Jackson favours Newcastle move – Monday’s gossip

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Nicolas Jackson favours Newcastle move, Chelsea and RB Leipzig in talks over swapping Xavi Simons for Christopher Nkunku, and Sunderland enquire about Lloyd Kelly.

Nicolas Jackson favours a move to Newcastle United should the Senegal striker, 24, leave Chelsea during the summer transfer window. (Telegraph – subscription required)

Chelsea are in talks with RB Leipzig over a potential swap deal for Netherlands midfielder Xavi Simons, 22, that could mean France forward Christopher Nkunku, 27, returning to the German club. (Guardian)

Newcastle will wait to resolve the future of Sweden striker Alexander Isak, 25, before deciding whether to move for Chelsea striker Jackson. (PA news agency)

Newcastle have made a bid for Brentford’s Yoane Wissa but Liverpool are monitoring the situation as they see the DR Congo forward, 28, as an alternative if they fail to sign Isak. (Caught Offside)

France forward Randal Kolo Muani, 26, would prefer to join Juventus than Newcastle after spending the second half of last season on loan with the Italian club from Paris St-Germain. (Teamtalk)

Sunderland have enquired about signing 26-year-old English defender Lloyd Kelly, who has just joined Juventus on an obligation-to-buy move after an initial loan from Newcastle. (Gazzetta dello Sport – in Italian)

AC Milan are in talks over signing Denmark striker Rasmus Hojlund, 22, but they want a loan with a buy option whereas Manchester United would prefer a permanent sale. (Sky Sports)

After signing Slovenia striker Benjamin Sesko, Manchester United have shifted focus to offloading England winger Jadon Sancho, 25, Argentina winger Alejandro Garnacho, 21, and Brazil forward Antony, 25. (Standard)

Manchester United are considering signing free agent Dominic Calvert-Lewin after the former England striker, 28, left Everton at the end of last season. (Caught Offside)

Nottingham Forest have made an offer for Monaco’s 21-year-old French midfielder Soungoutou Magassa. (L’Equipe – in French)

Kostas Tsimikas is edging nearer to leaving Liverpool after being left out of their Community Shield squad, with Nottingham Forest having been interested in the 29-year-old Greece left-back. (Echo)

Besiktas and Fenerbahce might make a move for Marseille’s Jonathan Rowe, while Rennes and Atalanta have also been linked with the 22-year-old English winger. (L’Equipe – in French)

Jamaica forward Michail Antonio, 35, says he is talking to clubs in England and abroad after leaving West Ham at the end of last season. (Talksport)

Enzo Fernandez will not leave Chelsea this summer despite reports in Spain linking the Argentina midfielder, 24, with a move to Paris St-Germain. (Fabrizio Romano)

Saudi Pro League club Al-Nassr have reached an agreement with France winger Kingsley Coman, 29, over a move from Bayern Munich. (Bild – in German)

Wrexham eye Broadhead – Monday’s EFL gossip

Chuba Akpom’s arrival at Ipswich could pave the way for 27-year-old Wales international Nathan Broadhead to make a £7.5m move to join Wrexham. (Evening Leader)

After their EFL transfer embargo was lifted, Sheffield Wednesday are weighing up 60 potential transfer targets, with free agents Liam Cooper, 33, formerly of Leeds and Scotland, and 35-year-old former Burnley and Brentford defender Ben Mee among them. (Sheffield Star)

Italian club Sassuolo are in talks with Ipswich over the signing of goalkeeper Arijanet Muric with the 26-year-old Kosovo international having been displaced by Alex Palmer at Portman Road (Sky Sports)

Norwich right-back Kellen Fisher, 21, is attracting the interest of Everton. (Pete O’Rourke)

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China says it expels Philippine vessels near Scarborough Shoal

China’s coastguard says it has expelled Philippine vessels from waters around the disputed Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea while Manila reports a collision in the confrontation.

