Sri Lanka parliament votes to fire impeached police chief

In the first inspector general’s impeachment in Sri Lanka, the country’s parliament approved firing the police chief for misconduct and gross abuse of power.

Deshabandu Tennakoon, who was accused of sending a team of armed officers to a failed raid in Weligama in 2023 that resulted in the death of an officer, was sacked by the legislature on Tuesday.

One member abstained, while no one else voted against his removal. Tennakoon was found guilty of 19 counts of misconduct and abuse of power after a committee appointed by the parliament opened an investigation into the allegations against him and released a report last month.

The committee determined that he had “pearheaded the dreadful, illegal act of shooting” at the W15 hotel in Weligama when a Tennakoon team opened fire on a team that had been sent there to intimidate the hotel’s owner.

The police chief, who oversaw a force of 85, 000 officers, was reportedly running a “criminal network” and unfit to serve, even in the lowest ranks, according to a state prosecutor.

Tennakoon has not responded since the impeachment hearing started last month. The 54-year-old is the island’s first police chief to be fired in its history.

Despite protests from opposition lawmakers and civil rights activists who claimed he was ineligible for the position, he was appointed police chief by then-President Ranil Wickremesinghe in 2023.

The highest court in Sri Lanka had decreed that the suspect had been tortured by rubbing menthol balm on his genitalia prior to his appointment.

BBC to air The Repair Shop despite rape charges against ex-host Jay Blades

Former host of The Repair Shop Jay Blades was charged with two counts of rape. West Mercia Police confirmed the star’s allegations and announced a magistrate’s court date of August 13th.

Despite rape accusations, BBC to air Jay Blades’ “The Repair Shop.”

The Repair Shop will still be airing on BBC One and BBC iPlayer on Tuesday evening after former host Jay Blades was charged with two counts of rape. West Mercia Police last night confirmed charges against the 55-year-old TV star, who stepped back from presenting The Repair Shop last year, and said that a magistrates’ court date is set for Wednesday 13 August.

“Jason Blades, 55, of Claverley in Shropshire, has been charged with two counts of rape,” a spokesperson for the force told The Mirror this week. “He is due to appear at Telford magistrates’ court on 13 August 2025.”

Jay Blades
Jay Blades was charged with two counts of rape(Image: BBC / Richochet Ltd)

The Repair Shop will be broadcast on iPlayer and BBC One starting at 8 p.m. tonight. Blades will not appear on the episode since he left last year, though. Dominic Chinea, Suzie Fletcher, Will Kirk, Lucia Scalisi, and Brenton West are tonight’s experts.

A Nottinghamshire woman with a weather-worn concrete portrait of her late father is the first to seek the assistance of an expert. The women who needed Scalisi’s assistance with the restoration of the artwork commissioned it as a gift for her late father.

Jay Blades
He stepped down from The Repair Shop last year(Image: Getty Images)

A rare and priceless silver statuette of a paratrooper is brought in by a father-daughter duo, Ian and Issy. Only 100 copies have been produced, according to the revealing information, and the piece belongs to Ian’s father, a proud member of the parachute regiment. The object was left ruined after surviving a dramatic shipwreck off Tenerife’s coast.

Pari, who brought in a leather baby hammock from her childhood in Iran, and a battered flight case that Trevor Bolder once owned, are other people who may need the assistance of the experts.

Jay Blades, a restaurateur, gained notoriety from his 2017 television program The Repair Shop. He left the program last year.

He also appeared on Comic Relief, Celebrity Masterchef, and Money For Nothing until 2020 on the BBC.

The BBC has reached out for comment, according to The Mirror.

If you’ve been the victim of sexual assault, you can access help and resources via www.rapecrisis.org.uk or calling the national telephone helpline on 0808 802 9999*

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Lyon sign Liverpool midfielder Morton for £15m

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Tyler Morton, a midfielder from Liverpool, has been signed for £15 million by Lyon.

Morton made his senior debut at Liverpool’s academy in 2021 after joining the club at age seven.

