Atletico thrash Real Madrid 5-2 in thrilling derby as Alvarez grabs brace

In a pulsating derby that ended the La Liga leaders’ first defeat in a year-opening season, Julian Alvarez scored twice as Atletico Madrid defeated Real Madrid 5-2 from behind.

Atletico rallied from a 2-1 deficit to win the thrilling encounter at the raucous Metropolitano Stadium, which placed them in fourth place with 12 points.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

Real Madrid leads La Liga by 18 points, two ahead of Barcelona, who are still playing.

In the fourteenth minute, Robin Le Normand’s aggressive start paid off.

In the 25th minute, Kylian Mbappe unstoppable strike from close range gave the visitors a lead before Arda Guller headed a volley from a Vinicius Jr cross 11 minutes later.

Atletico regained the lead five minutes into the second half when Alvarez converted a penalty after Guler’s high boot hit fellow goalkeeper Nico Gonzalez on the face inside the box in added time before the break.

In the 64th minute, Alvarez extended their lead with a sublime free kick that propelled them into the top corner with a quick counter in added time.

Alvarez’s performance, which included a controversial penalty that caused Atletico to lose to Madrid in the Champions League last season, was a sweet recompense.

After Madrid had won all six La Liga games and its Champions League opener, Atletico dealt Xabi Alonso his first defeat of the season. Alonso’s only other defeat as Madrid’s coach occurred against Paris Saint-Germain in the July Club World Cup semifinals, which he won in comparison.

With a victory over Real Sociedad on Sunday, Barcelona will overtake Madrid.

Alonso, the coach for Real Madrid, acknowledged that his team had a right to lose.

“We had poor performance everywhere. He claimed that we couldn’t string passes together, win duels, or create chances.

“We must examine what occurred and improve,” the statement goes.

As he prepared for the rest of the season, the Madrid coach tried to find satisfaction in this agonizing defeat.

Israel’s justification for Gaza hospital attack false, Reuters probe finds

According to a report from Reuters, Israel’s claim that it bombed a Khan Younis hospital in southern Gaza was false when it claimed it did so in front of a Hamas camera is false.

A military official claimed that Israeli forces used drone footage that showed a Hamas camera as the target of the August 25 attack on Nasser Hospital to plan the attack. However, a Reuters investigation of witness interviews and visual evidence revealed that one of the news agency’s own journalists had long used the camera.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Five journalists were among the 22 victims of the “double-tap” attack, one of whom worked for Al Jazeera. Since the genocidal war broke out nearly two years ago, there have been more than 200 journalists killed in Israeli attacks on Gaza as a result of their deaths.

A day after the hospital attack, the army claimed troops had shot on a “suspicious” camera that had been operated by Hamas. Later, drone footage revealed the drone’s installation on a hospital stairwell, which was covered with a prayer rug from Reuters’ reporter Hussam al-Masri, who was killed in the attack, not Hamas, according to Reuters.

Since May, al-Masri has positioned his camera on the same stairwell to record live broadcasts that have been broadcast around the world at least 35 times. He frequently used the rug to shield it from heat and dust.

Ismail al-Thawabta, the head of Gaza’s Government Media Office, alleged that Hamas was filming Israeli forces from Nasser Hospital was fabricated and false. Israel is attempting to cover up a full-fledged war crime committed against the hospital, its patients, and the medical staff.

In order to reconstruct the events of the attack, Reuters said it interviewed more than 20 people, reviewed more than 100 videos, and recorded more than 100 interviews.

Before the strike, Al Jazeera’s Ali Hashem described the stairwell as a “makeshift newsroom” where journalists had gathered. Moments prior to the explosion, which claimed the lives of Al-Masri and several other civil defense workers, froze Al-Masri’s live broadcast. As rescuers rushed in, a second explosion occurred.

When a massive explosion occurred while we were rescuing the martyrs and the wounded, according to Reuters cameraman Hatem Khaled.

