Rangers withdraw request for St Mirren postponement

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Rangers have withdrawn a request to postpone their Scottish Premiership visit to St Mirren should they reach the Champions League play-off round.

Russell Martin’s side are strong favourites to progress past Viktoria Plzen as they go into Tuesday’s away leg of their third qualifying round tie with a 3-0 lead.

Rangers had indicated they might want a blank weekend between the first and second legs against either Salzburg Austria or Club Brugge, should they progress.

The match will now go ahead on Sunday, 24 August with a 12:00 BST kick-off for live television broadcast at the SMiSA Stadium.

Rangers find themselves four points behind reigning champions Celtic after opening their domestic season with two draws.

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Rangers withdraw request for St Mirren postponement

SNS

Rangers have withdrawn a request to postpone their Scottish Premiership visit to St Mirren should they reach the Champions League play-off round.

Russell Martin’s side are strong favourites to progress past Viktoria Plzen as they go into Tuesday’s away leg of their third qualifying round tie with a 3-0 lead.

Rangers had indicated they might want a blank weekend between the first and second legs against either Salzburg Austria or Club Brugge, should they progress.

The match will now go ahead on Sunday, 24 August with a 12:00 BST kick-off for live television broadcast at the SMiSA Stadium.

Rangers find themselves four points behind reigning champions Celtic after opening their domestic season with two draws.

Related topics

  • St Mirren
  • Scottish Premiership
  • Rangers
  • Scottish Football
  • Football

Liverpool stepping up bid to sign Palace’s Guehi

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Liverpool are stepping up their attempts to sign Crystal Palace and England centre-back Marc Guehi.

Palace captain Guehi has a year left on his contract, but chairman Steve Parish said earlier this week he could be sold this summer to avoid him moving on a free transfer in 12 months’ time.

Sources have told BBC Sport that Liverpool have held initial talks with a view to signing the 25-year-old before the summer transfer window shuts.

If the clubs do agree a deal for Guehi, the defender himself may need to be persuaded that a move to Anfield is the right one for him.

Aside from the financial element of his personal terms, the level of playing time he will be afforded will also be a factor.

Liverpool are also trying to sign 18-year-old Parma centre-back Giovanni Leoni.

The Italy Under-19 international is not seen as a potential rival for Guehi but more as one for the future.

Guehi has made more than 150 appearances for Palace since joining from Chelsea in 2021.

He won the first of his 23 England caps in 2022 and was part of the Three Lions squad that reached the Euro 2024 final.

Guehi was the subject of bids topping out at £65m from Newcastle last year.

FA Cup winners Palace are believed to want £40m for him now, given he only has 12 months left on his contract, but Liverpool want to pay less than that.

The Reds have already spent about £270m this summer, though they have recouped about £170m through player sales.

They have also had a £110m bid for Alexander Isak rejected by Newcastle, though sources have told BBC Sport the Swede remains determined to move to Anfield.

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  • Liverpool
  • Premier League
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Liverpool stepping up bid to sign Palace’s Guehi

Getty Images
  • 472 Comments

Liverpool are stepping up their attempts to sign Crystal Palace and England centre-back Marc Guehi.

Palace captain Guehi has a year left on his contract, but chairman Steve Parish said earlier this week he could be sold this summer to avoid him moving on a free transfer in 12 months’ time.

Sources have told BBC Sport that Liverpool have held initial talks with a view to signing the 25-year-old before the summer transfer window shuts.

If the clubs do agree a deal for Guehi, the defender himself may need to be persuaded that a move to Anfield is the right one for him.

Aside from the financial element of his personal terms, the level of playing time he will be afforded will also be a factor.

Liverpool are also trying to sign 18-year-old Parma centre-back Giovanni Leoni.

The Italy Under-19 international is not seen as a potential rival for Guehi but more as one for the future.

Guehi has made more than 150 appearances for Palace since joining from Chelsea in 2021.

He won the first of his 23 England caps in 2022 and was part of the Three Lions squad that reached the Euro 2024 final.

Guehi was the subject of bids topping out at £65m from Newcastle last year.

FA Cup winners Palace are believed to want £40m for him now, given he only has 12 months left on his contract, but Liverpool want to pay less than that.

The Reds have already spent about £270m this summer, though they have recouped about £170m through player sales.

They have also had a £110m bid for Alexander Isak rejected by Newcastle, though sources have told BBC Sport the Swede remains determined to move to Anfield.

Related topics

  • Liverpool
  • Premier League
  • Crystal Palace
  • Football Transfers
  • Football

Gaza malnutrition death toll rises as Israeli attacks kill at least 67

A six-year-old Palestinian boy and a 30-year-old man have died from malnutrition resulting from Israeli-induced starvation of the besieged enclave, the Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza has said, as hunger-related deaths climb and deadly Israeli bombardment continues across the territory.

The deaths of Wissam Abu Mohsen and young Jamal Fadi al-Najjar on Tuesday came shortly after Gaza’s Health Ministry said five more people had died of famine within 24 hours, bringing the total number of starvation-related fatalities since the start of Israel’s war to 227, including more than 100 children..

The World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday urged Israel to allow it to stock medical supplies in Gaza before the military proceeds with its plan to seize Gaza City, a move that has drawn international condemnation.

“We want to stock up, and we all hear about ‘more humanitarian supplies are allowed in’, well it’s not happening yet, or it’s happening at a way too low a pace,” said Rik Peeperkorn, the WHO’s representative in the Palestinian territories.

