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Amaechi, Son Join Protest Over E-Transmission Of Election Results, Says APC Is Afraid

Former Rivers State Governor of Rivers State and former Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, has joined other protesters as demonstrations against the Senate’s rejection of mandatory electronic transmission of election results continued in Abuja on Tuesday.

The protest, which began on Monday, is opposed to the Senate’s decision to reject real-time electronic transmission of election results.

Amaechi, who attended the protest with his son—a medical doctor—said he brought him along in case the demonstration turns violent and injuries are sustained.

He explained that he came with his son to demonstrate his belief that during major protests, leaders should be at the forefront with their families.

The African Democratic Congress (ADC) called on Nigerians to rise up, adding that all opposition parties ought to be on the streets to protest the Senate’s decision.

READ ALSO: Peter Obi Joins Occupy National Assembly Protest Over E-Transmission Of Election Results

Amaechi alleged that the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) is opposed to electronic transmission of election results because it fears losing elections.

He questioned why the party would be afraid, despite having several opposition governors and prominent politicians defecting to its ranks.

He further stated that while Senate President Godswill Akpabio and President Bola Tinubu may ignore the demands of Nigerians, opposition parties and civil society organisations would persist until the decision is reversed.

Meanwhile, operatives of the Nigeria Police Force barricaded major roads leading to the National Assembly, where the Senate is scheduled to hold an emergency plenary session on Tuesday.

De Leede helps Netherlands cruise to win over Namibia

Adwaidh Rajan

BBC Sport journalist

Men’s T20 World Cup, Group A, Delhi

Namibia 156-8 (20 overs): Loftie-Eaton 42 (38); Van Beek 2-13

Netherlands 159-3 (18 overs): De Leede 72* (48); Scholtz 1-27

Netherlands won by seven wickets

Bas de Leede starred with both bat and ball as the Netherlands opened their account in the T20 World Cup with a convincing seven-wicket victory over Namibia.

The Netherlands suffered a narrow defeat by Pakistan after giving their opponents a major score in the opening game of the tournament in Colombo on Saturday but bounced back impressively in Delhi.

Chasing a target of 157, all-rounder De Leede, who had already picked up two key Namibia wickets, crafted an unbeaten 72 from 48 balls to guide them home with authority.

It is their biggest win in the tournament’s history while De Leede became the first Netherlands cricketer to score a half-century and take two wickets in the same match of a T20 World Cup.

Sent to bat in their first game of the tournament, Namibia made a decent start reaching 60-1 in nine overs before Logan van Beek dismissed Jan Frylinck, who scored 30 off 26 balls.

Namibia’s momentum was further halted by De Leede, who sent back their captain Gerhard Erasmus and JJ Smit for 18 and 22 respectively, while Nicol Loftie-Eaton fell to Van Beek after a 38-ball 42 as they posted 156-8.

The Netherlands lost opener Max O’Dowd early in the chase, but a 70-run third-wicket partnership between De Leede and Colin Ackerman steadied their innings before the latter departed for 32.

However, there was no stopping De Leede as he hit five fours and four sixes to seal the Netherlands win.

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  • Netherlands
  • Cricket

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    • 16 August 2025
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Can you beat our Premier League top assisters quiz?

Joe Rindl

BBC Sport journalist

Bruno Fernandes is on target to break a Premier League record.

The Manchester United captain has 12 assists from his past 15 Premier League matches and needs just nine more from United’s final 13 games to become the league’s all-time single-season assists record holder.

What information do we collect from this quiz?

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    Manchester City striker Erling Haaland celebrates scoring a goal
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How does the cutoff of Starlink terminals affect Russia’s moves in Ukraine?

Kyiv, Ukraine – A heavy Russian Geran drone struck a fast-moving train in northern Ukraine on January 27, killing five, wounding two and starting a fire that disfigured the railway carriage.

Such an attack was impossible back in 2022, when Russia started dispatching roaring swarms of Shaheds, the Geran-2’s Iranian prototypes.

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Ukrainian servicemen ridiculed them for their slow speed and low effectiveness – and shot them down with their assault rifles and machineguns.

But the Geran kamikaze drones have undergone countless modifications, becoming faster and deadlier – and some were equipped with Starlink satellite internet terminals.

The terminals made them immune to Ukrainian jamming and even allowed their Russian operators to navigate their movement in real time.

Western sanctions prohibit the import of the notebook-sized terminals operated by Elon Musk’s SpaceX company to Russia.

