Suarez sorry for spitting at opposition coach

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Inter Miami forward Luis Suarez has apologised for his behaviour after spitting at a member of the Seattle Sounders’ coaching staff following his side’s 3-0 Leagues Cup final defeat.

“It was a moment of great tension and frustration, where right after the match things happened that shouldn’t have happened, but that doesn’t justify the reaction I had,” he wrote on Instagram.

“I was wrong and I sincerely regret it.”

The incident happened shortly after the full-time whistle, following a melee involving both sets of players and sparked by the Uruguayan.

Moments later, the 38-year-old was involved in an altercation with a Sounders staff member and was held back by team-mate Oscar Ustari before appearing to spit in the coach’s direction.

“I feel bad about what happened, and I didn’t want to miss the opportunity to acknowledge it and apologise to everyone who felt hurt by what I did,” added Suarez.

Speculation has circulated about the extent of any punishment he may face but Suarez added he wants to aid Inter Miami’s push to make the MLS Cup play-offs.

“We know there’s still a lot of the season ahead, and we’re going to work together to achieve the successes that this club and all of its fans deserve,” he wrote.

Suarez is no stranger to controversy.

The former Barcelona and Atletico Madrid striker has been involved in several controversial incidents during his career.

In 2011 when at Liverpool, Suarez was given an eight-match ban after being found guilty of racially abusing Manchester United full-back Patrice Evra.

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South Korea trials 4-day weeks and half-days for its stressed-out workers

Go Kyoung-min, a nurse at Severance Hospital in Seoul, discovered a new sense of balance in her life in the first half of this year.

Go frequently felt bad about not having enough time with her children because of work because she was the mother of twin daughters born in 2021.

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However, Go was able to spend more time with her family, attend daycares she had previously missed, and rely less on her in-laws for childcare after choosing the four-day workweek that her employer offered.

Severance is the first hospital in South Korea to offer a four-day workweek to its staff in an effort to improve their work-life balance.

Some hospital employees are permitted to take three days off per week in exchange for a 10% salary reduction under the program, which was introduced in 2023 following a labor-management agreement.

Staff members alternate between six-month rotations and return to a five-day week.

In a report about the trial released last month, the Korea Worker Institute-Union Center claimed that the program appeared to have improved nurses’ health and wellbeing, improved the quality of medical services, increased organizational efficiency, and reduced turnover rates.

According to the report, there was a decrease in turnover among participating nurses who had no more than three years of experience, from 19.5% to 7%.

During the trial, the average sick leave for employees decreased by one day, while the average sick leave for wards increased by 0.7 days on five-day weeks.

Go claimed that having a four-day workweek helped her be more focused and compassionate with her patients as well as improving her work-life balance.

“I work in a critical situation on the pancreatobiliary ward.” The workload is thus increased. I think I can spend more time listening to patients and giving them more responsibility, she said, according to Al Jazeera.

When their grandparents picked them up from daycare, my children were content, they used to think they were lucky. But they anticipated my presence once more when I did it.

On August 11, 2025, Go Kyoung-min (left) discusses the results of a pilot work-day workweek at the Severance Hospital in Seoul, South Korea. [Courtesy of the Severance Hospital Labour Union.

In a nation known for its long working hours, where being late is frequently seen as a sign of good behavior, Go’s experience is unusual.

According to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), South Korean workers worked an average of 1, 865 hours in 2024, which is higher than the OECD’s 1, 736 hours average.

They put in 248 more hours than their Japanese neighbors, who were in the opposite situation.

Shorter work hours are becoming more common in the private sector as longer workdays become a commonplace.

For the past several years, some businesses, particularly IT companies and startups, have been trying four-day or four-and-a-half-day workweeks.

Samsung Electronics, SK Group, and Kakao, one of South Korea’s largest conglomerates, have started programs that offer employees regular breaks of a full or half-day.

Lee Jae-ho, 42, a father of two who works for Kakao VX, a sports and health technology company, has benefited from one of these programs, which gives him one free day off each month and places him on rest for an additional 1.5 hours.

According to Lee, having fewer days off does not necessarily mean less efficiency.

According to Lee, “When I have a Friday off or work shorter hours, I adjust my schedule in advance,” reducing my workdays’ productivity.

I can recharge, have dinner with my family, and work on my growth and interests.

Since Lee Jae-myung’s victory in June as president of South Korea, the push to reform the workplace has gained momentum.

By 2030, Lee pledged to introduce a four-and-a-half day workweek and reduce working hours below the OECD average during his campaign.

Lee reiterated at a press conference in July that working fewer hours and reducing productivity was unsustainable.

According to Lee, “we have fought more based on quality than quantity.”