The Philippine boats were intercepted on Monday after they ignored warnings in an operation China’s coastguard said was “professional, standardised, legitimate and legal”.

The incident is the latest in a series of confrontations between China and the Philippines in the South China Sea, one of the world’s busiest maritime routes, which Beijing claims almost entirely despite an international ruling that the assertion has no legal basis. Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan also claim parts of the contested waters.

“The China Coast Guard took necessary measures in accordance with the law, including monitoring, pressing from the outside, blocking and controlling the Philippine vessels to drive them away,” Gan Yu, a Chinese coastguard spokesperson, said in a statement.

Manila, meanwhile, said a Chinese navy vessel collided with one from its own coastguard while chasing a Philippine patrol boat, and it released video footage of the confrontation.

“The [Chinese coastguard vessel] CCG 3104, which was chasing the [Philippine coastguard vessel] BRP Suluan at high speed, performed a risky manoeuvre from the [Philippine] vessel’s starboard quarter, leading to the impact with the PLA [People’s Liberation Army] Navy warship,” spokesman Commodore Jay Tarriela said in a statement.

“This resulted in substantial damage to the CCG vessel’s forecastle, rendering it unseaworthy,” he said.

The incident occurred as the Philippine coastguard escorted boats distributing aid to fishermen in the area, Tarriela added.

Manila promises continued presence in disputed waterway

Tarriela told the AFP news agency that the Chinese crew “never responded” to the Philippine ship’s offer of assistance.

During the incident, the BRP Suluan was “targeted with a water cannon” by the Chinese but “successfully” evaded it, Tarriela’s statement said.

Speaking at a news conference on Monday, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr said the country’s patrol vessels would “continue to be present” in the area to defend and exercise Manila’s sovereign rights over what it considers to be part of its territory.

The Scarborough Shoal, a triangular chain of reefs and rocks, has been a flashpoint of tension between the countries since China seized it from the Philippines in 2012.

Marcos also addressed another source of tension with Beijing, stating China has “misinterpreted” his recent comments saying Manila would be inevitably drawn into a conflict between China and Taiwan should one erupt.

China accused Marcos of “playing with fire” after the Philippine leader said during a visit to India that “there is no way that the Philippines can stay out of it” due to its proximity to Taiwan.

“We are, I think for propaganda purposes, misinterpreted,” Marcos said.

Everton make progress in talks over Grealish loan

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Everton are progressing in talks to sign winger Jack Grealish on a season-long loan deal from Manchester City.

The 29-year-old has fallen out of favour at City and was left out of their squad for the final Premier League game of the season at Fulham as well as the Club World Cup in the United States.

Sources have told BBC Sport that an agreement over a deal for Grealish, who reportedly earns £300,000-a-week at City, is not yet imminent.

But he made only seven league starts last season as City ended the season without winning a major trophy.

He was left on the bench by manager Pep Guardiola during the FA Cup final defeat by Crystal Palace, with Argentine teenager Claudio Echeverri being given a debut instead.

Grealish’s diminishing role for City

Noel Sliney, BBC Sport:

It has been a chastening two years for Jack Grealish, since he enjoyed the most successful season of his career.

He had played an integral role in Manchester City’s historic Treble in 2022-23, starting the FA Cup final and every one of their seven knockout ties as the club won the Champions League for the first time.

Only six outfield City players spent more time on the pitch than Grealish in the Premier League too.

A hamstring injury halted his momentum early in 2023-24, which the England playmaker ended with more yellow cards (seven) than combined goals and assists (six) across all competitions.

He featured in just 40% of the total minutes played by City despite being in the squad for 82% of them.

His involvement dropped to 30% last term as Grealish’s career plummeted to its nadir. Three of his six starts after Christmas came against lower-league opposition in the FA Cup, while 16 starts in total is his fewest in a campaign since he was 20 years old.

Unsurprisingly, it has also been his least productive season in terms of chances created and dribbling success since returning to the Premier League in 2019.