Separately, Britain, Canada, Australia, Japan and 23 of their European allies said the humanitarian crisis in Gaza had reached “unimaginable levels”.

“Famine is unfolding before our eyes. Urgent action is needed now to halt and reverse starvation,” the foreign ministers of the countries said in a joint statement published by Britain. “We call on the government of Israel to provide authorisation for all international NGO aid shipments and to unblock essential humanitarian actors from operating.”

Israel attacks ‘safe zones’, rescue workers

At least 67 Palestinians have been killed since dawn on Tuesday, hospital sources in Gaza told Al Jazeera. In the last 24 hours, 31 aid seekers have died.

Al Jazeera’s Hind Khoudary, reporting from Deir el-Balah in central Gaza, said Israeli forces struck multiple areas, including al-Mawasi, designated by Israel as a “safe zone”.

“A family of five have been killed in their makeshift shelter there earlier this morning. There have also been concentrated attacks on Gaza City, where residential homes have been targeted,” she said.

“A family of four, the al-Nadeem family, has been targeted and a young girl has been rescued, but there are many people trapped under the rubble.”

Rescue operations have also come under fire. Palestinian Civil Defence said one of its members, Abdul Rahman Maher Abu Latifa, was killed in an Israeli strike on his tent in al-Mawasi. Both his parents were also killed. The service said 137 of its members have been killed since the war began.

Other strikes killed three members of the al-Hasari family in Gaza City, while one member of the al-Salmi family also died. Twenty more people remain trapped under rubble.

Footage verified by Al Jazeera showed the aftermath of an Israeli attack on central Gaza City, with a stream of blood running down the street as people carried a wounded man to a vehicle.

Civil Defence spokesperson Mahmoud Basal said Israeli bombardment of Gaza City has intensified for three consecutive days, using “all types of weapons … bombs, drones and also highly explosive munitions that cause massive destruction to civilian homes”.

Israel ‘blocking’ food items

Israel is also blocking the entry of more than 430 food items into Gaza, despite allowing some aid trucks through last month under international pressure, Gaza’s Government Media Office said on Tuesday.

In a statement, it said banned items include “frozen meat of all kinds, frozen fish, cheese, dairy products, frozen vegetables, and fruits”, along with “hundreds of other items needed by the starving and sick”.

It added that Israel had directly targeted food sources, by not just preventing aid, but deliberately bombing 44 food banks, killing dozens of workers in them, and targeting “57 food distribution centres with bombardment”.

Earlier, the Office accused Israel’s Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT), the military body reporting on aid deliveries into the enclave, of “a pathetic attempt to cover up an internationally documented crime, the systematic starvation of the population of the Gaza Strip”.

This comes a day after Israel targeted and killed a team of Al Jazeera journalists in Gaza City – an attack that has sparked protests in countries across the world.

Israel is also facing condemnation for its plans to seize of Gaza City and forcibly displace nearly one million Palestinians. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has not given a clear timetable for this, saying on Sunday that it would happen “fairly quickly”.

Palestine’s Foreign Ministry has blamed the international community for inaction over “the genocide of our people” in Gaza, urging global powers to uphold their moral, legal and political obligations.

“Despite the international consensus … on the need to implement international humanitarian law and human rights, the occupying power [Israel] continues to expand its aggression and deepen its use of starvation, thirst, and denial of medical treatment as weapons in the war,” it said in a statement on X.

South Korea awaits ruling on bid to arrest former first lady

South Korea’s former first lady, Kim Keon-hee, has appeared in court for a five-hour hearing, but the judge has yet to issue a ruling on a prosecution request for a warrant to arrest her on accusations of interfering with an investigation.

If detained, she would be South Korea’s only former first lady to be arrested, joining her husband, former President Yoon Suk-yeol, in jail as he faces trial, following his removal in April, over a botched bid to impose martial law in December.

Kim, wearing a black suit, bowed as she arrived on Tuesday, but did not answer reporters’ questions or make a statement.

After the hearing ended, she left to await the ruling at a detention centre in Seoul, the capital, in line with customary practice.

The charges against her, punishable by years in prison, range from stock fraud to bribery and illegal influence peddling that have implicated business owners, religious figures and a political power broker.

She has been accused of breaking the law over an incident in which she wore a luxury Van Cleef pendant reportedly worth more than 60 million won ($43,000) while attending a NATO summit with her husband in 2022.

The item was not listed in the couple’s financial disclosure as required by law, according to the charge.

Kim is also accused of receiving two Chanel bags together valued at 20 million won ($14,500) and a diamond necklace from a religious group as a bribe in return for influence favourable to its business interests.

Kim denies accusations

The prosecution sought Kim’s arrest because of the risk of her destroying evidence and interfering with the investigation, a spokesperson for the special prosecutor’s team told a news briefing after Tuesday’s hearing.

The spokesperson, Oh Jeong-hee, said Kim had told prosecutors the pendant she wore was a fake bought 20 years ago in Hong Kong.

The prosecution said it was genuine, however, and given by a domestic construction company for Kim to wear at the summit, Oh said.

Kim’s lawyers did not immediately comment on Tuesday, but they have previously denied the accusations against her and dismissed as groundless speculation news reports about some of the gifts she allegedly received.

The court is expected to announce its decision late on Tuesday or overnight, media said, based on the timing of the decision to arrest Yoon.

Yoon is on trial on charges of insurrection, which could result in life imprisonment or even the death penalty.