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UN calls for calm as fighting resumes in Libya’s Tripoli

The United Nations has called for calm as fighting has resumed in Libya’s capital, Tripoli, a day after authorities declared order had been restored.

The UN Mission to Libya (UNSMIL) warned on Wednesday that the situation in the country could “spiral out of control”.

“UNSMIL reiterates its calls for an immediate, unconditional ceasefire in all areas, allowing safe corridors for the evacuation of civilians trapped in intense conflict zones,” the mission wrote on X.

“Attacking and damaging civilian infrastructure, physically harming civilians, and jeopardising the lives and safety of the population may constitute crimes under international law. Those responsible will be held accountable for their actions,” it added.

Clashes erupted between the Rada militia and the 444 Brigade, loyal to Prime Minister Abdulhamid al-Dbeibah, in key areas of Tripoli, including the port, the AFP news agency reported, quoting a security source.

The official called the ongoing fighting “urban warfare” with intermittent clashes in residential areas and the use of light and medium weapons.

The fighting calmed down later on Wednesday after the government announced a truce, Tripoli residents told the Reuters news agency.

“Regular forces, in coordination with the relevant security authorities, have begun taking the necessary measures to ensure calm, including the deployment of neutral units,” the government’s Ministry of Defence said.

Fighting across Tripoli

Clashes broke out on Monday night after reports that Abdelghani al-Kikli, leader of the Support and Stability Apparatus (SSA), a militia that controls the southern district of Abu Salim, was killed.

According to local authorities, at least six people were killed in Monday’s fighting.

While Tuesday morning was calm, the fighting restarted overnight with major battles in the capital.

For residents, the uncertainty brought by the attacks was “terrorising”, a father of three told Reuters from the Dahra area.

“I had my family in one room to avoid random shelling,” he added.

Al-Dbeibah ordered what he called irregular armed groups to be dismantled, including Rada.

With the seizure of the SSA territory by factions allied with al-Dbeibah, including the 444 and 111 brigades, Rada is the last significant faction not allied with the prime minister.

Since the 2011 NATO-backed uprising that toppled longtime leader Muammar Gaddafi, Libya has struggled to recover.

In 2014, the country split between a UN-recognised government in Tripoli, led by al-Dbeibah, and a rival administration in the east dominated by commander Khalifa Haftar and his self-styled Libyan National Army.

How Tom Cruise Nearly Met His End On ‘The Final Reckoning’

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Tom Cruise’s film crew on his latest “Mission: Impossible” epic feared the actor was about to die after he appeared to pass out on the wing of a stunt plane over Africa.

The 62-year-old, who does his own stunts and was flying the biplane alone, was laid out flat on the wing after spending 22 minutes out of the cockpit — 10 more than safety guidelines allowed, his director Christopher McQuarrie told a masterclass at the Cannes film festival, where “Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning” is premiering Wednesday.

US actor and producer Tom Cruise and US director, screenwriter and producer Christopher McQuarrie pose during a photocall for the film “Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning” at the 78th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France, on May 14, 2025. (Photo by Sameer AL-DOUMY / AFP)

“When you leave the cockpit of the plane, it’s like stepping onto the surface of another planet,” McQuarrie said.

“The wind is hitting you in excess of 140 miles an hour (225 kph) coming off the propeller. You’re breathing, but only physically. You’re not actually getting oxygen.

“Tom had pushed himself to the point that he was so physically exhausted, he couldn’t get back up off the wing. He was laying on the wing of the plane, his arms were hanging over the front of the wing. We could not tell if he was conscious or not,” said the American filmmaker, who has shot the four last movies of the franchise.

READ ALSO: Sean Combs’s Ex Cassie Says He Forced Her Into ‘Disgusting’ Sex Ordeals

Cruise, a trained acrobatics pilot, was alone on the biplane and had agreed a hand signal to show if he was in trouble, McQuarrie said.

“You can’t do this when you’re unconscious,” the director told an audience at Cannes, with Cruise sitting beside him nodding sheepishly.

To make matter worse, the plane had only six minutes of fuel left. But the star finally stirred.

