California’s Gavin Newsom slams Trump absence at COP30 climate conference

One of the most notable absences at this week’s United Nations Climate Change Conference reflects the leadership of one of the largest greenhouse gas emitters in the world: the United States.

The administration of President Donald Trump has declined to send any top-level officials to Belem, Brazil, for this year’s edition of the annual event, known as COP30.

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But in Trump’s absence, state and local officials have arrived to reaffirm the US commitment to climate change policies — and to take shots at the Republican leader.

On Tuesday, one of those politicians took centre stage: California Governor Gavin Newsom, Trump’s longtime sparring partner in the Democratic Party. He is widely speculated to be a contender for the 2028 presidential elections.

Appearing on a series of panels, Newsom denounced the Trump administration’s lack of representation at COP30 as an abdication of duty.

“I  come here with humility, coming from the United States. I’m very mindful that the Trump administration has abandoned any sense of duty, responsibility or leadership as it relates to the issues that bring us all here together,” Newsom said at a ministerial meeting.

“It’s an abomination. It’s a disgrace. But rather than complaining about it, we’re trying to do something about it.”

He pitched his leadership as a contrast to Trump’s and sought to position California’s efforts as having bipartisan appeal.

In touting California as an innovator in clean energy initiatives, Newsom cited Republican leaders from the state, including Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon, as spearheading efforts to reduce water and air pollution.

“I’m here because I don’t want the United States of America to be a footnote at this conference, and I want you to know that we recognise our responsibility, and we recognise our opportunity,” Newsom told the COP30 audience.

A political pivot

Newsom’s comments come at a critical juncture in his political career: Limited to two terms as governor, he is slated to exit office after the 2026 midterm elections.

The Democratic leader has spent his final years as California’s governor building an increasingly national and international profile. In 2023, for instance, he travelled to China, also on the premise of forging international bonds to tackle climate change.

And during the 2024 presidential race, he emerged as a gadfly to challenge Republican policies. He faced Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis in a televised Fox News debate and served as a prominent surrogate for the scuttled campaign of then-President Joe Biden, who exited the race over concerns about his age.

Trump, the victor in the 2024 race, has repeatedly taken aim at Newsom since his inauguration in January.

The two politicians have clashed over wildfire suppression, immigration policies and Trump’s decision to deploy federal troops to US cities. Trump even gave the California governor one of his trademark nicknames — “Newscum” — and mused in June that it would be a “great thing” if the Democrat were arrested.

Newsom, meanwhile, took aim at Trump’s international and domestic policies at Tuesday’s climate conference.

By failing to send representation to COP30, Newsom argued that the US had created an opening for China, the country’s economic and political rival, to exert greater power on the global stage.

“ China is here. Only one country’s not here: United States of America,” Newsom said.

While Trump has used tariffs on foreign imports as a tool to combat China’s growing sway, Newsom maintained that, by stepping away from climate initiatives and clean energy technology, the US was losing ground economically.

“This is not about electric power. This is about economic power. And we, in the state of California, are not going to cede that race to China,” Newsom said.

Trump’s climate policies

Trump has been vocal in his opposition to emission-lowering policies, going so far as to claim that climate change is a “hoax” and a “con job”, a position that disregards the scientific consensus linking fossil fuel usage to long-term effects on the global climate.

At September’s UN General Assembly, for instance, Trump asserted that countries around the world had been “devastated” by the “fake energy catastrophe”.

He also berated world leaders for attempting to impose policies that capped carbon emissions.

“All these predictions made by the United Nations and many others, often for bad reasons, were wrong,” he said.

“They were made by stupid people that have cost their countries fortunes and given those same countries no chance for success. If you don’t get away from this green scam, your country is going to fail.”

Trump had campaigned for re-election with the slogan, “Drill, baby, drill”, and since returning to the White House, he has sought to make good on his pledge to open federal lands to oil and gas exploration.

On Tuesday, while Newsom appeared in Brazil, The Washington Post newspaper revealed that the Trump administration is weighing a draft proposal to allow offshore drilling along the California coastline.

Such activity has largely tapered off in recent decades, due to high-profile oil spills, and California prohibits new oil rigs within state waters, but that area is limited to the waters within three miles – or about 4.8km – of the shore.