The 22-year-old struggled to make a regular first team appearance, making 14 appearances across all competitions, and loaning time with Hull and Blackburn in the Championship.

He assisted England’s under-21 team win the European Championship earlier this summer.

Lyon’s poor financial situation earlier this summer led to their reinstatement to Ligue 1, but they were successful in appealing.

Following their title win in 2024-2019, Liverpool boss Arne Slot has made a significant investment in the squad during the off-season, spending more than £250 million on new players.

It is crucial to work with players, especially those who have graduated from the academy, to ensure that they adhere to the Premier League’s profit and sustainability regulations (PSR).

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‘It would be cool to be the fastest of all time’

Features of Rex

As he aims to break the 200-meter flying start time trial world record in Turkey the following week, British sprinter Matthew Richardson wants to become the “fastest track cyclist of all time.”

After the Paris Olympics in the summer of 2013, Richardson, who shifted his allegiance to Great Britain from Australia, is attempting to break the record of 9.088 seconds.

Charlie Tanfield will attempt the top hour mark, and para-cyclist Will Bjergfelt will attempt the C5 category hour milestone, making him one of three British cyclists competing for the same track on August 14.

Being the fastest track discipline, it has a nice ring to it, Richardson said.

Before switching to his country, Richardson, who was born in Maidstone, Kent, won two silver medals and a bronze for Australia last summer. He later immigrated to Western Australia at the age of nine.

At the start of the year, he won three sprint titles at the British Track Championships, and he added two golds to his Great Britain debut at the Nations Cup in March on the Konya track in Turkey, where the new attempts will all take place.

Before Dutchman Harrie Lavreysen broke the new flying 200-meter record minutes later, Richardson briefly set a new record for the time at the Olympics in 9.091.

The 26-year-old said he was “confident” going into the week and that the record would soon be broken, a feat that necessitates speeds of more than 80 km/hr.

He said, “I’m pretty confident that I’m doing a really good job.”

After Alex Dowsett, Bradley Wiggins, and Dan Bigham, Tanfield hopes to break the hour record by recording the longest distance he has ever cycled around a track in 60 minutes.

Filippo Ganna of Italy’s current record in 2022 stands at 56.792 km.

According to Tanfield, “I saw this year after the Games as a time when I had the freedom to give it a shot.”

I want to conquer 50 kilometers for the first time.

Will Bjergfelt races around the track while wearing his Great Britain skinsuit and kitSWPix

Bjergfelt said he had long wanted to break the 2014 Italian Andrea Tarlao C5 hour record.

The 46-year-old believes that the technological advancements over the past 11 years have significantly increased the distance between two goals.

I think I’ll be in a very, very good position to carry the record forward and advance it further and make it something big again, according to Bjergfelt.

“I’ll be the first C5 para-cyclist to cross the 50km barrier,” I’ll be the first to do so. That would be quite unusual.

After taking two years off from cycling, Bjergfelt returned to history as the first paracyclist to compete in the men’s Tour of Britain.

The hour record is regarded as one of the most exhausting cycling tests, and Bjergfelt described the difficulty in executing it flawlessly.

You must be very conservative in the first 40 to 45 minutes due to the hour-record. You still need to be on top of the game, but you also need to be truly within yourself, he said, because it always comes back to bite you.

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Remembering the original Superman

Even before the latest Superman film premiered, it was already deemed controversial. A rather innocuous comment by director James Gunn referencing Superman’s backstory as an “immigrant that came from other places” was enough to spark a backlash among conservatives who called the movie “woke” and vowed to boycott it.

Why all the anger when this is indeed Superman’s origin story? He is sent to Earth as a refugee from a planet that is about to die.

Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, who created Superman in the 1930s, were both sons of Jewish immigrants to the United States and Canada, respectively. The two projected onto Clark Kent, Superman’s alter ego, their experiences, fears and longing as two shy young men of immigrant backgrounds who struggled to fit in. Like them, their hero does not quite feel he belongs – neither as Clark, who is timid and lacks the confidence to speak up or approach others, nor as Superman, who is feared by some for being an alien.