Lee
On July 3, 2025, South Korean President Lee Jae-myung delivers a speech at a press conference at the Blue House in Seoul.

After previously offering employees every other Friday off, Cafe24, South Korea’s top e-commerce solution provider, started a full four-day workweek in July. The company also kept pay and overall hours.

The first pilot project of a four-and-a-half-day workweek without wage reductions among local governments was launched in Gyeonggi Province in June, which is located close to Seoul. It will continue until 2027.

By providing financial assistance to cover the increased labor costs, the program, which will run until 2027, encourages small and medium-sized businesses and public institutions in the province to experiment with shorter working hours.

Concerned about the proposed working week reduction, some experts and business leaders have voiced their concerns.

According to Kwon Young-sik, director of human resources at Yonsei University Health System, the parent organization of Severance, permanently switching to a four-day workweek would cost roughly 100 million won ($720) per ward in labor costs alone.

At a recent event where the labor union of Severance presented the results of the pilot program, Kwon claimed that “over the past three years, about 1.2 billion won have been spent on labor costs.”

Kwon Young-sik
On August 11, 2025, Kwon Young-sik addresses an event announcing the results of a pilot workweek that spans two days at Severance Hospital in Seoul, South Korea. [Photo courtesy of the Severance Hospital Labour Union.

For a four-day workweek to be sustainable, Severance’s general director Lee Kang-young stated at the same time that institutional and financial support would be “absolutely necessary.”

If a four-and-a-half-day workweek became the norm, Park Nam-gyoo, a professor of business at Seoul National University, said he would be concerned about productivity and wage disparities.

South Korea’s economy depends on exports. If it doesn’t manage to stay competitive globally, Park said. “It faces an uncertain future.”

He argued that the nation’s slow economy, low birthrate, and challenges to global competitiveness must all be taken into account.

However, Go and Lee’s employees want others to experience the advantages they have.

“There were no drawbacks at all,” he declared. I feel bad for my colleagues who couldn’t participate because it was a pilot program, which meant there were only a few people in my situation. Beyond that, Go added, “it ran smoothly without any operational issues.”

Financial rules have ‘killed’ Villa – Konsa

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Ezri Konsa, the club’s defender, claims financial constraints “killed” the Aston Villa team during the summer transfer window.

The only significant permanent move for Villa was made in early August when they signed Nice striker Evann Guessand for $ 26 million and $ 4 million in add-ons.

After that, they only added Unai Emery to their squad on transfer deadline day, after selling academy player Jacob Ramsey to Newcastle United for $ 40 million.

As they navigated spending restrictions, they signed free agents Victor Lindelof and Harvey Elliott of Liverpool, as well as Jadon Sancho of Manchester United and Jadon Sancho of Liverpool.

If Villa didn’t have a positive transfer balance by the end of the summer transfer window, they could have been fined by Uefa in July for breaking the financial rules of the European governing body.

In addition, the Birmingham club must adhere to the PSR, which states that clubs cannot report losses of more than £105m over a three-year reporting cycle.

Villa finished sixth in the Premier League last year, trailing only Newcastle United in goal difference, which would have prevented them from clinching fifth place and Champions League qualification.

Villa spent £57.5 million and recouped £47 million before running out with a £10.5 million surplus, according to FootballTransfers.com, making them the third-lowest investment in the top flight this summer.

Konsa said, “We’re going to have to deal with what we have now.”

“That transfer deadline day was definitely not something I watched.” It’s been difficult, especially for us.

I didn’t consider signing players until transfer deadline day because I knew it would be challenging for us.

“I went to Villa’s social media accounts around eight o’clock to check out what had happened. I saw that three players with Premier League experience and excellent performances were signed.

That’s what we needed, in my opinion.

In their first three games this season, Villa have only managed one point, which was earned in a goalless draw against Newcastle.

Konsa is optimistic that after the international break, they can turn around their fortunes.

I think our squad is excellent, and I think so. He said, “I think our manager is good.

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Financial rules have ‘killed’ Villa – Konsa

Images courtesy of Getty

Ezri Konsa, the club’s defender, claims financial constraints “killed” the Aston Villa team during the summer transfer window.

The only significant permanent move for Villa was made in early August when they signed Nice striker Evann Guessand for $ 26 million and $ 4 million in add-ons.

After that, they only added Unai Emery to their squad on transfer deadline day, after selling academy player Jacob Ramsey to Newcastle United for $ 40 million.

As they navigated spending restrictions, they signed free agents Victor Lindelof and Harvey Elliott of Liverpool, as well as Jadon Sancho of Manchester United and Jadon Sancho of Liverpool.

