Soul legend Carl Carlton has died. His family confirmed the music icon died aged 72. He was best known for his hit tracks She’s a Bad Mama Jama and Everlasting Love.
His son shared the sad news on social media. Carlton Hudgens II took to Facebook on Sunday to share a sad statement. ‘He wrote: “RIP Dad, Legend Carl Carlton, singer of She’s a Bad Mama Jama.”
He also shared a picture of the late funk and R&B singer. He continued: “Long hard fight in life and you will be missed.”
His death comes six years after he suffered a stroke. The Detroit-born soul legend went on to suffer ongoing health complications.
Carl Carlton has died aged 72 ( Redferns)
His fans paid their respects with messages on social media. Taking to Twitter/X one user shared a video of the star singing and simply wrote: “RIP Carl Carlton,” alongside a number of emojis.
Another also shared his tune and said: “This song is one of the most funkiest songs ever written and recorded… RIP Carl Carlton. She’s a Bad Mama Jama (She’s Built, She’s Stacked)”
Others took to Instagram to share similar messages. Commenting on his video, one user wrote: “Rest in peace,” with a white dove emoji. “I absolutely love this song.”
And funk group Confunkshun released a tribute on Facebook. They wrote: “With heavy hearts, we mourn the passing of the legendary Carl Carlton.
“His voice, talent, and contributions to soul and R&B music will forever be a part of our lives and the soundtrack of so many memories. Our deepest condolences to his family, friends, and fans around the world. Rest in power, Carl. Your legacy lives on.”
Carl Carlton circa 1970 ( Michael Ochs Archives)
The singer initially performed as ‘Little’ Carl Carlton and signed to Lando Records. He later joined Back Beat Records. He dropped his nickname in the early 1970s following the success of his song I Can Feel It in the Billboard Soul Singles chart.
But it was his hit She’s a Bad Mama Jama that saw his biggest success. He earned a Grammy nomination for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance and has surpassed 100 million streams on Spotify.
Other tunes he released included I Think of How I Love He and “I Love True Love. He also gained success with the likes of So What and Don’t You Need a Boy Like Me.
His last released record, God Is Good, was released in 2010.
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World number one Aryna Sabalenka has been voted the Women’s Tennis Association player of the year for a second successive season.
The 27-year-old won four titles – the most on tour – including retaining the US Open against Amanda Anisimova in September to claim her fourth Grand Slam singles triumph.
Across the season Sabalenka played in a tour-best nine finals, with losses to Madison Keys in the Australian Open final in January and Coco Gauff in June’s French Open final.
The Belarusian also won the Brisbane International in January, the Miami Open in March and the Madrid Open in May, and spent the entire year as world number one, finishing 2025 top of the rankings for a second successive year.
In July, she became the first player to top 12,000 WTA ranking points since Serena Williams in 2015.
Sabalenka finished the season with a 63-12 win-loss record, and picked up a record £11m in prize money.
She received almost 80% of the votes cast by international tennis media.
On 28 December, she will face 2022 Wimbledon runner-up Nick Kyrgios in a Battle of the Sexes-style exhibition match in a bid to “help bring women’s tennis to a higher level”.
Switzerland’s Belinda Bencic, 28, has been voted comeback player of the year after taking a 13-month break following the birth of her first child and returning to the sport at the start of this year.
Canadian 19-year-old Victoria Mboko picked up newcomer of the year after starting the season ranked outside the world’s top 300 and climbing to world number 18.
Katerina Siniakova and Taylor Townsend were voted doubles team of the year after winning their second Grand Slam title together, while Anisimova was named most improved player of the year after reaching five finals.
World number one Aryna Sabalenka has been voted the Women’s Tennis Association player of the year for a second successive season.
The 27-year-old won four titles – the most on tour – including retaining the US Open against Amanda Anisimova in September to claim her fourth Grand Slam singles triumph.