But Moscow has allegedly smuggled thousands of them via ex-Soviet republics and the Middle East, notably Dubai, using falsified documents and activation in nations where the use of Starlink is legal, according to Russian war correspondents and media reports.

Russian forces were able to counter the use of Starlink by Ukrainian forces as the terminals linked to SpaceX’s satellite armada orbiting the Earth allowed faster communication and data exchange, as well as greater precision.

In early February, SpaceX blocked the use of every Starlink geolocated on Ukrainian territory, including the ones used by Ukrainian forces.

Only after a verification and inclusion into “white lists” that are updated every 24 hours can they be back online.

But any terminal will be shut down if moving faster than 90km/h (56mph) to prevent drone attacks.

“Looks like the steps we took to stop the unauthorized use of Starlink by Russia have worked,” Musk wrote on X on February 1.

The step is ascribed to Ukraine’s new defence minister, Mykhailo Fedorov, a 35-year-old who had served as the minister of digital transformation. He introduced dozens of innovations that simplified bureaucracy and business, according to a four-star general.

“Fedorov managed to sort it out with Musk – somehow, because we couldn’t do it earlier,” Lieutenant General Ihor Romanenko, a former deputy head of Ukrainian armed forces, told Al Jazeera.

He said the shut-off “significantly lowered” the effectiveness of Russia’s drone attacks and disrupted the communication of small groups of Russian soldiers trying to infiltrate Ukrainian positions.

The effect was so devastating that it made Russian forces “howl” with despair, said Andriy Pronin, one of the pioneers of military drone use in Ukraine.

“They’re like blind kittens now,” he told Al Jazeera.

Russian servicemen in places like the contested eastern town of Kupiansk are now “deprived of any way of getting in touch with mainland”, one of them complained on Telegram on February 4.

Other servicemen and war correspondents decried the shortsightedness of Russian generals who built communications around Starlink and did not create an alternative based on Russian technologies and devices.

However, the shutdown affected Ukrainian users of Starlink that were not supplied to the Defence Ministry but were procured by civilians and charities.

“The communications were down for two days until we figured out the white list procedure,” Kyrylo, a serviceman in the northern Kharkiv region, told Al Jazeera. He withheld his last name in accordance with the wartime protocol.

The effect, however, is short-term and is unlikely to turn the tables in the conflict that is about to enter another year.

“It’s not a panacea, it’s not like we’re winning the war,” Pronin said. “It will be hard [for Russians], but they will restore their communications.”

Vonn reflects on Winter Olympics downhill crash and tibia injury

American ski athlete Lindsey Vonn said on Monday she had suffered a “complex tibia fracture” when she crashed in the Winter Olympics downhill and would need “multiple surgeries”.

“While yesterday did not end the way I had hoped, and despite the intense physical pain it caused, I have no regrets,” Vonn said on her social media, from the hospital in Italy where she is being treated.

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Vonn, 41, insisted that the ruptured anterior cruciate ligament she suffered in a crash in a World Cup race before the Milan-Cortina Games “had nothing to do with my crash whatsoever”.

“I was simply 5 inches too tight on my line when my right arm hooked inside of the gate, twisting me and resulted in my crash,” she added.

“I sustained a complex tibia fracture that is currently stable but will require multiple surgeries to fix properly.”

In her first statement since the crash, Vonn said: “My Olympic dream did not finish the way I dreamt it would. It wasn’t a story book ending or a fairy tale, it was just life. I dared to dream and had worked so hard to achieve it.

“Because in Downhill ski racing the difference between a strategic line and a catastrophic injury can be as small as 5 inches.”

Vonn crashed heavily just 13 seconds after starting her run. She was winched off the piste by a rescue helicopter and is being treated in a hospital in Treviso.

She had resumed her career in late 2024 after nearly six years in retirement and was considered a strong favourite for the downhill at these Olympics after recording seven World Cup podium finishes, including two wins, before her pre-Olympics crash in Crans-Montana, Switzerland.

Lindsey Vonn in action.
Vonn’s crash during the Olympic Women’s Downhill on Sunday is likely to be career-ending for the American Alpine ski athlete [Screengrab by IOC via Getty Images]

Lyon loan helping ‘explosive’ Endrick’s World Cup ‘dream’ with Brazil

Alex Clementson

BBC Sport in France
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Even those who do not follow French football in its most granular detail will be aware of the plight that could have befallen Lyon this summer.

Spared from administrative relegation to Ligue 2 just five and a half weeks before the start of the season, the club’s future in the French top flight hinged on their capacity to fulfil financial promises.

A firesale of the side’s most valuable assets duly ensued, and with it, expectations of a third successive season of European football dwindled.