If Villa didn’t have a positive transfer balance by the end of the summer transfer window, they could have been fined by Uefa in July for breaking the financial rules of the European governing body.

In addition, the Birmingham club must adhere to the PSR, which states that clubs cannot report losses of more than £105m over a three-year reporting cycle.

Villa finished sixth in the Premier League last year, trailing only Newcastle United in goal difference, which would have prevented them from clinching fifth place and Champions League qualification.

Villa spent £57.5 million and recouped £47 million before running out with a £10.5 million surplus, according to FootballTransfers.com, making them the third-lowest investment in the top flight this summer.

Konsa said, “We’re going to have to deal with what we have now.”

“That transfer deadline day was definitely not something I watched.” It’s been difficult, especially for us.

I didn’t consider signing players until transfer deadline day because I knew it would be challenging for us.

“I went to Villa’s social media accounts around eight o’clock to check out what had happened. I saw that three players with Premier League experience and excellent performances were signed.

That’s what we needed, in my opinion.

In their first three games this season, Villa have only managed one point, which was earned in a goalless draw against Newcastle.

Konsa is optimistic that after the international break, they can turn around their fortunes.

I think our squad is excellent, and I think so. He said, “I think our manager is good.

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  • Aston Villa
  • Premier League
  • Football

‘City of fear’: Palestinians trapped as Israel intensifies Gaza City attack

Gaza City has been under relentless bombardment for 23 months, and the Israeli military’s indiscriminate bombing of it has reduced entire neighborhoods to rubble, forcing residents to flee in fear.

An entire family of five, including three children, were killed on Thursday in an attack on a tent in the Tal al-Hawa neighborhood as part of Israel’s round-the-clock assault on what UNICEF has dubbed the “city of fear.”

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Palestinians were seen clearing up scattered belongings, including two blood-stained pink slippers that lay among the debris, on video from the attack.

When we heard the sound of a bomb, my children and I were sleeping in the tent. My four children started screaming when shrapnel fell on us, according to Israa al-Basous, an AFP news agency.

As a result of the military’s plan to remove nearly one million people from the enclave’s largest urban hub, attacks were reported in the neighborhoods of City’s Zeitoun, Sabra, Tuffah, Nassr, and Shujayea.

According to Mahmoud Basal, the civil emergency service spokesperson for the region, heavy bombardment in the Tuffah neighborhood left at least eight people dead and dozens more injured.

At least two people were killed in Shujayea when an Israeli bomb struck a residential building, according to a source in charge of the ambulance. Additionally, three bodies were discovered dead in a destroyed home belonging to the al-Ghaf family in Zeitoun.

According to Hani Mahmoud, a journalist for Al Jazeera from Gaza City, “they’re moving from one area that is less dangerous, but still within the reach of Israeli military fire, the air strikes, and bombardment.”

Many of the displaced were moving in the hope of finding safety for a few days, according to Mahmoud, only to find themselves re-displaced once more.

Many had fled to the city’s Sheikh Radwan neighborhood, but tanks started to erupt into the area northwest of the city center, igniting fires in tent camps and destroying homes.

Hospitals were overflowing with patients. The morgue’s floor at al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City was filled with bodies draped in white shrouds.

As her son’s body lay on a stretcher outside, a woman stroked his head.

Son, who are you leaving me to? Why? Why”? she shed a tear.

Nearly one million people were ensnared in the “city of fear, flight, and funerals,” according to Tess Ingram, UNICEF’s communication manager for the Middle East and North Africa.

On Thursday in Gaza City, 44 people were killed overall.

75 people were killed in the town.

Brigadier General Effie Defrin, a spokesman for the Israeli military, reported that troops now control 40% of the city as terrified residents scurried to find shelter from the bombs.

He claimed that the operation would “continue to grow and grow” over the coming weeks.

The Zeitoun neighborhood’s satellite images revealed the “heavy presence” of more than 52 Israeli army vehicles, according to Al Jazeera’s Sanad fact-checking agency.

The images, which date from August 25 and September 1, show a blatant pattern of forced displacement of residents west of Gaza City, particularly along al-Rashid Street and the beach.

Palestinians who have fled Gaza City over the past few months have discovered impoverished conditions further south, where people’s mass movements have increased the number of tent camps and raised the price of basic goods.

The arrival of more people from the north has worsened their situation, according to Shorouk Abu Eid, a pregnant woman from Gaza City who was displaced to Khan Younis four months ago.

She told The Associated Press news agency, “There is no peace of mind, no privacy.”

In any case, wherever they go, Palestinians who are escaping are most likely to find death and destruction.

In addition to killing three children, Israel bombed the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza on Thursday, killing seven people.

