Sabalenka defeats Svitolina to reach Australian Open final

Belarusian Aryna Sabalenka powered into her fourth Australian Open final in a row with a dominant 6-2 6-3 win over Ukraine’s Elina Svitolina on Thursday, in a politically charged encounter.

Top-seeded Sabalenka will now bid for a third crown at Melbourne Park in four years and fifth Grand Slam title overall against the winner of the late semifinal between Jessica Pegula and Elena Rybakina at Rod Laver Arena.

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“I just cannot believe that. It’s an incredible achievement ⁠but the job is not done yet,” world number one Sabalenka said on court. “I’m super happy with the win. She’s ​such a tough opponent and has been playing incredible tennis the whole week.”

Since Russia’s invasion ‍of Ukraine in 2022, for which Belarus has been a staging ground, Russian and Belarusian players have been banned from representing their nations at the Grand Slams and tour events.

Like other players from Ukraine, Svitolina does not shake hands with opponents from Russia or Moscow’s ally Belarus because of the war.

An announcement was made before the semifinal at Rod Laver Arena and a statement flashed up on a big screen saying there would be no handshake, asking fans to “respect” that.

The two players also noticeably kept apart for the pre-match formalities and photos.

Svitolina has been vocal about the strain of playing the two countries’ players, and said she hoped ‍to bring her ⁠nation “light” at the Australian Open after a tough winter.

Aryna Sabalenka in action.
Sabalenka serves against Svitolina during their women’s singles semifinal match in Melbourne on January 29, 2026 [Izhar Khan/AFP]

The 27-year-old Sabalenka, however, crushed those hopes in a furious display of raw power.

She became the third woman in the professional era to reach the Australian Open decider four times in a row, following Evonne Goolagong Cawley (1971-76) and Martina Hingis (1997-2002), who each played six finals in a row.

“Gutted not to make it through tonight,” Svitolina told reporters. “Of course, it’s very difficult when you’re playing a world number one on fire.”

While 31-year-old Svitolina was comprehensively defeated, she fought ​hard from the first ball to the last.

The 12th seed started with tenacity, thumping ‌a forehand winner down the line on the first point returning serve.

Sabalenka wobbled, giving up two break points with a loose backhand, but blasted her way out of danger.

There was early tension at 2-1 when Svitolina was awarded a point mid-rally, with Sabalenka penalised for hindering ‌the point with a late grunt.

Incensed, she demanded a video review, but the point stood.

She channelled her frustration into breaking Svitolina, then held for a 4-1 lead.

Pinning Svitolina well ‌behind the baseline, Sabalenka grabbed three set points and converted the ⁠third, roaring “Let’s go!” after a sizzling cross-court backhand winner.

Aryna Sabalenka and Elina Svitolina react.
Svitolina, left, was no match for Sabalenka in the first semifinal [Dita Alangkara/AP]

After 41 minutes of earth-shaking power, Sabalenka’s weapons finally misfired.

She dropped the opening service game of the second set with a clutch of errors, raising cheers from a crowd yearning for a contest.

But Sabalenka steadied herself, breaking Svitolina twice in ‌succession.

Svitolina never dropped her head and earned a break point when trailing 4-2 to put the match back on serve.

Sabalenka was not to be denied, though.

After thrashing a forehand winner down the line to save the break point, she ‍proved unstoppable.

Why is India’s Nipah virus outbreak spooking the world?

An outbreak of the Nipah virus in India’s eastern state of West Bengal has heightened concerns in China and several Southeast Asian countries, prompting them to tighten health screening operations at airports as millions prepare to travel for the Lunar New Year holiday.

Since December 2025, two confirmed cases of the virus have been reported in West Bengal, India’s health ministry said on Wednesday.

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The ministry did not provide details about the people infected but noted that of a total of 196 contacts linked to the confirmed cases, “all traced contacts have been found asymptomatic and have tested negative”, for the virus.

“The situation is under constant monitoring, and all necessary public health measures are in place,” the ministry added.