Democrats, including US Representative Mike Levin, have sought to pass legislation to protect the state’s coastline from further drilling, but to no avail. But Newsom on Tuesday said that Trump’s proposal was “dead on arrival”.

He also questioned why news of the drilling proposal broke during the COP30 meeting.

“He intentionally aligned that to the opening of COP,” Newsom said.

He pointed out that offshore drilling faces bipartisan opposition in Trump’s adopted home of Florida, where his Mar-a-Lago resort sits on the edge of the Atlantic Ocean.

“ I also think it remarkable that he didn’t promote it in his backyard at Mar-a-Lago. He didn’t promote it off the coast of Florida,” Newsom said, signalling a double standard. “That says everything about Donald Trump.”

Connecting with voters

Newsom’s broadside against Trump briefly reached beyond his opposition to the Republican president’s pro-fossil fuel policies.

When asked about Trump’s repeated air strikes against maritime vessels alleged to be drug-smuggling boats, Newsom delivered a fiery invective.

“What happened to due process? What happened to the rule of law?” Newsom asked. “I believe in the rule of law. I don’t believe in the rule of Don. That’s what we’re up against in the United States of America. I don’t want to lose my republic.”

Since September 2, the Trump administration has carried out at least 19 known air strikes in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean, killing approximately 75 people.

No evidence has been provided publicly to justify the bombing campaign, and the identities of the deceased remain unknown.

Legal experts have denounced the attacks as a form of extrajudicial killing, and leaders at the United Nations have called for an end to the military campaign as a violation of the UN Charter.

The Trump administration has defended the violence as necessary to interrupt drug trafficking into the US. It has also moved to label cartels in Latin America as “international terrorist organisations” and “enemy combatants”.

But Newsom argued that such actions were unacceptable, and called on the international community to stand up to Trump.

“Our politics needs to change, and I hope our international partners understand that,” he said. “It’s chilling to me to see those scenes of the United States of America blowing up boats with no transparency, no advice and consent with the United States Congress.”

At another COP30 event, entitled “America Is All In”, Newsom doubled down on his call for political change in the US, underscoring that Trump’s power is “temporary”.

“ He’s an invasive species. He’s a wrecking ball president,” Newsom said.

When pressed for solutions that would connect with voters, the California governor encouraged world leaders to find a unifying approach, particularly when it comes to combatting climate change scepticism.

Emission-lowering goals — like limiting global temperature increases to 1.5 degrees Celsius — felt abstract to most of his constituents, Newsom argued.

“I think we have to use different language,” he said. “The vast majority of my audience doesn’t know what Celsius is.  You’re talking 1.5 degrees Celsius. How many more degrees is that in Fahrenheit? We talk about greenhouse gas emissions. Where are they? Do they float in the sky, or where do they land?

“We don’t understand. We have to use better metaphors. We have to change our language.”

Nico Harrison fired from Mavericks nine months after Luka Doncic trade

The Dallas Mavericks fired general manager Nico Harrison on Tuesday, nine months after his trade of Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers sent the organisation into a tailspin.

Team owner Patrick Dumont announced the dismissal of Harrison, who was also Dallas’s president of basketball operations. The Mavericks have limped out of the blocks to a 3-8 record.

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“This decision reflects our continued commitment to building a championship- caliber organization, one that delivers for our players, our partners, and most importantly, our fans,” Dumont said.

In an open letter to fans, Dumont acknowledged “the profound impact these difficult last several months have had”.

The team appointed Michael Finley and Matt Riccardi as co-interim general managers to oversee basketball operations. A search will begin for a permanent replacement.

Riccardi is the team’s assistant general manager. Finley, a 15-year NBA player, joined the Mavericks’ front office in 2017 and has held a variety of roles.

Harrison, a former Nike executive, was hired on June 28, 2021, and the Mavericks reached the Western Conference finals in his first season. In the 2023-24 season, the Mavericks lost to the Boston Celtics in five games in the NBA Finals.

But just seven months later, Harrison sent the five-time first-team All-NBA selection Doncic west in a blockbuster trade amid fans’ furor and frenzy.