And seven people were killed and more injured when Israeli forces fired at a group of people looking for aid near a distribution point in southern Rafah.

Since dawn, Israeli ground and air attacks have claimed 75 lives across the enclave.

US denies that Israel has been violated by France and others.

American Secretary of State Marco Rubio pressed for recognition of a Palestinian state to blame for Israel’s violations of the occupied West Bank as diplomatic efforts to put an end to the Gaza war sputtered.

In the midst of Israel’s terror-related campaign in Gaza, the annexation drive has been gaining steam. Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, a far-right Israeli, called for the annexation of the majority of the territory this week.

When a reporter asked about the annexation drive, Rubio effectively attributed Rubio to France and other nations that are planning to declare their support for a Palestinian state at the upcoming UN General Assembly meeting in New York this month.

We informed all of these nations, and we did. We warned that if you did this recognition work, which is all fake and not even real, you would end up in significant problems,” Rubio said on Thursday.

On Thursday, the US added Al-Haq, the Palestinian Center for Human Rights, and Al Mezan Center for Human Rights to its list of well-known Palestinian rights organizations. Without Israel’s permission, the rights groups were targeted, according to Rubio, because they “directly engaged in efforts by the International Criminal Court [ICC] to investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute Israeli nationals.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former defense minister Yoav Gallant were both detained by the ICC for war crimes last year.

France was also alleged to be in contact with Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, who claimed that Paris would not allow a visit from French President Emmanuel Macron if Paris continued to engage in “efforts that harm Israel’s interests.”

Gogglebox shake-up as five new families join Channel 4 show and one couple departs

What will it mean for the regular viewers when the Channel 4 show returns tomorrow night for series 26? There will be many new faces staring at the screen.

A 30-year-old married couple named Andrew and Alfie are forming Gogglebox.

Five new families will join the regulars for the new series of Gogglebox from their sofas after just one pair of families were fired.

Earlier this summer, it emerged that Scottish couple Roisin Kelly and Joe Kyle were leaving the show after producers decided not to invite them back for the 26th run, which starts on Channel 4 tomorrow.

Two brand-new Scottish duos, Jake, 27, and Calum, 31, from Glasgow, as well as Rosie, 68, and Susie, 70, from Edinburgh, are now among the incoming groups of telly watchers.

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The Gordon family
The Gordon family from Surrey is one of the newcomers.

Sara, 87, from Yorkshire, who will watch the box alongside her daughter-in-law Lara, 58, will also be the show’s oldest contributor.

The Gordons from Surrey, along with their daughter Chee, 25, and married couple Andrew, 62, and Alfie, 32, both from the Cotswolds, make up their other two families.

The long-running program, which is still one of Channel 4’s best-loved titles after 13 years on air, was “injecting a little freshness,” according to an insider.

But the injection of new faces could cause stress for some of the Gogglebox regulars, who may feel they are now in danger of being pushed out in the coming months if the new arrivals prove popular.

Jake and Calum
One of the two new Scottish duos hired to replace retiring pair Joe and Roisin is Glasgow-based Jake and Calum.

Starting tonight at 9pm, the series will show off the new groupings. The new households joining the Gogglebox family, according to Mike Cotton, creative director for Studio Lambert, was “a delight” along with our much-loved returning cast, and we are eager to hear their honest opinions on this week’s most talked-about TV. ‘

They will be joined by regular Goggleboxers pals Jenny and Lee, the Siddiqui family, the Malone family, Giles and Mary’s married couple, Ellie and Izzi’s sisters, the Welsh couple David and Shirley, the Plummer brothers, Amira and Amani, Abbie and Georgia, Sue and Steve’s friends, Simon and Jane, the married couple Ronnie and Annie, Danielle and Daniella, and Teresa and Anita’s parents, Michael and Sally, who

In July, Joe and Roisin announced that they would not be returning for the show’s upcoming series on social media. After three and a half years of sitting on the couch, Channel 4 has decided it’s time for Joe and I to stretch our legs and haven’t asked us back for season 26. We are thereby separating from the Gogglebox family.

Jenny and Lee from Gogglebox
The newcomers will join the programme’s long-term regulars, who include pals Jenny and Lee(Image: Channel 4)

Thanking the producers, they added: “The experience has actually been so mad and we will miss watching TV with you all on Friday nights! It’s been an honour to represent Scotland as some of the first Scottish people on the show and prove we don’t actually need subtitles.”

We thank Joe and Roisin for their contributions to Gogglebox over the years, according to a spokesperson for Channel 4 who expressed their gratitude for their continued success.

Continue reading the article.

Friday, 9 p.m. – Gogglebox, Channel 4,