A district health officer told Reuters that the two people infected in West Bengal in late December were health workers. Both are being treated at a local hospital, the health officer said.

Is the recent outbreak of the virus a cause for concern?

Here’s what we know:

What is the Nipah virus?

The Nipah virus (NiV) is a zoonotic virus – a disease transmitted from animals such as fruit bats and flying foxes to humans. It can also be transmitted to humans via contaminated food products or directly from person to person.

The virus can be deadly. It typically incubates in the human body for five to 14 days, with symptoms occurring within three to four days.

It causes severe respiratory and neurological disease in humans, progressing from fever and headache to acute encephalitis (brain inflammation) in severe cases, Kaja Abbas, associate professor of infectious disease epidemiology and dynamics at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and Nagasaki University, said.

Symptoms can also include convulsions and mental confusion, and patients can fall into a coma within 24 to 48 hours in severe cases.

“The case fatality rate is high, between 40 percent and 75 percent, among people infected with the Nipah virus,” Abbas told Al Jazeera.

However, the virus’s basic reproduction number, which is the expected number of secondary infections stemming from a primary case, is “typically below one”, he said. This suggests the virus spreads in only a limited way via human-to-human transmission and there is a low likelihood of the virus becoming a widespread pandemic.

Where have outbreaks of the Nipah virus occurred before?

The first known outbreak of NiV was reported in 1998 when pig farmers and butchers in Malaysia and Singapore contracted it from infected pigs. At least 250 people were infected, with more than 100 deaths.

In 2014, NiV infections in the Philippines were associated with the slaughter of horses and consumption of infected horse meat.

Since 2001, there have been sporadic but recurring outbreaks in South Asia, particularly in Bangladesh and India.

According to the World Health Organization, outbreaks in Bangladesh have been linked to humans consuming contaminated raw palm sap, having close contact with other people’s secretions and excretions, and caring for infected patients.

According to the WHO, the first cases in India were recorded in West Bengal in 2007 but an earlier outbreak was retrospectively identified in the state’s Siliguri city in 2001. The 2001 Siliguri outbreak occurred in a healthcare setting where 75 percent of cases were of hospital staff or visitors, the WHO said.

Since 2018, dozens of deaths have been reported in India’s Kerala state, which is now regarded as the world’s highest-risk region for the virus.

The reasons for other outbreaks in Indian states are unclear. Some medical experts have suggested outbreaks may have been triggered by human consumption of fruit contaminated by bat saliva or urine, while the Indian Council of Medical Research has suggested that while the virus is primarily spread by physical contact, it may also be airborne.

According to Abbas, there is no clear evidence about the cause of the latest outbreak in West Bengal, which has occurred after decades without outbreaks.

Abbas said the fact that the two confirmed cases are both healthcare workers in the same hospital indicates a potential transmission from an infected but undiagnosed patient to the healthcare workers at the hospital.

Nipah
Field laboratory assistants catch a bat to collect specimens for Nipah virus research in the Shuvarampur area of Faridpur, Bangladesh, on September 14, 2021 [File: Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters]

Is there a vaccine for the virus?

According to the WHO, there is currently no approved treatment or vaccine available for people infected by the virus or animals carrying the virus.

The University of Oxford has been conducting clinical trials in Bangladesh to test a Nipah virus vaccine and launched the second phase of trials in December 2025.

In the absence of approved vaccines, doctors have been treating patients with antivirals such as Ribavirin. According to the United States government’s Centers for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC), Ribavirin was used to treat a small number of patients in a 1999 Nipah outbreak in Malaysia, but its efficacy in treatment remains unclear.

The CDC has said that the drug Remdesivir could also help prevent Nipah “when given to exposed nonhuman primates”.

The Indian state of Kerala used Remdesivir during a 2023 outbreak which resulted in an improved case fatality rate.

Which countries have announced enhanced screening for Nipah virus?

Thailand, Indonesia, Nepal and Malaysia have all tightened international airport screening.

Thailand’s health ministry told journalists that it has assigned special parking bays for aircraft arriving from Nipah-affected countries, and passengers have been asked to complete health declaration forms before immigration.

