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Farmers, Herders Sign 25 Peace Pacts To End Bokkos–Riyom Killings

Farmers and herders in six rural communities across Bokkos and Riyom Local Government Areas of Plateau State have signed 25 peace agreements aimed at restoring peace and rebuilding trust after years of deadly conflict.

The agreements were reached by men and women drawn from the communities of Sha, Bum and Sopp, where recurrent clashes have claimed many lives and led to the destruction of property.

The peace accords followed a series of dialogue and reconciliation engagements facilitated by the Institute for Integrated Transitions (IFIT), as part of efforts to strengthen social cohesion and find lasting solutions to violence in fragile, conflict-affected rural communities.

A participant and senior district head from Bokkos Local Government Area, Lazaros David, described the peace process as timely and critical, given the scale of challenges faced by the communities.

READ ALSO: Operatives Arrest 184, Rescue Minors In Anti-Trafficking Raids In Plateau

According to him, the organisers succeeded in bringing the communities together at the grassroots level through sustained engagement.

“They followed the programme time after time to ensure its success. They identified our problems and discussed them together with us,” he said.

David expressed confidence that the agreements would be implemented, noting that community leaders would use platforms such as churches and mosques to reinforce the peace process.

“Where you often see your people, we’ll make sure this peace holds,” he added.

Another participant, Chiroma Haruna Idris, said the initiative would go a long way in restoring peace and stability between farming and herding communities.

90% Of Lawmakers Won’t Return To NASS If Elections Are Transparent — Sowore

Human rights activist and politician, Omoyele Sowore, has claimed that 90 per cent of federal lawmakers and other elected officials would not be elected if elections in Nigeria were conducted transparently.

Sowore made the remark while reacting to the controversy trailing the amendments to the Electoral Act, particularly provisions relating to the electronic transmission of election results.

On Tuesday, the Senate amended the Electoral Act to permit the electronic transmission of election results, a move many Nigerians had clamoured for.

READ ALSO: Senate Reverses Stance To Allow E-Transmission Of Election Results, Retains Manual Backup

However, the lawmakers retained a provision allowing manual collation of results in areas where internet connectivity fails — a clause many critics have described as unnecessary.

Speaking on Channels Television’s The Morning Brief on Wednesday, Sowore argued that lawmakers are reluctant to enact reforms that would strengthen electoral transparency because they believe such changes would cost them their seats.

According to him, the argument that poor network coverage justifies manual collation is merely an excuse.

“This excuse that there is no network in some states is just another balloon air on the part of these guys. They don’t want transparent elections because if elections are transparent, 90 per cent of them will not make it to the National Assembly — and of course the presidency and other elected positions, they know that,” Sowore said.

The former presidential candidate of the African Action Congress (AAC) described the Senate’s decision to retain manual collation of election results as “clever by half.”

He argued that the provision was deliberately inserted to create an avenue to revert to what he called the “hardcoded way of reporting elections,” which, according to him, has eroded public trust in the electoral process.

‘Adopt electronic voting’

Sowore further criticised the Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC) current IREV system, describing it as outdated. He suggested that Nigeria should adopt electronic voting, similar to the system used in India.

“I said it yesterday and I will repeat it again, I am not even a fan of all these old systems. By now, we should be doing what they are doing in India. India has 900 million registered voters and they use electronic voting as their own way of expressing the wishes of the people and those are almost foolproof.

“I don’t think you hear a lot of tribunal sittings in India after 900 million votes and we have only 90 million here, we should be able to go for electronic voting,” he said.

Nine Killed In Canada Mass Shooting Targeted At School, Residence

A shooter killed nine people and injured dozens more at a secondary school and residence in a remote part of western Canada on Tuesday, before the suspect took their own life.

The killings occurred in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, a picturesque mountain valley town in the foothills of the Rockies.

A total of 27 people were wounded, including two with serious injuries and 25 who suffered non-life-threatening injuries, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said in a statement.

Canadian media have reported that the shooter was female, but the RCMP declined to provide any details on the suspect’s identity in a press conference on Tuesday.

READ ALSO: Mexican Police To Use Robot Dogs At 2026 World Cup

Prime Minister Mark Carney said he was “devastated” by the “horrific acts of violence” and announced he was suspending plans to travel to the Munich Security Conference on Wednesday, where he had been set to hold talks with allies on transatlantic defence readiness.