Growing up, reading the comics, I saw in Clark Kent someone I knew too well – a hesitant, modest man, shrinking himself to fit in. I saw myself. I too was an immigrant, and I too had had to leave my country before it started falling apart.

And so, I looked forward to seeing the new Superman film, hoping to see a return to the original premise. My children and I counted down to the premiere together, watching trailers and reading interviews. We went to see the film, and I felt a genuine sense of recognition. It was great to see the core of Superman’s story pushed to the fore once again.

But why did some see the immigrant backstory in Superman as a threat? As an attempt to make their favourite superhero “woke”?

Perhaps it has to do with the fact that for a long time, Superman was whitewashed into a pliant superhero who worked with and represented American power. How did it get to that?

When their creation became too popular, Siegel and Shuster lost control over it because their publisher decided to sideline them.

“Jack Liebowitz, the president of DC [Comics], sees that they can sell Superman pillowcases and pyjamas – but if Superman’s running around throwing people out of windows and threatening to wrap iron bars around their necks, it isn’t going to work,” Paul S Hirsch, author of Pulp Empire: A Secret History of Comic Book Imperialism, told the BBC.

The original Superman was a rebel. He was seen as a “socialist”, “anarchist” and even a “radical revolutionary”. On the comic book cover, he was described as a “champion of the oppressed”.

In one of his first adventures, Superman comes after a corrupt lobbyist and a weapons manufacturer who try to bribe a congressman into voting for US involvement in a foreign conflict.

This type of character didn’t serve the establishment. He challenged it. That is why it didn’t take long before those edges were sanded down. In the 1940s, Superman was enlisted, like other superheroes, in the propaganda war against the Axis powers. During the Cold War, he promoted American military prowess and values, eventually becoming a symbol of American empire, of power and hegemony – the very opposite of what his creators intended.

Superman had to be whitewashed not only to serve the government and the elites but also because his original character was dangerous. The story of a quiet, timid immigrant who finds in himself the power to rebel against injustice and oppression could inspire. And the political establishment do not want the marginalised to become Superman. They want them to be Clark Kent – shy, indecisive, weak, voiceless.

It is for the same exact reason that the government and the elites are coming after people of immigrant backgrounds who have found in themselves the strength to speak up and stand up.

People like Zohran Mamdani, the son of an Indian mother and Ugandan-Indian father who is running for mayor of New York while openly speaking up against injustice and corruption.

People like Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar, two trailblazers for their immigrant communities who have been elected and re-elected to the US House of Representatives and who continue to be outspoken about issues that bother the powerful – Islamophobia, US war crimes and persecution of immigrants.

People like Mahmoud Khalil, a former Columbia University graduate student who risked his education to speak up for his people facing genocide in Gaza. Even his kidnapping and detention by the federal government did not force him into silence. Upon his release, Khalil continued to speak up for the Palestinian people.

The fear of the marginalised finding a voice and demanding their rights is also driving the US government’s mass anti-immigration campaign, the dismantling of equity, diversity and inclusion (DEI) programmes and the war on academic freedom, targeting fields of study that openly challenge power and empire.

The elites saw the mass mobilisation for Gaza – in the streets, on campuses, at ballot boxes – and became terrified. The scale and scope of this movement cutting across communities, races and religions was laying the ground for a mass mobilisation that could go beyond the immediate goal of stopping a genocide. It could stand up to injustice and corruption. It could come for them.

The elites see what happens when Clark Kent realises that he no longer wants to stay timid and invisible to blend in, that he wants to be Superman, the champion of the oppressed. They are not afraid of the marginalised, of refugees and immigrants. They are afraid of these people finding their voices and strength to demand their rights.

And that’s the sentiment the original Superman was supposed to inspire – not blind infatuation with American power, not misplaced pride in American values, but belief in one’s own power to speak up, to stand up and create change.