Luka Doncic, who was traded from the Dallas Mavericks to the Los Angeles Lakers by Harrison on February 2, is enjoying his highest scoring season as a pro in the 2025-26 season, averaging 37.1 points per game [File: Jessie Alcheh/AP]

Fan pressure to fire Harrison

Harrison’s dismissal came one day after Dumont was seen talking to a fan who was wearing a gold Lakers’ version of Doncic’s No 77 jersey during the second half of Monday’s 116-114 home loss to the Milwaukee Bucks.

“Fire Nico!” chants were audible during the fourth quarter of the game, in which Dallas squandered a 13-point lead.

The tone of the Mavericks’ fan base towards Harrison has changed since he signed a multi-year contract extension in June 2024.

Harrison, 52, accepted responsibility for the trade and defended it by claiming there were concerns over Doncic’s physique and commitment to conditioning.

Doncic played his final game with the Mavericks on Christmas Day 2024, and he strained his left calf in the loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves.

The Mavericks were 19-10 entering that game, and 26-23 on February 1, 2025, when Doncic was traded. Without him on the roster, the Mavericks finished 13-20 and failed to make the playoffs.

Anthony Davis, the 10-time All-Star big man who was the key cog in return from the Lakers, was sidelined for six weeks after sustaining an adductor strain in his Dallas debut.

Davis, 32, is currently out with a calf strain, while top overall 2025 draft pick Cooper Flagg, 18, is adjusting to life in the NBA.

In the loss to the Bucks, Flagg scored a career-high 26 points and pulled down a game-high nine rebounds.

Dallas Mavericks fans react.
Dallas Mavericks fans gather outside the arena before the game between Dallas and the Houston Rockets to protest the Nico Harrison trade of former Mavericks point guard Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers on February 8, 2025 in Dallas, Texas, US [Jerome Miron/Imagn Images via Reuters]

US Supreme Court extends order allowing Trump to withhold food aid

The highest court in the United States has extended a previous order allowing President Donald Trump to withhold food assistance to tens of millions of people in the US amid the government shutdown.

In a ruling on Tuesday, the Supreme Court extended a previous pause that it had granted the Trump administration after a lower court ordered the government to pay out about $4bn in food benefits for November.

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Advocates have said that withholding the funds could have calamitous effects on people who depend on food benefits through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), although the issue could be made moot as the shutdown appears to be drawing to a close.

The Supreme Court decision comes one day after the Senate on Monday approved compromise legislation that would end the longest government shutdown in US history, breaking a weeks-long impasse that has disrupted food benefits for millions, left hundreds of thousands of federal workers unpaid and snarled air traffic as a lack of air traffic controllers forced cancellations.

The battle over SNAP benefits has underlined the Trump administration’s aggressive efforts to slash government employment and roll back access to programmes that it had previously criticised under the auspices of the shutdown.

While it is common for some benefits and programmes to face delays or other issues during government shutdowns, food benefits ceased entirely at the start of November for the first time in the programme’s 60-year history.

The decision set off a series of legal challenges and several weeks of back-and-forth rulings that have kept those who rely on food assistance in a state of limbo.

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,357

Here is how things stand on Wednesday, November 12:

Fighting

  • Ukraine’s top military commander, Oleksandr Syrskii, said the army’s situation has “significantly worsened” in parts of the southeastern Zaporizhia region amid fierce fighting with Russian forces.
  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a post on X that he had received an update from Syrskii, which conveyed that the situation” remains difficult” in the Zaporizhia region, as well as in the direction of the embattled city of Pokrovsk.
  • Zaporizhia Governor Ivan Fedorov said that a Russian drone attack killed a 56-year-old man in the Polohivskyi district.
  • Also in Zaporizhia, the Kushuhum Village Council announced in a post on the Telegram messaging app that families with children must begin mandatory evacuations from the area.
  • Ukraine’s Southern Defence Forces said in a post on Facebook that they had to withdraw from positions near the settlements of Novouspenivske, Nove, Okhotnyche, Uspenivka, and Novomykolaivka in the Zaporizhia region.
  • Ukraine’s General Staff claimed that explosions and fire were recorded after Ukrainian forces hit the Orsknefteorgsintez oil refinery in Russia’s Orenburg region.
  • A Ukrainian mine explosion killed one person in the village of Bahatyr in the Russian-occupied Ukrainian region of Donetsk, Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Ambassador-at-Large Rodion Miroshnik said, while persistent Ukrainian drone attacks have forced people to flee the area, Russia’s state TASS news agency reports.
  • Russia’s Ministry of Defence claimed that its forces seized the eastern part of Kupiansk in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region, according to TASS.