Police said an alert was issued about an active shooter at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School on Tuesday afternoon.

As police searched the school, they found six people shot dead. A seventh person with a gunshot wound died en route to hospital.

Separately, police found two more bodies at a residence in Tumbler Ridge.

The residence is “believed to be connected to the incident,” police said.

At the school, “an individual believed to be the shooter was also found deceased with what appears to be a self‑inflicted injury,” police said.

In a statement, the municipality of Tumbler Ridge said: “There are no words sufficient for the heartbreak our community is experiencing tonight.”

Tumbler Ridge student Darian Quist told the public broadcaster CBC that he was in his mechanics class when there was an announcement that the school was in lockdown.

He said that initially he “didn’t think anything was going on,” but started receiving “disturbing” photos about the carnage at the school.

“It set in what was happening,” Quist said.

He said he stayed in lockdown for more than two hours until police stormed in, ordering everyone to put their hands up before escorting them out of the school.

Darian’s mother, Shelley Quist, said she embraced her son when they finally connected after the site was declared safe.

“He’s not going to be out of my sight for a while now,” she told the CBC.

Trent Ernst, a local journalist who was previously a substitute teacher at Tumbler Ridge, told AFP that one of his children just graduated from the school.

“There’s been troubled kids here in town before,” he said.

Police have not yet released any information about the age of the shooter or the victims.

‘Horrific violence’

Mass shootings are extremely rare in Canada, but 11 people were killed in Vancouver in April during a vehicle attack that targeted a Filipino cultural festival.

British Columbia Premier David Eby called the violence “unimaginable.”

The RCMP’s northern district commander Ken Floyd described the incident as “a rapidly evolving and dynamic situation.”

“This has been an incredibly difficult and emotional day for our community, and we are grateful for the cooperation shown as officers continue their work to advance the investigation,” he said.

The RCMP said officers were searching other homes and properties in the community to see if there were additional sites connected to the incident.

Tumbler Ridge, a quiet town with roughly 2,400 residents, is more than 1,100 kilometers (680 miles) north of Vancouver, British Columbia’s largest city.

GB’s Pinnington Jones stuns world number 20 Cobolli

Ailsa Cowen

BBC Sport journalist

Great Britain’s Jack Pinnington Jones claimed the biggest win of his career as he stunned world number 20 Flavio Cobolli at the Dallas Open.

Pinnington Jones, ranked 181st in the world, came through qualifying to reach the main draw of an ATP 500 event for the first time.

He then stunned fourth seed and Wimbledon quarter-finalist Cobolli 6-2 6-2 in just 54 minutes.

Pinnington Jones, who largely plays on the lower-tier Challenger tour, lost to the same opponent in the second round of last year’s Wimbledon.

Pinnington Jones claimed his first match win at a Grand Slam with victory over Tomas Martin Etcheverry at Wimbledon last year.

A close friend of British number one Jack Draper, Pinnington Jones completed his junior season at Texas Christian University in May but opted against returning for a final year in order to pursue a full-time tennis career.

Elsewhere, Elisabetta Cocciaretto progressed to the last 16 of a WTA 1000 event for the first time with a dominant win over Coco Gauff at the Qatar Open.

Italian Cocciaretto saved four of the five break points she faced in a 6-4 6-2 victory over French Open champion Gauff.

Elena Rybakina won her first match since her Australian Open triumph with a 6-2 6-4 victory over China’s Wang Xinyu, while world number two Iga Swiatek breezed past Janice Tjen 6-0 6-3.

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The pizza chef hoping to star for Italy at T20 World Cup

James Wallace

Cricket writer
  • 2 Comments

“It’s all about the fingertips” replies Crishan Kalugamage with a wink when asked about the similarities between bowling leg-spin and making pizzas.

Kalugamage moved from Sri Lanka to Lucca in Tuscany as a 15-year-old and is one of five home-based players in Italy’s 15-man squad for the T20 World Cup.

A sporty kid, Kalugamage made friends competing in athletics and then started playing some amateur cricket near his adopted hometown. His natural talent for the game set him apart and he was soon scouted to play for Roma Cricket Club, one of the oldest in the country.

The now 34-year-old is one of many players in the Italian squad who have known sacrifice to get where they are today, namely playing in front of thousands of people at famous cricketing stadiums such as Kolkata’s Eden Gardens and Mumbai’s Wankhede. A global audience of millions watching at home.