Thermal scanners have also been installed at the Suvarnabhumi airport in Bangkok to screen people for fever and other symptoms of the virus.

Malyasia, Indonesia and Nepal have implemented similar measures at their international airports.

What is the best way to prevent the spread of this virus?

On Wednesday, Hong Kong daily The South China Morning Post reported that social media channels in China had been flooded with posts from people expressing concern over the outbreak of the virus in India.

“It’s so scary, especially with the Spring Festival coming up. I don’t want to experience another lockdown,” one social media user said.

“Can’t we temporarily shut the travel channel with India?” another user asked, according to the SCMP.

China’s state broadcaster, CCTV, reported that the country has not recorded any Nipah virus cases so far but warned that there could be risks of imported cases.

According to Abbas, however, the virus is not like the COVID-19 virus which resulted in yearlong lockdowns around the world from 2020.

He said severe cases of the Nipah virus could be managed “through intensive supportive care”.

He added that besides airport health screenings, countries should focus on promoting measures to prevent the virus, like good hygiene, proper ventilation, avoiding crowds, staying home when ill, seeking timely medical advice and maintaining a healthy lifestyle to support immunity.

The WHO has also provided guidelines for controlling the spread of the virus.

In particular, it stated in a 2018 report, “decreasing bat access to date palm sap and other fresh food products” is required.

“Keeping bats away from sap collection sites with protective coverings [such as bamboo sap skirts] may be helpful. Freshly collected date palm juice should be boiled, and fruits should be thoroughly washed and peeled before consumption. Fruits with sign of bat bites should be discarded,” the WHO reported.

It added that people should wear gloves and other protective clothing while handling sick animals or their tissues, and during slaughtering and culling procedures.

To control the spread of the virus in healthcare settings, WHO said, “contact and droplet precautions should be used in addition to standard precautions. In some cases, “airborne precautions” may also be required.

‘Wael’s last wish’: Man detained by ICE denied release for son’s funeral

The restrictions placed on Maher Tarabishi will haunt him long after his 30-year-old son, Wael, is laid to rest.

For decades, Maher, 62, had cared for his son as he struggled with a rare genetic condition called Pompe disease, which causes muscle weakness and severe respiratory problems.

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The disease required round-the-clock care and dozens of surgeries, which Maher carefully attended to.

But Maher was abruptly separated from Wael last year, as part of United States President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

Last Friday, when Wael drew his final breath, Maher was not there to hold him. When Wael’s funeral is held on Thursday at a mosque in Arlington, Texas, Maher will once again be absent, unable to say his final goodbyes.

That is because Maher remains in the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and in each instance, his requests for a temporary release have been denied.

“Wael’s last wish was, ‘Let me at least just see my father. Let me at least hold his hand,’” Shahd Arnaout, Wael’s sister-in-law, told Al Jazeera.

Maher Tarabishi
Maher Tarabishi poses for a family photo with his son Wael [Credit: @freemahertarabishi on Instagram]

Maher, a Jordanian national, had lived in the US for years under a so-called “supervision order” from a court. It allowed him to remain in the country to care for his son, despite a 2006 order calling for his removal.

But the conditions of his stay included annual check-ins with ICE, which Maher completed for more than two decades. Over that time, he provided immigration agents with documents explaining his son’s complications from his surgeries and the care he needed to survive.

But on October 28, 2025, something changed. During Maher’s last check-in, ICE agents took him into detention as part of Trump’s hardline immigration policies.

His family spent months trying to convince officials of the role Maher played in his son’s life. Their petitions went unheeded.

Arnaout and other family members attended to Wael in his absence, but they were acutely aware of the unique bond the father and son had built over their 30-year relationship.

“It was very scary, because we didn’t want to do anything wrong,” Arnaout recounted. “His body was very fragile. We had to wait for Maher to call, so we could ask the questions we needed to ask.”

“One time, his feeding tube came all the way up,” she added. “We had to wait until Maher called so we could show him through video whether we were doing the right steps or not.”