Diplomacy

  • Rustem Umerov, the secretary of Ukraine’s National Security and Defence Council, has arrived in Turkiye’s Istanbul, where he said in a post on Facebook that he is working “to unblock” the process of exchanging captives with Moscow and ensuring the implementation of the agreement that has already been reached with Russia.
  • The state environmental inspectorate in Ukraine’s Sumy region announced in a post on Telegram that it has launched a lawsuit over environmental damages, including the destruction of forest areas, against Russian forces that spearheaded the invasion of the region in 2022.
  • Russia’s Foreign Ministry said that 30 Japanese people, including a foreign ministry official, were now barred from entering Russia in response to sanctions introduced by Tokyo against Moscow.

Regional security

  • The FSB, Russia’s domestic intelligence agency, claimed that Russia thwarted a Ukrainian-United Kingdom plan to hijack a MiG-31 jet equipped with a hypersonic missile and to use it to carry out a false flag attack on a major NATO airbase.

Energy

  • Romanian Minister of Energy Bogdan Ivan said his country must take control of the local Romanian company of Russia’s Lukoil, as Western sanctions have prompted a wave of similar moves across Europe.
  • Ukrainian authorities have charged seven people in relation to an alleged $100m kickback scheme involving senior energy officials, a day after launching a probe into Ukraine’s state nuclear agency Energoatom.
  • Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said the government had dismissed Energoatom’s supervisory board and that an urgent audit of the agency would be conducted, “including its procurement activities”.

Military aid

  • Denmark’s Ministry of Defence announced 1.4 billion kroner ($217m) worth of military aid to Ukraine, including for the purchase of US weapons.

Makhachev vs Della Maddalena: UFC 322 fight card, start, odds, how to watch

Mixed martial arts (MMA) superstar Islam Makhachev will take a shot at winning his first title in the welterweight division when he takes on reigning champion Jack Della Maddalena at UFC 322.

Makhachev’s last UFC fight was in January when he defeated Renato Moicano by submission to successfully defend his lightweight title belt, which he first won in 2022.

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Four months later, the Russian fighter vacated the lightweight title and boldly announced his decision to move up a weight class and challenge Australia’s Della Maddalena in one of the most eagerly awaited UFC fights on the 2025 calendar.

Here’s what you need to know about UFC 322:

When does the UFC 322 fight start?

  • The Della Maddalena-Makhachev main event will be held on Saturday at Madison Square Garden in New York City.
  • The five-fight main card is scheduled to begin at 10pm (03:00 GMT on Sunday) with the ring walk for the Della Maddalena-Makhachev bout not expected before 11:30pm (04:30 GMT on Sunday).
  • The four-fight preliminary card begins at 8pm (01:00 GMT on Sunday).

Why did Makhachev switch from lightweight to welterweight?

Makhachev, a four-time defending lightweight champion, vacated the belt in May to move up to the welterweight classification.

The Russian told ESPN that it was difficult to cut weight for the 155lb (70kg) lightweight class and it affected his performance and recovery.

“My life changed when I changed the weight division. All my life, I had to think about what I eat. … Now I can eat whatever I want and smile.”

“At 155lb, it is so difficult. … Now, I am very excited to see how I feel in the cage,” he said.

Della Maddalena vs Makhachev – a contrast in fighting styles

Della Maddalena is a disciple of Brazilian jujitsu and trains under the renowned Australian coach Ben Vickers. Not surprisingly, Della Maddalena excels at powerful yet accurate punching and kicking to the body and face. He is a lethal striker on the counterattack.

Vickers, in a recent interview with Fox Sports, insisted his charger will silence the many doubters who believe Makhachev and his trademark grappling-wrestling background will prove too much for the Australian.

“He’ll just keep on turning up to beat whoever you put in front of him,” Vickers said.

