Gloucester-Hartpury extend perfect start to PWR season

Champions Gloucester-Hartpury continued their perfect start to the Premiership Women’s Rugby season with a 45-26 victory over Loughborough Lightning.

With the season returning after a six-week winter break, Gloucester-Hartpury made it eight straight wins and have now beaten all of their rivals this season at the first time of asking.

A Nel Metcalfe hat-trick helped put them 19-7 ahead at the break on Sunday and they extended their advantage in the second half with Kelsey Jones, Georgia Brock, England captain Zoe Stratford and Pip Hendy all crossing.

The victory leaves them five points clear of nearest rivals Saracens.

Elsewhere, Bristol Bears ended a five-game losing run with a dramatic 30-29 home win over Sale Sharks.

Sale led 22-10 at half-time but Bristol gradually cut the gap and a last-gasp penalty from Wales scrum-half Keira Bevan gave them the victory.

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Banton whacks England to victory over Sri Lanka

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Second T20 international, Pallekele

Sri Lanka 189-5 (20.0 overs): Rathnayake 40 (22); Archer 2-42, Jacks 1-24

England 173-4 (16.4 overs): Banton 54 (33), Buttler 39 (29); Pathirana 2-47

England won by six wickets runs; lead three-match series 2-0

Tom Banton whacked an unbeaten half-century as England pulled off a brilliant DLS chase to beat Sri Lanka by six wickets in the second T20 international.

The players had gone off for rain with England 57-2 off 7.2 overs – Phil Salt and Jacob Bethell the batters out – and when they returned the tourists were set a revised DLS target of 168 off 17 overs.

Jos Buttler laid the platform with a 29-ball 39 but Harry Brook truly gave England belief during a brutal and breathtaking cameo in Pallekele.

Brook spanked four sixes during a knock of 36 off 12 balls as he seized the initiative only to be caught scooping the slingy Matheesha Pathirana.

With 38 runs off 33 balls required, Banton played with calculated aggression en route to 54 not out off 33 balls to put England on the brink of victory.

The match went down to the final over but Sam Curran duly whacked Janith Liyanage for six to wrap up the win with two balls to spare.

Sri Lanka had earlier posted a competitive 189-5 after being inserted by England as Pavan Rathnayake top scored with 40 off 22 balls.

Pathum Nissanka had set the tone for the hosts as he and fellow opener Kamil Mishara hammered 35 off the first two overs of the match.

However, England’s spinners stymied the hosts attacking intent with controlled spells through the middle overs as Adil Rashid, Liam Dawson and Will Jacks all picked up a wicket apiece.

Jofra Archer claimed 2-42 but fellow seamers Jamie Overton and Curran were both expensive and wicketless.

Spin department looking solid

Encouragingly for England on the eve of a subcontinental T20 World Cup, their spin department is holding up well.

A combined 12 overs yielded three wickets for 81 runs at an economy rate of 6.75, a return that underlined their growing control and reliability.

Rashid remains the ace in the pack, capable of stifling momentum and producing breakthroughs at key moments.

The experienced leg-spinner’s googly may have been well studied by opposition batters, but it remains a potent weapon, as Sri Lanka captain Dasun Shanaka discovered when he was trapped lbw slogging to leg.

Dawson’s left-arm spin provided much-needed control through the middle overs, slowing down his speeds to left vs right handers, while Jacks continues to mature as a bowling option, and used his angles well.

Brook has plenty of options to turn to even when the pitch does not spin big.

A slight concern for England, with just under a week to go before a major tournament, was that their seam bowling did not quite hit the mark.

That caveat comes with the acknowledgement that the surface at the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium was a used one, offering little margin for error.

Nevertheless Jamie Overton struggled with his length, while Curran, fresh from an expensive hat-trick in the opening T20, surprisingly lacked conviction after conceding 14 from his first over.

Archer fared slightly better, picking up two wickets despite being targeted early on, with Nissanka launching him out of the ground in his opening over.

Archer, however, recovered well to bowl effectively at the death as Sri Lanka pushed for a total in excess of 200.

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    • 16 August 2025
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Real and England wait on Bellingham injury

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Real Madrid are waiting to discover if midfielder Jude Bellingham faces a spell out after he suffered a hamstring injury during the 2-1 win against Rayo Vallecano.

The England international, 22, was in tears as he was replaced by Brahim Diaz after pulling his left hamstring less than 10 minutes into the La Liga match at the Bernabeu.

England play friendlies against Uruguay on 27 March and Japan on 31 March before manager Thomas Tuchel names his World Cup squad in May.

Real manager Alvaro Arbeloa said he “didn’t know anything” about the severity of the injury.

“Jude was in perfect condition to play and has given everything,” he said.