‘ICE is responsible’

Wael’s family draws a direct line between his death and his father’s enforced absence, noting the 30-year-old experienced a physical and psychological decline as the months of separation stretched on.

During that time, he twice ended up in intensive care, and his health deteriorated during his most recent visit.

“ICE is responsible for the death of Wael,” Arnaout said. “They may not kill him with a bullet, but they killed him inside.”

As it became clear Wael’s final moments were approaching, family lawyer Ali Elhorr made a desperate appeal to ICE officials for Maher’s release.

First, Elhorr travelled to an ICE field office in Dallas, where he was told to contact the Bluebonnet Detention Center, where Maher was being held.

He was then given an email and sent back to the Dallas field office, before being redirected to another detention centre in Alvarado, Texas, an hour’s drive away.

Finally, Elhorr found the docket officer in charge and explained the situation. Soon after, he received an update.

“Basically, Maher would only be allowed a virtual [visit],” Elhorr recalled. “So basically, a Zoom call.”

Maher was not able to be in the room as his son died. Elhorr’s efforts to gain Maher a supervised release for Wael’s funeral met a similar end.

“Initially, it seemed like they had agreed. They asked me to send through email exact funeral details, like times and locations of the different events, and it seemed like they were actually working to move him,” Elhorr said.

“And then, about 15 minutes later, I get another call from the officer who said, ‘My director called me and told me that he would not be allowed to attend his funeral.’”

To Elhorr, the message was clear: “The decision was made from higher up.”

The government’s indifference to Maher’s requests has drawn nationwide outrage, as the family shared their story on a GoFundMe page to help raise money for their legal fees.

“It’s just no compassion. No moral compass. It’s shameful in this country,” said Mustafaa Carroll, the interim executive director of the Texas branch for the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).

“I have four sons. I can’t imagine what that must be like,” Carroll added. “They’re treating him like a hardened criminal.”

‘This has to stop’

According to his lawyer and family, Maher has no criminal history and no history of disobeying the provisions set out by immigration officials.

They are seeking to have Maher’s immigration case reopened after discovering that the individual who initially filed his immigration paperwork appears to have fraudulently posed as a lawyer.

Elhorr hopes the case, which is making its way through immigration court, could lead to Maher’s removal order being nixed. He has lived in the country since 1994.

ICE did not respond to Al Jazeera’s request for information on Maher’s case.

However, in a statement to NBC News last year, an ICE spokesperson described Maher as a “criminal alien and self-admitted member of the Palestine Liberation Organization [PLO] – a murderous foreign terrorist organization that has carried out countless terrorist attacks and plane hijackings”.

Elhorr said the claim is as baffling as it is false. He emphasised that Maher has “zero involvement” with the PLO, which is an umbrella term for a coalition of Palestinian groups.

Furthermore, while the PLO was designated as a “terrorist” group by the US in 1987, it has been regularly granted waivers to maintain a diplomatic presence in the US.

For her part, Arnaout said Wael’s death has added a new dynamic to the push for Maher’s release.

“Maher was Wael’s arms, his legs, his lungs,” she said. “He has not been holding up. He is always alone, thinking about his son. We don’t want to lose him, too.”

Mbappe blasts Real Madrid after Champions League loss at Benfica

Real Madrid striker Kylian Mbappe has said his team “deserve” to be in their current situation because they were not consistent enough for a top-eight spot as his side slipped into the Champions League playoff round.

The record 15-time European champions fell to a 4-2 defeat at Jose Mourinho’s Benfica on Wednesday, finishing ninth in the league phase table, meaning they must face their Portuguese conquerors or Bodo/Glimt in February instead of reaching the last 16 directly.

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After three wins in their previous three matches under new coach Alvaro Arbeloa, Madrid were brought back down to earth by Benfica in Lisbon.

“The problem is we aren’t consistent in our play, we have to fix that, you can’t have one day [playing well] and another not, a champion team does not do that,” Mbappe told reporters.