Across the season Sabalenka played in a tour-best nine finals, with losses to Madison Keys in the Australian Open final in January and Coco Gauff in June’s French Open final.
The Belarusian also won the Brisbane International in January, the Miami Open in March and the Madrid Open in May, and spent the entire year as world number one, finishing 2025 top of the rankings for a second successive year.
In July, she became the first player to top 12,000 WTA ranking points since Serena Williams in 2015.
Sabalenka finished the season with a 63-12 win-loss record, and picked up a record £11m in prize money.
She received almost 80% of the votes cast by international tennis media.
On 28 December, she will face 2022 Wimbledon runner-up Nick Kyrgios in a Battle of the Sexes-style exhibition match in a bid to “help bring women’s tennis to a higher level”.
Switzerland’s Belinda Bencic, 28, has been voted comeback player of the year after taking a 13-month break following the birth of her first child and returning to the sport at the start of this year.
Canadian 19-year-old Victoria Mboko picked up newcomer of the year after starting the season ranked outside the world’s top 300 and climbing to world number 18.
Katerina Siniakova and Taylor Townsend were voted doubles team of the year after winning their second Grand Slam title together, while Anisimova was named most improved player of the year after reaching five finals.
The humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip deteriorated sharply late last week during Storm Byron, which brought heavy rainfall and strong winds.
Widely circulated video on social media showed Palestinian Civil Defence teams scrabbling through the rubble of fallen buildings, trying to rescue people trapped beneath.
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But why did those homes fall? And what has the impact been on people in Gaza? Here’s what we know:
What is happening in Gaza?
Many damaged homes in Gaza collapsed during the recent storm, trapping people in their rubble.
At times, parts of buildings and walls fell onto nearby tents where displaced Palestinians were living, compounding the risks for civilians already enduring precarious conditions.
Thousands of Gaza families are sheltering in structurally compromised buildings, having lost their own homes during the war, with no safe alternatives available.
The heavy rainfall of Storm Byron turned these weakened structures into direct threats as floodwaters inundated tens of thousands of tents.
Why are these houses falling?
It’s not just the rain that caused the collapses, rather it is because two years of intense bombing during Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza have made these structures unstable.
In addition, Israel has imposed a siege on Gaza that prevents the entry of any building materials people can use to fix their homes.
Thousands of residential buildings were damaged by direct strikes, nearby bombardments and ground incursions, leaving cracks in columns and foundations, separation of load-bearing walls and partial roof collapses.
People with nowhere to go have little choice other than to shelter wherever they can, including in homes that are only partially standing.
Heavy rain exacerbates the damage. Water seeps into cracks, weakening foundations and columns while saturated soil erodes beneath buildings, increasing the risk of sudden collapses.
Overcrowding inside damaged homes further stresses weakened structures as multiple families are often forced to live together in a single house or floor.
In many cases, displaced residents pitch tents next to or even on top of the ruins of damaged buildings, exposing themselves to falling walls and concrete blocks during storms.
Displaced people often cannot leave, even when they know the risks. Often, they have no other option, or they see damaged homes as better shelter than deteriorating tents.
In late September, Gaza’s Government Media Office estimated that 93 percent of tents (about 125,000 out of 135,000) were no longer suitable for habitation.
How many people have been hurt or killed by these collapsing homes?
The recent storm killed 11 Palestinians in less than 24 hours and caused widespread structural damage.
According to the Government Media Office, 13 homes collapsed and 27,000 tents were flooded or swept away.
Civil Defence and Ministry of Health sources said the 11 victims were found dead under rubble in collapsed homes or in nearby tents. Another six were injured.
Fatalities included children, women and elderly people, and officials confirmed a baby girl died from extreme cold. Incidents were reported in Gaza City, northern Gaza, and central and southern areas of the Gaza Strip.
Collapses occurred in Gaza City’s Nassr neighbourhood, Shati refugee camp and Tal al-Hawa neighbourhood.