“He’s just taken Belal Muhammad’s streak. Next, he’ll take Islam’s streak. Then it will be [fellow welterweight contender] Shavkat Rakhmonov’s streak. He’ll take them all.”

Makhachev’s trademark style – which has been honed under the tutelage of legendary ex-UFC competitor Khabib Nurmagomedov – is built on a world class wrestling and grappling foundation. He is also an underrated striker of opponents.

His superb ground-and-pound attack, which he asserts after gaining top control, wears down his opponents and frequently results in submissions.

Islam Makhachev asserts control over Dustin Poirier on the canvas during UFC 302 in Newark, New Jersey, on June 2, 2024 [Joe Camporeale/USA Today Sports via Reuters]

Della Maddalena-Makhachev: What are the betting odds?

Della Maddalena will start as a heavy underdog against Makhachev with the bookmakers.

The odds have Makhachev marked as the -275 favourite at Bet MGM in the United States with Della Maddalena at +225.

Similarly, bookmakers outside the US have the Russian priced at $1.36 for the victory with Della Maddalena a long shot for the win at $3.25, according to Bet365.

Will Donald Trump attend the fight?

At this stage, it is unknown whether US President Donald Trump will attend UFC 322 in the city where he was born and spent most of his life.

Trump attended the last major UFC event in the area – UFC 316 – on June 7 in Newark, New Jersey, just across the Hudson River from New York.

The 79-year-old’s association with the UFC dates back to 2001 when he hosted two events in New Jersey.

If Makhachev beats Della Maddalena, will he fight Topuria?

Ilia Topuria and Makhachev, ranked number 1 and number 2 on ESPN’s pound-for-pound rankings, are widely considered the top MMA fighters in the world, and Topuria has already said he would move up another weight class to face Makhachev at the 170lb (77kg) welterweight limit if the Russian beats Della Maddalena.

Both fighters have agreed that if the bout occurs, then the much-hyped UFC event at the White House in June would be the ideal venue for staging what would be considered the biggest box office UFC contest since the memorable Nurmagomedov-Conor McGregor confrontation in 2018.

“I saw the [Charles Oliveira] fight; [Topuria,] he’s good,” Makhachev told ESPN. “I have a good fight now, and I know [Topuria] is going to fight soon, and we’ll see what’s gonna happen. He wants to fight at the White House, and I also want to be there. I know the UFC wants to do some big fight in the White House. Which fight is going to be bigger than this?”

The UFC has not announced any fights for the White House event although Trump has said it would take place on June 14.

IIia Topuria reacts.
UFC lightweight title holder Ilia Topuria might be the next challenger for Makhachev if he can take the welterweight title from Della Maddalena at Madison Square Garden [File: Aldara Zarraoa/WireImage via Getty Images]

Who is Islam Makhachev?

  • The 34-year-old fighter from the Dagestan region of Russia is one of the biggest names in MMA thanks to his three-year undefeated streak as the UFC lightweight champion.
  • A protege and close friend of UFC legend Nurmagomedov, whose father, Abdulmanap, trained both Dagestani men, Makhachev made his MMA debut in 2011 and signed his first contract with the UFC three years later.
  • The southpaw is renowned for his strong grappling skills and an impressive striking accuracy (59 percent) with a reach of 70 inches (178cm). During his more than decade-long career in the UFC, Makhachev has established himself as a legend in the lightweight division, having successfully defended his belt on four occasions.
  • Makhachev, who recently vacated the UFC lightweight title to move up, is on an incredible run of 15 straight UFC wins dating back to October 3, 2015, when he lost the only professional fight of his MMA career against Adriano Martins of Brazil.
Islam Makhachev reacts.
Islam Makhachev will be the favourite heading into Saturday’s blockbuster clash against Della Maddalena [File: Per Haljestam-USA Today Sports via Reuters]

Who is Jack Della Maddalena?