City’s team structure has seldom afforded Grealish the license to take on and glide past opponents as he did with such insouciance as the talismanic captain at boyhood club Aston Villa.

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Helen Flanagan looks incredible in nautical bikini as she holidays with family

TV star Helen Flanagan gave fans a glimpse into her trip away to Italy to celebrate her 35th birthday as she showed off her stunning figure in a nautical bikini

The actress and TV star gave fans a glimpse into her trip away

Coronation Street star Helen Flanagan looked stunning as she showed off her toned figure in a striped bikini while she soaked up the sun on holiday with her family. The actress and TV star gave fans a glimpse into her trip away as she hugged her daughter before boarding a boat.

The 35-year-old wowed in the blue and white patterned bikini, which showed off her washboard abs. It looked like the star had already had a dip in the crystal blue waters, as her hair was in a wet and scraped-back bun, and she had droplets coming from her arms.

Helen gave her eldest daughter, Matilda, a hug for the snap. Helen also shared a panoramic video of the picturesque scenery as she checked in with her daughter, asking if she was ‘okay?’.

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Helen gave her eldest daughter, Matilda, a hug for the snap
Helen gave her eldest daughter, Matilda, a hug for the snap

Helen, who often updates fans on what she is up to through social media, wrote: “I spent my 35th birthday during the day at @lagavitella which was just absolutely stunning in Positano x”. Adding: “Done Bali, now Italy just need to do India xxx Loved this special trip with my big girl… growing together and putting up with her mad mum”.

Helen’s holiday snaps followed just days after she stunned in a gold bodysuit for her big birthday celebrations. In her caption, she looked back on her Thirties and said she was feeling ‘blessed’.

The 35-year-old stunned in a blue and white patterned bikini
The 35-year-old stunned in a blue and white patterned bikini

She wrote: “Loved my 30s so far so much feel very blessed. I got my beautiful dream boy Charlie. I got to watch Matilda grow into the most amazing little girl and my amazing precious darling Delilah x. Did lots of things in my career that I wanted to do, achieved things that I wanted to do and a hell of a lot of growing.

Adding: “There’s been a fair share of heartache but I wouldn’t change anything, I think it’s best to feel and love with your whole heart less what’s the point? I get to write the last half of my thirties and I’m excited for this age.”

Famous friends rushed to comment on the post as Christine McGuinness said: “HBD beautiful you are the narrator, the creator and the star of your very show in this thing called life, 35+ is magical”, while Ashley James said: “Happy birthday, love you”.

TV star Helen Flanagan gave fans a glimpse into her trip away to Italy to celebrate her 35th birthday
TV star Helen Flanagan gave fans a glimpse into her trip away to Italy to celebrate her 35th birthday

It comes after the mum-of-three, who shares Matilda, nine, Delilah, six, and son Charlie, four, with ex Scott Sinclair, opened up about co-parenting and how she and Scott live five hours from each other.

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She told The Sun: “It’s really difficult. I won’t have the kids for Christmas this year because it’s such hard work because me and Scott, he’s from Bath and I live in North Manchester, so we co-parent five hours away. Really hard work.”

Adding: “And we’ve done this since Charlie’s been born because he was played for Bristol. But we’re very fair, and I try to be fair with Scott, and he tries to be fair with me. So this Christmas, I won’t have the kids.”

Space NK’s new summer edit worth £158 will get you a Tatcha brightening serum for £8

Space NK’s new summer beauty edit is here, and it’s packed with big-name brands like Tatcha, Sunday Riley and Westman Atelier, all for £60

Space NK’s new Summer Glow Edit is packed with cult favourite beauty buys(Image: Getty)

If you’ve been looking to give your current beauty routine a little warm weather update, Space NK’s latest The Summer Glow Edit might be the perfect purchase. With cult favourites and travel-ready must-haves, this curated collection is worth £158, but is up for grabs for £60. And with eight different products inside, that means you’re getting each item for just over £8.

