassed enormous wealth for his work in music but also his ventures in the liquor industry.
He was arrested by federal agents in New York in September 2024 and denied bail multiple times.
Combs is being held at Brooklyn’s notorious Metropolitan Detention Center, a facility plagued by complaints of vermin and decay as well as violence.
High-profile inmates there have included Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell and Sam Bankman-Fried, the cryptocurrency entrepreneur convicted of fraud.
Combs has appeared in pre-trial hearings looking remarkably aged, his once jet-black, styled coif now overgrown and gray.
The jury selection start date is notably the first Monday in May — which annually marks New York’s Met Gala, a glittering celebrity charity bash where Combs was once a red carpet mainstay.
Just two years ago, he posed for the cameras at that event uptown — but on Monday, he will be downtown as the panel of citizens tasked with determining his fate face a barrage of questions from lawyers on both sides.
Core to the case is Combs’s relationship with his former girlfriend, the singer Casandra “Cassie” Ventura, who is expected to be a key trial witness.
A disturbing surveillance video from 2016, which was aired by CNN last year, shows Combs physically assaulting Ventura at a hotel.
Prosecutors say the encounter occurred following one of the “freak-offs” they argue were a feature of his pattern of abuse.
The so-called “freak-offs” were coercive, drug-fueled sexual marathons including sex workers that were sometimes filmed, according to the indictment.
READ ALSO: Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Faces More Charges Ahead Of Criminal Trial
It is unclear how much of the CNN video will be shown to jurors as evidence in court — the footage’s quality has been a sticking point between the opposing legal teams — but Judge Arun Subramanian has ruled that at least some of it will be admissible.
The floodgates opened after Ventura filed a civil suit alleging Combs subjected her to more than a decade of coercion by physical force and drugs as well as a 2018 rape.
That 2023 suit was quickly settled out of court, but a string of similarly lurid sexual assault claims against the Grammy winner from both women and men followed.
Industry watchers are monitoring Combs’s case as a potential inflection point in the music world which, beyond the case of Kelly, has largely evaded the #MeToo reckoning that has rocked Hollywood.
Caroline Heldman — co-founder of the Sound Off Coalition, which is focused on sexual violence in music — said Combs’s case is a flashpoint of a broader pattern of industry tolerance and cover-up of abuse.
“In the music industry, I think it’s the perfect storm of what celebrity does to people and what power does to people. It gives them an empathy deficit where the rules don’t apply to them,” she said.
When it comes to Combs’s case, she told AFP she’s “optimistic that justice will be served.”
“I hope that this inspires other survivors to come forward.”