  • Maddalena, also known by his initials JDM, is from Perth, Australia, and is a black belt in Brazilian jujitsu.
  • He stands 5ft, 11 inches tall (1.8 metres) and his current fighting weight is listed at 77kg (170lb).
  • He is undefeated in 18 straight MMA fights dating back to May 28, 2016.
  • The 29-year-old became the new UFC welterweight champion at UFC 315 on May 10 when he upset Muhammad at Bell Centre in Montreal, Canada.
  • He will be making his first UFC title defence on Saturday against Makhachev.
Della Maddalena and Belal Muhammad in action.
Jack Della Maddalena, right, strikes Belal Muhammad during their welterweight title bout at the UFC 315 event at Bell Centre in Montreal on May 10, 2025 [Alexis Aubin/AFP]

What has Makhachev said about the fight?

Saturday’s fight will be Makhachev’s sixth title fight in a row but first as a challenger. In an ESPN interview on October 27, the Russian broke down the Australian’s strengths and weaknesses.

“I watched all his fights. He is good. His striking is good. His boxing is very good, you know. His wrestling not so good but he is good on the ground. He know how to defend, how to escape, how to get up, you know. He has good skills on the ground also. … His striking is really good. That’s why he is one of the best in the world right now.”

On moving up a weight class to fight Della Maddalena:

“He is not like some guy who has crazy power. … I don’t think Jack has more than me.”

On Nurmagomedov’s pre-fight message to him:

“It’s not a secret. He told me: ‘Take him down.’”

“I think I can finish him on the ground – choke him, do an arm bar or something. I saw his skills are good on the ground. They are good – but I have something more.”

What has Della Maddalena said about the fight?

The welterweight champ claims his grappling proficiency in the octagon will surprise Makhachev:

“Probably in his mind, he thinks he’ll take me down, immobilise me or even finish me. But I have enough level to surprise him on the ground: strength, technique and defences that we’ve been working on constantly. When he plays at his highest level, I’ll be able to destabilise him. The key is to stay calm. People underestimate how disconcerting it can be for someone to be serene and focused. I think a large part of the fight will be standing, and that’s where I can surprise him,” said Della Maddalena on Mainevent TV.

Della Maddalena on Makhachev moving up a weight class to fight him:

“I think it’s good for him to move up. It was obviously a big wake-up for him. He is obviously getting bigger, growing. I think it’s a good move for him. I just think it’s bad timing,” he said on the New York Post Sports podcast.

Jack Della Maddalena in action.
Della Maddalena will defend his welterweight title for the first time on November 15 [File: Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images via AFP]

What’s Makhachev’s fight record?

  • Fights: 28
  • Wins: 27
  • Loss: 1
  • Knockouts: 5 wins, 1 loss
  • Submission: 13 wins
  • Decision: 9 wins

What’s Della Maddalena’s fight record?

  • Fights: 20
  • Wins: 18
  • Losses: 2
  • Knockouts: 12 wins, 1 loss
  • Submission: 2 wins, 1 loss
  • Decision: 4 wins

Stat Attack

  • Makhachev – number of days since his last defeat: 3,697 (October 3, 2015, to November 15)
  • Della Maddalena – number of days since his last defeat: 3,461 (May 28, 2016, to November 15)
Valentina Shevchenko in action.
Valentina Shevchenko, right, will defend her flyweight title at UFC 322 [File: Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images via AFP]

Who is fighting in the co-main event at UFC 322?

In Saturday’s penultimate bout at UFC 322, women’s flyweight champion Valentina Shevchenko of Kyrgyzstan will defend her title against China’s Zhang Weili in the co-main event.

Zhang, a former strawweight titleholder, vacated her belt and moved up a division to fight Shevchenko in what promises to be a fascinating contest between two of the biggest female stars in the UFC.

What’s the full fight card for UFC 322?

Main card (10pm start | 03:00 GMT on Sunday):

  • Della Maddalena (Australia) vs Makhachev (Russia) – title bout
  • Shevchenko (Kyrgyzstan) vs Zhang (China) – title bout
  • Sean Brady (US) vs Michael Morales (Ecuador) – welterweight
  • Leon Edwards (United Kingdom) vs Carlos Prates (Brazil) – welterweight
  • Beneil Dariush (US) vs Benoit Saint Denis (France) – lightweight

Preliminary card (8pm start | 01:00 GMT on Sunday):

  • Bo Nickal (US) vs Rodolfo Vieira (Brazil) – middleweight
  • Roman Kopylov (Russia) vs Gregory Rodrigues (Brazil) – middleweight
  • Erin Blanchfield (US) vs Tracy Cortez (US) – women’s flyweight
  • Malcolm Wellmaker (US) vs Cody Haddon (Australia) – bantamweight

How to watch UFC 322

Al Jazeera Sport will have a live build-up and text commentary stream for the fight from 01:00 GMT on Sunday.