Kalugamage’s job as a pizza maker often came second to playing cricket. “I lost a lot of jobs,” he says ruefully, “Sunday is a very busy day, lots of bosses aren’t keen on you not working because you are playing cricket.”

“Crish is a very dangerous weapon” Italy’s head coach, John Davison, says on a separate call. “He can spin it sharply both ways and he will have the element of surprise, hardly anyone in the tournament will have ever faced him.”

Davison knows his rotations – he is also known as ‘The Spin Whisperer’. He has spent the last decade and a half as an in-demand spin coach. Nathan Lyon called Davison the “best spin coach in the world” and has worked with him since his teens.

‘Some of Italy’s players have never set foot in country’

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None of the 15 squad members were born in Italy and only a few are fluent in the language.

Several players hold Italian passports or qualify because of a relative, and some people have baulked at the Italian Cricket Federation casting their net so wide rather than concentrating on developing more homegrown players.

South African born and South African capped (six ODIs and 16 T20Is between 2017 and 2021) all-rounder JJ Smuts will play for Italy during the tournament by dint of his marriage but has never even stepped foot in the country.

“People can have their opinion but we’ve got a real togetherness,” says captain Wayne Madsen, speaking before his side’s opening match against Scotland on Monday, which saw him dislocate his shoulder and his team soundly beaten.

The 42-year-old South African born batter is club captain at Derbyshire and has a wealth of experience with teams around the globe. Even so, this group of players has had a real effect on him.

“That heritage and the journeys that guys have gone on to get here, there’s a bond which is pretty hard to describe outside of the feeling that we get as a group,” said Madsen.

“It really is probably our biggest strength. Everyone’s got a story to tell in terms of how they got to this position and everyone’s is unique. Whether it is guys who have grown up in Italy or guys with grandparents who moved away many years ago. We’ve had some really powerful conversations, it has really bonded us.”

For Madsen and Davison, success on the pitch in this tournament is part of a wider plan to build on the growing cricketing roots in Italy.

“We want to win games and we know and believe that we can. If we can finish in the top eight, that’ll change the lives of a lot of our cricketers and put Italian cricket on the map” says Madsen.

Men’s ICC T20 World Cup 2026

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75 friends and family v 33,000 Nepal fans

For some of the squad, the prospect of playing in front of a large crowd will be something of an alien prospect. Davison mentions that the players had a training session inside Chennai’s MA Chidambaram Stadium a few days earlier and it was the first time that the Pakistani born and Italian raised left-arm seamer Hassan Ali had stepped foot inside a cricket stadium of any kind.

The players have been working with Dr Andrew Hooton, Head of the School of Sports and Exercises Science at the University of Derby, in order to prepare themselves. Hooton has worked with Madsen and Micky Arthur at Derbyshire and also with Burton Albion Football Club.

“Some of the squad definitely haven’t had experience of playing in a big stadium, under lights with huge crowds” says Hooton, “One of the things I’ve been working with them on is being able to perform their skills and maintain their basics in this heightened scenario.

“We’ve done some work around ‘centering’. Like when you see Ronaldo before he takes a free-kick or penalty, he closes his eyes and does a whole body breath. It allows for attentional focus but also helps to guard against nerves and anxiety. It’s physical as well as mental.”

Davison mentions the 33,000 seater Wankhede stadium in Mumbai is sold out for their second game against Nepal.

“The ICC give us about 75 tickets for friends and family, that leaves a heck of a lot of supporters for us to win over, but we’ll be giving it our best shot,”

“We have a platform to take cricket further, to take it to another level,” adds Madsen. “We’ve got the players to make that happen and we’re dreaming high. We aren’t just here to make up the numbers, we can take sides down.”

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De Zerbi leaves Marseille by mutual consent

Mandeep Sanghera

BBC Sport journalist
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Roberto de Zerbi has left his role as manager of Marseille by mutual consent.

The Italian’s departure from the French club follows a 5-0 thrashing by Paris St-Germain and their recent exit from the Champions League following a 3-0 defeat at Club Brugge.

De Zerbi took over at Marseille in the summer of 2024 after leaving Brighton, where he spent just under two years in charge.

“Olympique de Marseille and Roberto De Zerbi, coach of the first team, have announced the end of their collaboration by mutual agreement,” Marseille said in a statement.

“Following discussions between all stakeholders in the club’s management – the owner, president, director of football, and coach – it was decided to make a change at the helm of the first team.

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