Israel has repeatedly targeted hospitals, churches, shelters, mosques, and other locations that are protected by international humanitarian law. Journalists, medical professionals, first responders, and humanitarian workers have also been killed in the attacks. Israel continues to carry out a genocide in Gaza despite numerous international calls for an investigation.

According to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), Israel has never released the findings of a formal investigation or held anyone accountable for journalist murder.

The world recognises Palestine, yet it treats the Palestinians as stateless

10 nations ratified Palestinian statehood earlier this week. Out of 193, 157 of the UN member states have since recognized Palestine as a state as a result. The Palestinians now have a state, which means the majority of the world accepts. Many people experience the soul-crushing reality of statelessness at borders and in immigration detention, but they continue to be treated as if they don’t.

I frequently assist asylum seekers in detention as a freelance English-Arabic interpreter for Respond Crisis Translation. I have firsthand experience as a Palestinian who is stranded in the increasingly cruel US immigration system.

As his lawyer battled to have him released from detention by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), I met Mohammad (not his real name) while interpreting during his legal proceedings. Over time, I assisted him on numerous occasions in this endeavor.

Before Israel started its genocidal war, Mohammad made the decision to leave Gaza. He escaped his home, but he found no freedom when he did.

The journey was difficult and brutal. He was abducted by cartel groups, beaten, threatened, and left without his money in countries that refused to recognize his country or the documents he was carrying. He finally arrived in the US. He encountered ICE, and there he encountered it, believing that perhaps the “American dream” could provide him with safety, refuge, and freedom.

Mohammad had already escaped one prison before being detained in another. He embarked on a hunger strike because his only voice, a desperate plea for help, was his own, when he stopped eating.

More than just refusing to eat, his hunger strike was. It was to be denied invisibility. a body breaking so that it can be heard. During his hunger strike, he claimed to have been subjected to psychological pressure, humiliation, and solitary confinement. Another form of punishment was instituted as a result of the hunger strike, which was intended to promote dignity.

After the court made it clear that only if he was deemed mentally stable and medically sound, Mohammad was forced to end the hunger strike. He had no choice but to end his hunger strike in order to fulfill this requirement and have a chance to leave jail.

The court granted Mohammad’s request when he eventually accepted deportation. He could be deported if he did not want to stay, according to the judge and the prosecutor. but deported to a location? The US immigration system only has a passing amount of “Palestine,” which is a word that has meaning for him. The court defaulted to “Israel” because the US does not recognize Palestine as a state. Palestinians are not permitted to enter the West Bank or Gaza, but Israel, which controls the Palestinian territory, does not.

Borders are walls of steel, bureaucracy, and laws, which are not just lines on a map for Palestinians, especially those from Gaza. You might claim that neighbors’ countries allow for entry. Palestinians from Gaza could only return home through Egypt or Jordan prior to the war. The crossing between Egypt and Gaza is currently closed. Palestinians are prohibited from entering Jordan unless they have special permits, which are rare and nearly unobtainable. It may remain unreachable even when “home” is written on a deportation order.

A mirage appeared in Mohammad’s imaginable “redemption,” which was going to the war. Regaining freedom did not mean leaving the US system. It meant confronting the cruel truth that being a Palestinian today means living in isolation, without safe havens, and without the promise of even an unknown return. People from Palestine fall into another trap, even deportation, which may mean returning, for some.

Mohammad continues to insist on returning to Gaza. He has so far fought to avoid being taken to another country. He is still being held by ICE. According to the attorneys, private facilities are paid daily per detainee, so there are financial incentives to prolong detention. Release is frequently delayed even after a court ruling.

His story ultimately involves more than just one man’s unsuccessful asylum claim. Not just about the US’s ongoing opposition to Palestine’s status as a state.

In a world where documents are necessary before dignity is offered, it is about what it means to be stateless. It explores how “home” turns into both a dream and a wound. The dream of freedom and dignity is lost on Gaza-based prisoners who are deported, turning their deportation into a journey not toward safety but to a different, shadowy, closed-door future.

No authority can overthrow the blockade that holds Palestine or the policies that prevent its citizens from returning and moving freely. Courts can sign papers, immigration officials can escort people to airplanes.