Constrained by their financial frailties, Les Gones, spearheaded by sporting director Matthieu Louis-Jean, had to work diligently, embarking on an agile recruitment drive.

Spotting talent from lesser-known European leagues became a central tenet of their philosophy.

“We worked on different markets,” outlined the former Nottingham Forest right-back in September.

Amid a flurry of moves, Pavel Sulc and Ruben Kluivert arrived on permanent deals from Viktoria Plzen and Casa Pia respectively, while Adam Karabec joined from Sparta Prague on loan.

Louis-Jean has cultivated a burgeoning reputation as a strategic operator, but his most innovative market manoeuvre would have to wait until the winter window.

Having deviated from their reactive tendencies of the past, Lyon were left without a central striker of note, preferring to secure the temporary services of Martin Satriano on loan.

“We took a decision on the final day of the transfer window to leave the position of a first-choice striker open,” said general director Michael Gerlinger.

Louis-Jean, and Lyon’s wider recruitment department, were convinced an opportunity would present itself in January. Their intuition soon morphed into prophecy.

Having amassed just 99 minutes of action for Real Madrid during the first half of the season, Brazil striker Endrick needed an escape. Lyon were more than happy to provide sanctuary for a player and talisman they desperately craved.

Endrick celebratesGetty Images

At a club where strikers are held in such reverence, his impact has been almost divine.

He scored 42 minutes into his debut against Lille in the last 32 of the French Cup. Another four goals have followed in five games.

Three of those came against Metz, making him the youngest player to score a Ligue 1 hat-trick for Lyon, surpassing the great Bernard Lacombe, who had held the record for 54 years.

Before Saturday’s match with Nantes, no Lyon player had been directly involved in more goals (six), had more shots on target (14), or completed more dribbles (19) than the Brazilian since his arrival.

Endrick’s signing perpetuates a long-held legacy of Brazilians representing the club.

Juninho Pernambucano, Cris and Sonny Anderson are just a few to have spent significant portions of their careers with Lyon, each contributing to the club’s unprecedented run of seven successive Ligue 1 crowns between 2002 and 2008.

“I know there are a lot [of Brazilians] that have played for the club, and many of them have had a fantastic career here,” said Endrick during his first interview with French newspaper L’Equipe.

Lucas Paqueta and Bruno Guimaraes, Brazil team-mates of Endrick, provided counsel prior to his move.

“Before coming, I spoke with Paqueta and Bruno,” he said. “They told me it was a place I could be really happy.”

Personal fulfillment, and a chance “to play football” with this summer’s World Cup looming, he says were driving factors in his decision to join.

If strikers are revered in Lyon, they are held in almost sacred status in Brazil.

“We don’t have that mobile number nine in the Brazil side,” says former Lyon captain Cris.

“We have Gabriel Jesus, Richarlison, but there’s a space there for him to help the side with his mobility and the way he sees the game.”

Ultimately, Brazil manager Carlo Ancelotti will be the man who decides if Endrick makes the plane.

“We had a wonderful conversation,” said Endrick when asked about whether the Italian had been in contact before his move.

“He gave me some advice that has stayed with me,” he added. “Now, I have to work in order to improve and become a better player.”

Lyon, and Ligue 1, provide the perfect platform for him to do just that.

“He’s very explosive, very quick, very good in one-on-one situations,” enthused Lyon manager Paulo Fonseca after his debut against Lille.

His contentious sending-off for two yellow cards against Nantes on Saturday, however, following a petulant kick out after some robust challenges against him, provides a timely reminder of the adjustments Endrick needs to make.

“When there are players of that calibre, we have to make sure to contain them,” said Nantes manager Ahmed Kantari in the aftermath.

Endrick celebratesGetty Images

That influence transcends the pitch, too – his signing representing a commercial coup as well as a sporting one.

“It’s obvious his notoriety will boost the club’s image,” Gerlinger said during the Brazilian’s presentation.

The results have been tangible. His arrival video, published on the club’s official Instagram account, is the club’s most-watched on the platform, while highlights of games against Metz, Lille, Brest and Stade Laval – in which Endrick featured – top their YouTube charts.

Lyon will hope his impending one-game suspension does not stymie his, or their, seamless progress of late.

Prior to Endrick’s arrival, Fonseca’s side had recorded a run of four wins in all competitions – subsequently extended to 12.

Related topics

  • Spanish La Liga
  • Lyon
  • European Football
  • Brazil
  • French Ligue 1
  • Real Madrid
  • Football

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