Dozens of athletes call on UEFA to ban Israel over rights abuses

Dozens of athletes have joined rights groups in calling for the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) to suspend Israel due to rights abuses against Palestinians.

In a letter delivered to UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin on Tuesday, Athletes for Peace, a group that includes more than 70 sports professionals, backed a call for the governing body to sever ties with the Israel Football Association (IFA).

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“No shared venue, stage, or arena in international civil society should welcome a regime that commits genocide, apartheid, and other crimes against humanity,” the letter, penned by Game Over Israel, read.

“Israel’s continued impunity for such crimes will only be ended by the weight of collective conscientious action, including measures to block their entry to sporting or cultural events and activities.”

The athletes who endorsed the call include French World Cup winner Paul Pogba, Dutch forward Anwar El Ghazi, Moroccan player Hakim Ziyech and Spanish winger Adama Traore.

Human rights advocacy groups, including the Hind Rajab Foundation and the Gaza Tribunal, also signed the letter.

The petition marks a continuation of a campaign demanding that UEFA ban Israel from its events, citing atrocities committed during its war on Gaza.

In September, Turkish Football Federation president Ibrahim Haciosmanoglu also backed the call for suspending Israel from European football. The Football Association of Ireland (FAI) passed a similar resolution earlier this month.

Although a United States-brokered ceasefire nominally ended the Israeli assault on Gaza last month, Israel has continued to restrict aid and kill Palestinians in the territory.

Leading rights groups and United Nations investigators have described Israel’s war on Gaza as a genocide. As many as 69,182 Palestinians have been killed in the Israeli assault, including 421 footballers.

The war destroyed the sport’s infrastructure in Gaza, including stadiums and training facilities.

Moreover, Israel continues to entrench its occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, imposing a regime that the International Court of Justice says is “tantamount to the crime of apartheid”.

The rights groups’ letter argued that Israel has used football to legitimise its occupation in those areas.

The country, for example, allows clubs from illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank to participate in its professional leagues, in an apparent violation of FIFA rules.

“The participation of teams from illegal settlements in Israeli football leagues is a breach of fundamental principles of international law,” Tuesday’s letter read.

“UEFA’s relationship with the IFA – providing funding and allowing Israeli teams to play in international tournaments – means that UEFA may also be facilitating these violations and may themselves be accountable.”

Israeli clubs’ participation in European football competitions has been a source of debate and controversy over the past two years.

Last year, clashes between Ajax and Maccabi Tel Aviv FC fans broke out in Amsterdam after Israeli hooligans were heard chanting “death to the Arabs”, attacking taxi drivers and removing Palestinian flags from the walls of private homes.

In October, a ban on visiting Maccabi Tel Aviv fans in a Europa League game against Aston Villa sparked a political crisis in the United Kingdom, as well as accusations of anti-Semitism.

“This decision is based on current intelligence and previous incidents, including violent clashes and hate crime offences that occurred during the 2024 UEFA Europa League match between Ajax and Maccabi Tel-Aviv in Amsterdam,” the West Midlands Police said in a statement earlier this month.

But the government of UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer was quick to oppose the police’s decision and dismiss the security considerations behind it, sparking criticism from Palestinian rights advocates.

“We will not tolerate anti-Semitism on our streets,” Starmer said in a social media post in response to the ban.

“The role of the police is to ensure all football fans can enjoy the game, without fear of violence or intimidation.”

Maccabi Tel-Aviv, which sits in 34th place in the Europa League standings with one point from four games, ended up losing the match 2-0 to Aston Villa last week.

Tuesday’s letter to UEFA stressed that banning a country that violates international law would not be unprecedented; it is, in fact, the norm.

“It is well-known that football governance bodies, such as UEFA, have historically suspended states from football for egregious violations of international law – apartheid South Africa, post-war Germany, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, and more recently, Russia,” it said.