One man was killed when a wall collapsed in the Shati camp.
During the storm, the Civil Defence received more than 2,500 distress calls from displaced people.
Authorities warned that the death toll is likely to rise as further low-pressure systems and rainfall continue to cause homes to collapse.
Has there been any help for these impacted people?
Because of the conditions imposed by Israel, the emergency response has been limited.
Civil Defence teams struggled to evacuate those trapped under rubble because they face a shortage of heavy machinery, rescue equipment and fuel as well as flooded roads.
The Civil Defence has urged residents to get out of damaged homes during the storms.
Authorities stressed that the continuation of Israel’s blockade increases the likelihood of similar incidents during future storms.
Authorities have not been able to provide alternative shelters or habitable tents for unhoused families.
In some areas, aid has been limited to small distributions of blankets and basic relief items that are insufficient to meet the needs of Palestinians facing falling temperatures and widespread infrastructure damage.
Municipalities have been unable to carry out preventive drainage or repair work due to the destroyed infrastructure and a lack of resources, so the people of Gaza remain vulnerable to future storms.
Is there anything that people in Gaza can do to stay safe?
Unfortunately, options are extremely limited or nonexistent.
Thousands of people are unable to relocate due to the absence of safe housing or shelters.
There are also restrictions on movement imposed by the “yellow line” demarcating the portion of Gaza under Israeli army control. People in at-risk areas cannot move to safer locations.
On top of that, people lack tools for structural reinforcement, waterproofing or heating.
People can take only minimal measures, such as moving children to more stable areas, using blankets or raising their belongings off the ground, but these do not prevent collapses or flooding.
UNRWA, the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees, said the suffering could be reduced if humanitarian aid were allowed to enter Gaza without obstacles.
It said flooded streets and soaked tents are worsening already dire living conditions and increasing health risks.
Far-right candidate Jose Antonio Kast of the Republican Party – who claims to be inspired by US President Donald Trump – has won Chile’s presidential run-off election, marking a major shift in the Latin American nation’s political landscape.
Kast, who campaigned on a promise to expel undocumented migrants and crack down on crime, secured 58 percent of the votes against left-wing candidate Jeannette Jara, who won 42 percent, in one of the most polarised elections in recent memory. In the first round, Kast finished second to Jara. But he went on to dominate the December run-off with strong support from across the right wing.
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“Chile needs order – order in the streets, in the state, in the priorities that have been lost,” the 59-year-old conservative hardliner, who will take office on March 11, 2026, told supporters in his victory speech.
His victory is widely seen outside Chile as part of a broader shift to right-wing politics in Latin America, with conservative leaders winning elections in Ecuador and Bolivia in recent months.
Who is Jose Antonio Kast?
Kast has run for president multiple times. He lost to incumbent President Gabriel Boric in 2021 elections, receiving 44 percent of the vote. In the 2017 elections, he contested as an independent candidate, winning some eight percent of the votes.
After serving for more than 10 years as a congressman from the centre-right Independent Democratic Union (UDI), he stepped down in 2016. Then, in 2019, the 59-year-old leader founded the Republican Party, a more hard-line political entity, appealing to voters disillusioned with mounting insecurity and economic stagnation.
He trained as a lawyer but later entered politics, becoming a councilman for the city of Buin in 1996.
Kast was born in 1966 in Santiago, the capital city, to German immigrants with links to Nazis.
His father was a member of the Nazi Party in Bavaria before emigrating to Chile after World War II. However, the president-elect has claimed his father was a forced Nazi conscript.
Kast’s older brother Miguel was a central bank president and a government minister in the early 1980s during the rule of General Augusto Pinochet. Under his 17-year dictatorship, thousands of people were killed, forcibly disappeared and tortured.
The president-elect is an admirer of Pinochet.
Kast is married to Maria Pia Adriasola, a lawyer, with whom he has nine children.
What does he stand for?