From glow-giving moisturisers to luxe body oils and handbag-friendly makeup, every piece has been handpicked to keep your skin radiant, hydrated and holiday-ready this summer.

Whether you’re jetting off on a sunny getaway, or keeping it local and appreciating the current heatwave, this luxury edit has everything you need.

So what’s exactly in the edit? Everything is kept inside a Space NK Peach Towelling Wash Bag, which is a soft yet structured travel bag that can hold all your beauty essentials organised and together.

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Space NK The Glow Edit
The edit features major luxury brands like Tatcha and Sunday Riley(Image: Space NK)

Inside is also one of Space NK’s new Caribbean Shores Shimmer Body Oil in Golden. This shimmering body oil is infused with nourishing avocado oil to boost natural radiance and leave a glossy, luminous finish. It’s the perfect addition to your holiday make-up bag and will give you a glowing, sun-kissed look.

Another highlight is the Sunday Riley C.E.O. Afterglow Brightening Vitamin C Cream. Formulated with vitamin C and hyaluronic acid, this moisturiser hydrates, brightens and leaves skin glowing and perfectly prepped for makeup. And is priced at £60 on its own.

Tatcha’s The Brightening Serum is also included in the edit. Made with 12-hour time-release vitamin C, this serum brightens dull skin and helps improve hyperpigmentation and uneven tone, resulting in a clearer, more even complexion.

Also inside the towelling bag is a Vida Glow 6 Day Sample Pack, Westman Atelier Petite Lit Up Highlight Stick, Innisfree Cherry Blossom Glow Jelly Cream, and Tata Harper Regenerating Cleanser. All that for £60 is a fantastic bargain, in our opinion.

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If you’re a perfume lover, you’ll be pleased to hear about Next’s latest Fragrance Edit Beauty Box. This affordable box features £56 worth of scents and is available for £22. Inside, you’ll receive five different perfumes, mists, and candles, in a mix of full-size, mini, and sample sizes.

Israel is occupying Gaza to clean up the crime scene

If you read the Western press this morning, you may come to believe that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s desire to take military control over Gaza is new. But dropping 2000lb bombs does not rescue captives and wiping out whole neighbourhoods does not come without plans to build something in their place.

On Friday, Israel’s security cabinet approved the occupation of Gaza City, formalising what was always the endgame of this genocide. The plan follows a deliberate sequence: First destroy, then starve, occupy, demand demilitarisation, and finally carry out full ethnic cleansing once Palestinians have no political power and capacity to resist. This is how the dream of “Greater Israel” is achieved.

But why formalise this occupation now, after 22 months of systematic slaughter? Because the crime scene must be sanitised before the world sees what remains of Gaza.

On Sunday, the Israeli army assassinated Al Jazeera journalists Anas al-Sharif, Mohammed Qreiqeh, Ibrahim Zaher, Mohammed Noufal and Moamen Aliwa by dropping a missile on a media tent near al-Shifa Hospital. Their names are now added to the long list of more than 230 Palestinian journalists and media workers that Israel has killed since October 2023.

With Israel banning all foreign media from freely accessing Gaza, Palestinian journalists have been solely responsible for covering and documenting Israeli war crimes. The assassination is a clear message to them to stop, to stay silent.

Meanwhile, foreign journalists who rode on airdrop flights to Gaza were also warned. Aerial footage they released offered glimpses of Gaza’s corpse: A patchwork of shattered concrete, ruins and hollowed streets. It is complete desolation.

The footage shocked viewers across the world and so the Israeli government was quick to ban filming on these flights, warning that aid drops would be halted if there were any violations.

Israel knows it cannot continue to block foreign media access to Gaza forever. The genocide will come to an end eventually; aid convoys and relief workers will be allowed in and with them, foreign journalists with cameras.

So before that day arrives, Israel is racing to erase the evidence because once the world sees Gaza, it will no longer be able to pretend that the war was about anything other than the mass killing of Palestinians and the erasure of their history.