“It’s a very important loss, but I have an extraordinary squad.

‘Injury could be crushing blow to World Cup chances’ – analysis

If injury rules Bellingham out of the March international break, it could be a crushing blow to his chances of making it into England’s starting XI for the World Cup opener against Croatia on 17 June.

For the past 12 months he has been locked in a battle with Aston Villa’s Morgan Rogers for a place in Tuchel’s 4-2-3-1 system.

But at the moment it would be fair to say Rogers, the Professional Footballers’ Association Young Player of the Year last season, is leading the race by some distance.

The 23-year-old was a cornerstone of the England side that achieved record-breaking success in the World Cup qualifiers. They scored 20 goals and did not concede in eight matches.

Rogers’ bid to claim pole position in time for the World Cup was aided by Bellingham’s previous spell on the sidelines, which meant he missed the September and October international breaks.

Bellingham and Rogers have had contrasting seasons. Rogers has become the talisman and focal point of a Villa side who are in the hunt for Champions League football.

Bellingham, on the other hand, has been booed by Real supporters at the Bernabeu in recent weeks, and manager Xabi Alonso was sacked this month.

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‘At Least 200’ Feared Dead In DR Congo Landslide, Says Govt


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The Democratic Republic of Congo’s government said on Sunday it feared “at least 200 dead” in a “massive” landslide that struck a militia-held mine in the country’s east.

Since its resurgence in 2021, the M23 armed group has seized vast tracts of the DRC’s resource-rich east, capturing the Rubaya mine in North Kivu province in April 2024 with Rwanda’s help.

The mine produces 15 to 30 percent of the world’s supply of coltan, a key component in the production of electronics such as laptops and mobile phones.

Thousands of artisanal miners work daily in precarious conditions in Rubaya’s pits, most equipped with simple shovels and rubber boots.

A “massive landslide likely left at least 200 dead”, the country’s communications ministry said in a statement to AFP on Sunday, expressing its “deep dismay” over the tragedy.

According to information obtained by AFP, part of a hillside in the mine collapsed on Wednesday afternoon. A second landslide struck on Thursday morning.

Rubaya sits on steep hillsides carved by deep ravines with dirt roads, often impassable during the rainy season, winding between unstable slopes.

The M23‑appointed governor of North Kivu, Eraston Bahati Musanga, who visited Rubaya on Friday, told AFP there were “at least 200 deaths”.

He said bodies had been recovered from the debris, without giving an exact number.

AFP was unable to independently verify a toll.

Phone networks have been down for several days there, and Congolese authorities and civil society groups fled the area when the M23 arrived.

Information is arriving “in dribs and drabs from motorbike couriers circulating the region”, making it difficult to establish an accurate toll, a humanitarian source told AFP.

Injured survivors have been taken to local health centres that have limited resources, another humanitarian source said.

Writing on X, Belgium’s embassy in Kinshasa expressed its “solidarity after the tragic landslides”.

READ ALSO: Landslide Hits Mining Site in DR Congo, Several Feared Dead

 Organised ‘looting’ 

Resource-rich eastern DRC, which borders Rwanda as well as Burundi, has been beset by 30 years of continual violence.

According to United Nations experts, the M23 has set up an administration parallel to the Congolese state to regulate the operation of the Rubaya mine since its capture.

Experts estimate that the M23 makes around $800,000 a month from the mine thanks to a $7-per-kilogram tax on the production and sale of coltan.

UN experts also accuse Rwanda — which denies providing the M23 with military support — of using the militia to syphon off the DRC’s mineral riches.

Kinshasa on Sunday urged “the international community to fully grasp the scale of this tragedy” which it blamed on “armed occupation and an organised system of looting” by the Rwanda-backed militia.

The government noted “all mining and commercial activity” had been banned in Rubaya as of February 2025, but between 112 and 125 tonnes are extracted each month and sent “exclusively to Rwanda”.

Russian drone attack on bus in Ukraine kills at least 12

At least 12 people have been killed in a Russian drone attack on a bus carrying miners in ​Ukraine’s southeastern Dnipropetrovsk region, the country’s energy minister said.

“Today, the enemy carried out a cynical and targeted attack on energy sector workers in the Dnipro region,” Minister of Energy Denys Shmyhal posted on Telegram on Sunday.

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“As a result of the terrorist attack, 12 mine workers were killed and seven more were injured.”

Police said the attack took place in the ‌city of Ternivka. Footage posted by the State Emergencies Service showed a charred bus with ‌shattered windows that had veered off ⁠the road.

Energy firm DTEK said in a statement that the killed and wounded were its employees returning from a shift.

Earlier on Sunday, regional officials said at least nine people had been wounded in Russian strikes on a maternity hospital and a residential building in the ‌southeastern city of Zaporizhzhia.