A staunch Catholic, Kast opposes abortion and same-sex marriage. He has stated in the past that he would revoke the country’s limited abortion rights and prohibit the sale of the morning-after pill.
Consuelo Thiers, a lecturer at the University of Edinburgh in the United Kingdom, said Kast will be the most right-wing president since Pinochet.
“Kast is the first president since the end of the dictatorship to have openly supported Pinochet,” she told Al Jazeera.
“[Former President Sebastian] Pinera, the last right-wing president, voted against Pinochet in the 1988 referendum and also embraced some progressive policies, such as the legalisation of same-sex marriage,” she added.
By contrast, Kast supports extremely conservative positions, Thiers said, adding that he was also in favour of granting freedom to individuals convicted of human rights violations committed during Pinochet’s rule.
Jenny Pribble, professor of political science and global studies at the University of Richmond, said Kast has frequently pointed to El Salvador as a model for his tougher laws on crime policies.
“He regularly voiced support for Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele’s ‘mano dura’ [Iron-fist] crackdown on gang violence, arguing that Chile needs ‘more Bukele’,” Pribble told Al Jazeera.
“It remains to be seen if Kast could or would pursue such an approach, but if Chile follows the Salvadoran model, it would constitute significant democratic backsliding.”
What are his key policies?
Kast campaigned on public safety, promising to take an iron-fisted approach to crime in Chile – despite the country being one of the safer nations in Latin America.
He has pledged to send the military to high-crime areas, and has promised to build more prisons. An IPSOS poll of Chilean voters in October showed 63 percent of respondents said security was a top issue for them.
The president-elect also takes a tough approach to migration. He has proposed building a police force inspired by the United States’ agency, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which has carried out a number of “military-style” raids on migrant communities and workplaces in the US this year in search of undocumented people, many of whom have been detained for deportation.
ICE is responsible for managing the US federal immigration system and has come under increased criticism for its conduct towards immigrants across the country, including those residing there legally.
Supporters of Kast celebrate following the presidential run-off election [Marcelo Hernandez/Getty Images]
Similar to US President Donald Trump, Kast has proposed building infrastructure around the country’s northern border to stop people from coming in, and has vowed to deport hundreds of thousands of undocumented migrants.
Analyst Patricio Navia said tackling the issue of undocumented migrants will be his “biggest challenge”.
“According to estimations, there might be up to 400,000 undocumented immigrants,” Navia, a professor at New York University, told Al Jazeera.
“It will be impossible to expel all of them from the country,” he added, but noted that in recent weeks, Kast has “walked back some of his harsher statements”.
“I think he will try to find a balance between his harsh campaign promises and the reality that many of those immigrants contribute to the national economy and are now an integral part of Chilean society,” Navia added.
Kast has also threatened to impose a state of siege in the Araucania region of Chile in order to expel armed Indigenous groups. The measure he is proposing would give the military sweeping powers, including warrantless searches and arrests, and would suspend key civil rights.
How have other countries responded to Kast’s win?
Right-wing allies in the region are celebrating Kast’s victory as part of a broader conservative resurgence across Latin America.
Argentina’s libertarian President Javier Milei was among the first to congratulate him. “Enormous joy at the overwhelming victory of my friend José Antonio Kast,” he posted on X.
Ecuador’s right-wing President Daniel Noboa, meanwhile, said that “a new era is beginning for Chile and for the region”.
Congratulations to Chilean President-Elect @JoseAntonioKast on his victory. The United States looks forward to partnering with his administration to strengthen regional security and revitalize our trade relationship.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said his country “looks forward to partnering with his administration to strengthen regional security and revitalise our trade relationship”.
The Foreign Ministry of Spain’s leftist government said it will look to “continue strengthening the friendship between our peoples and the strategic relationship between our two countries”.
What does Kast’s win mean for regional politics?
Chile’s election result is part of a wider regional shift towards conservative and, in some cases, far-right leadership, according to Edinburgh University’s Thiers.