“We watched Tom as he pulled himself up and stuck his head in the cockpit so that he could replenish the oxygen in his body and then climb up into the cockpit and bring the plane safely down to land.

“No one on Earth can do that but Tom Cruise,” he said to rapturous applause.

Asked about how he dealt with the fear, Cruise pointed to the years of preparation that went into his movies. But in the end, “I like the feeling. It’s just an emotion for me. It’s something that is not paralysing.

“I’m like, ‘Oh, that’s exciting’… I don’t mind kind of encountering the unknown.”

It was far from the only scare the pair had on the $400 million epic, the eighth in the franchise known for its dizzying set pieces and heart-stopping action scenes.

 ‘No way to test that thing’

With fans fearing that the “The Final Reckoning” title meant it might be the last in the series, McQuarrie said the plane scene was not the only one that could have ended everything.

One of the new movie’s most dramatic moments involves Cruise’s character Ethan Hunt diving inside a sunk Russian nuclear submarine in the Bering Sea.

McQuarrie said it took two and a half years to build the set in London.

“Remember that when you’re watching Tom inside this semi-submerged rotating room inside the submarine, that is housed inside a 60-foot diameter, 1,000-ton, 360-degree rotating, fully submersible steel gimbal in a 8.5-million-litre tanker. And he’s inside it,” he said.

“And what you’re watching is us testing it. Because there is no way to test that thing.

“We built a model, and we put a little plastic figure and a bunch of torpedoes in it, and rotated it once, and they smashed the little plastic figure.”

Neither Cruise nor McQuarrie would confirm or deny if the new movie was the final “Mission: Impossible”, with Cruise calling it the “culmination of three decades of work”.

The film is being released in India, Australia and South Korea this weekend, with audiences in Europe and the Middle East having to wait until May 21 and those in North America until May 23.

Draper rues missed chances in Rome loss to Alcaraz

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British number one Jack Draper was knocked out of the Italian Open as Carlos Alcaraz showed his quality under pressure to reach the semi-finals.

Draper, 23, was beaten 6-4 6-4 on the Rome clay as world number three Alcaraz battled valiantly to save break points at key moments and take his own chances when they came.

Englishman Draper, who is fifth in the ATP rankings, led 4-2 in the first set before Alcaraz fought back to take the lead.

Looking to build on his run to the Madrid Open final at the start of May, Draper recovered in the second set and constantly applied pressure on Alcaraz’s serve.

But he was unable to convert three break points and, after coming through a lengthy eighth game to hold, reigning French Open champion Alcaraz ran with the momentum.

“I played with such a high rhythm during the whole match and didn’t let him dominate in the rallies,” said Alcaraz, who avenged a defeat by Draper in the Indian Wells semi-finals in March.

“It was a good weapon for me and I’m really proud how I approached the match.”

Positives to take for Draper before French Open

Coming into this European clay-court swing, Draper had won nine of his 20 matches on the red dirt.

Now, having reached the Madrid final and caused problems for Alcaraz in Rome, he has emerged as a genuine force on the surface going into the French Open, which begins on 25 May.

This, though, was a reminder of what it takes to beat the world’s leading men’s clay-courter.

Building up his physical durability – having struggled with fitness issues in previous seasons – has been key to Draper’s improvement on a surface which does not come naturally to the left-hander.

All his greater physicality was needed against Alcaraz – a player who glides around the clay and has more time to employ his weapons effectively on the slower surface.

Draper pounced on a loose game to take a 4-2 lead in the first set, but he was unable to consolidate the break as Alcaraz returned superbly to instantly hit back.

Continuing to make Draper work hard behind the baseline in the points, and electing to employ the drop-shot more regularly to end them, helped Alcaraz switch momentum.

Draper began to look weary as Alcaraz won five straight games to move a set and a break up, but he demonstrated his improved durability by digging deep to find another wind.

Draper instantly broke back in the second set, breezing through his next few service games while ramping up the pressure on Alcaraz.

Suddenly, Alcaraz looked flustered as his serve came under intense scrutiny.