The occupation of Gaza City is the murderer returning to the crime scene to hide the body. The goal is not only to cover up the crimes, but to convince the world that the dead have not died and that what we see is not what it is.

The official death toll in Gaza stands at 60,000, a number that by many expert accounts is an undercount. According to estimates, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have likely been murdered. As UN experts declared on August 7, “Israel is exterminating the people of Gaza by any and all means.” There are a lot of crimes to cover up.

We have already seen the modus operandi of the Israeli army in trying to destroy evidence in Gaza. It has buried massacred civilians in mass graves with bulldozers; it has withheld bodies of Palestinian torture victims; it has dug into the sand whole crime scenes of execution; it has planted weapons in hospitals that it has ransacked; it has lied about discovering tunnels.

All of this fits neatly with Israel’s long history of burying evidence of atrocities. Since 1948, Israeli authorities have systematically erased their ethnic cleansing of Palestinians by building on top of the ruins of pillaged Palestinian villages and towns.

Israeli intelligence has also removed documents from archives that provide evidence of Zionist and Israeli forces committing war crimes during the Nakba of 1948. Some of the documents that have disappeared give gruesome details about the brutality of Zionist fighters during massacres of Palestinians, like in the village of Dawaymeh, near Hebron, where hundreds of Palestinian men, women, and children were killed by artillery fire or directly executed. In 1955, the settlement of Amatzia was built on the ruins of the Palestinian village.

By occupying the northern part of the Gaza Strip now, Israel will certainly resort to these same methods of erasure and falsification. It will also be able to control foreign media coverage, just as it has done until now.

The Israeli army has only allowed foreign journalists into Gaza embedded with its military units under strict conditions that transform reporters into participants in hasbara. Embedded journalists must submit all materials for military review before publication, must operate under constant observation, and cannot speak freely with Palestinians.

Journalists thus become mouthpieces for the Israeli military, parroting their justifications for wholesale destruction and propagating their lies about Palestinian civilians as “human shields” and Gaza hospitals and schools as “terror hubs”.

The full-scale occupation can also help facilitate further massacres and ethnic cleansing. Those who refuse forced displacement will be labelled “militants” to excuse their slaughter. Israel used this strategy early into the genocide, dropping leaflets warning Palestinians in northern Gaza that they will be deemed “partners in a terrorist organisation” if they do not comply with “evacuation orders”.

Mass displacement is essential to the cover-up because it creates a new narrative that Palestinians are voluntarily migrating rather than being ethnically cleansed. The short-term goal is to force those willing to comply into concentration camps in the south and detach them from their homes and land. Over time, it would become easier to expel Palestinians elsewhere and deny them the right to return. It is the same way Nakba refugees were forced to flee to Gaza and were then denied their internationally recognised right of return.

The response of the international community to Israel’s plan has been just more condemnations. Germany went as far as halting military exports that could be used in Gaza – something that should have been done 22 months ago, when Israel started indiscriminately bombing civilians.

These actions are pathetic. They do not absolve these governments of their complicity in aiding and abetting the crime of genocide; they are just another sign of their moral cowardice.

The international community must take decisive action. It must undertake military intervention, as mandated under international law, to force Israel to immediately end the violence, to allow unrestricted humanitarian aid into Gaza, and to give Palestinians the freedom they are entitled to. International journalists must be granted immediate access to collect whatever evidence remains of Israel’s crimes before it disappears under the cover of “military operations”.

It is time the world starts believing Palestinians. For 22 months, Palestinians have said this is genocide. They have said it while stuck under the rubble, while starving, while carrying their children’s bodies. They said Israel was not defending itself but trying to erase Palestinians. They said occupation and ethnic cleansing are the goal. Israeli politicians themselves have said it.

Without urgent international action, the words “never again” will refer not to the prevention of genocide, but to the existence of Palestinian life in Gaza. The truth so many Palestinians have died to tell must not be buried with their bodies.