“We deserve to be in this situation today. Benfica were better. Now we have to play two more playoff games. It hurts to have to play those. We wanted to have the time in February to work on our game.”

Mbappe said he could not put his finger on a clear reason why Madrid played so poorly against Benfica.

“I think it’s a bit of everything. I can’t tell you it’s just a matter of attitude, because if I only say that, you’ll think we came here without any desire,” said the French superstar, who scored twice in the defeat.

“If I tell you it’s a football issue, you’ll think the team is bad. No, I think it’s a broader issue, and in the Champions League, every detail matters if you want to beat your opponent.

“It shows you that if you don’t come in with everything you need to win a Champions League match, the opponent will come and, as they say, make fools of you.”

However, Mbappe called on Madrid’s fans to support the team at the Santiago Bernabeu on Sunday against Rayo Vallecano in La Liga, rather than booing as they did earlier in January.

“Come and support the team – we had a bad game – but we are not knocked out of the Champions League, and in La Liga we’re in a good dynamic now,” pleaded Mbappe.

Senegal and Morocco handed fines and bans after AFCON final farce

African football’s governing body has issued fines worth more than $1m and banned Senegal’s coach and Senegalese and Moroccan players over a shambolic African Cup of Nations (AFCON) final that involved a walk-off protest by one of the teams, fans trying to storm the field and fights among journalists.

The bans, announced on Thursday, apply only to African games and not the World Cup, which kicks off in June and which Senegal and Morocco have both qualified for.

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The sanctions announced by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) include fines totalling $615,000 for the Senegalese Football Federation and $315,000 for the Royal Moroccan Football Federation for unsporting and improper conduct by their players, coaching staff and supporters, among other offences.

At the January 18 AFCON finale, Senegal’s players walked off the pitch, led by coach Pape Thiaw, in protest against a penalty awarded late in regulation time to the hosts, Morocco. Thiaw, who last week defended his side’s actions, was banned for five African games and given a fine of $100,000 for bringing the game into disrepute, the African confederation said.

The game restarted after a delay of about 15 minutes. Morocco missed the penalty, and Senegal won the African title 1-0 after extra time.

The heated final in Rabat also saw supporters trying to storm the field, Morocco’s and Senegal’s players scuffling on the sidelines, reporters from the two countries fighting in media areas and a bizarre sequence in which Moroccan ball boys tried to seize a towel being used by Senegalese goalkeeper Edouard Mendy – in an apparent bid to distract him and help their team win the continental title.

That behaviour by the home team’s ball boys led to a $200,000 fine for Morocco’s federation, which will be a cohost of the 2030 World Cup alongside Spain and Portugal and has come under scrutiny for the chaotic African final.

That behaviour by the home team’s ball boys led to a $200,000 fine for Morocco’s federation, which will be a co-host of the 2030 World Cup alongside Spain and Portugal and has come under scrutiny for the chaotic African final.

Morocco was hoping to host the 2030 World Cup final in Casablanca at the Hassan II Stadium, set to be the largest football arena in the world with a capacity of 115,000 people after its planned completion in 2028. But this month’s African final reflected badly on it.

Morocco coach Walid Regragui said the game had given African football a “shameful” image.

Senegalese players Iliman Ndiaye and Ismaila Sarr were banned for two African games, Morocco’s Achraf Hakimi was also banned for two games with one suspended and Morocco’s Ismael Saibari was banned for three games and fined $100,000 for unsporting behaviour.

CAF dismissed an appeal by Morocco to have the result cancelled and Morocco declared the winner because of the Senegalese walk-off.

The game even strained diplomatic ties between Senegal and Morocco, prompting government officials in both nations to pledge to stay friends and call for calm. In Morocco, rights groups denounced what they called hate speech targeting sub-Saharan African residents in the country.

Senegalese Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko said on an investment-related trip to Morocco days after the game that the reaction to it should be seen as “emotional outbursts produced by fervour and not as political or cultural rifts”.

In a further blow to Morocco’s 2030 FIFA World Cup ambitions, the president of Spain’s football federation declared on Tuesday that his country would be hosting the final.