The attacks come days after United States President Donald Trump said Russian President Vladimir Putin had agreed to temporarily halt the targeting of the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv and other cities, amid freezing temperatures that have brought widespread hardship to Ukrainians.

The Kremlin confirmed on Friday that it agreed to suspend attacks on Kyiv until Sunday, but did not reveal any further details.

Russia and Ukraine held trilateral talks with the US in the UAE capital, Abu Dhabi, last month and are expected to meet for a second round this month, amid ongoing US pressure to end their nearly four-year war.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Sunday that the second round of talks ‍would take ⁠place in Abu Dhabi on Wednesday and Thursday.

While Ukrainian and Russian officials have agreed in principle with Washington’s demands for a compromise, Moscow and Kyiv differ deeply over what an agreement should look like.

Israel orders eviction of Bedouins as settlers target West Bank schools

Israeli occupation authorities have intensified their campaign of forced displacement across the occupied West Bank, issuing expulsion orders to an entire Bedouin community east of Ramallah and escalating demolition policies in occupied East Jerusalem.

The measures come amid a surge in settler violence targeting educational institutions in the Jordan Valley and residential homes in Qalqilya, further shrinking the living space for Palestinians under military occupation.

‘Zone of expulsion’

On Sunday morning, Israeli forces raided the Abu Najeh al-Kaabneh Bedouin community in al-Mughayyir village, east of Ramallah.

Local sources confirmed to the Wafa news agency that soldiers delivered a military order requiring the community’s 40 residents to dismantle their homes and leave the area within 48 hours. The army declared the site a “closed military zone”, a tactic frequently used to clear Palestinian land for settlement expansion.

During the raid, Israeli troops arrested three foreign solidarity activists attempting to document the eviction order.

The expulsion order is part of a widening campaign of ethnic cleansing in the region. It follows the complete displacement of the Shallal al-Auja community north of Jericho, which concluded on Saturday. After years of systematic harassment, the last three families of the community were forced to leave, marking the erasure of a presence that once included 120 families.

Al-Aqsa provocations

In occupied East Jerusalem, Israel’s municipal policies of urban restriction continued to displace Palestinians.

On Sunday, Yasser Maher Dana, a Palestinian resident of the Jabal Mukaber neighbourhood, was coerced into demolishing his 100-square-metre (1,076-square-foot) home. The structure, located in the al-Salaa district, housed four family members.

Israeli authorities routinely force Palestinians in East Jerusalem to execute their own demolition orders to avoid paying exorbitant fees charged by municipal crews and forces if they carry out the destruction themselves. These demolitions are justified by a lack of building permits, which rights groups say are nearly impossible for Palestinians to obtain in the city.

Simultaneously, in Silwan, south of Al-Aqsa Mosque, the municipality issued a demolition order for a residential room belonging to the al-Taweel family, granting them a 10-day deadline. This follows notices issued three days before demolishing two homes belonging to brothers in the Wadi Qaddum neighbourhood.

Tensions also rose at the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, stormed by dozens of Israeli settlers under heavy police protection. According to the Jerusalem governorate, the incursion included a provocative “wedding blessing” ritual performed by settlers for a bride in the courtyards, a violation of the site’s status quo.

Settlers attack schools and homes

In the northern Jordan Valley, Israeli settlers, backed by the military, disrupted the school day at the al-Maleh School.

Azmi Balawneh, the director of education in Tubas, reported that settlers blocked teachers from reaching the school, which serves children from the vulnerable Bedouin communities of al-Hadidiya, Makhoul, and Samra.

This harassment coincides with the establishment of a new illegal settlement outpost in the al-Maleh area just a week ago. In the nearby Khirbet Samra, settlers erected a new tent on Sunday morning to seize more pastoral land.

Meanwhile, in the village of Faraata, east of Qalqilya, settlers from the illegal “Havat Gilad” outpost attacked the home of Hijazi Yamin.

Yamin told Wafa that settlers pelted his house and unleashed an attack dog on his family, trapping his wife and seven children inside.

“We live in a constant state of insecurity,” Yamin said, noting this was the second attack in a week. “I am afraid to leave my wife and children alone or let them go to school.”

Military raids and closures

Israeli forces conducted multiple raids across the West Bank on Sunday, arresting at least four Palestinians. In Hebron, two brothers were arrested following a raid on their family home. More arrests were reported in the village of Duma, south of Nablus, and in the town of al-Ubeidiya, east of Bethlehem.

In the northern city of Jenin, military vehicles stormed the city centre and the Jabel Abu Dhuhair neighbourhood. During the incursion, troops deliberately destroyed street vendors’ carts at the Cinema Roundabout, targeting the local economy.