“These leaders have largely come to power on similar promises, particularly the pledge to repair economies in severe distress, as in Argentina, and to improve security in a region where organised crime is rapidly expanding,” she said.
“Many people see in these candidates the promise of a drastic change that could significantly improve their lives,” Thiers added, noting it also reflects a global trend in which incumbents find it “increasingly difficult” to win re-election, “as voters punish them by choosing opposition figures who promise something radically different”.
Meanwhile, academic Navia described recent right-wing victories as “just alternation in power”.
“I would not suggest that the countries are becoming more conservative or illiberal,” he said.
Rachael Carpani shared a post detailing her health struggles before her sudden death, which her parents described as a ‘long battle with a chronic illness’
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Rachael Carpani shared a number of posts detailing medical issues in recent years (Image: rachcarpani/Instagram)
Rachael Carpani’s family have announced the beloved actress has passed away after battling ill health for a long while. Rachael, known for her roles in Aussie soap Home and Away as well as TV show McLeod’s Daughters, passed away last week aged just 45, it was announced today. She shared a tragic social media post detailing her struggles before her sudden death on December 7.
She died after “a long battle with a chronic illness”, according to her heartbroken parents, who released a statement saying she slipped away “unexpectedly but peacefully” earlier this month. Tributes have flooded in since this morning’s statement.
No further details have been given as her grieving family asked for privacy, but the star had always been open about her health set-backs. Back in 2021, she was rushed to hospital after experiencing acute abdominal pain. The issues caused to even days in an intensive care unit before she was taken in for surgery.
“I was admitted to emergency with acute abdominal pain just over a week ago and spent a few days in the ICU,” she wrote weeks later. “Was then moved to the surgical ward,” she added before telling fans: “listen to what your body is trying to tell you”.
She said the pain had existed for some time before the situation severely worsened. Rachael added: “Basically it was a case of me not listening to my body and the pain [I tend to work through pain!] and allowing myself to get quite ill.”
In an Instagram post from last year, the actress shared images of herself taking part in a photoshoot following more surgery for an undisclosed issue. Alongside the collection she explained: “My first time back in front of a camera for a photoshoot two days ago. No hospital gown, no awesome surgery socks ….[have to admit I miss the comfort].”
Two years ago, she underwent surgery on her eyes after having a phakic intraocular lense replacement. Again keeping fans updated, she wrote on social media: “After a life with horrific short-sightedness, wearing glasses from the age of 5, I bit the bullet and got ‘eyeball’ surgery.”
Her parents confirmed her sudden passing in a heartbreaking social media statement today. It read: “It is with great sadness that Tony and Gael Carpani announce that their beautiful daughter, beloved Australian actress Rachael Carpani, unexpectedly but peacefully passed away after a long battle with chronic illness.”
The star had a recurring role on Home and Away, playing Claudia Salini, but was perhaps better known for appearing in the acclaimed drama series McLeod’s Daughters from 2001 until 2009, playing Jodi Fountain. She also appeared in NCIS: Los Angeles. Rachael also appeared in a number of films, including The Very Excellent Mr Dundee and Hating Alison Ashley.
Her co-star, Bridie Carter, paid tribute on social media with a lengthy statement. Carter wrote: “In love and respect, for our beautiful Rach, in prayer and with the deepest sorrow and profound sympathy for the Carpani family. Rest In Peace our beautiful girl….the “baby” of our [ McLeod’s Daughters] family. We love you, we cherish you.”
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Carted added: “This is the wrong order of things. We are better people for having the privilege of sharing time with you. We know Rach will not only be missed immeasurably by her family, by us, but she is loved and will be missed by you all, around the world. We love you Carpani.
“We miss you Rach. May your blessed spirit, so vivid, so full of life, laughter, joy, generosity, unique talent, energy, fervour, intelligence, resilience, courage and great humour, and a gentle humility, may you rest in peace.”