The Spaniard played more than twice as many service points as Draper across the opening eight games but hung on with the help of his forehand to keep the set on serve.

Not breaking serve ultimately knocked the stuffing out of Draper.

The British left-hander was broken to love in the ninth game, bowing his head at the changeover to signal his frustration, before Alcaraz confidently served out.

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Draper edged out by Alcaraz in Rome quarter-finals

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British number one Jack Draper has been knocked out of the Italian Open as Carlos Alcaraz showed his quality under pressure to reach the semi-finals.

Draper, 23, was beaten 6-4 6-4 as world number three Alcaraz battled valiantly to save break points at key moments and take his own chances when they came.

Englishman Draper, who is fifth in the ATP rankings, led 4-2 in the first set before Alcaraz fought back to take the lead.

Looking to build on his run to the Madrid Open final last week, Draper recovered in the second set and constantly applied pressure on Alcaraz’s serve.

But he was unable to convert two break points and, after coming through a lengthy eighth game to hold, reigning French Open champion Alcaraz ran with the momentum.

Alcaraz, a first-time Rome semi-finalist, will play Italy’s Lorenzo Musetti or Germany’s Alexander Zverev in the last four.

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Sean Combs’s Ex Cassie To Face Defence Questioning In Court

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Sean “Diddy” Combs’s former partner Casandra Ventura is expected to be grilled by the fallen music mogul’s defense lawyers Wednesday as she returns to court for a second day of testimony.

Singer and model Ventura, better known as Cassie, is also likely to face questions about allegations Combs raped her in 2018, as well as her graphic accounts of elaborate sex parties organised by the hip-hop icon.

In an emotional first day of testimony, Ventura, who is heavily pregnant, also detailed beatings and abuse at the hands of Combs whom she painted as controlling and willing to wield his wealth and influence to get his way.

READ ALSO: Sean Combs’s Ex Cassie Says He Forced Her Into ‘Disgusting’ Sex Ordeals

COMBO: Singer Cassie and Sean Combs aka Puff Daddy or Diddy

She gave vivid accounts that will underpin much of the prosecution’s case against the music industry figure who is alleged to have used violence and blackmail to manipulate women over many years.

Ventura recounted so-called “freak-off” sex parties saying she participated because she was “just in love and wanted to make (Combs) happy — to a point I didn’t feel like I had much of a choice.”

Ventura, who is 17 years younger than Combs and first met him when she was 19, described how the mogul would sometimes urinate on her, or he would instruct one of the numerous sex workers he engaged to do so.

‘It was disgusting’

Singer and model Cassie Ventura

The escorts, almost always men, were paid thousands of dollars in cash after encounters.

“It was disgusting. It was too much. It was overwhelming,” she said, adding that the hotel rooms used for the marathon sex sessions were often trashed, with establishments charging sizable cleaning and repair bills including for sheets stained with blood and urine.

Combs’s defence team indicated that during cross-examination, which is expected as early as Wednesday afternoon, they would seek to emphasise that Ventura took drugs of her own free will, and behaved erratically.

Ventura said that during the encounters she took drugs including ecstasy, ketamine and cocaine, and that the “drugs honestly helped” her meet Combs’s demands to stay awake for days on end.

FILES: Sean P. Diddy Combs with Cassie Ventura attend the premiere of ‘The Perfect Match’ at the Arclight Theatre in Los Angeles on March 7, 2016. (Photo by Chris Delmas / AFP)

The drugs also had a “dissociative and numbing” effect, she said, “a way to not feel it for what it really was.”

In a hotel surveillance clip from March 2016 shown to jurors Monday and again Tuesday, Combs is seen brutally beating and dragging Ventura down a hallway.

The prosecution played portions of the footage while Ventura was on the stand.

When asked why she didn’t fight back or get up, Ventura answered simply that curled up on the ground “felt like the safest place to be.”

Combs’s defense team insists while some of his behavior was questionable it did not constitute racketeering and sex trafficking. He denies all counts and proceedings are expected to last eight to 10 weeks.